California Chrome (Liesl King)

Chrome shines in the desert

After an injury plagued season and some indifferent performances following his second place in last year’s Dubai World Cup, California Chrome was super-impressive when going one better in Saturday’s $10 million showpiece. The big chestnut raced wide the whole way with a slipped saddle and was still able to carve out a track record in beating a game Mubtaahij.

Jumping from a wide draw, as jockey Victor Espinoza gunned him out of the gate for position his saddle slipped. Espinoza did manage to make it close to the lead but raced wide the whole way.

California Chrome (Liesl King)

California Chrome (Liesl King)

Speaking post-race Espinoza said; “Basically, the girth is slipped all the way back and I was really trying not to move my body, just to sit there still and lean forward a little bit because if I move a little back, I might go out of balance and that would not be pretty,” said Espinoza. “I was not really concerned about it. I was just looking forward, ‘Where’s the wire?'”

Trainer Art Sherman said he wasn’t aware how serious the situation was until Espinoza pulled up after winning the race. “And I said, ‘Well, that thing is back in the rumble seat.’

Despite all the obstacles, California Chrome shot clear down the home straight and drew off to win by nearly four lengths in track-record. Mubtaahij was second and Hoppertunity finished third.

Commenting on his website Mike de Kock was generous in his praise of California Chrome.  “I tell you, we were beaten by some racehorse.  California Chrome had to race wide throughout and his saddle slipped in the race, but look at the convincing way he won.  We’ll happily take our second to the best dirt horse in the world. We are over the moon!” he enthused.

De Kock, who had told the media and Mubtaahij’s supporters to expect his best on World Cup night, was vindicated. “I couldn’t have the Super Saturday results.  Mubtaahij reversed the form of the Maktoum Challenge Round 3 with Special Fighter and Gun Pit.

“Christophe and I discussed the Dubai World Cup at length this week and we envisaged what would happen. We were keen to lead the race, to make the pace if we had to. As it happened he jumped well, found a dream passage on the fence and settled in the running. Mubtaahij stays very well and he fought all the way for a well-deserved second. We are massively proud of Mubtaahij tonight,” said De Kock.

There are no immediate plans for Mubtaahij although the form of this renewal of the Dubai World Cup is likely to carry much merit.

By Andrew Harrison

beat the retreat nkosi hlophe

Beat The Retreat gives Argonaut a boost

Summerveld trainer Alistair Gordon’s gelding Beat The Retreat became the latest KZN-trained three-year-old to boost the returns of the discarded stallion Argonaut and displayed his Gr 2 Byerley Turk credentials in the process.

Beat The Retreat had a classy Progress Plate field over 1300m on the Greyville turf spread out like the washing behind him last Wednesday.

He galloped clear under Alec Forbes to beat the former Gr 3-winning Cape horse Captain Chaos, who is now with Mark Dixon, by an astonishing 5,5 lengths.

Beat The Retreat (Nkosi Hlophe)

Beat The Retreat (Nkosi Hlophe)

Beat The Retreat started favourite as he was receiving 5,5kg from the classy Gr 3-winner Redcarpet Captain, but few would have predicted him beating the latter by 12,75 lengths and finishing 15,75 lengths ahead of another classy sort in Main Submission. The latter pair were admittedly having comeback runs and will certainly improve on those performances.

Beat The Retreat joins the Michael Roberts-trained Natal as a son of Argonaut with South African Champions Season credentials.

The 1400m trip of the Byerley Turk, to be run on the Greyville turf on Friday night April 8, should be ideal.

Meanwhile, Gordon has said Royal Life is unlikely to be aimed at any features this season and will instead be given easier, confidence boosting tasks.

The Lammerskraal-bred son of Dynasty ran an eyecatching third in a MR 81 handicap over 1400m on the Greyville poly on March 9.

Royal Life was purchased out of the Duncan Howells yard as a three-year-old by former Lammerskraal owner Mike Rattray after winning his maiden over 1600m by 6,5 lengths at Scottsville in January last year, but a serious virus he contracted after being gelded delayed his debut for the Gordon yard.

By David Thiselton

Smart Call (Liesl King)

Smart Call begins US journey

The J&B Met winner Smart Call flew to Mauritius on Sunday on the first leg of her journey to America, where she will attempt to emulate her paternal grandmother Banks Hill by winning the Breeders Cup Filly and Mare Turf.

The Mauritzfontein Stud-owned and bred Smart Call is currently rated the joint sixth best thoroughbred racehorse in the world after winning the Met with contemptuous ease.

The win was another feather in the cap for Bloodstock agent Alistair Brown, who sourced Smart Call’s superbly bred sire Ideal World on behalf of Mauritzfontein.

Ideal World is grabbing more and more attention due to the class of his first couple of crops.

Brown is quite a low profile racing industryman, considering he has been responsible for the import of champion sires Al Mufti and Fort Wood and also such well performed stallions as Strike Smartly and Goldkeeper, Gr 1-Cape Guineas producing sire Sail From Seattle and latterly Noble Tune, who has attracted many Cape mares to the KZN Midlands due to his increasingly attractive pedigree.

Smart Call (Liesl King)

Smart Call (Liesl King)

Well known bloodstock agent Robin Bruss also had a lot to do with the existence of Smart Call.

Bruss was asked by Mauritzfontein Stud’s late great Bridget Oppenheimer to find an overseas mare which she could send to her beloved champion Horse Chestnut due to the export protocols of the time making it difficult to send a South African mare. Horse Chestnut was standing in Kentucky in the USA after his glittering career was ended by injury early in the year 2000.

Bruss’s search was in the long run to yield both a Vodacom Durban July winner and a J&B Met winner.

He found a mare at the Inglis Sale in Australia called Great Verdict and bought her in foal to Zabeel for Aus$370,000, at a time the exchange rate was only about 3 to 1.

Great Verdict was by an unfashionable stallion called Christmas Tree, but her dam Summoned had been very successful, producing the champion racehorse and sire Zeditave as well as four other stakes winners.

Bruss also liked the mating with Zabeel.

Great Verdict was in Kentucky two weeks after the sale, a far cry from the arduous journey Smart Call will have to undergo due to the current quarantine requirements placed on horses travelling from an African Horse Sickness endemic country.

The Zabeel foal Great Verdict gave birth to in the USA was none other than Grey’s Inn, who won the Vodacom Durban July for Oppenheimer in 2004, conditioned by Horse Chestnut’s trainer Mike de Kock.

Great Verdict produced three foals by Horse Chestnut and the oldest of them, Good Judgement, was shipped to South Africa to stand at Mauritzfontein Stud before she had ever raced.

Good Judgement’s fifth foal to race was Smart Call.

It was somewhat ironic that Smart Call upset Legal Eagle in the Met as the latter is by her close relative Greys Inn, who has become a top class sire.

However, Ideal World is the sire on everybody’s lips.

Brown could not have found a more suitable replacement for Fort Wood, who in no uncertain terms ended the bleakest spell in Mauritzfontein’s glittering history.

Fort Wood, who was the sire of Horse Chestnut, was by one of the most influential stallions in thoroughbred history, Sadler’s Wells, and his dam Fall Aspen was one of world’s best broodmares. Among Fall Aspen’s eight Graded stakes winners was the US Champion two-year-old colt Timber Country, who went on to win the Preakness; Hamas and Fort Wood, who both won Gr 1s in Europe and became sires; Northern Aspen, a Gr 1 winner in the USA; and the Gr 2 winner Colorado Dancer, who became dam of Dubai Millennium, the eighth highest Timeform rated horse in history.

Ideal World is by Kingmambo, a champion three-year-old in France, who became one of the world’s leading sires. Kingmambo was superbly-bred being by one of history’s most influential stallions, Mr Prospector, out of Hall Of Fame mare Miesque.

Ideal World’s dam Banks Hill was by the most successful stakes producing stallion in thoroughbred history, Danehill. She was out of Hasili, who became the first Northern Hemisphere-bred dam in history to produce five Gr 1 winners. Among the latter was Dansili, who sired Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe winner Rail Link.

Banks Hill was a three-time Gr 1-winner herself and was named European Champion filly and American Champion Female Turf Horse in 2001. Among her Gr 1 wins was a 5,5 length victory over the South African-bred Spook Express in the Breeders Cup Filly and Mare Turf.

Ideal World was touched off by a nose in the Gr 2 Prix Niel over a mile-and-a-half by Vision D’Etat and the latter ended his career as a four-time Gr 1-winner.

South Africa are indeed fortunate to have such a blue-blooded stallion standing out here and the dividends are already being reaped.

Some of the other horses on the flight to Mauritius on Sunday included Noah From Goa, Nassa, Same Jurisdiction and Madame Dubois.

Both Noah From Goa (Tiger Ridge) and Nassa (Dynasty) were bred by Mary Slack’s Wilgerbosdrift Stud and the former is part-owned by them too.

The whole country will be behind Smart Call when she lines up in the Breeders Cup in November and the Oppenheimer family will once again be saluted for the tremendous influence they have had on South African thoroughbred bloodstock.

By David Thiselton

sean tarry

Stone ‘unhinged’ in the boardroom

Denied in the boardroom, Stonehenge lost nothing in defeat when running the race of his life in the Gr2 Colorado King Stakes at Turffontein yesterday. Beneficiary of the objection was last season’s Dingaans winner Unparalleled (9-1) with hot favourite French Navy (6-10) a spent force some way out and a well beaten third ahead of Mac De Lago.

It was a plan that possibly went awry for Sean Tarry as Stonehenge looked set up as pacemaker for French Navy but the Algoa Cup winner responded with a tremendously courageous front-running effort and it was a bit of rough justice to lose the race on an objection.

Sean Tarry

Sean Tarry (Nkosi Hlophe)

JP van der Merwe wasted no time pressing Stonehenge into the lead setting a solid gallop and opening a gap of three lengths on a chasing Killua Castle who in turn was four ahead of French Navy who was being shadowed by Mac De Lago.

Come the straight most expected Stonehenge to fall away and French Navy to accelerate into the lead. But the incredulity was clear in commentator Alistair Cohen’s voice as Stonehenge kept rolling and French Navy bobbed along one-paced. With all eyes on French Navy, Bernard Fayd’Herbe slipped Unparalleled almost unnoticed up the inside fence reeling in Stonehenge stride for stride. Two jumps from the line an exhausted Stonehenge ducked sharply inwards into Unparalleled, holding on to his lead but doing enough damage to have the result overturned in the boardroom.

Unparalleled was off the track for almost nine months after finishing six lengths back to Wylie Hall in last year’s Premiers Champion Challenge and Johan Janse van Vuuren will be hoping that his charge can emulate Wylie Hall with victory in the Colorado Stakes going on to the Premiers Champion Challenge at the end of next month.

It’s difficult to read anything into French Navy’s run as he was given every chance but just didn’t fire. It was his second below par run in succession but given that runners from the Tarry yard are almost invincible at present, it would be folly to write him off for the Champions Challenge but there are now more questions than answers.

Coennie de Beer, with his one good horse, has not been shy to travel and Talktothestars knows well the inside of a horse float. In his travels to Flamingo Park, Scottsville and Kenilworth he proved himself a hard-knocking handicapper but he reaped a deserved feature race victory when getting the better of a titanic struggle with the smart filly Lazer Star in the Gr 2 Senor Santa Stakes. The final furlong turned into a cavalry charge worthy of the Light Brigade as a dozen runners were in contention but Talktothestars and Lazer Star edged clear of the pack over the final 50m. It was heads up-and-down at the line but the photo showed the 25-1 shot snatching the verdict from the favourite.

This was his eighth win from 21 starts and by far the best son of Overlord.

The Tarry machine may have slipped a cog in the Colorado King but it was back to its smoothly oiled best in the Gr 3 Sycamore Sprint. The race drew a competitive field of fillies but there was nothing competitive in the finish as Tiger’s Touch simply smoked home. S’Manga Khumalo asked for an effort a long way out and the Australian-bred daughter of Where’s That Tiger put the race to bed in a matter of strides with another Aussie-bred, Sensible Lover, stepping out of the pack late but still over three lengths adrift of the winner.

The Tarry machine rolled on in the Oaks Trial with Inaninstant taking full advantage of her 4kg pull in the weights. She led early in the straight and try as she may, stable companion Intergalatic couldn’t make up the leeway as the daughter of Silvano kept finding to win rather comfortably.

The Derby Trial fell the way of the Brian Wiid-trained Bankable Teddy who made short work of some rather modest opposition. The word was out on course that Bankable Teddy was the right one and he duly obliged under Chase Maujean, romping home by over four lengths.

By Andrew Harrison

Big test for Quest

Orion Quest will answer one of the big outstanding questions of recent weeks when he takes on older horses for the first time in the Itsarush.co.za Handicap at Kenilworth on Saturday.

Corne Orfer (Nkosi Hlophe)

Corne Orffer (Nkosi Hlophe)

The way he won his maiden in January was staggering. Going to the front over a furlong out, he strode right away under no more than hands and heels to score by more than seven lengths. It was the sort of margin owner Diane Nagle might expect from the horses she sends to Aidan O’Brien but rare indeed in Cape Town.

“He won well but it wasn’t a strong field,” recalls Brett Crawford whose plan to bring the colt back at Durbanville four weeks ago was thwarted by coughing. The problem here is that the form has been shown to have more holes in it than a piece of Swiss cheese and is hardly worth a string of beads.

One after another of the 12 beaten horses has disappointed. One finished second and another fourth but the majority have flopped. So how good is Orion Quest and, more to the point, is he good enough to win on Saturday?

The handicappers gave him a rating of 85, high for a three-year-old maiden winner but not unjustified. After all seven-plus lengths is the equivalent of 17 points.

Brett Crawford (Liesl King

Brett Crawford (Liesl King

Corne Orffer’s mount seems sure to start favourite but there are others with at least equally strong claims including Sophomore fourth Psycho Syd, Equity Kicker (dropped two points for last time’s 1 400m run and possibly better over this trip) and the improving Fire Master. However Winter Trade, 2.5kg better with Fire Master for the length he was beaten on Met day, makes most appeal at expected odds of around 6-1.

Dancer, even though perhaps a little disappointing last time, gets the vote for Joey Ramsden in race one where Robert Khathi gets the chance on the Justin Snaith newcomer Pride Rock – Richard Fourie has preferred to go to Turffontein for Weiho Marwing – but this one’s dam only won over 1 800m.

The Vaughan Marshall-trained R2.2 million William Longsword looks a bigger threat – his dam is a half-sister to Victory Moon – while Ramsden should double up half an hour later. He has a third of the nine runners and, while Captain Gambler showed plenty of promise on debut, preference is for Sandy Bay who would have finished a lot closer to Not On My Watch last month had she got away on terms. Again look out for the Marshall newcomer – Flash Fire cost only R250 000 but her dam won four times over 1 200m.

Weskus Klong has proved a bookies benefit in his last two starts and, even though he wears blinkers for the first time in the Soccer 6 Maiden, it could pay to look elsewhere. Zud Wes may be the one.

By Michael Clower

French Navy (Nkosi Hlophe)

French Navy to make amends

There is a feast of racing around the country over the Easter weekend and there will be feature race action at both Turffontein on Saturday and Scottsville on Sunday.

At Turffontein French Navy should make amends for his disappointing last run by winning the Gr 2 Colorado King Stakes over 2000m, where he is well weighted. He had been freshened up for his last race over 1800m in order to not peak too soon for his ultimate target, the R4 million President’s Champion Challenge. He consequently over raced behind an unexpectedly slow pace, so emptied out quickly in the straight. He will be more forward now and is well drawn so should mow them down in the long straight in his normal resolute style. Judicial and Mac De Lago will also be staying on over a galloping 2000mm they will relish and are the chief dangers.

MOOGHAMIR (Kenilworth Racing)

Mooghamir (Kenilworth Racing)

The Gr 2 Senor Santa Stakes over 1160m could be won by the ever improving Moofeed, who packs a powerful finish and was unlucky in the Gr 3 Tommy Hotspur Handicap over 1000m last time out. He probably found the 1400 of the Hawaii Stakes last time a touch far and this is likely his ideal trip. Trip To Heaven is second best in at the weights and is likely to have come on from his decent effort in the Hawaii, where it didn’t pan out well for him. He will be right there and so will the filly Lazer Star, who is the best in at the weights. She looked the winner of the Hawaii last time, but the photo finish showed otherwise.  In her last two runs over this course and distance saw she was a facile winner of both a Listed and Gr 3 race.

The Listed Derby Trial, a handicap over 2000m, hasn’t attracted a very good field and a pair of Mike de Kock-trained horses, Mooghamir and Jubilee Line, could fight it out. They are both returning from layoffs and have to give weight away, which makes it a tricky betting race. Mooghamir is by Ideal World so is likely to still be improving and he will enjoy the course and distance. He has a tongue tie and blinkers on having made a breathing noise when running disappointingly in the Gr 3 Politician Stakes over 1800m at Kenworth last time out. That run followed a fine win over the same course and distance. Jubilee Line has to carry topweight, but is a classy sort who should enjoy the trip, although he hasn’t run since finishing fifth in the Dingaans last November. Count Tassilo is officially 2kg under sufferance, but could be the main danger as one who will likely relish the step up to this trip.

The Listed Oaks Trial could be won by Inaninstant, who impressed last time out by beating Trophy Wife over 1800m. The latter is a leading representative of a brilliant crop, so Inaninstant could be well handicapped off just a 77 merit rating. If she does not win it is wide open and the ones which make most appeal to pick up the pieces are Intergalactic, Bondiblu, Estimation, Bajan Fantasy, AP’s Lily, Song Of Happiness, American Story and Kelly Firth.

French Navy (Nkosi Hlophe)

French Navy (Nkosi Hlophe)

The Gr 3 Sycamore Sprint over 1160m for fillies and mares is a wide open affair. Lumya caught the eye running on well over 1000m in the Listed Bauhinia Handicap last time. She is tipped to beat the pacey and likely improving Spring Wonder. Ha Lucy will be running on strongly over an ideal trip and is tipped for third, but Easy Game, Tiger’s Touch, Silver Star, Perfumed Lady, Silver Class also have to be considered and Drifting Dusk and Swift Sarah are hard to ignore.

The best bet on the card could come in the last race as the up and coming filly Shatoosh looks to have plenty of scope. This long-striding sort should relish the Standside 1400m, having caught the eye running on strongly over 1200m on the Inside Track in just her second career start last time out.

In the third race Count Red could represent some each-way value. He has caught the eye as a likely progressive sort. On the evidence of his last start over 1600m at the Vaal he should relish this galloping 1400m course and distance from a plum draw.

At Scottsville, the Listed Easter Handicap over 1950m could see Way Of Light running on well and only just fending off a flying Solar Star.

The Easter Dash is extra intriguing this year, having been reduced by 100m to 500m. Jade Bay has excellent gatespeed and early pace and is tipped to beat home the speedy Viva La Var. However, Trip Tease will be hard to beat if managing to ping the gates.

By David Thiselton

Glyn Schofield (Nkosi Hlophe)

Schofield fined

JOCKEY Glyn Schofield has been fined $Aus 50,000 for his role in the sale of the unraced Equita to Hong Kong, an affair that has also seen trainer Brent Stanley disqualified for nine months.

Glyn Schofield (Nkosi Hlophe)

Glyn Schofield (Nkosi Hlophe)

Schofield is the first jockey to be charged under rules that state riders are not permitted to take part in the sale of horses unless the principal racing authority says otherwise.

He pleaded guilty to the charge, saying he had no idea of the rule, having taken a $Aus 20,000 commission when acting as an agent for Hong Kong trainer Danny Shum.

As part of the transaction, Schofield also handed trainer Stanley $Aus 20,000 in cash in the jockeys’ car park at Randwick racecourse in Sydney.

John Bowman, chairman of the Racing Appeals and Disciplinary Board, described the action as “not a good look” before handing down the fine.

Schofield now has three months to pay the fine after also been hit with a $Aus 20,000 penalty by Racing NSW stewards over the sale of another horse, Lil Caeser.

“I was going to fly back to Sydney on Qantas, but now I’m going to give Tiger a look,” Schofield joked on Twitter.

– Racing Post

Eric Ngwane (Nkosi Hlophe)

She’s producing winners

The Joshua Dancer mare She’s A Winner is turning out to be a promising broodmare and one of the deserved beneficiaries is her former trainer Corinne Bestel.

On Sunday She’s A Winner’s three-year-old daughter by Fort Wood, the Bestel-trained She’s A Fortress, surprised connections by handling the soft conditions and beating a decent field in a MR 76 handicap for fillies and mares over 1000m by a comfortable two lengths off a merit rating of 68. The 2,5kg claiming apprentice Eric Saziso Ngwane thus made it two wins from two rides for the Bestel yard. She’s A Fortress has now won two starts from five. Her gate speed and natural pace are her chief weapons and she led from start to finish on Sunday.

Meanwhile, in Johannesburg, She’s A Winner’s Leon Erasmus-trained colt by Var, He’s A Var, showed tremendous speed throughout when winning a Juvenile Plate over 1000m on debut by a cosy length, despite ducking out in the closing stages. His runner up Rivarine was touched off in the Listed Storm Bird Stakes next time out; the third-placed horse Janoobi won his maiden next time out by seven lengths; and the fourth-placed Ribovar also won his maiden next time out. The form thus points to He’s A Var being feature race material and this is not surprising considering his impressive looks.

Eric Ngwane (Nkosi Hlophe)

Eric Ngwane (Nkosi Hlophe)

She’s A Winner, under Bestel’s nurturing, won on debut over 1200m at Scottsville back in March 2008. Second time out she won the Gr 3 Godolphin Barb Stakes over the same course and distance, thrashing the boys including subsequent twice Gr 1-winner, the Mike de Kock-trained Forest Path. She then started favourite for the Gr 1 Allan Robertson, but nothing went right for her that day. Breathing issues subsequently plagued her and led to her premature retirement.

She’s A Winner is owned by stalwart Durban-based owner and breeder Eric Buhr.

She stands at the Clifton Stud farm of Peter and Jenny Blyth. Her progeny are also bred under the banner of this KZN Midlands stud farm.

Her first foal Star Silvano by Silvano fetched R225,000 at the National yearling Sales, but unfortunately an injury while in training prevented her from ever racing.

Star Silvano is currently in foal to Summerhill’s champion freshman sire Visionaire, a mating which should yield plenty of speed and class.

She’s A Fortress was next in line for She’s A Winner. The filly did not crack the nod for the National Yearling Sales, so Buhr decided to race her and sent her to Bestel, a yard he has had a long association with. One of Bestel’s most loyal patrons, Judy Paterson, also now has a share and as a person who loves her racing is sure to be bubbling with enthusiasm over this horse.

He’s A Var was next up and was sold at the KZN Suncoast Yearling Sales for R340,000 and is owned by Mrs A Snyman.

She’s A Winner currently has a yearling by Var which Buhr plans to keep for racing and breeding.

She also has a filly foal at foot by the Scott Brothers-based Gr 1 Middle Park Stakes-winning sir Crusade.

She’s A Winner is currently in foal to Rathmor Stud-based Noble Tune, whose pedigree just gets better and better due to the continuing success of his relatives in North America.

She’s A Winner’s curtailed racing career certainly caused immense disappointment for her connections, but she is beginning to repay a passionate group of racing owners who have stood by both her and her former trainer Corinne Bestel.

By David Thiselton

Cherry On The Top (Lissl King)

Cherry still on top

Former Triple Tiara victor Cherry On The Top, who was named two weekends ago by legendary trainer Ormond Ferraris as one of the two best horses he had ever trained, has a foal at foot by former national champion sire Silvano and is now in foal to reigning national champion sire Captain Al.

Jessica Slack of Mauritzfontein Stud recalled the joy this filly had brought to her late grandmother, Bridget Oppenheimer, “Grandma was crazy about Cherry On The Top. She also got on really well with Ormond Ferraris.”

Slack also spoke of the fairytale ending to the ownership and breeding career of her late grandfather Harry Oppenheimer and how history later repeated itself.

Cherry On The Top (Lissl King)

Cherry On The Top (Lissl King)

Harry was in his 90s when the Oppenheimer owned-and-bred Horse Chestnut landed the Triple Crown.

The champion was defeated only once in a ten race career, which included an eight length victory in the J&B Met and a 5,5 length victory in his only start in the USA.

He is now widely regarded as the greatest thoroughbred racehorse to have ever graced the South African turf, although there are a few who still regard Sea Cottage as at least his equal.

Harry died in the year 2000, the same year in which Horse Chestnut had his final start.

Bridget, who was fondly known as “The Queen Mum Of South African racing”, was also in her 90’s when Cherry On The Top landed the Triple Tiara. Few will forget the moment when Bridget, sitting in her wheel chair, instinctively raised her arms in triumph as the great filly accelerated into the lead in the SA Oaks. Jessica and Mauritzfontein stud manager Guy Murdoch were standing beside her and were equally excited.

Cherry On The Top was bred by Bridget’s daughter Mary Slack of Wilgerbosdrift Stud and was by the latter’s resident sire Tiger Ridge. To crown it all Wilgerbosdrift Stud sponsored the Triple Tiara series of races. Cherry On The Top landed a R1 million bonus for Bridget upon pulling off the Triple Tiara.

The South African public were saddened to hear of Bridget’s death in October of that year. Earlier she had accepted four awards at the Highveld Feature Season awards, including Champion Owner and the Champion Breeder Award for her Mauritzfontein Stud. Cherry On The Top was named Champion Three-year-old filly and Horse Of The Season. She was later named Equus Champion three-year-old filly.

Jessica Slack said of her respective grandparents’ fairytale last days of ownership, “It was as if they saved the best for last.”

Cherry On The Top has twice been sent down to the Cape Town region to be covered. However, she returns to foal down at the Kimberley-based Mauritzfontein Stud.

She is described as the friendliest of mares and a “farm favourite”.

Her first foal was a filly and has been named Blossom.

By David Thiselton

Sylvester The Cat (Nkosi Hlophe)

Guineas route for Sylvester

Sylvester The Cat showed himself to be a horse with Classic potential when turning in a smart performance at Scottsville on Sunday. The gelded son of Black Minnaloushe formed part of a Duncan Howells treble and the stable has seemingly turned the corner after a quiet spell that was attributed to a low grade virus.

Sylvester The Cat’s win came in a particularly strong Graduation Plate but it was not so much the victory as the manner in which it was achieved that had tongues wagging. Jumping from an outside gate stable jockey Muzi Yeni found himself in front and went on to make all. “He jumped well and when I looked around to see that I didn’t cut anyone off he went half a stride forward and thought he was back in a 1200. I got him to come back to me and he raced with his ears pricked.”

Sylvester The Cat (Nkosi Hlophe)

Sylvester The Cat (Nkosi Hlophe)

Commenting post-race Howells said his charge could have a bright future but needs to control his temperament. “He’s his own worst enemy. He’s a fighter. He will fight you with everything he’s got.”

Most impressive was the gelding’s turn of foot as Bulleting Home loomed up alongside with the line in his sights. But Sylvester The Cat quickly found another gear and sped clear to win as he liked. “He was not 100% fit but he still found more. He’s still got a lot to prove but I think he’s above average and we will go the Guineas, Daily News route if things pan out,” said Howells.

Ten Gun Salute is another promising three-year-old in the Howells yard and the Michael Roberts Handicap winner is likely to follow the same route as Sylvester The Cat after being given a short break. “He’s back in full work. I think we might go the same route as Sylvester but I’m still debating. I think Sylvester’s best distances are from a mile to 2000m but Ten Gun will stay further.” He shed his maiden over 2400m.

Also in contention for a high profile South African Champions Season is the filly Cosmic Light however, it has not all been plain sailing. “She’s doing well but I battled to get her back on song after her trip to Cape Town. I think the SA Fillies Sprint (City Of Pietermaritzburg Fillies Sprint) is the right race for her but I’m still no sure at this stage.”

Former Howells inmate Same Jurisdiction leaves the Kenilworth quarantine station for Mauritius on March 27. Howells has a watching brief but said although the filly had lightened up a little – “one can expect that” – things were going well.

However, there has been a forced change of plans. “She tested positive for pyro and will not be allowed to race in America so I think her connections will be looking to race in Hong Kong,” said Howells.

By Andrew Harrison