London Call (Nkosi Hlophe)

London Call is ‘exceptionally well’

Summerveld trainer Mark Dixon was upset his classy sprinter London Call was not selected to run in the Gr 1 Tsogo Sun Sprint at the Scottsville Festival Of Speed Meeting on the first weekend of this month, but believes the five-year-old Kahal gelding can prove a point in the Gr 2 Post Merchants over 1200m on the turf at Greyville on Friday night.

He said, “I was disappointed they reduced the size of the field for the Tsogo Sun Sprint to 14 (due to the moving of the rail inward) and then decided to ignore the handicapping and select the field on their own judgement.”

London Call (Nkosi Hlophe)

London Call (Nkosi Hlophe)

London Call did his final piece of fast work for the race on Monday upsides a companion on the Summerveld top sand track and the gallop was “very pleasing.”

Dixon continued, “He is exceptionally well and is a big runner provided he behaves himself … it is his first time running under the lights.”

Dixon felt the Bruce Le Roux-bred gelding’s draw of two was perfect as “he has plenty of pace.”

The 101 merit-rated speedster is not the soundest and cannot be raced often, but on the other hand he does not take a lot of work and it is relatively easy to get him ready for a race.

He has only had eight career starts for four wins, two seconds and a fourth and his only unplaced run was when tried over 1400m against the like of Ice Machine.

All four of his wins have been over the 1200m trip of the Post Merchants and his last win, on December 30 this season, was over the Greyville course and distance.

In that race, carrying a welter 61kg, he gave the Graded-placed three-year-old Mr Roy 7,5kg and a one length beating and an even more eyecatching bit of form was giving third-placed Executive Power, who has always been held in high regard, 9kg and a 2,5 length beating.

In London Call’s last start over 1000m at Scottsville on February 28 he was a 2,5 lengths second in the race in which Muscatt set a new course record and he was giving the latter 1,5kg.

In form Keagan de Melo knows him well and will be aboard on Friday night.

By David Thiselton

Could the drought be over for Rain

Rain is in short supply in most of southern Africa but punters will be looking to Mike de Kock’s filly Rain In Africa to beak her drought when she runs in the seventh at Greyville this afternoon.

On a card littered with Maidens and Handicap punters will be digging deep into the form book where all races are on the poly, and all barring one with maximum fields.

Mike de Kock

Mike de Kock

Rain In Africa has her first outing in KZN after running up a string of placings on the Highveld but alarmingly in most of those races the jockeys have returned reporting respiratory noises which does not augur well. However, that has not been enough to stop her finishing in the money in all of her seven starts and the switch to poly over the minimum trip may finally get her over the line.

The balance of the runners consists of a group of fellow battlers but the danger could come in the form of two-year-old Castor Cat. Weiho Marwing’s runner has also been reported to have breathing issues but she did improve last time out and could be finding form.

Silver Sage and Smart World will be popular choices in the last and barring sudden improvement by one or two of the opposition, should fight this one out.

Silver Sage comes from the all-conquering Sean Tarry yard and has put in two smart efforts on the poly since making his debut. He was doing his best work late behind the heavily backed Starrett City late last month and is the likely favourite.

However, apprentice Lyle Hewitson will have to deal with old fox Anton Marcus aboard Dennis Drier’s charge Smart World that steps out in blinkers for the first time. He raced on the same day as Silver Sage, but over a ‘mile’, and gave the impression that he would enjoy today’s extended trip as he was running on stoutly in the finish after missing the jump.

Blinkers and Marcus could be enough to get him off the mark.

The opening leg of the Pick 6 is a nightmare race. Trinity Hall has been knocking at the door for some time now but could again leave the door open has pulled another tough draw. Drier, ahead in the KZN Trainer’s Championship, could take advantage and add another to his total with Majix. The grey found trouble at the start last time after showing steady improvement. He races in a tongue-tie for the first time.

A Divided Handicap heads the card where Executive Power can go one better after being caught late by the smart Paterfamilias on the Greyville poly. Prior to that he has some smart form in strong company and from the best of the draw can add to an already useful record.

Chestnut’s Rocket appears to have taken a liking to Scottsville where he won a feature as a three-year-old and finished runner-up to It Is Written over the course and distance when making his seasonal KZN debut back in March. He has to give a bit of pudding to the younger Executive Power and that may be what separates the pair at the line.

Sail South, Diamond King, Master James and the grey Isca, who blew the start and declared a non-runner at his last intended start, are others to consider in a difficult race.

Irish Pride and Cape Laddie look the principal contenders in the fifth but both have been compromised by wide draws. Cape Laddie has not been out since November last year but showed early in his career when making his debut on the Greyville poly that he is a horse with potential.

Dean Kannemeyer is a past master at letting his runners mature without being under pressure and Cape Laddie could prove the pick of the field in spite of the draw.

By Andrew Harrison

Maleficent (Nkosi Hlophe)`

Slipper next for Maleficent

J&B Met-winning trainer Alec Laird believed he had landed a bargain when securing Judpot filly Maleficent for R160,000 at the Bloodstock SA Val De Vie Sale last year and she proved it at Greyville on Saturday when winning the Listed Devon Air Stakes over 1400m in fine style to give her regular rider Weichong Marwing the first leg of a feature race double.

Maleficent (Nkosi Hlophe)`

Maleficent (Nkosi Hlophe)

Her value had already been made greater recently by her full-brother Rocketball, who came close to upsetting Triple Crown hero Abashiri in the Gr 1 SA Derby before finishing a decent fourth in the Gr 1 Daily News 2000.

Maleficent ran green almost throughout on Saturday, but still managed to beat the always handy Querari Falcon by 3,25 lengths, an amazing margin considering how long she took to get going.

She is unbeaten in two starts over 1400m, having lost narrowly on debut over 1200m, and has put a total of 8,75 lengths between herself and the opposition.

Laird said, “She is a strong girl.”

He added she would likely line up for the Zulu Kingdom Explorer Golden Slipper over 1400m on Vodacom Durban July day and he would play it by ear from there.

Laird won the colt’s equivalent of that race, the Durban Golden Horseshoe, with another progeny of Judpot, Forest Indigo, in 2013.

Both events have been downgraded from Gr 1 to Gr 2 this year.

Maleficent, who is owned by Chris Gerber and was bred by Shirluck Stud, has landed a plum draw of two among the 28 nominations for the Golden Slipper.

By David Thiselton

Legal Eagle (Liesl King)

Mac on July mission

Gr 1 Rising Sun Gold Challenge winner Mac De Lago returned to trainer Weiho Marwing’s Ashburton yard after his victory at Greyville on Saturday and the latter will monitor how he comes out of the race before making the next move in his Vodacom Durban July preparation.

Marwing pulled off a fine training feat as the race, which Mac De Lago was awarded in the boardroom after going down by a short-head, was the horse’s return from a fourth place finish in the tough Gr 1 Premier’s Champions Challenge run over 2000m at Turffontein on April 30.

The four-year-old Australian-bred Encosta De Lago gelding had travelled down from Johannesburg last Thursday and one of the decisions to be made will be whether the horse remains at Ashburton to train for the July or returns to Johannesburg.

The recently crowned champion workrider Sam Mosia will be there to ride him every day in routine work, no matter which training centre he is prepared out of.

Legal Eagle (Liesl King)

Legal Eagle (Liesl King)

Marwing said, “Sam is very loyal, he’s been working for me for the past ten to twelve years, he’s the only guy I really let ride Mac De Lago at home and he gets on with him like a house on fire.”

Also of importance to the progressive bay’s July chances will be the handicapper’s assessment of Saturday’s weight for age race.

Mac De Lago had previously run in ten Graded races without a win and this was without doubt the best performance of his career.

His merit rating will likely be raised significantly from its current mark of 107. The possible line horses are the next four in the running, 113-merit rated Trip To Heaven (short-head margin), 115-merit rated French Navy (beaten 1,8 lengths), 110-merit rated New Predator (beaten 3,8 lengths) and 109-merit rated Captain Aldo (beaten 5,8 lengths).
Marwing lodged the objection on Saturday after the stipendiary stewards had announced a steward’s enquiry.

If the stewards had not already made up their minds they would soon have been convinced by jockey Piere Strydom’s argument.

Strydom pointed out the two different types of horses which were involved, Trip To Heaven being a sprint-miler type and Mac De Lago a middle distance type who took a while to get going. He then asked for the official winning distance, which was a short-head, before asking for the tape to be rewound to about the 150m mark, which was the stage just before Trip To Heaven had received the first of two bumps from Mac De Lago. The margin before the bumps was shown to be about half-a-length, meaning Mac De Lago had been finishing the faster of the pair despite the interference, which had caused him to be carried a number of horse-widths inward.

Trip To Heaven’s trainer Sean Tarry also presented a good argument, saying Trip To Heaven had come from last under the hands and his jockey Grant Van Niekerk, due to the proximity of Mac De Lago, had been forced into riding his mount with the hands all the way to the line, while Mac De Lago in the meantime had been hard ridden. Both he and Van Niekerk also pointed out the first movement, however slight, was made by Mac De Lago towards Trip To Heaven (although they did not brush at that stage).

Siren's Call (left) and Trophy Wife

Trophy Wife (right) – (Nkosi Hlophe)

However, the stewards did not take long to announce the upheld verdict and the majority, including Marwing, believed they had made the correct decision. Elated part-owner Dylan Chinsammy was on course to receive the trophy on behalf of the connections, who also include Hassen Adams, CF Delport, Lawrence Pillay, TJ Smith and ODT Visser. It was Chinsammy’s second Gr 1 win, the first being with Ash Cloud, who won the SA Oaks for the Marwing yard in 2014.

Mac De Lago finished second in last season’s Gr 2 KRA Guineas and fifth from the widest draw of all in the Gr 1 Daily News 2000, so clearly loves the tight city course.

His Champions Challenge run looks very good, as the fifth placed horse Judicial was 4,3 lengths behind him. Mac De Lago was receiving 2kg from French Navy in the Champions Challenge and the latter beat him by 1,8 lengths. Before the running of the Gold Challenge, Mac Delago was set to receive 4kg from French Navy in the July, which would have given him a massive chance. However, his task will now be harder with the pending merit rated raise.

French Navy meanwhile ran a tremendous July preparation race in Saturday’s event and it should bring him spot on for the big one. He was running on strongest of all to finish a 1,8 length third. He will be very well weighted in the July, unless Legal Eagle is scratched before the publishing of the weights tomorrow (Tuesday).

The three scenarios from now in are: If Legal Eagle is scratched before the publishing of the weights, French Navy carries 60kg and July favourite Black Arthur carries 53,5kg; if Legal Eagle runs in the July, French Navy carries 57,5kg and Black Arthur carries 53kg; if Legal Eagle is scratched after the publishing of the weights, French Navy carries 60kg and Black Arthur carries 55,5kg.

Strydom was not sure yet where his July ride would come from. However, he is sure to be in demand. The master jockey has already ridden two Gr 1 winners since returning just three-and-a-half weeks ago from a three-and-a-half month layoff for a broken collar bone.

By David Thiselton

Palladium (Nkosi Hlophe)

Laird in top form

Former National Champion Trainer Charles Laird scored a tremendous treble at Greyville on Saturday, including winning two black type events for his chief client these days Alesh Naidoo.

However, Laird said he would not be supplementing Gr 3 Cup Trial winner Exit Here for the Vodacom Durban July. He said, “He has drawn well in five for the consolation event anyway.”

Laird was relieved to have been proven correct in his assessment of Exit Here’s poor last two runs, in which he believed the jockeys had gone to hard out in front. The blinkered Moutonshoek-bred Jay Peg colt was asked to go a particularly ridiculous pace in the Gr 2 Canon Guineas.

Palladium (Nkosi Hlophe)

Palladium (Nkosi Hlophe)

By contrast Weichong Marwing rode him to perfection on Saturday, controlling the pace from the front before extracting the necessary extra to repel challengers and beat the second favourite Dynamic by a quarter of a length. He converted odds of 40-1.

Naidoo was largely behind the decision to purchase Exit Here for R1,1 million at the CTS March Yearling Sale in 2014. Exit Here is a half-sister to Eventual Angel, who won four races for Naidoo, including the Gr 3 Umzimkhulu Stakes. Naidoo owns Exit Here in partnership with Laird’s long-time stalwart client Markus Jooste.

Earlier on Saturday, Laird and Naidoo had combined to win the Listed Gatecrasher Stakes over 1400m with the Avontuur-bred Silvano colt Palladium, who remains unbeaten after two starts.

Despite the tailwind, Palladium was able to come from last with an impressive run and beat the favourite Daffiq by a neck under Keagan De Melo.

Laird had advised De Melo to stick with Palladium after his strong finishing-debut win over 1200m at Greyville, knowing Anton Marcus would be tied to ride the Markus Jooste-owned stablemate Buffalo Soldier, who ran a decent 1,9 length fourth on Saturday.

Laird said he would keep De Melo aboard for Palladium’s next two races, which are due to be the Gr 2 Golden Horseshoe over 1400m on July day and the Gr 1 Premiers Champion Stakes over 1600m on eLan Gold Cup day.

Palladium is a half-brother to the former Equus Champion Sprinter Val De Ra, but Laird said he took more after his sire Silvano and would get the mile.

Laird clinched the treble with a brilliant front-running ride by Marcus on the Jooste-owned Top Form in the R200,000 KZN Winter Challenge 1200.

There was also disappointment for the yard as the luckless Ice Machine ran unplaced in the Gr 1 Rising Sun Gold Challenge.

Laird said Ice Machine had always been a horse who preferred being taken to the outside for his run as he was then able to be taken through the gears gradually on the back of a momentum building outwards catapult,  whereas taking a horse inward for a run, like he was on Saturday, required committing the horse too soon. “He is not getting any younger,” he said about the seven-year-old.

By David Thiselton

Liege (Nkosi Hlophe)

Liege and Trophy Wife impress

The Sean Tarry-trained three-year-old Dynasty colt Liege made himself a Vodacom Durban July final supplementation possibility when winning a traditional pointer to the big race, the Gr 3 Jubilee Handicap over 1800m at Turffontein yesterday, in cosy style under stable jockey S’Manga Khumalo despite being 0,5kg under sufferance off his 93 merit rating.

The most fancied July horse in the field, Deo Juvente, who was a 13-1 shot for the big one, started favourite yesterday but had to be pulled out of the race. July 150-1 chance Rainy Day Blues was 3,5kg under sufferance and ran a 1,1 length second. Three-year-old Romany Prince was 25th on the last July log and remains a borderline horse after finishing a 2,2 length third while giving the winner 4kg.

Judicial, Jubilee Line, Stonehenge and Diesel Jet were not in the top 25 on the last log and did their chances of making the July field no favours by finishing fourth, sixth, seventh and eighth respectively. Earlier, the Tarry-trained Trophy Wife, who was 21st on the last July log, put her hand up for a place in the final field with a fine win of a Pinnacle Stakes race for fillies and mares over 1400m.

By David Thiselton

Mac De Lago (Nkosi Hlophe)

Rising Sun Gold Challenge Racemeeting Wrap

The four-year-old Australian-bred gelding Mac De Lago cemented his place in the final field for the R4.25-million Vodacom Durban July in three weeks’ time when declared the winner of the R1-million, Grade 1 Rising Sun Gold Challenge over 1 600m at Greyville on Saturday.

Touched off by a whisker at the line by the Trippi gelding Trip To Heaven, the gutsy son of Encosta De Lago from the Weiho Marwing stable would have been hard done by if his place in the big race had been in question had the result stood, but Marwing was quick to object against Trip To Heaven on the grounds of interference in the closing stages and the success of the move removed any possibility of that.

Mac De Lago was 16th on the latest July Log and in spite of his success being his first in 529 days, his fourth to Legal Eagle in the Grade 1 Premier’s Champion Challenge at Turffontein, where he stayed on at the end of the 2 000m trip, was strong enough form for the selection panel to consider him a possible inclusion. Saturday’s gutsy fight under Piere Strydom was evidence enough that he deserves his place in the field on July 2.

For racegoers, however, it might have been a very confusing race. Trainer Sean Tarry had reportedly stated that Trip To Heaven, that will be competing in the Grade 2 Post Merchants over 1 200m at Greyville this coming Friday, would go to the front if he broke well enough but in the race the four-year-old took station at the back of the field with stable companion Prospect Strike under Anthony Delpech going quickly to the front to set a good gallop.

In the straight, replacement rider Grant van Niekerk sent Trip To Heaven for home with a strong finish, joining issues with Mac De Lago. The two raced together in a bitter duel but Trip To Heaven shifted inwards onto Mac De Lago with the pair then racing neck and neck to the finish. There was just a whisker between them at the line but there had been contact and because of the close finish the stipes had little choice but to uphold the objection.

Tarry’s big race contender French Navy, that had raced midfield in the early stages, got fully into stride in the straight and ran on strongly for third place ahead of New Predator while Prospect Strike faded out to finish seventh.

The R250 000, Grade 3 Cup Trial was also not without incident and an objection was a feature of this result as well. All eyes had been on the two major July candidates The Conglomerate and Dynamic that both required a major showing to get a run in the country’s premier race. As it turned out, it was the outsider from the Charles Laird stable, Exit Here that stole the glory after a cunning ride by Weichong Marwing who dictated the pace at a slow tempo then fought off a challenge from Dynamic to take the honours.

The Conglomerate followed them across the line ahead of Saratoga Dancer but trainer Duncan Howells lodged an objection against The Conglomerate on the grounds of interference and intimidation in the closing stages and this objection was upheld reversing the order of third and fourth places.

The result of this race possibly put paid to the chances of The Conglomerate and Dynamic being considered for the Vodacom Durban July field.

The R400 000, Grade 2 Tibouchina Stakes over 1 400m was won by the Brett Crawford-trained Dynasty filly Alexis that gave credence to the racing saying of “horses for courses”. The filly under stable jockey Corne Orffer loves the Greyville track having won the KRA Fillies Guineas at the venue last year. Her record at Greyville now stands at three wins from four starts.

It was a race targeted by Crawford for the filly and she will now go for the Grade 1 Jonsson Workwear Garden Province Strakes on July day.

In the slow-run race Alexis finished strongly to snatch victory from the Mike Bass-trained Silver Mountain with another fast-finished Sensible Lover taking third place ahead of Inara.

There was a close finish to the Listed Gatecrasher Stakes with Laird snatching his first feature win of the day with the Silvano colt Palladium that got up to beat favourite Daffiq by about a head. The race was marred by a false start but Keagan de Melo allowed Palladium to settle at the rear of the field before putting in his flying finish to snatch victory.

The Listed Devon Air Stakes saw Weichong Marwing at his best as he drove the Judpot filly Maleficent through with a powerful finish to swoop past favourite Querari Falcon to win going away by more than three lengths.

By Richard McMillan

Rising Sun Gold Challenge Racemeeting Wrap

The four-year-old Australian-bred gelding Mac De Lago cemented his place in the final field for the R4.25-million Vodacom Durban July in three weeks’ time when declared the winner of the R1-million, Grade 1 Rising Sun Gold Challenge over 1 600m at Greyville on Saturday.

Touched off by a whisker at the line by the Trippi gelding Trip To Heaven, the gutsy son of Encosta De Lago from the Weiho Marwing stable would have been hard done by if his place in the big race had been in question had the result stood, but Marwing was quick to object against Trip To Heaven on the grounds of interference in the closing stages and the success of the move removed any possibility of that.

Mac De Lago was 16th on the latest July Log and in spite of his success being his first in 529 days, his fourth to Legal Eagle in the Grade 1 Premier’s Champion Challenge at Turffontein, where he stayed on at the end of the 2 000m trip, was strong enough form for the selection panel to consider him a possible inclusion. Saturday’s gutsy fight under Piere Strydom was evidence enough that he deserves his place in the field on July 2.

For racegoers, however, it might have been a very confusing race. Trainer Sean Tarry had reportedly stated that Trip To Heaven, that will be competing in the Grade 2 Post Merchants over 1 200m at Greyville this coming Friday, would go to the front if he broke well enough but in the race the four-year-old took station at the back of the field with stable companion Prospect Strike under Anthony Delpech going quickly to the front to set a good gallop.

In the straight, replacement rider Grant van Niekerk sent Trip To Heaven for home with a strong finish, joining issues with Mac De Lago. The two raced together in a bitter duel but Trip To Heaven shifted inwards onto Mac De Lago with the pair then racing neck and neck to the finish. There was just a whisker between them at the line but there had been contact and because of the close finish the stipes had little choice but to uphold the objection.

Tarry’s big race contender French Navy, that had raced midfield in the early stages, got fully into stride in the straight and ran on strongly for third place ahead of New Predator while Prospect Strike faded out to finish seventh.

The R250 000, Grade 3 Cup Trial was also not without incident and an objection was a feature of this result as well. All eyes had been on the two major July candidates The Conglomerate and Dynamic that both required a major showing to get a run in the country’s premier race. As it turned out, it was the outsider from the Charles Laird stable, Exit Here that stole the glory after a cunning ride by Weichong Marwing who dictated the pace at a slow tempo then fought off a challenge from Dynamic to take the honours.

The Conglomerate followed them across the line ahead of Saratoga Dancer but trainer Duncan Howells lodged an objection against The Conglomerate on the grounds of interference and intimidation in the closing stages and this objection was upheld reversing the order of third and fourth places.

The result of this race possibly put paid to the chances of The Conglomerate and Dynamic being considered for the Vodacom Durban July field.

The R400 000, Grade 2 Tibouchina Stakes over 1 400m was won by the Brett Crawford-trained Dynasty filly Alexis that gave credence to the racing saying of “horses for courses”. The filly under stable jockey Corne Orffer loves the Greyville track having won the KRA Fillies Guineas at the venue last year. Her record at Greyville now stands at three wins from four starts.

It was a race targeted by Crawford for the filly and she will now go for the Grade 1 Jonsson Workwear Garden Province Strakes on July day.

In the slow-run race Alexis finished strongly to snatch victory from the Mike Bass-trained Silver Mountain with another fast-finished Sensible Lover taking third place ahead of Inara.

There was a close finish to the Listed Gatecrasher Stakes with Laird snatching his first feature win of the day with the Silvano colt Palladium that got up to beat favourite Daffiq by about a head. The race was marred by a false start but Keagan de Melo allowed Palladium to settle at the rear of the field before putting in his flying finish to snatch victory.

The Listed Devon Air Stakes saw Weichong Marwing at his best as he drove the Judpot filly Maleficent through with a powerful finish to swoop past favourite Querari Falcon to win going away by more than three lengths.

By Richard McMillan

Alexis (Nkosi Hlophe)

Rising Sun Gold Challenge Racemeeting Wrap

The four-year-old Australian-bred gelding Mac De Lago cemented his place in the final field for the R4.25-million Vodacom Durban July in three weeks’ time when declared the winner of the R1-million, Grade 1 Rising Sun Gold Challenge over 1 600m at Greyville on Saturday.

Touched off by a whisker at the line by the Trippi gelding Trip To Heaven, the gutsy son of Encosta De Lago from the Weiho Marwing stable would have been hard done by if his place in the big race had been in question had the result stood, but Marwing was quick to object against Trip To Heaven on the grounds of interference in the closing stages and the success of the move removed any possibility of that.

Mac De Lago was 16th on the latest July Log and in spite of his success being his first in 529 days, his fourth to Legal Eagle in the Grade 1 Premier’s Champion Challenge at Turffontein, where he stayed on at the end of the 2 000m trip, was strong enough form for the selection panel to consider him a possible inclusion. Saturday’s gutsy fight under Piere Strydom was evidence enough that he deserves his place in the field on July 2.

For racegoers, however, it might have been a very confusing race. Trainer Sean Tarry had reportedly stated that Trip To Heaven, that will be competing in the Grade 2 Post Merchants over 1 200m at Greyville this coming Friday, would go to the front if he broke well enough but in the race the four-year-old took station at the back of the field with stable companion Prospect Strike under Anthony Delpech going quickly to the front to set a good gallop.

In the straight, replacement rider Grant van Niekerk sent Trip To Heaven for home with a strong finish, joining issues with Mac De Lago. The two raced together in a bitter duel but Trip To Heaven shifted inwards onto Mac De Lago with the pair then racing neck and neck to the finish. There was just a whisker between them at the line but there had been contact and because of the close finish the stipes had little choice but to uphold the objection.

Tarry’s big race contender French Navy, that had raced midfield in the early stages, got fully into stride in the straight and ran on strongly for third place ahead of New Predator while Prospect Strike faded out to finish seventh.

The R250 000, Grade 3 Cup Trial was also not without incident and an objection was a feature of this result as well. All eyes had been on the two major July candidates The Conglomerate and Dynamic that both required a major showing to get a run in the country’s premier race. As it turned out, it was the outsider from the Charles Laird stable, Exit Here that stole the glory after a cunning ride by Weichong Marwing who dictated the pace at a slow tempo then fought off a challenge from Dynamic to take the honours.

The Conglomerate followed them across the line ahead of Saratoga Dancer but trainer Duncan Howells lodged an objection against The Conglomerate on the grounds of interference and intimidation in the closing stages and this objection was upheld reversing the order of third and fourth places.

The result of this race possibly put paid to the chances of The Conglomerate and Dynamic being considered for the Vodacom Durban July field.

The R400 000, Grade 2 Tibouchina Stakes over 1 400m was won by the Brett Crawford-trained Dynasty filly Alexis that gave credence to the racing saying of “horses for courses”. The filly under stable jockey Corne Orffer loves the Greyville track having won the KRA Fillies Guineas at the venue last year. Her record at Greyville now stands at three wins from four starts.

It was a race targeted by Crawford for the filly and she will now go for the Grade 1 Jonsson Workwear Garden Province Strakes on July day.

In the slow-run race Alexis finished strongly to snatch victory from the Mike Bass-trained Silver Mountain with another fast-finished Sensible Lover taking third place ahead of Inara.

There was a close finish to the Listed Gatecrasher Stakes with Laird snatching his first feature win of the day with the Silvano colt Palladium that got up to beat favourite Daffiq by about a head. The race was marred by a false start but Keagan de Melo allowed Palladium to settle at the rear of the field before putting in his flying finish to snatch victory.

The Listed Devon Air Stakes saw Weichong Marwing at his best as he drove the Judpot filly Maleficent through with a powerful finish to swoop past favourite Querari Falcon to win going away by more than three lengths.

By Richard McMillan

Mac De Lago (Nkosi Hlophe)

Big move for Mac

Mac De Lago and Dynamic were the big movers in the Vodacom Durban July betting yesterday as bookmakers assessed the results, and likely impact, of Saturday’s big Greyville races.

Word Sports Betting cut the promoted Rising Sun Gold Challenge winner from 18-1 to 11-1 while Betting World shortened Weiho Marwing’s charge from 16-1 to 10-1. Dynamic, as big as 50-1 before his second to Exit Here in the Cup Trial, is now a best-priced 22-1.

French Navy, who ran on in eye-catching style to take third in the Gold Challenge, was shortened from 11-1 to 9-1 by WSB and is 8-1 with Betting World. However the layers were unimpressed with fourth-placed New Predator and marked him out from 60-1 to as big as 90-1. Black Arthur remains favourite at 11-2 (5-1 with Betting World) and Marinaresco has shortened a point to 6-1.

By Michael Clower