Trip to Heaven (JC Photographics)

Heaven for Diadem

The Gr 2 Diadem Stakes over 1200m will be the headliner at Kenilworth on Saturday and it has attracted a top class field, although some of the contenders might be using it as a springboard into the Gr 1 Betting World Cape Flying Championships.

The Sean Tarry-trained Trip To Heaven will be hard to beat, especially considering this is his chief target for the Cape Summer Of Champions Season. Tarry believes the 1000m trip of the Cape Flying is too short for the brilliant five-year-old Trippi gelding, whose optimum trip is probably 1400m. He does hold an entry in the Cape Flying, but is not a certainty to line up. He has a merit rating of 117 which makes him officially the best weighted horse in the Diadem as he only has to carry a 1kg Gr 2 penalty as opposed to the 2kg Gr 1 penalty allotted to all of Talktothestars, Red Ray and Gulf Storm.

Trip to Heaven (JC Photographics)

Trip to Heaven (JC Photographics)

Trip To Heaven beat Talktothestars by 2,4 lengths over 1160m at Turffontein on Sansui Summer Cup day in the Citizen Merchants. He is now only 1,5kg worse off, so on paper should confirm the placings. Furthermore, he has an exceptional turn of foot and the tough 1200m of the Kenilworth track should be more down his alley than the fast 1160m of Turffontein.

The 118 merit rated Talktothestars is officially only 0,5kg under sufferance with Trip To Heaven. He is the reigning Equus Champion Sprinter and should give a good account of himself, considering he was an easy winner of the Gr 1 Tsogo Sun Sprint over the tough 1200m of Scottsville when carrying topweight under handicap conditions. On the other hand he did finish unplaced in two runs over the Kenilworth 1200m last season. As usual he will not be wearing shoes on Saturday.

Gr 1 Mercury Sprint winner Red Ray is only 1kg under sufferance with Trip To Heaven. He has shown in the past to be capable of running well fresh, although he does seem to need a run to bring him back to his absolute peak. This will be his first run since winning The Mercury six months ago.

Gulf Storm will have a good chance as it will be his third run after a rest over an ideal trip and he was unlucky last time in the Listed Southeaster Sprint over 1100m, which was also a handicap meaning he had to carry 62kg. He is merit rated 110, which puts him 4,5kg under sufferance with Trip To Heaven. However, he was also 4,5kg under sufferance with the best-weighted Carry On Alice when winning last year’s Cape Flying.

Red Ray (Liesl King)

Red Ray (Liesl King)

Search Party is the unknown factor as he beat two Gr 1 winners, Real Princess and Gulf Storm, over 1000m in November despite only receiving 2kg and 4,5kg respectively. He followed up by winning the Gr 2 Betting World Cape Merchants, a handicap over the Kenilworth 1200m, when 0,5kg under sufferance off a 96 merit rating. He is now merit rated 103, so officially has a tough task, especially considering he has to carry a 1kg Gr 2 penalty. He is officially 7kg under sufferance with Trip To Heaven.

Seven-year-old Tevez loves the Kenilworth 1200m and showed he has lost none of his edge when winning the Listed South Easter Sprint last time over 1100m with 60,5kg on his back last time out. He carries no penalties and is officially only 1,5kg under sufferance with Trip To Heaven.

Captain Alfredo improved to run a 2,5 length third in the Merchants when giving Search Party five lengths, but like the latter has a tough task at the weights here even off his 107 merit rating.

Victorious Jay was fourth in the Merchants so on paper has a very tough task. However, in his favour is he is not fully exposed over sprints, having raced over further for most of last season, and this is his third run after a six month layoff. He could be the dark horse.

Exelero, La Favourari and Line Break are fully exposed in sprints and would be shock winners, while Brilliant Crimson and Purple Mountains, who are dropping back in trips, have hopeless tasks at the weights.

By David Thiselton

Anthony Delpech (Nkosi Hlophe)

Delpech back in action

Anthony Delpech will be returning to action on Friday night at Greyville stronger than ever and he has already been confirmed as rider of the Justin Snaith-trained champion filly Bela-Bela for the Gr 1 Sun Met on January 28.

Delpech broke his collarbone when falling off Payne’s Grey after the line at Turffontein on the night of December 6. He had broken this same bone before.

On this occasion the repair operation required a bone graft as well as a plate being fitted. The surgery was successful and the injury has healed well.

Anthony Delpech (Nkosi Hlophe)

Anthony Delpech (Nkosi Hlophe)

In fact Delpech said with the plate now in place the collarbone was stronger than it had been before. He has been riding work this week and has four rides on Friday night, three of them for his biggest KZN supporter, Dean Kannemeyer.

Delpech watched Bela-Bela winning the Gr 1 Maine Chance Farms Paddock Stakes over 1800m under Anton Marcus on Saturday and agreed with Snaith it could have been a bit of a “flat run.”

He said, “She usually quickens quicker than that, she took a while to get going. But it was her second run after a layoff and came only three weeks after her comeback.”

Snaith qualified his own opinion, “It was by no means a bad run. The filly she beat Safe Harbour is a very, very good filly, in fact she beat Sergeant Hardy (in the level weights R2,5 million Lanzerac Ready To Run Stakes over 1400m) and he is now rated 110.”

Bela-Bela showed fine resolve on Saturday to get up by 0,4 lengths. She should be at her absolute peak for the Met.

However, Delpech is under no illusions about the task she faces and said, “It is going to be hard for her.”

The Met weights were published yesterday and Bela-Bela is set to carry 57kg, which includes a 2kg Gr 1 penalty.

She is merit rated 109, which means she will officially be 4kg under sufferance with the Met favourite Legal Eagle, who is merit rated 123 and carries joint topweight of 60kg.

Delpech rode Bela-Bela to victory in both the Gr 2 Daisy Fillies Guineas and Gr 1 Woolavington 2000 during last year’s SA Champions Season. He said after the latter win he regarded her as the second best filly he had ever ridden and only Vodacom Durban July and J&B Met-winner Igugu was better. Bela-Bela was duly named Equus Champion Three-year-old Filly.

By David Thiselton

Greg Cheyne (Liesl King)

Passage out the maidens

Brett Crawford, who has a big chance of landing the third Met of his career, can start Kenilworth punters off on a winning note tomorrow.

Whisky Baron’s trainer has a third of the field in the noon maiden and Kingston Passage showed enough first time to suggest he has what it takes to land this 1 000m race.

Greg Cheyne’s mount was little fancied when racing green but taking second to comfortable winner Head Honcho on debut three weeks ago and needs to make only normal improvement to beat these. Indeed he opened odds-on (15-20) with World Sports Betting yesterday. Stable companion Pop The Question has not raced for nearly four months but the 4-1 chance has some decent form and looks the most obvious danger.

Greg Cheyne (Liesl King)

Greg Cheyne (Liesl King)

Joey Ramsden has weeded out most of the less competitive members of his string and as a result his team is down from 145 to 90, of which half are two-year-olds. It is significant that he has elected to persevere with Dance At Dawn who is still a maiden at the age of four. True, she is a full sister to Real Princess and closely related to Victory Moon so worth going on with if at all possible.

She beat all except the winner in her last two races before running inexplicably badly on Christmas Eve. Donovan Dillon came back convinced something was wrong and the racecourse vet wrote down “poor recovery.”

She tries again in race two and at 4-1 she looks worth backing. Lady Diddeo (11-2) ran below form last time (it was a work riders’ race) butappears held by Gypsy Beauty (4-1) while Ready Set Go (also 4-1) was not disgraced after being nibbled at (33-1 to 18-1) on debut. The sahorseracing computer has Gypsy Beauty, Dance At Dawn and Lady Diddeo in a multiple dead-heat. Talk about hedging your bets! Surely the machine can do better than that?

Loadshedder, thought to be crying out for a mile, seemed to have a touch of the slows when he finally got it but maidens are frequently won by horses you have given up on and he is going to get it together soon, maybe even tomorrow. He is 5-2 second favourite for the Racing Association race and the choice of the computer.

Gadget Man, beaten only a neck by Icon King last time, heads the market at 18-10 but the one that makes most appeal is 3-1 chance Redeemer, not least because he is a full brother to Captain America. He finished three lengths off Gadget Man on debut but didn’t get a clear run.

Grant van Niekerk rides Sabina’s Dynasty for Justin Snaith in race four rather than the Bass-Robinson runner Leaves Of Grass. But the 12-10 favourite is drawn even worse than Marinaresco and Richard Fourie’s mount makes more appeal at 5-2. Watch out for the Andre Nel-trained Guilty Pleasure (6-1) because he had to ease off the heels of the fourth-placed horse 50m out on debut, and 10-1 chance Come On Inn because that is the computer tip.

By Michael Clower

alec forbes

Forbes fab four-timer

The Tony Rivalland-trained Highway Explorer was an impressive winner of the African Holly Handicap over 1000m on the Greyville polytrack yesterday and the win clinched the third of a terrific four-timer for jockey Alec Forbes.

Alec Forbes

Alec Forbes (Nkosi Hlophe)

Another highlight was the return to action of the much vaunted Robbie Hill-trained Red Chesnut Road in a Progress Plate over 1400m and it saw him losing little in defeat to the Frank Robinson-trained Winter Is Coming.

There was also a double for trainer Yogas Govender, his first since breaking ties with Plattner Racing, and one of his charges gave Tristan Godden his first winner as a fully fledged jockey.

Highway Explorer, an Australian-bred five-year-old gelding by Hussonet, caught the speedy 5/2 favourite Call Me Winter in the straight and pulled away to win by two lengths from A Womens Way and Call Me Winter. Rivalland later admitted he had always had a feeling the Mary Liley-owned gelding was a 1000m horse and this now confirmed it.

Frank Robinson has always rated Winter Is Coming, a Western Winter colt who is out of a half-sister to the 2015 Sansui Summer Cup runner up Deo Juvente. The handicappers gave him a 94 merit rating after he had won his maiden over yesterday’s course and distance by eight lengths at the end of September.

His two runs in December would have put him spot on for yesterday’s race. Meanwhile, the previously unbeaten Red Chesnut Road had been out through an injury enforced layoff since May 1 last year. In his first two starts over 1200m and 1100m respectively at Scottsville he had obliterated the opposition and the exceptional form of those races saw the handicappers merit rating him 104.

Tony Rivalland (Nkosi Hlophe)

However, on top of the long layoff, yesterday was his first time around the turn, his first time beyond a sprint, and he had to give Winter Is Coming 4kg. His odds of 9/20 looked a bit stingy. He was duly green around the turn. He still threatened to draw clear but Winter Is Coming, who started at 5/1, stuck with him and then edged ahead to win by 0,5 lengths. The Listed winner Palladium finished a 2,75 length third in the four horse field.

Forbes’ first victory was on the Belinda Impey-trained juvenile Miss Millionaire, who gave the new Scott Brothers-based stallion Crusade his first winner. Forbes’ other wins were on the Colin Scott-trained Silvano gelding Silver Sails and the Wendy Whitehead-trained Mogok filly Storm Kitten.

Govender’s double was with two Roy Moodley-owned horses, the three-year-old Muhtafal colt Roy’s Stormer and the Australian-bred Choisir filly Roy’s Rolls Royce, ridden by Godden and Brandon Lerena respectively. It was Godden’s second ride as a fully fledged jockey and he dedicated the win to his father as the important milestone happened on the latter’s birthday.

Moodley has had a fine trot over the festive season.

Duncan Howells had a winner with the Greys Inn filly Modernista and this saw him drawing level on top of the KZN log with Dennis Drier. The pair have had 29 winners apiece in KZN this season.

By David Thiselton

Cloud makes Kenilworth return

The brilliant but so-temperamental Cloth Of Cloud has her first race since winning the SA Nursery over eight months ago in the Fairview Wines Sophomore Sprint at Kenilworth on Saturday.

S’Manga Khumalo, doubtless prepared for the filly to slam on the brakes as she hits the line, also partners Trip To Heaven for Sean Tarry in the Khaya Stables Diadem Stakes when Mercury Sprint winner Red Ray returns to take on fellow Grade 1 winners Gulf Storm and Talktothestars in the Khaya Stables Diadem Stakes.

Nine of the 13 runners in the Diadem are also in the Betting World Cape Flying Championship a fortnight later. That race is also the prime objective of Carry On Alice who possibly saw more daylight than planned when disputing it from halfway and being unexpectedly beaten in last Friday’s Cartier Sceptre Stakes.

S'Manga Khumalo

S’Manga Khumalo

“No real excuses and we took it on the chin,” said Tarry. “It was a matter of being exposed – it’s hard when you are not getting cover – but her target is at the end of the month.”

Live Life, who was almost ignored at 22-1 and carries the Horizon colours, won as if she could be a new star in the sprinting firmament she now goes in search of the real money in the 1 200m CTS $500 000 on Sun Met day.

Candice Bass-Robinson said: “It was a little bit of a surprise but we have long had high hopes for this filly. She has a really bright future.”

However rider Grant van Niekerk could hardly believe it, saying: “Live Life really shocked me. I didn’t think she had much chance but she finished it off in style.”

Glen Kotzen has his early two-year-olds in the same blistering form as the rest of his string and Saturday’s debut winner Namibia was the third of Kenilworth’s seven juvenile races that have gone to him and Richard Fourie this term. The winner and third-placed Ostinato (also Kotzen) will take on Dutch Philip in the Met day Listed race.

It was appropriate that Namibia should be owned and bred by Gaynor Rupert after the decision to turn the Queen’s Plate meeting into a two-day affair proved such a success. The hardened cynics, expecting Friday’s crowd to be little bigger than a mid-week meeting, were pleasantly surprised. Indeed some of them were suggesting that next year’s Met should follow the same lead. It certainly has enough big races to turn it in to a two-day festival.

But back to Mrs Rupert. When she first became involved the Queen’s Plate was not much better attended than an ordinary Saturday and the only non-racing attraction was a few old cars in a tent. The new, and growing year-by-year, format is proving to have huge crowd-pulling appeal and, as many of the overseas visitors testified, is helping to put South African racing back on the world map.

Triple Crown winner Abashiri, returned not striding out after finishing last in the Queen’s Plate, has been scratched from the Met.

By Michael Clower

Miss Millionaire (Nkosi Hlophe)

Crusade off the mark

The impeccably bred first season stallion Crusade got off the mark at Greyville yesterday when the Belinda Impey-trained filly Miss Millionaire won the first race over 1000m on her debut under Alec Forbes.

KZN Breeder’s former chairman Koos de Klerk was on course and confirmed the Scott Brothers-based USA-bred sire remained KZN’s big hope.

Miss Millionaire led from the off and kicked on to win by 1,25 lengths at odds of 7-1 for Pat Gounden, Joe Jacobs and EH Seedat.

Miss Millionaire (Nkosi Hlophe)

Miss Millionaire (Nkosi Hlophe)

She was bred by Bruce le Roux and was bought at the Sibaya Yearling Sale last year for R70,000. Impey went into the race confident as Miss Millionaire had been working well at home. She confirmed Crusade’s progeny have precocious speed and believed they would mostly be sprinters. This has been the opinion of most trainers.

Robin Scott, who describes Crusade as a “big, strong stallion”, has always believed he would produce horses with precocious speed who would train on and perhaps stay further in time.

However, he had expected them to predominantly be sprinters and Scott Brothers had planned their own matings with that in mind.

On Saturday the Candice-Bass Robinson-trained Crusade filly Romantic Crusade finished second in a hot Maiden Juvenile Plate over 1000m at the L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate meeting. She has also finished second on debut and won’t be long in winning.

Crusade, who is by Mr. Greeley, won the Gr 1 Middle Park Stakes over six furlongs at Newmarket as a two-year-old for Aiden O’Brien and was retired after only one run as a three-year-old.

His dam La Traviata is something of a phenomenon. She had only four starts, all as a three-year-old, and won the first three of them from 5,5 furlongs to 6 furlongs by a combined margin of 27,5 lengths. In the last of those victories, in the Gr 3 Victory Ride Stakes over six furlongs at Saratoga, she stumbled at the start yet still won by 9,25 lengths. As a broodmare she has produced two Gr 1 winners and a Gr 1 placed horse from her first four foals to have raced.

La Traviata acquired her speed from her sire Johannesburg, whom Aiden O’Brien sent out seven times as a two-year-old and he finished the season unbeaten. His seven victories included four Gr 1s from six furlongs up to 8,5 furlongs. Johannesburg had an exceptional turn of foot.

At the National Yearling Sale last year Crusade’s 21 lots sold at an average of R162,380.

By David Thiselton

Sad loss of Harry’s Son

Paul Lafferty Racing announced the passing of stable star Harry’s Son via their Facebook page yesterday:

‘It is with great sadness that the stable announces the passing of the stable’s champion, Harry’s Son, on Friday 6th January, 2017.

Harry’s Son experienced unfortunate luck in the running of only his second European race in the Prix Luthier at Deauville on the 17th December, an intended prep run for his return to this year’s Dubai Carnival season. After settling in fourth position from a good break, as the field entered the first turn two furlongs into the race, Harry’s Son was severely cut into from behind, completely severing his superficial tendon and damaging the major flexor tendon and tendon sheath of his right hind leg.

Harry was bandaged on course and sent to the best clinic available, the Grosbois Veterinary Clinic south of Paris. On arrival and after consultation with the attending vet, blood tests were run to establish his suitability for immediate surgery under anaesthesia to re-attach the tendon. As a severe tendon injury, there is not much of a window before the tendon begins to contract so time is always of the essence in such situations. Fortunately, the blood parameters were normal and he underwent successful surgery that night to re-attach his tendon and, of course, to hopefully save his life.

Post surgery, Harry’s wounds had been recovering well and without infection, always a major concern with severe trauma injuries such as his. On Friday 6th January, the clinic decided it was time to change the cast and remove the sutures from his injured tendon, a somewhat delicate procedure on a hind leg and requiring a short operation under anaesthesia. The wound was found to be healing well and the new cast was put in place. However without warning, Harry suffered a cardiac arrest while still under anaesthesia. All efforts to resuscitate him tragically failed.

Harry’s Son was one of those great rarities in racing. From the outset, he had an air of nobility and a wisdom beyond his years. He was always easy to train. It was one of life’s great pleasures to be associated with this remarkable character, and an honour to have been by his side over his racing career. Unfortunately, fate has intervened to deprive South African breeding of an opportunity to share in his unique genes. It is a great loss. And for the stable, Harry is our great personal loss. We will sorely miss you, our dear Harry….’

Brett Crawford - Liesl King

Market respect for Whisky Baron

The Brett Crawford-trained four-year-old Australian-bred gelding Whisky Baron has shortened from 17/2 into 4/1 for the Gr 1 Sun Met after his impressive win in Saturday’s Gr 2 Glorious Goodwood Peninsula Handicap over 1800m at Kenilworth.

He could realistically upset the two above him in the betting, Legal Eagle and Marinaresco, as unlike them he will not have to carry a Gr 1 penalty. Furthermore, he has continually improved since gelding, so is not yet fully exposed.

Meanwhile, the Candice Bass-Robinson-trained Gr 3 Politician Stakes winner Horizon looks to be a typically progressive son of Dynasty and proved on Saturday he is better than his 91 merit rating suggests. He could be a runner in the Gr 1 Investec Cape Derby and so can the Politician Stakes runner up Newlands, who was doing his best work late after battling to find a split off the narrow false rail.

The Glen Kotzen-trained Australian-bred Banner Hill defied a lowly merit rating of 81 in the Gr 3 BMW Chairman’s Cup over 3200m to win going away by 0,4 lengths and he will be a contender in the Gr 2 Western Cape Stayers over 2800m on Sun Met day. He was 4,5kg under sufferance on Saturday, but clearly relished the trip. The Justin Snaith-trained Ovidio ran a fine second lugging 62,5kg and will likely make a bold bid to retain his Western Cape Stayers crown.

Kotzen’s two-year-old winner on Saturday, Var filly Namibia, caught the eye and is another one to follow.

By David Thiselton

Legal Eagle (Liesl King)

Legal Eagle joins SA elite

The five-year-old Sean Tarry-trained gelding Legal Eagle joined the greats at Kenilworth on Saturday by becoming the first since Pocket Power to win back-to-back L’Ormarins Queen’s Plates (LQP).

He is now unbeaten in five starts over a mile, which includes his maiden, three Gr 1 weight-for-age miles and a Gr 2 weight-for-age mile. This is a remarkable feat for a horse who first achieved prominence when romping home to a three-length victory in the Gr 1 SA Derby over 2450m in just his fifth career start.

Pundits who felt he was lucky to be named Equus Horse Of The Year last season, above his J&B Met conqueror Smart Call, will have to now put up their hands and admit he fully deserved the accolade, as the mile has now been confirmed to be his best trip.

With Smart Call now overseas, he will be hard to oppose in the Sun Met.

Legal Eagle (Liesl King)

Legal Eagle (Liesl King)

Legal Eagle’s greatness as a miler can be seen in the way he controls his races from the off. There can be some comparisons between him and the 2013 Queen’s Plate winner Variety Club, a twice Equus Horse Of The Year, who had unbelievable gatespeed and simply controlled the race from then onward.

Variety Club and Legal Eagle were both ridden by the masterful Anton Marcus.

On Saturday Legal jumped as well as usual and there was never a moment before the business end in which he was not beautifully relaxed. The writing was on the wall for his chief rival, Marinaresco, before they had reached the first turn as he was in the box seat and the two ahead of him Midnite Zone and Captain America were going to provide protection from the stiff headwind in the straight.

Marcus was able to sit in Captain America’s slipstream until the 300m mark. Legal Eagle, like Variety Club, then found the gears necessary to take him clear.

He won by 2,25 lengths from the gallant Captain America, a Brett Crawford-trained six-year-old gelding. This was the exact same margin of victory of Variety Club’s win over the Crawford-trained Jackson in 2013.

The Crawford yard also clinched third with another six-year-old gelding, Sail South. The latter has always struck as classy, but his headstrong antics have proved costly throughout his career. Brilliant jockey Richard Fourie had the strength to rein Sail South back into an unfamiliar last place on Saturday. Even then he still over raced a bit, so it was a fine performance to run on strongly, pass Marinaresco, and finish just three lengths behind the winner.

However, Marinaresco, 0,3 lengths further back, was disappointing in fourth.

The six-year-old Jay Peg gelding Silicone Valley proved his versatility by finishing a 4,55 length fifth in just his second attempt at a mile, having finished a half-a-length second in the Gr 2 WSB Cape Merchants over 1200m at the beginning of December.

Legal Eagle will reportedly be leaving the country at the end of the Cape Summer Of Champions season together with the like of Marinaresco, Rabada and Silver Mountain.

Derek Brugman, racing manager to Legal Eagle’s owner Markus Jooste, has done a fine job together with Tarry in managing the horse’s career. Legal Eagle has had his targets carefully picked and his 15 career starts have yielded nine victories. He still looks to have plenty in the tank for overseas.

The three horses who won the Queen’s Plate between Pocket Power’s and Legal Eagle’s victories were the only entires to have won the race since the late great Jet Master’s back-to-back wins in 1999 and 2000. Those three were Gimmethegreenlight, who is already proving himself to be a stallion with a future, Variety Club, who was sadly found to be infertile, and Futura, who had a book of at least 100 mares in his first season at Drakenstein Stud.

The gelding dominance might seem strange for a race which is the most prestigious weight-for-age mile in the country, but is likely due to it being a very hard race for three-year-olds to win. Gimmethegreenlight was in fact the first three-year-old to win it for 39 years.

Gaynor Rupert of the sponsors L’Ormarins can be thanked for turning the Queen’s Plate into the top notch racing event it is today. She has a keen appreciation of the history of the sport of kings and has always tried to bring an English feel to the Queen’s Plate. Racing is an integral part of the British culture and over there the horse as an athlete, coupled with socialising, are central to most meetings.

This year’s effort in making the Queen’s Plate into a two day festival was another fine innovation. The Friday garden party looks set to become an integral part of the event’s tradition. The bond between racing purists and the Queen’s Plate will likely become stronger and stronger in a climate where turnover is paramount.

By David Thiselton

Bela-Bela (Liesl King)

Bela-Bela confirms Spring credentials

The phenomenal Cheveley Stud mare Mystic Spring will be odds-on to at last to be named Equus Champion Broodmare after her daughter Bela-Bela clinched the second Gr 1 of her career on Saturday by winning the Maine Chance Farms Paddock Stakes over 1800m at Kenilworth.

Trainer Justin Snaith had five winners at last year’s L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate meeting, but lamented his lack of a Gr 1 winner, and this year it was the opposite as his big string yielded only a single victory, but undoubtedly the one he most wanted.

The brilliant grey by Dynasty provided a second Gr 1 win on the day for Anton Marcus, who rode four winners in all.

Bela-Bela (Liesl King)

Bela-Bela (Liesl King)

Marcus’s flying, come-from-behind victory in the ninth race on Supercilious was described afterwards by trainer Joey Ramsden as the best ride he had ever produced on one of his charges.

Bela-Bela was also given a faultless ride by Marcus. From a good draw of six he soon had her one wide of the rail with cover. From there she was always going to be getting a run in the straight, which was not a given for rails-hugging horses as the false rail on the day was very narrow.

Marcus was not concerned about Bela-Bela being shuffled back in the running as he was sitting behind Silver Mountain, whom he knew would be going forward for most of the straight at least. In the stiff headwind he was patient for a while in the straight behind Silver Mountain. There can be little coincidence that he spun her out for her run just before a gap opened for the crack three-year-old Safe Harbour towards the inside. This gave Bela-Bela almost 400m to first build up into her powerful stride and then wear the others down with her resolute finish.

Marcus had timed it to perfection as she was certainly not flying at the line, but her resolve enabled her to get up in the last couple of strides to win by 0,4 lengths from Safe Harbour, with Silver Mountain a length further back.

The hard fought victory, which saw 3,85 lengths covering the first eight past the post, will have critics questioning where Bela-Bela stands in history. She certainly has something still to do to be considered as good as the last two winners of the race, Beach Beauty and Smart Call.

However, her dam Mystic Spring has nothing left to do to prove herself a great broodmare.

Bela-Bela was the Equus champion three-year-old filly last season, while Mystic Spring’s ill-fated son Rabiya, a twice Gr 1 winner, was the Equus champion three-year-old male in 2005. Mystic Spring has also produced Gr 2 winner Secret Of Victoria, who has produced two Gr 1-winning fillies, one of them a champion. On top of that Mystic Spring has produced three other stakes winners, Spring Lilac, Rafiya and Touch The Sky. Spring Lilac has already produced a stakes winner.

Bela-Bela was bred by Cheveley Stud and owners Varsfontein Stud have a valuable asset in their hands.

By David Thiselton