Soqrat (Candiese Lenferna)

Are you ready for the ‘race of the century’

Kenilworth is all set for Saturday’s “race of the century”, the Grade 1 L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate (LQP), which pundits are hailing as the strongest ever renewal of the country’s premier weight for age mile, and the horse who could claim to be the most ignored, Soqrat, is the choice to win.

Soqrat is one of a two-pronged attack by Mike de Kock and his son and assistant trainer Matthew said, “It is a big test for them but they are up to it.”

The bookmakers don’t even rate Soqrat the best of his stable and have him at 7/1 and Buffalo Bill Cody at 9/2.  

Soqrat suffered a “nightmare” 27 hour journey down to Cape Town two weeks before the Grade 1 Cape Guineas, but even that did not stop him winning a strong renewal comfortably.

He has early pace, a superb temperament, a lovely action, a tremendous turn of foot and the resolve to stay all the way to the line. He also has a plum draw of three. However, he is attempting to become only the second three-year-old since 1973 to win the LQP.

The yard couldn’t separate him and four-year-old Buffalo Bill Cody, who gets a half-a-kilogram Northern Hemisphere-bred allowance and traveled down well about two weeks ago.

Soqrat (Candiese Marnewick)
Soqrat (Candiese Marnewick)

The Irish-bred has won five of six starts and his three races over a mile have been won by an average of over four lengths. He probably needed his last start too,where he showed a fine turn of foot from a handy position. He could be anything but it is going to be tough jumping from the widest draw of all in his first ever feature start.

The joint-favourite Legal Eagle attempts to join the great Pocket Power by winning this race four times in succession.

Trainer Sean Tarry reckons in terms of ability and current form this will be the strongest field Legal Eagle has ever faced but added, “He is good enough and his preparation has gone according to plan. To have a fair pace would be the greatest thing for such a good race as there would then be no stories afterwards, but if there happens to be no pace Legal Eagle has proven he wouldn’t mind that either.”

Eric Sands has two horses involved, the joint-favourite Rainbow Bridge and Amazing Strike.

It would seem obvious the latter is in as a pacemaker, although Sands was non-committal on this question.

Rainbow Bridge needs a good pace as he becomes unsettled when the pace is as slow as it was in the Green Point Stakes or when he finds no cover. The bookmakers, by making him joint-favourite, are claiming he is able to perform a lot better with a true pace as he is 2kg worse off with all three of the trio who narrowly beat him in the Green Point. He was previously unbeaten in five starts and Sands said, “I would say he is probably now at his peak.” As a horse who can play up before a race, the big crowd might be a concern. However, the sophisticated LQP audience is quieter than the Sun Met one. He is drawn well in four and if everything pans out well this powerful racing machine will be finishing like a train, considering he was the fastest finisher of all in the Green Point despite having over-raced.

Justin Snaith’s imposing Vodacom Durban July winner Do It Again looks set, like his father Twice Over, to have a tremendous four-year-old season. His finish in the Green Point proved he is effective over the mile, which is on the sharp side for him. Snaith also runs the only filly in the race, Snowdance, who is unbeaten in two starts over the course and distance, both of them Grade 1s against the girls.

Snaith said, “Do It Again is in very good form and is looking amazing, everything has gone according to plan. Snowdance is very well and was very impressive in her comeback run. She will give the boys a go.”

Snowdance enjoys being handy or in the front so has a tough draw of eight, especially if Amazing Strike does turn out to be a specialist pacemaker. However, if able to relax up there she can produce her tremendous kick and won’t be easy to catch if hitting the front. Do It Again, drawn six, is able to run on from behind.  

Brett Crawford was bullish about his Rising Sun Gold Challenge winner Undercover Agent and said, “He has improved this season and is a lot stronger and more mature mentally. He has come on since the Green Point and has done a really good gallop since.”

Joey Ramsden knows all about winning the Queen’s Plate and said about Hat Puntano,“I hope he improves a lot. He hasn’t done a lot since the Green Point. We’ve freshened him up, but he’s a hard horse to judge. He was left flatfooted in the Green Point due to the slow pace, but I don’t know if he has the pace to get up there. It is going to be very hard from his wide draw as you are reliant on what the horses inside of you do.”

The Queen’s Plate has always been the aim for Infamous Fox although trainer Candice Dawson admitted he was up against it on form. She said, “He unfortunately ran disappointingly in his last two runs which was not an ideal preparation but he was coming off African Horse Sickness Vaccines and seems fit and well so we stuck to our guns and are just hoping he gives a nice run.”

Soqrat is selected to beat Legal Eagle with Undercover Agent, Do It Again and Rainbow Bridge next best. Snowdance and Buffalo Bill Cody are difficult to ignore and whoever comes out on top it is truly going to be the race of the century.

By David Thiselton

Lady In Black (Candiese Marnewick)

Oh Susanna back to her best

The Grade 1 Cartier Paddock Stakes over 1800m could see reigning Equus Horse Of The Year Oh Susanna retaining her crown but she will be given plenty to think about by Lady In Black, who has landed a plum draw, as well as the like of Fresnaye.

Oh Susanna was beaten by Lady In Black at level weights over 1600m last time and trainer Justin Snaith said, “She definitely just needed it. She was stuck in quarantine after the Durban season so did nothing for a month and it is hard to find races for 121 merit rated horses. She didn’t pull up that well after that last run but we worked on her and she has come on beautifully. It is the best I have had her since her Met win last year.”

Oh Susanna (Candiese Marnewick)
Oh Susanna (Candiese Marnewick)

Snaith also runs Miyabi Gold and Miss Katalin and said, “Miyabi Gold ran a very impressive comeback as she had only had one gallop and I am bullish about her running a big race drawn one with Anton Marcus up. I think she will reverse form with Fresnaye.”

Miss Katalin has the same ownership as Oh Susanna, Drakenstein Stud, and finished just 1,8 lengths behind Fresnaye last time when setting the pace over course and distance in the Victress Stakes. Snaith said, “Her form warrants her being given this opportunity. She likes to run handy and her presence will ensure its run at a nice gallop.”

Dennis Drier will be hoping to see history repeating itself. His great Dynasty filly Beach Beauty finished second in this race as a three-year-old and won the next two renewals. Lady In Black, also by Dynasty, finished second in this race last year as a three-year-old. Drier said, “I am very happy with her and expect a big run.”

She has landed a plum draw of three whereas Oh Susanna jumps from draw seven.

Victress winner Fresnaye finished third in the Paddock Stakes last year and has a tough draw of 12. However, trainer Joey Ramsden confirmed she was not a difficult ride and pointed out she had “a good fellow” (Bernard Fayd’Herbe) aboard. He added, “We have sorted out a few issues with her so she has shown improvement. She only had one gallop going into the Victress so will strip a lot fitter.”

The Mike de Kock-trained Cascapedia travelled down from Cape Town on the Thursday two weeks ago and the journey went well.

The big Irish-bred mare had a tough race in the G-Bets Summer Cup where she finished a narrow 0,8 length third giving 2,5kg to the winner Tilbury Fort and 2kg to the runner up Dawn Assault. However, the yard have freshened her up and Matthew de Kock said she was a happy horse at present. He also believes she will appreciate the step down to 1800m. “2000m stretches her,” he said. She has never raced in Grade 1 weight for age company before but is relatively unexposed having won six of ten career starts. She jumps from a tricky draw of eight.

Hashtagyolo is a good looking filly and she still needed it in the Victress. She has the class to cause an upset. Trainer Dean Kannemeyer said, “She has her third run after a layoff and I expect her to continue to improve but it is a hard race.” She has a good draw of five.

Trainer Sean Tarry prefers Second Request of his pair. Safe Harbour had a wind operation after last season and Tarry said, “Her first two runs back were discouraging but the blinkers helped last time and she is fit and well so we are just hoping she returns to her best form. Second Request ran on well in the Guineas and the extra distance will certainly help. We will see if she is good enough.”

Trainer Candice Dawson said about Sylvan On Fire, “She deserves a chance and is well in herself.”

Elusive Heart was found to have a nasal discharge after finishing a far from disgraced 3,95 lengths back to Snowdance At level weights over a mile last time and trainer Glen Kotzen said, “We have treated her accordingly. It is her third run after a layoff so she is cherry ripe but it is very competitive. She can place on her best form.”

Trainer Adam Marcus said about Brave Move, “She is very well. Her last run was disappointing and she was found to have choked up. So we have fitted her with a tongue tie. We hope it sorts it out but whether it does or not is still unknown. If she does run to her best she is not one to be ignored.”

The selection is Oh Susanna to beat Lady In Black and Fresnaye with Hashtagyolo and Cascapedia next best.

By David Thiselton

Do It Again to stamp his name on the Queen’s Plate

Only two horses have completed the Queen’s Plate-Durban July double this century – Trademark and the legendary Pocket Power. Do It Again is out to become the third in Saturday’s L’Ormarins highlight.

Justin Snaith admits he was surprised to see him finish so close in the Green Point – “He had only had one companion gallop, it was a prep race for him and, although he takes very little work, the slow gallop suited the others.”

Legal Eagle & Sean Tarry (Liesl King)
Legal Eagle & Sean Tarry (Liesl King)

The dual champion trainer, shrewdly, is the first person I have spoken to who casts doubt on the worth of that famously close result – “It was a perfect example of a slow run race. It’s easy to say that the first four are all great horses but they shouldn’t have all finished on top of each other like that. If there is a better pace on Saturday and we get a bit of climate, e.g. a head wind or a tail wind, it will alter the whole race.”

Snaith won the 2012 Queen’s Plate with Gimmethegreenlight but on this occasion his customary optimism is more than just tinged with realism. “The Met is Do It Again’s main aim but there is no reason why he won’t run a big race on Saturday. Everybody thinks he is a 2 000m horse – he is – but he has that X-factor. Remember he didn’t just win the July, he won it convincingly. For sure, he will be doing his best work late but there is nothing wrong with his form over a mile.”

On paper there is but seemingly there were reasons for the one way-below par effort. “He wasn’t right in the Cape Guineas. He had given trouble in the starting stalls, we had to do a lot of schooling and it flattened him. When he walked into the parade ring I was embarrassed how he had trained off. It was in the Natal Guineas, his next run over a mile, that we got to see what he is capable of over the trip. He was impressive.”

Dual Grade 1 winner Snowdance is very much the second string according to the betting but that is not how Snaith sees it. “Everyone is counting her out, almost as if she is a non-runner, but I think she can give them all a run for their money. She is not just any filly but, in my view, by far the best miler of her sex in the country. She showed that when she ran Undercover Agent to half a length in the Gold Challenge when she wasn’t right.

“I think I have her right now. She will need a bit of luck –she has a wide draw at eight –but, if she gets it, she will be in the firing line.”

It is the second run after a rest for both Snaith horses. Is that a concern? “It doesn’t bother me at all. I prefer the second run (to the third) and it works better for me.”

Asked what he regards as the principal dangers, I got a blunt answer. “Listen, I am not interested in anything else in the race other than mine and nor am I interested in all the talk. I have a lot of runners on both days and all my worrying and focus is on my horses.

“The Queen’s Plate is going to be a tough race and a very hard one to win but I think I have the right ammo to come to the table. Certainly I wouldn’t swap mine for any of the others.”

By Michael Clower

Soqrat (JC Photographics)

De Kock bullish ahead of Queen’s Plate

The Mike de Kock yard are happy with their two L’Ormarin’s Queen’s Plate contenders Soqrat and Buffalo Bill Cody and also with their Grade 1 Cartier Paddock Stakes runner Cascapedia.

The four-year-old Irish-bred Buffalo Bill Cody receives a half-a-kilogram Northern Hemisphere allowance and is improving consistently, while Soqrat will attempt to become only the second three-year-old since 1973 to win the Queen’s Plate.

Mathew de Kock said, “It is a big test for them but they are up to it.”

Soqrat (JC Photographics)
Soqrat (JC Photographics)

Soqrat showed last time when winning the Grade 1 Cape Guineas he is course and distance suited and has all the credentials of a great racehorse,including early pace, a relaxed temperament and a superb turn of foot.

However, he is out at 7/1 with World Sports Betting while Buffalo Bill Cody is a 9/2 shot.

The latter has won five of six career starts and in three runs over a mile has put a combined margin of 12,2 lengths between himself and the opposition. He is unexposed but could be anything.

Soqrat has a plum draw of three and regular pilot Randall Simons is up. 

Buffalo Bill Cody has a tough draw of ten and Gavin Lerena remains aboard having taken over from Simons last time.

Buffalo Bill Cody and Cascapedia travelled down from Cape Town on the Thursday two weeks ago and the journey went well.

The big Irish-bred mare had a tough race in the G-Bets Summer Cup where she finished a narrow 0,8 length third giving 2,5kg to the winner Tilbury Fort and 2kg to the runner up Dawn Assault.

However, the yard have freshened her up and Matthew said she was a happy horse at present.

He also believes she will appreciate the step down to 1800m.

“2000m stretches her,” he said.

Cascapedia has never raced in Grade 1 weight for age company and is up against the like of Equus Horse Of The Year Oh Susanna.

However, she is relatively unexposed having won six of ten career starts.

She jumps from a tricky draw of eight with Lerena up.

By David Thiselton

Owner of the Month – October 2018

GEOFF PERKINS

The Gold Circle Owner Award for the month has been bestowed on Geoff Perkins

With a love of horses that was deep in his heart from the time he was a small boy hearing stories of horses and racing from grandfather Donald Perkins who had been deeply involved in horseracing in the former Rhodesia, there was little surprise that at the age of nine he was learning to ride.

Thereafter,when the opportunity presented itself, the next step in his relationship with his favourite species came when moving into his late teens and he applied his riding talents as a work rider for trainer Gary Rich, son of the legendary racing character Des Rich who trained the Vodacom Durban July winner Lightning Shot back in 1977.

Geoff moved overseas for eight years during which he had no involvement in racing at all but when he returned he was encouraged by a friend to take a share in a racehorse. His involvement has grown over the years to the point that he is now involved as a shareholder in a number of horses “with a couple of trainers”.

During the month Geoff had three winners, one being his Curved Ball gelding Hard To Play in which he was the majority shareholder that secured his fifth win under Stuart Randolph for trainer Wendy Whitehead at Greyville.

“It was a good month for me and I have had another couple of wins since,” he said.

Well done Geoff.

2018 Nov Jockey of the Month copy

Jockey of the Month – November 2018

ANTON MARCUS

Anton Marcus is Gold Circle’s Jockey of the month.

It may be said that Anton gets all the best rides and for him to top the winner’s log for the month is nothing really to get excited about. But, for any jockey to get nearly 50% of his rides across the line first in one month is exceptional and if not a record, then very close to one.

Making the achievement even more remarkable is that it was not just a case of two out of four rides which is well within the scope of any jockey, but during November, in addition to his rides in other centres, Anton partnered 42 horses and steered 19 – 45.24% – into the winner’s box with eight of his other rides finishing in the placings.

That was an outstanding achievement and more than worthy of the award.

Well done Anton.

2018 Oct Jockey of the Month copy

Jockey of the Month – October 2018

WARREN KENNEDY

The Gold Circle Jockey Award for the month goes to Warren Kennedy

Dedication and perseverance have been part of everyday life for Warren who has stuck to his guns over the years in a tough business where he has had to compete against some of the greatest jockeys this country has produced including some that have proven themselves among the best in the world.

His reputation as a rider that does his best on every horse he partners now sees him sought after by many stables and during October threw a leg over 60 horses – 11 more than any other jockey – and steered 11 of those into the winner’s enclosure to top the jockey table for the province.

In addition, Warren is having success in other centres and is currently sixth on the National Jockey Log.

Well done Warren

2018 Sept jockey of the month

Jockey of the Month – September 2018

APPRENTICE LUKE FERRARIS

The Gold Circle Jockey Award for the month has been bestowed on apprentice Luke Ferraris

South Africa’s newest racing sensation, Luke Ferraris has the royal blue blood of South African racing running strongly through his veins being the grandson of legendary trainer Ormond Ferraris and son of top trainer David Ferraris who plies his trade in the East.

However, racing has shown that the right blood does not necessarily produce a champion and many hopefuls have failed.

Not with young Luke though. The young man has taken racing by storm to the extent that during the month he was engaged to ride in no less than 62 races – more than any other rider including some of the country’s leading jockeys. And he made the most of those opportunities finishing second to Anton Marcus on the KwaZulu-Natal jockey log with 11 winners and 12 placings with a win-place success strike rate of close to 40%.

It was a great performance for a young rider and more than worthy of the monthly award.

Well done Luke

2018 Trainer of the Month November copy

Trainer of the Month – November 2018

BRETT CRAWFORD

Brett Crawford is Gold Circle’s Trainer of the month.

Brett is one of a few out-of-province trainers operating satellite yards in KwaZulu-Natal with success and runners from the yard are always presented in top condition for the races they contest at Greyville or Scottsville.

Currently fifth on the National Trainer Log with the highest winner to runner percentage,runners out of his KwaZulu-Natal yard won 40% of the races they competed in. During the month the stable sent out 22 runners and won with nine of them with another three making the frame.

A stable always highly respected, it earned its rewards this month.

Well done Brett

2018 Trainer of the Month October copy

Trainer of the Month – October 2018

DENNIS BOSCH

The Gold Circle Trainer Award for the month goes to Dennis Bosch

Had he not had a battle with his weight, Dennis would undoubtedly have been a major contender for champion jockey over the many years when he displayed his talent as a jockey that was among the best the country had seen.

As a “heavyweight” rider he was limited to the number of rides he could take but when he got his chances it was a treat to see how he became one with his mounts and seemed to effortlessly extract the best from them.

Highly popular in the racing community with his jovial personality and among his patrons in particular, Dennis enjoyed a well-earned month to top the provincial trainer’s log with six winners and 13 places at a win-place strike rate of 51.35%.

Well done Dennis