Greyville Sunday 13/05/2018

Barrier trial Greyville poly 1000m 13/05/2018

1st Pickawinner (Ferraris -4 kg/Howells 2yog A 57kg draw 7) This unraced What A Winter gelding has a quick, daisy cutting action and showed good pace. Led from pillar to post while being kept on a tight hold so this was an eyecatching trial. 58.89 seconds

2nd 5,50 Perfect Air (Veale/Drier 3yof S 58kg draw 3) This Dynasty filly is out of SA Fillies Classic winner Icy Air and is a half-sister to Grade 2 Premier Trophy winner Icy Trail. She was unplaced in two races last November and has been laid off since. She digs the toe in and showed fair pace to be second throughout without being asked any questions. 59.89 seconds

3rd 6,75 Steelheart (Godden/Forbes 2yof S 56kg draw 1) This unraced Crusade filly was relaxed in midfield around the bend and the penny still has to drop, but she showed a fair action and has scope for improvement. 60.13 seconds

4th 6,90 Elegant Royal (Jacobson/B Crawford 2yof S 56kg draw 5) This unraced Sail From Seattle filly is a scopey sort. She wore ear muffs but overraced a bit. However, she displayed quite a big action and will have benefited from the outing. 60.16 seconds

5th 7,65 Paradise Song (Pagel/G S Kotzen 2yof A 56kg draw 2) This unraced Noble Tune filly fly-jumped twice and was tailed off. However, she then showed some fair pace to catch up before the bend and then stayed on with a nice action. 60.3 seconds

6th 7,90 Summer Day (Mohapi/N Kotzen 2yof s 56kg draw 4) This unraced Mambo In Seattle filly was green and a touch outpaced but stayed on quite well and will need further. 60.34 seconds

7th 11,90 Blitz Bok (Schwarz/Hill 2yog S 57kg draw 8) This Duke Of Marmalade gelding was dropped out but was green and outpaced and will likely need further. 61.11 seconds

8th 19,40 Peace Train (Samuel/Naidoo 3yoc A 59kg draw 6) This unraced Toreador colt was having his second barrier trial having been disqualified from the first and after showing some pace he appeared to be reluctant to gallop in the straight. 62.59 seconds

By David Thiselton

Greyville Friday 11/05/2018

Barrier trial Greyville poly 1000m 11/05/2018

1st Kateecador (L J Ferraris -4 kg/G H Van Zyl 3yof MR81 A 58kg draw 7) This Toreador filly has had one win over 1000m in seven sprint starts and had been laid off since January. She led from the off and let herself down nicely without being asked to do a lot. 58.75 seconds

2nd 0,5   Play Another Tune (J Gates -4 kg/G H Van Zyl 2yog A 57kg draw 6) This Noble Tune gelding has some good form, including an easy win over 1400m on the poly last time out in March. He is a rangy sort with a nice big action and showed a good turn of foot from a handy position. Good trial against older horses. 58.84 seconds

3rd 1,25 Royal Armour (Randolph/Forbes 5yog MR96 a t 60kg draw 1) This Jay Peg gelding is a seven-time winner, including the Fever Tree Stakes over 1400m at Scottsville, and he finished second in the Kings Cup last season. He battled in last year’s Champions Season and hasn’t raced since last July. He showed pace and in the straight was climbing all over the back of the leader before being switched in and coming home as he liked. 58.97 seconds

4th 6,25 Mr Bombastic (Kennedy/G H Van Zy 2yog A 57kg draw 9) This Visionaire gelding won on debut over 1200m on the poly and finished 2,75 lengths behind Play Another Tune over 1400 when giving him 3kg. He strode out well and stayed on nicely. 59.89 seconds

5th 6,50 Mysterious Omen (Jacobson/B Crawford 2yoc S 57kg draw 8) This unraced Captain Al colt is not the biggest but is athletic and displayed a fair action. He was on a tight hold until being niggled at towards the end and he responded well. 59.94 seconds

6th 6,55 Ready Set Go (Wright/Nel 4yof MR81 S 59kg draw 11) This Gimmethegreenlight filly has won twice over 1200m at Kenilworth but her KZN form in three starts was not as good and she has been laid off since last November. She overraced around the bend but stayed on quite well and would have benefitted from this trial. 59.95 seconds

7th 6,70 Vertical Descent (Samuel/Miller 2yoc A 57kg draw 10) This What A Winter colt won on debut over 800m in December when backed into even money, beating the like of Play Another Tune, but hasn’t raced since. He showed pace to go handy from a wide draw and then stayed on nicely. 59.97 seconds

8th 11,45 Boundless Deep (Pagel/G S Kotzen 2yof A 56kg draw 5) This unraced Var filly was green from the off but showed signs of speed and acceleration. 60.87 seconds

9th 11,70 Jurist (Ngwane/Drier 2yoc S      57kg draw 3) This unraced Judpot colt dwelt and was green. He quickened and stayed on well considering he was kept on a tight hold throughout. 60.92 seconds

10th 12,20 What A Red (Mgudlwa/Snaith 2yof A 56kg draw 4) This unraced What A Winter filly dwelt and was green but showed a fair action without being asked to do a lot. 61.02 seconds

11th 15,45 Woody Coast (Godden/Drier 2yog S 57kg draw 2) This unraced Sail From Seattle gelding showed pace but was green around the bend and was kept on a tight hold down the straight. 61.65 seconds

By David Thiselton

Pack Leader (Nkosi Hlophe)

Final Fields: Daily News and Supporting Features

Racing enthusiasts throughout the country and particularly those on course for Daily News Raceday at Greyville on Saturday, can look forward to three very exciting races where a host of Vodacom Durban July hopefuls, including four in the top six of the big race betting, will be in action.

Pack Leader (Nkosi Hlophe)

Pack Leader

At the final acceptance stage for the R2-million, Grade 1 Daily News 2000, the R1-million, Grade 1 Woolavington 2000 and the R300 000, Grade 3 Lonsdale Stirrup Cup, there were no July entries of significance that were withdrawn but Sean Tarry elected to run his Silvano filly Chariot Of Gold in the Woolavington 2000 and not the Daily News 2000 where she had also been a nominee.

Justin Snaith’s Twice Over gelding Do It Again, second favourite for the Vodacom Durban July on July 7, heads the 13-horse field for the Daily News 2000 with regular pilot Bernard Fayd’Herbe in the irons and the very inside draw from which to jump. While official betting for Saturday’s feature races were not available at the time of writing, the Daisy Guineas winner is likely to start the short-odds favourite.

The Glen Kotzen-trained Philanthropist colt Pack Leader that impressed in both the Investec Cape Derby where he finished third and the Sledgehammer at Greyville has drawn toward the outside while the Trippi gelding White River from the Brett Crawford stable will make his bid from the mid-field draw.

Snaith’s star filly Oh Susanna has stood her ground for the Woolavington 2000 and is likely to be on offer at prohibitive odds when official betting opens. She is drawn one from the outside of the 10-horse field and will undoubtedly be the exotic bet banker for most punters. However, the Duncan Howells-trained Captain Al filly Fiorella is not a runner to be ignored and with Muzi Yeni in the irons there will be some who believe she can beat Oh Susanna after having upstaged the Snaith stable companion, Snowdance, in the Daisy Fillies Guineas.

The Lonsdale Stirrup Cup has trimmed down to 12 runners with Dean Kannemeyer withdrawing four of his five nominees and leaving only the Silvano gelding Mr Winsome to fly the stable flag while Justin Snaith will campaign with three runners including the Dynasty gelding Made To Conquer that has won his last three starts.

Brett Crawford runs his Highland Night Cup winner Hero Quest while champion trainer Sean Tarry competes with Hyaku that finished second in that race and his four-year-old Dynasty colt Shenanigans that ran a good second over 2 000m at the Vaal last time out. Here are the final fields below.

By Richard McMillan.Daily News FF
Woolavington
LONSDALE

Byleveld confident

Jockey MJ Byleveld has no concern whatsoever about the 2000m trip for Tap O’ Noth ahead of the Grade 1 Daily News 2000 at Greyville on Saturday.

Byleveld was somewhat annoyed people had written the horse off as a non-stayer after just one run.

He said, “As a specimen from day one he has looked like a horse who would go a trip and I have no doubt he will stay.”

byleveld an

MJ Byleveld

Furthermore, the Captain Al colt is a half-brother to the useful stayer Strathdon, who has won a Grade 3 over 2500m and a Listed race over 2400m.

At the time of his run in the Grade 1 Cape Derby the Marshall yard had a problem with a virus which was affecting many horses.The yard were unable to find the reason for his well below par run in the Cape Derby but Byleveld pointed out he was not travelling well virtually from the off so was clearly not himself and the yard believe it had nothing to do with him not staying.

Tap O’ Noth’s SA Champions season pipe opener in the Grade 2 Daisy Guineas at Greyville was his first run since the Cape Derby and his 2,25 length third was also a touch disappointing considering he started favourite. However, Byleveld pointed out that being on the rail had not really suited him and both of his eyes were closed the next day too due to the kickback on the night. Tap O’ Noth is indeed a big, rangy type and would likely prefer some room to use his action.

Last week Tap O’ Noth was looking a picture at Summerveld and despite the cold weather had a gleaming coat.

Byleveld confirmed he was fit and doing very well and added, “We could not have him any better.”

Byleveld finished fourth for Marshall in two of the four Grade 1s on Saturday at Scottsville and eighth in the other two. He said about the two-year-old filly Canukeepitsecret, who finished fourth in the Allan Robertson and whom Marshall rates as good as her two Grade 1-winning sisters The Secret Is Out and All Is Secret, “She might just need blinkers. When the gap opened she fired but was a bit green.”

By David Thiselton

captain of all  lk site

Barrier trials future plans undecided

There are no plans – for the moment at any rate – to extend barrier trials to Cape Town and Johannesburg.

Phumelela boss Clyde Basel said: “It hasn’t been discussed yet but there is nothing on the table. We want to see what the upside is of the barrier trials in KZN.”

Racing there is run by Gold Circle which made the trials compulsory from March 1 for all newcomers and for any horse returning from a 150-day break. Phumelela runs racing in Cape Town and Johannesburg. A straw poll of trainers and punters at Kenilworth last Saturday revealed mixed views.

Captain Of All (left) winning the Diadem Stakes at Kenilworth on Saturday (Liesl King)

Picture supplied by Liesl King

Some of the older trainers said that the concept was tainted by the barrier trials staged in the 1990s when one unscrupulous trainer (long since dead) ran several horses in each one and manipulated them for the express purpose of hoodwinking the public and so getting a better price when his horses ran in an actual race.

Another said that in the summer the ground at Kenilworth is too firm to risk horses more than necessary but another was all for it and proposed staging them on alternate weeks at Kenilworth and Durbanville, the latter being filmed if the trials did not coincide with a racemeeting.

In the betting hall they still remember the villain of the 1990s – “He certainly didn’t help the punter. He was the biggest crook of the lot” – but they thought such trials would help with assessing two-year-olds.

Up in the Pocket Power lounge one racegoer, who seldom misses a meeting, ruled out any repeat of the old villainy, saying: “Things are more transparent these days, and anything that can be done to improve things for the punter would be welcomed.”

The trials would have obvious benefits with unraced horses – for punters, trainers and the animals themselves – particularly as the Cape Town training facilities are inferior to those at Summerveld. They would also be beneficial with horses returning after a break.

So often punters hear, or read, that a horse is “just having a gallop” and they are immediately placed in a quandary. The message is clear – the horse is not that busy. But such horses sometimes win, and often they are placed. They cannot be safely ignored. If the horse could be sidestepped into a barrier trial (where there is no betting), everybody would benefit.

By Michael Clower

Vaughan Marshall

Marshall steps in with One World

Vaughan Marshall steps into the season-long two-year-old battle between Joey Ramsden and Candice Bass-Robinson at Kenilworth today and he just might beat them both with One World in the 1 400m Juvenile Plate (race four)

The Cape Town score stands at Ramsden 14 and Mrs Robinson 13 whereas Marshall has had only seven but One World made a huge impression when winning on debut at the end of March. Heavily backed, he led two furlongs out, was ridden clear and won by three lengths pulling up. Marshall (“I didn’t think anything could beat him”) promptly started talking in terms of the Langerman.

Vaughan Marshall

Vaughan Marshall

The form was nothing to write home about – the second horse was perpetual bridesmaid Frozen Tune and none of those behind has won since – but the impression was memorable.

There is no question that Arabian Air’s form is stronger and he has been backed from 18-10 to 15-10 favourite with World Sports Betting which has One World on 17-10. The Ramsden horse looked a bit special when easily beating older horses on debut and 11 days later went down narrowly to stable companion Twist Of Fate (disappointing at Scottsville on Saturday) after hanging in the last two furlongs. He had the third three lengths back and his trainer said afterwards: “He is a very good horse but he had the worst preparation.”

Ramsden runs four others, the shortest-priced of which is the 11-2 shot Lucky Dancer who was also second to Twist Of Fate last time but was beaten two and a half lengths. That said, he met the stable companion at levels whereas Arabian Air was receiving 2kg.

For once the Bass-Robinson runner does not look good enough. Sacred Arrow (11-1) won at Durbanville and only by three-quarters of a length. While the form book says Arabian Air the memory goes for One World.

In the Betting World Juvenile Fillies Ramsden (four runners) and Bass-Robinson (two) have it between them. With no Go The Distance ( lame and scratched), it looks a straight fight between 9-10 favourite Sans Regrets and Cruise Along (22-10) whose second to Canukeepitsecret reads well after Scottsville. Marginal preference is for Sans Regrets.

In the opening Juvenile Fillies the Brett Crawford-trained Vodka Lime may have come on sufficiently to beat the equally lightly raced Margrethe while Blue Roller’s seconds to Rainbow Bridge and Arabian Air suggest she is a stand-out for TAB Telebet Maiden despite the strong recent form claims of the busy Seventh Sea.

Flower Of Carmel’s below-par last effort is apparently something of a mystery to her stable and so Clifton Beach is preferred in the Tabonline.co.za Maiden.

By Michael Clower

Lady In Black (Candiese Marnewick)

Drier sends out his Lady In Black

The Dennis Drier yard are on a high after landing their 9th Scottsville Grade 1 victory and 11th overall on Saturday and they are now looking forward to a big run from Lady In Black in the Grade 1 Woolavington 2000 at Greyville on Saturday.

Drier is not a believer in the “second run after a rest” theory, which some racing people are adamant about, but the Dynasty filly did run a below par 2,85 length fifth in the Grade 2 Daisy Fillies Guineas last time having won impressively in her SA Champions Season pipe opener in the Grade 3 Umzimkhulu Stakes over 1400m.

Lady In Black (Candiese Marnewick)

Lady In Black (Candiese Marnewick)

Drier said, “She is very well. Last time she ran three wide and the race just didn’t go well for her. Justin Snaith’s filly Oh Susanna is a champion and she is the one we have got to beat but Lady In Black couldn’t be better and has come on a lot for that last run, she will be a different filly on Saturday.

Lady In Black is drawn three out of a disappointing ten nominations. Stable jockey Sean Veale, who rode Var filly Sommerlied to victory in the SA Fillies Sprint on Saturday, will be aboard as usual. Lady In Black was initially an entry for the Vodacom Durban July, but was scratched after the Daisy Fillies Guineas and will stick to the fillies route.

Drier’s Grade 1 day started badly on Saturday when his joint favourite for the Allan Robertson Outlandos D’Amour finished unplaced.

He said he did not want to use the long delay at the start as an excuse but added, “She is usually so laid back, but she was in a muck sweat by the time she loaded and then played up in the pens.”

He believed this Captain Al filly would stay further than sprints, but both hers and Sommerlied’s futures would be under discussion.

Drier had three runners in a strong renewal of the Tsogo Sun Gold Medallion and he claimed a fourth place with the Master Of My Fate colt Goliath Heron.

By David Thiselton

Sommerlied (Candiese Marnewick)

Drier’s dominance continues

Dennis Drier clinched his ninth Grade 1 victory at Scottsville this decade when Sommerlied won the SA Fillies Sprint on Saturday and it provided an eighth victory in the space of ten years for the progeny of Avontuur Thoroughbred Farm stallions.

Avontuur have been closely associated with the Festival Of Speed meeting in this period through their stallion Var, the sire of Sommerlied. Their newer stallion Oratorio has now joined the party as he scored a one-two in Grade 1 Tsogo Sun Gold Medallion courtesy of the Tobie Spies-trained Van Halen and the Dennis Bosch-trained Cue The Music.

The four-year-old filly Sommerlied is the holder of the Scottsville 1000m course record but proved she could stay 1200m when winning the Grade 3 Poinsettia in yielding going at Scottsville four weeks ago at odds of 16/1. Ominously, the yard said she had still probably needed that run, her first since returning from a highly disappointing campaign in Cape Town, so it was surprising she was allowed to go off at odds of 15/1 on Saturday.

Sommerlied (Candiese Marnewick)

Sommerlied (Candiese Marnewick)

She jumped well from draw four under Sean Veale and the writing was on the wall for her opponents by the 500m mark as the speedy Jo’s Bond had provided her with a perfect tow. Veale then switched her inward and she was still full of running when hitting the front at the 300m mark. She fended off the favourite Magical Wonderland to win cosily by 1,5 lengths with another KZN horse, Neptune’s Rain, a short-head back in third. Vaughan Marshall’s The Secret Is Out, a previous Grade 1 Allan Robertson winner, emulated her full-sister and stablemate Canukeepitsecret, who had earlier finished fourth in the Alan Robertson. Jo’s Bond was one position worse than last year in fifth.

Drier has walked away with at least one Grade 1 trophy from this meeting in every year this decade apart from 2016. It started with Link Man winning the Gold Medallion in 2010, then Val De Ra won the SA Fillies Sprint in 2011. Potent Power, Captain Of All, Guiness, Seventh Plain and Sand And Sea won the Gold Medallion in 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015 and 2017 respectively, Captain Of All won the Tsogo Sun Sprint in 2015 and Sommerlied made it nine this decade. Drier’s first Scottsville Grade 1 success was way back in 1990 with Spook and Diesel in the Gold Medallion, then known as the Smirnoff Plate.

Var’s run at this meeting began in 2008 when the Vaughan Marshall-trained Villandry won the Gold Medallion. He produced the winner of the SA Fillies Sprint for three years in succession from 2011 courtesy of Val De Ra and the Duncan Howells-trained Via Africa, who won it twice in a row. In 2012 and 2013 he also produced the winner of the Tsogo Sun Sprint through the Charles Laird-trained pair Contador and Normanz.

Sommerlied became Var’s career eighth individual Grade 1 winner and his progeny have now scored 16 Grade 1 victories in total. He is a speed stallion yet his greatest progeny was the magnificent miler Variety Club.

In Saturday’s Gold Medallion the previously unbeaten colt Cue The Music looked set to justify favouritism. He had been up with the pace throughout and kicked ahead at the 400m mark. Unfortunately, he had not had any cover throughout and began wobbling under the right-handed stick in the final 300m. The strapping gelding Van Halen was thus able to reverse form with him under a fine ride by Craig Zackey, who got him up by a quarter-of-a-length. It was the wrong order for Avontuur as they bred Cue The Music, who is a half-brother to Val De Ra. Van Halen’s slow start turned out to be a blessing in disguise as Zackey had originally intended to “bowl him” in front due to his tremendous speed. Zackey had felt he was a 1000m specialist the first-time he rode him and praised the Spies yard for the stamina work they had put into him. Van Halen showed a tremendous turn of foot from off the pace.

Oratorio was described by Timeform of 2005 as “sturdy, good-bodied, who usually impressed in appearance.” He has stamped his progeny and Van Halen is a classic example as he is a magnificent specimen. Cue The Music is also strongly built and like Val De Ra has a magnificent racing temperament.

The purchase of Oratorio was a coup for Avontuur as he was one of the legendary Danehill’s best sons on the racecourse and before his first crop had raced here he had already produced over 40 stakes winners around the world.

By David Thiselton

Brett Crawford (Nkosi Hlophe)

Crawford bucks the handicapper

Brett Crawford proved at Scottsville that the practice of protecting handicap marks can be counter-productive when his three-year-old Bold Silvano gelding Bold Respect clinched the Listed In Full Flight Handicap/Grade 1 Tsogo Sun Sprint double.

Brett Crawford (Nkosi Hlophe)

Brett Crawford

In 2015 Crawford had Gulf Storm well enough to win the In Full Flight Handicap and despite the horse being raised nine points for that win he went on to finish second in the Tsogo Sun Sprint to the brilliant Captain Of All.

Bold Respect was also in good enough shape to win the In Full Flight in his SA Champions Season pipe opener four weeks ago. He was raised five points by the handicapper but the effort in going all out in that race not only brought him to his peak, but it also gave the yard confidence. Crawford had pointed out last week a first outing at Scottsville was always tough for a horse and they would likely be better in their next attempt. Bold Respect duly more than made up the required 2,5kg improvement by winning the Tsogo Sun even more easily. In the In Full Flight he beat his stable companion Sunset Eyes by half-a-length and on 1kg worse terms beat him by 2,5 lengths in the Tsogo Sun. Sunset Eyes finished third, 0,75 lengths behind the Dorrie Sham-trained Pinnacle Peak, who made it a Grade 1 runner up double. It was a rare one-two for three-year-olds in the race. Sham said after the Querari gelding had finished second in the Computaform Sprint that she was thrilled to just have a runner in the SA Champions Season. Pinnacle Peak gave Bold Respect half-a-kilogram and will no doubt be back to contest the Grade 1 Mercury Sprint.

Bold Respect jumped well and Corne Orffer was happy to let him use his big action in front. Pinnacle Peak lay second throughout on the outside. The perfect horse for Scottsville’s tough track is one that has both the speed to free-wheel down the hill and then produce a kick to put the opposition under pressure when the climb begins at the 500m mark. Bold Respect duly responded well to Orffer’s urging at the 400m mark and his long stride did the rest. He never looked in danger of defeat and justified 113-20 second favouritism. The favourite Kasimir, jumping from draw one, moved up well at the 400m mark but his effort petered out and his sixth place completed a day to forget for the national champion elect yard of Justin Snaith.

Bold Respect, considering the speed and class he showed, will likely start favourite for the Mercury Sprint. On Saturday he received 3kg from the Computaform Sprint winner Attenborough and beat him by four lengths.

This was Crawford’s first Grade 1 win this season. Last year he won six, including the Rising Sun Gold Challenge with Captain America, who runs in the same Delmar and Lance Sherrell-owned black and white colours as Bold Respect.

By David Thiselton

Jeff Lloyd (Supplied)

Rocket Countdown needs to make the cut

Jeff Lloyd will have his final throw of the Vodacom Durban July dice on board Rocket Countdown if the Selangor Cup winner makes the cut.

The Guv’nor’s rides on the big day are being organised by Deez Dayanand but his trip is sponsored by Kuda Insurance whose managing director Wehann Smith is part-owner of Rocket Countdown – and the booking was confirmed straight after the horse finished second to the unbeaten Rainbow Bridge in Saturday’s Winter Classic.

Jeff Lloyd (Supplied)

Jeff Lloyd (Supplied)

At the moment the gelding is just one of seven listed immediately below the July log’s top twenty but he has crowd-pulling appeal way above the other six. In addition to his legendary jockey, who will be bidding to finally win the great race at the 26th attempt and will hang up his boots shortly afterwards, the horse is trained by the history-making Candice Bass-Robinson who became the first of her sex to train the winner (Marinaresco) last year and in her first season at that.

She has been in blistering form all this season and she has no doubt about her horse’s claims to get into the race, saying: “Why shouldn’t he get in? He deserves his place in the line-up after winning a Grade 2, he was giving weight all round in the Winter Classic, he will enjoy Greyville and he has a turn of foot. I want him to run.”

Oh Susanna, who could create a vacancy as Snaith Racing has said that she is only 50:50 to run, is a prohibitive 4-10 for the Woolavington at Greyville on Saturday, her first race since winning the Sun Met. World Sports Betting quotes Fiorella as 11-2 second favourite and goes 11-1 Lady In Black, 13-1 Elusive Heart, 22-1 and upwards others.

Daisy Guineas winner and leading Durban July fancy Do It Again is 7-2 favourite for the Daily News on the same card with Surcharge on 5-1, Pack Leader next at 6-1 and Majestic Mambo on 15-2.

By Michael Clower