captainalfreemanstallions

Business as usual for Klawervlei

Klawervlei owner John Koster is full of anticipation for the forthcoming Investec Cape Derby, where the late great Klawervlei Stud stallion Captain Al will attempt to make it a clean-sweep of the Cape Summer classics.

Captain Al’s second last crop will be at the Sales this year and Koster described it as “by far the best” of any of his crops from a pedigree point of view.

Klawervlei will be sending one of their strongest ever drafts to the forthcoming CTS Cape Premier Yearling Sale (CPYS).

captainalfreemanstallions

Captain Al (FreemanStallions)

Included in this draft are two by the legendary Frankel and one by the sensational speed stallion Scat Daddy. The latter was the leading North American freshman sire in 2011, and in 2015 he broke the North American record for the number of juvenile stakes winners in a season with nine. The Group 1-winning colts Carravagio and Sioux Nation and the Group 1-winning filly Lady Aurelia have seen Scat Daddy dominating the big Royal Ascot sprint races over the last two seasons. His son Mendelssohn also recently won the Group 1 Breeders Cup Juvenile Turf. Scat Daddy’s yearling filly on offer at the CPYS is out of a Myboycharlie mare who won once over seven furlongs in Ireland. However, she is in turn out of the Paris House mare Misty Eyed, who won a Gr 3 over five furlongs as a juvenile and later finished second in the King’s Stand Stakes. This Scat Daddy filly (lot 140) will be packed with speed, so should be suited to South African conditions, considering the Royal Ascot going this year was good to firm.

Equus Champion Sprinter Captain Of All will have his first progeny on sale at the CPYS.

Koster said the sales inspectors had been full of praise for the yearlings of this magnificent looking son of Captain Al.

Six of his ten lots will be consigned by Klawervlei.

Klawervlei will also be creating what Koster believes is South African breeding history at CPYS by consigning two Argentinian-breds.

Argentinian-breds running in South Africa are invariably imported.

The first of the two lots is by Equal Stripes, sire of the like of South African Grade 1-winner Bambina Stripes, out of a dual Grade 2-winning mare by Not For Sale. The second is by Exchange Rate out of an unraced half-sister to a Grade 1-winner.

The Captain Al’s will be one of the CPYS highlights and Klawervlei are consigning 16 of his 27 lots.

The one Koster is most excited about is Lot 35, who is a half-brother to Antonoe, a Group 1-winner in the USA. Also among their Captain Als are a half-brother to Via Africa, a full-brother to All Is Secret, a full-brother to Like A Panther, a colt out of a half-sister to Kentucky Derby winner Monarchos and a filly out of a three-quarters sister to Kentucky Derby winner Giacomo.

Meanwhile, Captain Al’s Cape Guineas-winning son William Longsword has excellent fertility and among the 80 top quality mares he covered in his first season are the respective dams of Via Africa, Like A Panther, Edict Of Nantes, Fly By Night, Trust Antonia, Paterfamilias and Gibraltar Blue.

Klawervlei’s new chestnut stallion Coup De Grace, a Group 2 winner in the USA who is the only son of Tapit to have stood in South Africa, has really stamped his first crop.

“They are like peas in a pod,” said Koster.

Captain Al has scored a rare Grade 1 Cape Fillies Guineas and Cape Guineas double with Snowdance and Tap O’ North this season.

His best chances of winning the Cape Derby will be through Tap O’ Noth and Cape Guineas third-placed Like A Panther, but they will face strong opposition.

By David Thiselton

Sir Bernardini (Candiese Marnewick)

Sir Bernadini does the business

The switch from the Scottsville turf to the Greyville poly track yesterday resulted in a plethora of scratchings but the move will have been music to Dennis Bosch who saddled Sir Bernadini in the Blinkers Bar Handicap.

Well fancied over a mile on debut, the Australian-bred gelding with a touch of an American dirt pedigree, revelled on the synthetic surface and landed the odds in good fashion.

Sir Bernadini was given a hefty rating by the handicappers but their assessment proved fully justified as the favourite kept a clean sheet, this time under Anthony Delpech, keeping a charging Verdier and the fancied Archilles at bay. The former was having his first outing for Mark Dixon after showing some useful form in the Cape behind the much-touted African Night Sky in the Winter Series and he is definitely one for the notebook or the ‘Follow Me’ app available on TABgold.

Sir Bernardini (Candiese Marnewick)

Sir Bernardini (Candiese Marnewick)

Louis Goosen had Archilles lined-up for a crack on the Scottsville turf but the switch of surface dampened his confidence as he expressed candidly in his post-race interview in the winner’s box after Gratuity continued her good form in the Rockafellas Restaurant Handicap.

Not always easy to handle, Gratuity was given a copybook ride by Gunter Wrogemann who had piloted her to her most recent victory over course and distance beating smart stable companion Captain’s Girl.

Shifting Gears is another Goosen runner that has taken to the poly but this time around she found one too good in the form of Pearl Glow. Dean Kannemeyer’s filly made amends for her penultimate disappointment when a beaten odds-on favourite by shedding her maiden next time out. That form looked compromised by second-placed Holy Flame running a dismal race next time out but Duncan Howells reported to the stipendiary stewards that she had returned with a swollen eye from a clod in the face which would have accounted for that below par performance. However, Pearl Glow did start at the top of the boards.

Anton Marcus looked to have timed his run to perfection on Miziara in the sixth, making his move at the top of the straight, but in spite of giving his mount a breather after the subway, it was not enough as Keagan de Melo steamed home aboard the Yogas Govender-trained Komeshans Flight, nailing Miziara on the line.

Dixon may have had to settle for second with Verdier but there were no mistakes in the Racing. It’s A Rush Handicap as the run of winning favourites continued. De Melo had no hesitation in taking top weight Fantasy Lady to the head of affairs and she was never in danger as all challengers wilted around her.

By Andrew Harrison

Gavin Lerena

Kilrain can make amends

The Vaal Classic Track stages a nine race meeting tomorrow and Kilrain could make amends in the highest rated race of the day, an MR 87 Handicap over 1700m.

In his penultimate start over 1700m the six-year-old gelding by Dynasty was staying on well over 1800m when he and most of the field were taken out by the hanging antics of the runner up Hidden Agenda. Tomorrow he faces Hidden Agenda on 1,5kg worse terms despite being beaten by him in that aforementioned race, but he could well have beaten the latter with a clear run that day. His only run since then was not a bad 3,6 length fourth in the Michaelmas over 1900m on the Greyville polytrack, considering he was found to be coughing.

Gavin Lerena

Gavin Lerena

Gavin Lerena up is a bonus and as a hold up type the tricky draw of six in a nine horse field should not be too bothersome. Tommy Waterdevil has improved with the application of cheek pieces and went close from a similar draw last time over 1600m in soft going at Turffontein despite being bumped twice. He did make a respiratory noise that day though and also has to overcome a two point merit rated raise. Hidden Agenda is distance suited and should be right there but he has had a busy campaign. This will be his third run with blinkers on. Malinga rose through the ranks last season with three nice handicap wins from 1800-2000m. However, he was well beaten by Hidden Agenda over 1800m in May, when reportedly making a breathing noise. He is better than that run and as a son of Silvano should still be capable of improvement as a five-year-old.

However, this is his second run after a layoff and the trip is sharper than ideal. Rushmore River is a six-time winner who has dropped to an attractive merit rating on his best form and this is his third run after a layoff. However, that layoff was over a year long, so he obviously has his problems. Tandava has shown signs of class on occasion so is interesting with the blinkers removed over a trip which is longer than he is used to running over. Bold Viking has talent and appears to be effected by breathing issues so can’t be relied on. However, he is tough to ignore off a 78 merit rating. Street Flyer looks likely to be stretched by the trip. Odd Rob would prefer further and his resolve is sometimes questionable as he  moves up well but then does not find a lot.

The best bet of the day could be in race 8, where Star Of Joburg runs in a MR 66 Handicap over 1200m. When he won his maiden last time in an uninspiring field he was drawn on the wrong side of the track and only won by half-a-length. Therefore his 74 merit rating could be lenient and this time he is well drawn with Gavin Lerena up.

In the previous race the talented Alex The Great could also provide a winner for Championship-chasing Lerena. He has been dropped a further point by the handicapper and has his third run after gelding from a good draw over a suitable trip.

By David Thiselton

Last Winter (Nkosi Hlophe)

Handicappers not impressed

…who raised him only half a kilo to 107 for his narrow defeat in last Saturday’s Premier Trophy. Legal Eagle is rated 123 and Edict Of Nantes 118.

Dean Kannemeyer (Nkosi Hlophe)

Dean Kannemeyer

But Dean Kannemeyer was unruffled by this news yesterday, saying: “He is improving and he has come out of the race fine. My feeling is that he will go straight there as I would rather have fresh legs for the Met. I don’t want to rip his guts out in the Queen’s Plate in the interim.”

This year’s Cape Guineas was a couple of kilos or so below last year’s race when William Longsword came out of it on a mark of 109 and second-placed Gold Standard was rated 108.

The handicappers have raised Tap O’Noth five points to 104 and runner-up White River 11 to 103. Like A Panther (third off 94) and Cot Campbell (fourth off 87) have both been re-assessed at 100.

Matthew Lips said: “The winner may well be better than this but he seems to be one of those that doesn’t win by big margins. Also there weren’t too many highly rated horses going into the race and many of them finished in a heap.”

Tap O’Noth was reported in good shape yesterday by Vaughan Marshall who confirmed that the colt will not run again before the Investec Cape Derby on Met day. “Years of experience – never rush things,” he said.

Bold Respect, who warranted a stipe-ordered veterinary inspection after dropping out rapidly in the final two furlongs to finish with only two behind him, was also reported fine. “He pulled very hard and didn’t settle,” said Brett Crawford who now intends dropping him in trip.

Last Winter (Nkosi Hlophe)

Last Winter

African Night Sky is as short as 17-2 for the Met and so his 1 400m gallop before racing at Kenilworth last Saturday was particularly interesting. Bernard Fayd’Herbe rode the Winter Series winner who was tucked in behind as Robert Khathi set a decent pace on Heartland from Star Chestnut (Grant van Niekerk). Another Night Sky moved up well early in the straight but he tired before the end and couldn’t get past the other two.

First impressions were not encouraging but Chris Snaith pointed out that he was giving away up to 10kg to the other two and Fayd’Herbe said: “It was a good gallop and I am sure he will progress from this. He is still a bit heavy but then that is why he was galloped.”

Justin Snaith added: “It was what I expected. I deliberately made it very hard for African Night Sky – the other two are the best 1 400m horses I have and they were super ready. I think a lot of him and I wouldn’t be doing all this if I didn’t think he has a chance in the Queen’s Plate and the Met.”

Brother Jonathan, an astute student of the form book, reckons that the four-year-old is a better horse than his 102 rating would suggest although he makes the point that the gelding is “more of a Met horse than a Queen’s Plate horse.”

By Michael Clower

Louis Goosen (Nkosi Hlophe)

Shifting Gears back on the poly

It didn’t take a rocket scientist to work out that the heavy rain and persistent showers over the past three days would result in today’s scheduled Scottsville meeting moved to the Greyville poly track.

However, the move has led to a plethora of withdrawals due to the change of surface and punters are advised to get up to date before placing bets.

Louis Goosen (Nkosi Hlophe)

Louis Goosen

Louis Goosen, successful with a double on the weekend, will have taken the switch of surface in his stride as the chances of his filly Shifting Gears were given a boost with the scratching of two of her more prominent rivals, Fiorella and Sitia.

Shifting Gears has come into her own on the poly track and romped home in her maiden win two starts back. That form has been franked with second-placed Green Fairy a subsequent winner.

Lightly raced, she could prefer this shorter trip.

Pearl Glow was a recent maiden winner but does look progressive and could rate the biggest threat to Shifting Gears. Second-placed Holy Flame in that maiden was down the field at her next start but returned with a swollen eye which will account for that poor showing, so Pearl Glow does look capable of following up.

Emma’s Oracle and High Altar are two further casualties of the change in surface but Duncan Howells has a third strong to his bow in Miziara who can provide effective back-up.

Although never in the hunt behind Hastagyolo in the KZN Fillies Guineas Trial, she had shown promise before that and with poly track master Anton Marcus back in the irons she could prove too strong for Miss Carrera and recent maiden winner Everlasting Love.

Racing is on the Greyville poly on Friday evening where the Frank Robinson-trained Roy’s Riviera can add to the Christmas coffers. Robinson had a tilt at the lucrative Highveld races on offer on Summer Cup day and Roy’s Riviera, although beaten nearly five lengths by Folk Dance, was far from disgraced and should have a bright chance of adding a second victory to her CV.

The Australian-bred has yet to finish out of the money and although she takes on some more salted opposition the signs are that she is capable.

The Highveld is never an easy place to raid but Roy’s Riviera acquitted herself well and showed that the form behind the promising Hashtagyolo and Fiorella does hold some water.

She shed her maiden on the poly and over what looks to be her optimum trip at this stage and a handy weight, she looks a serious contender.

Dangers include Parabola, winner first time out on her KZN debut for Brett Crawford and bottom weight Bridal Veil who should much prefer this mile to the 1000m dash of her last start.

By Andrew Harrison

Tap O’Noth scores major win for Fosters

Alec had initially been concerned when Tap O’Noth drew widest of all in the 14-horse field.

However, trainer Vaughan Marshall, who has now won the Cape Guineas five times, put his mind at rest when pointing out he had twice won the big race from wide draws, with Captain Al in 2000 and with Captain Al’s son William Longsword last year.

Tap O' Noth (Liesl King)

Tap O’ Noth (Liesl King)

MJ Byleveld produced one of the rides of the season on William Longsword last year and repeated the feat on Saturday.

He bided his time out wide before choosing the right moment and acting decisively, slotting the rangy Captain Al colt into a midfield position. Thereafter he had cover throughout behind Undercover Agent.

Tap O’Noth moved up well in the straight under hands and heels and when asked the question showed a fine turn of foot to win cosily by half-a-length, despite tending to hang inward.

Alec had been privy to Marshall and Byleveld’s pre-race strategy and said, “The plan worked out perfectly. It was a fantastic ride.”

The Fosters watched from Marshall’s box and Alec understated, “There was a lot of noise!”

Later, the Foster owned-and-bred four-year-old gelding Strathdon, a Justin Snaith-trained half-brother to Tap O’Noth, won the Grade 3 Mahala TV Cape Summer Stayers Handicap over 2500m.

Alec believes Tap O’Noth will stay the trip of the Grade 1 Investec Cape Derby, but cautioned, “It’s only when they actually go over 2000m that you know.”

He also pointed out Strathdon was by the stamina influence Silvano, who is from German blood he had always liked.

Saturday’s Cape Guineas was the third Grade 1 victory for the Fosters, whose participation in South African racing stretches back to 1985, and Alec considered it their most important win.

He said, “If you go back and look at the past winners of the Guineas it has been won by significant colts who have gone on to be stallions and the Fillies Guineas has been won by some wonderful fillies. I would rather win a Classic than the Met or the July. The big handicap races are fantastic days and I always support them, but from a pure breeding perspective the Classic races are literally the classic races.”

byleveld an

MJ Byleveld

He spoke of the long road between planning a thoroughbred breeding and the resultant progeny winning a race.

He said, “It is a very up-and-down sport and not only do you get both geese and swans but mares can get colic, foals can be kicked and you can lose horses. So when you win a race with a horse you have bred it is incredibly rewarding.”

This would especially be the case for the Fosters as Alec describes themselves as “small breeders” and in some scenarios “very small breeders.”

Alec farms cattle in the UK, so has learnt a lot about breeding livestock and sums it up simply, “When you have a very good bull and good cows, you will produce top quality cattle. It is exactly the same in horseracing.”

Not only did Tap O’Noth’s champion sire Captain Al win the Cape Guineas, but his dam Wintersweet is by champion sire Western Winter, who has produced two Cape Guineas winners.

However, a lot is still about chance and Alec said, “Every horse you breed you have a champion in mind, but you can’t dictate whether he will be a champion or a plodder.”

Wintersweet is out of the Elliodor mare, Air Of Elegance, who was bought for the Fosters by John Freeman from Wilfred Koster in 1994.

Air Of Elegance only won one race but became a stalwart for the Fosters in the breeding shed as she also produced Wintersweet’s full-sister Grace Me Guide, a twice Grade 3-placed horse who has produced Graded winners Black Arthur and Robert The Bruce, Grade 1-placed M’Lord’s Throat, Grade 3 runner-up Glenton and five-time winner Ochoncar. All five of these horses ran in the Fosters’ familiar scarlet and gold colours.

Alec took a share in Western Winter early as he was involved in insuring the great stallion.

They had a share in Captain Al and have shares in Dynasty, Gimmethegreenlight and Twice Over, but also send mares to other stallions after doing their pedigree match ups.

They have a house in Cape Town and plan their breeding together with John Freeman shortly before returning to the U.K. in March.

Justin Snaith

Justin Snaith

Alec first visited South Africa in 1977 with the Eton Ramblers cricket team and toured with them again in 1981.

He liked South Africa and had always been interested in racing as his family were involved in the sport in the early part of last century.

On one of the cricket tours Alec stayed with Denham Rodwell, owner of the great Wolf Power. He later helped Rodwell find Hot Touch from the U.K and took a share in this horse. Hot Touch finished third in the Champions Stakes and won the Clairwood Gold Vase. When he went to stud Alec bought a mare to be covered by Hot Touch. The resultant filly Steamy Window won four races, including the Grade 1 Natal Oaks. Their breeding interest has grown from that good start. They also buy the odd filly at the sales.

They used to keep their mares at Summerhill, but the stallion strength later moved to the Cape and their mares moved down their. Their mares board at Varsfontein today.

Their horses are trained by Marshall and Snaith in Cape Town and they also have a long association with the late Stanley and Allan Greeff yard from Port Elizabeth.

The Fosters’ second Grade 1 victor was in the 2001 Gold Cup with the Greeff-trained Cereus.

The Foster’s colours are the same as those of Alec’s grandfather, who bred the 1923 Ascot Gold Vase winner.

By David Thiselton

Edict Of Nantes (Nkosi Hlophe)

Edict Of Nantes drifting

Edict Of Nantes has gone for a walk in the Sun Met betting and since Saturday morning he has drifted from 3-1 joint favourite with Legal Eagle to 11-2 with World Sports Betting. Legal Eagle remains unchanged on 3-1. Betting World has suspended its prices on the race since Saturday.

Edict Of Nantes (Nkosi Hlophe)

Edict Of Nantes

The easing of the price just might relate to unconfirmed website reports that Edict Of Nantes may be sold to Hong Kong interests. Mayfair Speculators manager Derek Brugman was unavailable for comment yesterday.

In contrast the Brett Crawford-trained four-year-old is 28-10 with WSB for the L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate with Legal Eagle (now owned by Braam van Huyssteen and his partners) 14-10 favourite to win the race for the third successive year.

Captain America is next in the betting at 10-1 along with Last Winter even though the latter is far from certain to run.

In the Paddock Stakes (now sponsored by Cartier) the Mike de Kock-trained Nother Russia has been installed 3-1 favourite with Gimme Six 6-1 and Nightingale 7-1. Last Saturday’s Victress winner Star Express is a 10-1 chance.

By Michael Clower

Edict Of Nantes (Nkosi Hlophe)

Vote for Big Pleasure

Anton Marcus could dominate today’s racing at Kenilworth where the four-time champion has six mounts and five of them are favourites.

He starts with Big Pleasure who in fact has drifted in the market for the TAB Telebet Graduation. World Sports Betting opened the Joey Ramsden three-year-old at 22-10 but he has gone out to 28-10 as the money has come for Loadshedder.

The Andre Nel runner has the form to win and is rated to do so but a few of the stable’s runners have performed a bit below par recently (Hoist The Mast in the Southern Cross was a notable exception) and the two due to run last Saturday were both scratched as they were coughing. In the circumstances the vote goes to Big Pleasure.

Anton Marcus (Liesl King)

Anton Marcus (Liesl King)

The once-raced Power Of Peace, on the other hand, has been backed for the mile maiden 35 minutes later and has shortened from 19-10 to 11-10. He also started favourite when only third in a five-runner maiden 19 days ago but is bound to have come on from that. Psychic (4-1) from the Sean Tarry stable, and Parisian Gold (10-1) are close on last time’s run and, together with 9-2 shot Earl Of Warwick, look the dangers.

Perfectproportions steps up to a mile in the Betting World Maiden (race four) and the 12-10 favourite could be another for the former champion. The filly probably has most to fear from Anina (9-2) who went close over a furlong less last time.

Kampala Campari looks the one in race five, the Play Soccer Handicap, and the Nel runner shares 5-2 favouritism with Marcus’s mount The Great One who is certainly good enough to expose any chinks in the armour of his principal opponent.

Big Mistake is hard to oppose in race seven after his fifth from a wide draw in the Lanzerac Ready To Run but watch out for Purple Mountains who has only gone up a kilo for coming back to form last time and is still rated 20 points below the mark he had a year ago.

“He got sore in his joints when he went to Durban, he went stale and we battled with him,” recalls Glen Puller. “We sent him to the farm for a break, did physio on him and he has turned around. He has a nice low rating and he has to have a chance.”

Marcus’s final ride is on 28-10 favourite Still I Rise in race eight. This filly has been a bit a disappointing since making a winning debut and she might be vulnerable under top weight.

Prince Oracy’s last run suggests he is the one to get punters off the mark at 5-2 in the opener but it is significant that Corne Orffer rides newcomer Bwana (7-2) in preference to his two more experienced stable companions . “He is a very nice horse who has been working well although, being a first-timer, he will probably need it a bit,” says Brett Crawford.

By Michael Clower

Last Winter (Nkosi Hlophe)

Last Winter leaves them cold

The four-year-old might have lost his unbeaten record – albeit only by the skin of his teeth – but he lost nothing else in a performance that confirmed his potential star quality.

For much of the race 22-1 shot Milton looked like bringing off another of his now-famous front-running shocks with Gavin Lerena conjuring a bit more each time he looked under threat.

Last Winter (Nkosi Hlophe)

Last Winter

Indeed, when Anthony Delpech started niggling early in the straight, those who made Last Winter 12-10 favourite were preparing to tear up their tickets.

Even 100m out – by which time he was really motoring – he was eight lengths adrift and he was still five lengths down 50m from home. But Milton was tiring as fast as the favourite was quickening and had the line been half a stride later the short head verdict would have gone the other way.

Delpech said: “This is a good horse but I got caught behind horses that weren’t going forward. I never hit him – I would only have unbalanced him in the wind – and he was giving me everything anyway.”

Dean Kannemeyer, yet to win the Met, has typically been weighing up every step of the way as assiduously as a mountaineer nearing the peak of Mount Everest.

He said: “I am still keeping things open but I don’t think he will run in the Queen’s Plate and there is now a great possibility that he will go straight into the Met. I would like him to have won but I was very pleased with the way he finished. He really took off in the last furlong and, bar the winner, he spit the rest of them out.”

For Milton’s owner-trainer though it was one of the biggest wins of a long career handling only horses belonging to himself and wife Christine. It was also a perfect end to a difficult week.

The 82-year-old explained: “I was in hospital on Monday to have stents put into my heart and I then had a reaction to the medication. I might now have another think about going for the Met with Milton but I doubt it even though I’ve got no other races for him. I had been thinking of a Pinnacle in PE !”

Justin Snaith will run Sunshine Sweepstake Victress winner Star Express in both the Maine Chance Farms Paddock Stakes and the Klawervlei Majorca while Mahal TV Cape Summer Stayers winner Strathdon (owner-bred by the Fosters) will attempt to make it five in a row in the Chairman’s Cup on 6 January.

By Michael Clower

Tap O'Noth (Liesl King)

Rematch for ‘O’Noth and ‘River’

Tap O’Noth and White River, separated by only half a length in Saturday’s Forus Cape Guineas, will have a rematch in the Investec Cape Derby on Met day. And it’s quite possible that third-placed Like A Panther, who has already won over ten furlongs, will throw down the gauntlet to both of them.

Saturday’s Kenilworth Grade 1 triumph was as much a vindication of Vaughan Marshall’s judgement as of his training skills because he predicted that this could be Guineas winner number five when the Captain Al colt made a winning debut eight months earlier.

Marshall said: “He is a very good horse and he has done everything we asked him to do. It would be unfair to any of them to compare him with my previous Guineas winners but he is up there with them.”

Tap O'Noth (Liesl King)

Tap O’Noth (Liesl King)

The Milnerton trainer was quick to rule out suggestions of a possible Queen’s Plate challenge, saying: “Slowly, slowly. We will go for the Derby next.”

The Captain Al colt started 4-1 favourite and is the third Grade 1 winner bred by Alec and Gillian Foster. He is also the third Guineas winner for MJ Byleveld whose arm-raised victory salute revealed some of the pressure he had been under to get it right from that dreadful draw.

He got across alright but he was only able to slot in with more than half the field in front of him. “It wasn’t easy and I would like to have been a bit closer,” he admitted. “In the straight it opened up and when I asked him he turned it on a bit too quickly. As a result I might have been in front a little too early but he stayed on like a good horse.”

White River wore ear muffs but no muzzle and indeed there was no repeat of the attempted opposition-biting of the Selangor and Greg Cheyne said: “He is still a bit immature and mentally he is still not quite there either but he has huge potential.”

Brett Crawford added: “He is a Derby horse. He is still a big baby, though, and still learning.”

Interestingly Anton Marcus expressed similar sentiments about Like A Panther, saying: “The penny hasn’t quite dropped yet but it will and I thought this was a good run. He is a staying type.”

The disappointment of the race was Do It Again who was backed from 8-1 to 5-1 second favourite but lost ground at the start and managed only ninth.

Justin Snaith, although delighted with fourth-placed Cot Campbell, shouldered the blame. “I debated whether to give Do It Again another gallop beforehand. I decided to do so and I shouldn’t have. This was a flat run.”

Pack Leader, sixth and only beaten two and a half lengths, was unlucky not to finish significantly closer because he was hampered on three separate occasions in the straight.

Bold Respect (12th) dropped right back in the closing stages but suspicions that this could be more than just lack of stamina could not be confirmed by the vet who reported that nothing showed up. Undercover Agent (tenth) and Sir Frenchie (last) were both reported unusually fatigued.

By Michael Clower