French Navy (Nkosi Hlophe)

Summer Cup final field

French Navy, current favourite for the R2-million Gauteng SANSUI Summer Cup, will jump from barrier No 8 when the horses jump from the 2000m mark at Turffontein on Saturday November 28. The final field and barrier positions for Johannesburg’s most prestigious race were announced on Wednesday.

The SA Classic and Daily News 2000 winner is one of two runners for champion trainer Sean Tarry, and will carry top weight of 60kg in the Grade 1 race and has Raymond Danielson up. “He is a horse who drops out and races from off the pace so the draw is not that important,” said Tarry.

“However, No 8 is decent position to be in.”

The Dean Kannemeyer-trained Vodacom Durban July winner Power King will receive 1.5kg from French Navy and like many progeny of Silvano could well now be at his peak as a five-year-old. He impressed in his recent preparation run over 1 200m at Greyville, flying up for third.

He is also nicely drawn at No 5 and will be ridden by Stuart Randolph who was aboard when Power King won the Durban July.

Irish import Flying The Flag will be one of three horses attempting to give Mike de Kock his 10th Summer Cup. He ran on well from the back in the Charity Mile and will likely relish the soft ground the rains could bring as he has done well in testing going in Ireland before.

“He has improved markedly since running in the Charity Mile and we’re hoping for a big run. But landing up with No 16 draw has not helped his chances,” said assistant trainer Mathew de Kock.

Master Sabina, runner up two years ago, will be having his second run after a year’s break and will be one of three horses attempting to give five-time champion trainer Geoff Woodruff his third successive victory in the race.

Woodruff won last year with Louis The King and in 2013 with Yorker when he trained the first three past the post.

Ultimate Dollar is one of two horses for Justin Snaith and will be fancied by many as the course and distance should perfectly suit his running style and he will be ridden by Piere Strydom. Unfortunately they drew No 19.

Final field for the R2-million Gauteng SANSUI Summer Cup (Grade 1) over 2000m at Turffontein on Saturday 28 November.

1 – 8 FRENCH NAVY (S G Tarry) R Danielson 60.0 – 113

2 – 5 POWER KING (D Kannemeyer) S Randolph 58.5 – 109

3 – 16 FLYING THE FLAG (M F De Kock) A Delpech 58.0 – 108

4 – 20 JUDICIAL (T Zackey) …………… 56.5 – 105

5 – 7 MASTER SABINA (G V Woodruff) G Lerena 56.5 – 105

6 – 9 HALVE THE DEFICIT (S G Tarry) S Khumalo 56.0 – 104

7 – 4 YER-MAAN (S J Gray) Q Riddle 56.0 – 104

8 – 17 MAC DE LAGO (W H Marwing) W Marwing 55.5 – 104

9 – 6 EASY LOVER (S T Pettigrew) M V’Rensburg 55.0 – 103

10 – 18 DEO JUVENTE (G V Woodruff) S Cormack 54.5 – 102

11 – 2 M L JET (G H Van Zyl) M Yeni 54.5 – 102

12 – 19 ULTIMATE DOLLAR (S J Snaith) P Strydom 54.5 – 102

13 – 10 DISCO AL (J Ramsden) A Fortune 54.5 – 101

14 – 14 DYNAMIC (S J Snaith) K de Melo 54.0 – 100

15 – 13 DIESEL JET (E Verdonese) M Byleveld 53.0 – 99

16 – 15 ST TROPEZ (J Ramsden) A Marcus 53.0 – 99

17 – 1 THE CAPTAIN’S TUNE (G V Woodruff) C Murray 53.0 – 99

18 – 12 AHLAAM (M F De Kock) J P v’d Merwe 52.0 – 96

19 – 11 THE CENTENARY (M F De Kock) C Zackey 52.0 – 96

20 – 3 PLATINUM JET (G H Van Zyl) K Zechner 52.0 – 91

Same Trainer: (1,6) (3,18,19) (5,10,17) (11,20) (12,14) (13,16)

RELEASED BY: Phumelela Gaming and Leisure Limited

Greg Cheyne (Liesl King)

Sensible Lover has what it takes

Sensible Lover has what it takes to upset the shorter-priced Come Fly With Me and Acrostar in the Racing.It’s A Rush Conditions Plate at Kenilworth tomorrow.

Greg Cheyne’s mount has three lengths to find with favourite Come Fly With Me on their running in last month’s Diana Stakes at Durbanville but she is 5.5kg better, has run a good race since and will strip fitter this time.

“Weiho Marwing trained her last season and she then went to the farm,” relates Darryl Hodgson. “She had been in only 22 days when she ran in the Diana and I thought she might well finish last but she ran pretty well. She will go very close here.”

Greg Cheyne (Liesl King)

Greg Cheyne (Liesl King)

Acrostar is also weighted to beat Come Fly With Me, on their running at Greyville in June, but this is her first outing for 15 weeks. “She will need it, particularly over a mile,” says Justin Snaith. “But I am expecting a good run.”

Acrostar was backed yesterday – from 33-10 to 22-10 with World Sports Betting- while Come Fly With Me eased marginally to 18-10. Sensible Lover was supported from 5-1 to 4-1 but she still looks value at that price.

The R3 million Ante Omnia managed only a disappointing ninth on his Cape Town debut but he could be worth another chance in the opening maiden, particularly at yesteday’s 11-2. He showed promise first time out at Scottsville and now wears blinkers. “He has come on but he is average,” cautions Dennis Drier.

The form horse, Psycho Syd, had the selection over seven lengths behind and has gone close in his last three. He is hot favourite at 18-10. Two others to watch out for are 10-1 shot Viking Voyage (if he runs) and Purple Rock (11-2) who is on a recovery mission.

“Viking Voyage’s work is exceptional but he gave a couple of coughs on Saturday so I’m not sure if I will run him,” reports Andre Nel while Hodgson says: “Purple Rock has a bit of ability but it was greenness last time – when he turned into the headwind in the straight he got lost – and that it is why I am putting him up the straight.”

The All To Come Maiden (race two) is wide open and a good case can be made for Tripinthemist (28-10) and 5-1 shot La Flambee (Adam Marcus: “She is working very well and we rode her the wrong way last time”) but it might be worth taking a chance with the consistent Brilliant Idea who is ridden by Bernard Fayd’Herbe for the first time. She was 7-2 yesterday and that looks reasonable considering her overall form.

Fayd’Herbe can also win races four and five. Brooklyn Brawler showed improved form last time and has a considerable draw advantage over Mega Secret and League Of Legends.

Little went right for Mulher De Branco when odds-on last time. She was ridden to get a position early but couldn’t get in and had to be eased back. She was also difficult to settle. The extra 200m should suit her. She was 2-1 yesterday and she should be able to beat 16-10 favourite Playboy Buddy.

By Michael Clower

Patrick Shaw

Shaw bags third Gold Cup

South African master trainer Patrick Shaw won his third Singapore Gold Cup after Argentinian-bred stayer Cooptado landed the famous race in a heart-stopping finish on Sunday.

Heading into this year’s renewal of the Longines-sponsored Group 1 race with a smashing four-pronged attack, the 59-year-old Durbanite, who already had two previous Singapore Gold Cups to his name (Mr Line in 2006 and Quechua last year), again cemented his mettle as a conditioner of stayers with a podium finish for two of them – Cooptado on top and Perfect P third – while Quechua and Emperor’s Banquet did not finish far behind in fifth and sixth place respectively.

“He was the true stayer among the four, obviously along with Quechua, who showed he had the distance when he won the race last year,” said Shaw.

Patrick Shaw

Patrick Shaw

“Emperor’s Banquet always does well and he was not far behind. Perfect P was the only doubtful over the trip but he showed he got the 2200m with his third place.

“But when we got Cooptado from Argentina, my agent Ignacio already told us he was one of the best stayers there. He came with a big reputation but we still had to give him time to prove himself.

“When he came for the SIA Cup (Singapore Airlines International Cup), we were trying to figure him out within such short notice. His body weight was an issue as (previous Dubai trainer) Doug (Watson) doesn’t weigh his horses.

“He was not ready in the SIA Cup, but with more time he’s slowly improved and never ran a bad race. I’ve been increasing his distances and the Gold Cup was always going to suit him.

“But, after three months with us, we realised he had some back issues. We had to treat his back with a lot of acupuncture and, luckily, he’s come right.

“I was very happy with his run in the El Dorado when he carried 57 kg while giving Sebrose 7kg. When I put a set of blinkers on him, he really travelled a lot better and I knew he would run well in the Gold Cup.

“He travelled well in the race, and with a good ride from Shafiq, he got there right in the nick of time.”

With the bulk of his horses belonging to either fellow South African owner Fred Crabbia or the Avengers/Tmen Stable, Shaw was delighted he had picked up the biggest prize on the Singapore racing calendar for Russian owners Evgeny Kappushev and Valentin Bukhtoyarov of Red Stable.

“I have to thank Evgeny and Valentin for their support and patience. It’s nice for them to win the Gold Cup even if they’re not here,” said Shaw.

“It’s also wonderful I have won three Gold Cups. Laurie (Laxon) is always having a dig at me, but I’ve won three and he’s still on two. But I’m only joking as he’s a great trainer!

“It’s funny how I was known as a staying trainer all my life, as I won three Derbies in South Africa and also won the July Handicap with Teal, but then came Rocket Man.

“But it’s a fact I’ve always had a lot of luck with stayers and I guess there must be some truth to it.”

– Singapore Turf Club

Triptique (Liesl King)

Triptique has Queen’s Plate on the agenda

Dennis Drier revealed that Triptique’s win in the Gr 2 Cape Merchants at Kenilworth on Saturday was a plan come together and the imposing son of Trippi might now be aimed at the Gr 1 L’Ormarin’s Queen’s Plate.

Drier has perennially become a thorn in the flesh of the big-Cape yards and was not surprised to be in the winner’s enclosure of the Cape Summer Of Champions Season’s second Gr 2 event.

He said, “I have always rated him and said to Braam (Van Huysteen, who part-owns him), ‘I think he can win the Merchants’.” Drier went on to speak of the satisfaction of a plan coming together.

He praised lightweight stable jockey Sean Veale, who joined the yard in about February, and said, “He has taken the bull by the horns, is riding with a lot of confidence and rode to instructions.”

Triptique (Liesl King)

Triptique (Liesl King)

Veale was given the ride ahead of first call stable jockey Sean Cormack simply due to the 52kg Triptique was set to carry and Drier confirmed that at the weights, with Generalissimo having to carry 57,5kg, Triptique had “definitely” been the yard elect. The betting reflected this as Triptique was backed in from 16/1 to 9/1, while Generalissimo drifted from 8/1 to 20/1.

Drier had spoken of his regard for Triptique in the build-up to the Cape Summer Of Champions and had rated him the 26-horse string’s “dark horse”, before adding, “He is very talented and we haven’t seen the best of him yet. I think he could be looking for 1400m to a mile.” Drier thus regards the 1000m of the Cape Flying Championship as too sharp for him. One plan he is eyeing is to take in the Gr 2 Khaya Stables Diadem Stakes over 1200m at Kenilworth on December 26 and then run him two weeks later in the Queen’s Plate, which is widely regarded as the country’s most prestigious weight for age mile. Plan B is to keep him to sprints.

Triptique will be taking on a lot of the country’s best horses if he runs in the Queen’s Plate, including two Equus Horses Of The Year in Legislate and Futura, but asked on whether he was up to it, Drier replied, “He has done nothing wrong to date.” Indeed, if the race turns into the crawl that it did last year he could be the dark horse considering his natural speed.

However, the feedback on Generalissimo was not bright, as he has pulled up badly from his fourth place finish in the Merchants and the yard are on tenterhooks as they monitor his condition.

Generalissimo was regarded as one of the yard’s leading Cape Flying Championship hopefuls and Drier said they could only “hope and pray” he would recover timeously from his lameness, which looks to be worse than mere “jarring up.” X-rays have been taken and have revealed little.

Meanwhile, Equus Champion Three-Year-Old colt Seventh Plain is doing well ahead of Saturday’s R2,5 million Lanzerac Ready To Run Stakes, while the Gr 2 weight for age Green Point Stakes contender Punta Arenas continues to thrive and the top sprinter Guiness is also enjoying himself at Drier’s Phillippi yard.

Seventh Plain, a tall colt by Seventh Rock with a beautiful action, makes his seasonal debut and is merit rated ten points superior than any other horse in the 16-horse field which lines up for the Ready To Run Stakes over 1400m. However, Drier admitted he had it “all to do” from the very outside barrier position. However, the classy bay does have early pace as well as a fine turn of foot, two vital assets for the tight Kenilworth Old Course, and another bonus is Anton Marcus aboard.

Punta Arenas thrived while being taken care of by Drier during the Champions Season on behalf of the now retired Stan Elley. As an official member of the yard, he has continued to enjoy himself at Phillippi, which he is familiar with as this was Elley’s base. The J&B Met is his main aim but Drier has still not decided which race will be his final stepping stone into the Met, pointing out that the 1600m of the Queen’s Plate was a touch on the sharp side. Elley used the Gr 2 Peninsula Handicap over 1800m on Queen’s Plate day as a preparation for Punta Arenas in both 2014 and 2015 and he went on to finish 3rd and 5th respectively. The evergreen seven-year-old Silvano gelding loves to gallop and if able to find a handy position from his high draw of nine under Sean Cormack he could be the surprise package in Saturday’s ten horse field for the Green Point Stakes.

By David Thiselton

Legal Eagle (JC Photos)

Met on the roll for Legal Eagle

National Champion trainer Sean Tarry sends crack speedster Carry On Alice down to Cape Town today, but his top class male sprinter Trip To Heaven will campaign in Johannesburg and the highest rated horse in the country Legal Eagle will likely have a preparation in Johannesburg before being sent down for the J&B Met.

Carry On Alice (Nkosi Hlophe)

Carry On Alice (Nkosi Hlophe)

Carry On Alice will be joined by Liege, who runs in next weekend’s R2,5 million Lanzerac Ready To Run Stakes over 1400m at Kenilworth.

Last year’s J&B Met runner-up, the evergreen eight-year-old Gold Onyx, will also be heading down to Cape Town, having thrived there last season.

Zambezi River is already down there and ran a good third in the Gr 2 Cape Merchants over 1200m on Saturday.

Liege, a progressive Dynasty colt who finished second in the Gr 3 Graham Beck Stakes over 1400m last time out behind the classy Muwaary, might also go for the Gr 1 Grand Parade Cape Guineas on December 19. Furthermore, he was in joint 15th on the latest CTS Million Dollar log. Tarry is planning to send down more horses for the latter 1400m event, which takes place on January 23, although Swift Sarah (joint 9th) and Old Em (joint 19th) are the only others he currently has on the log.

The Captain Al four-year-old filly Carry On Alice made her seasonal reappearance on Saturday at Turffontein and was touched off a head by the new kid on the block, the Dominic Zaki-trained Little Genie, in the Listed Gardenia Stakes over 1000m.

Little Genie, who is by Judpot, is the same age as Carry On Alice but has only had seven starts and has won the last five of them. She was receiving only 1,5kg from 115 merit-rated Carry On Alice on Saturday and the pair might clash again in the Gr 2  Southern Cross Stakes over 1000m at Kenilworth on December 5 as Zaki is considering raiding for that race.

Legal Eagle (JC Photos)

Legal Eagle (JC Photos)

Carry On Alice finished a fine third in the Gr 1 Betting World Cape Flying Championships over 1000m last season, despite having had to stand for ages in the starting stalls, and that race, which will now be run on J&B Met day for the first time, will be her main aim again. However, there is an excellent program of sprint races for fillies during the Cape Summer Of Champions Season, including the Southern Cross, and she will likely take in a couple of those races too.

The 115 merit-rated Trip To Heaven was a touch unlucky to be beaten by Brutal Force last time out in a Pinnacle Stakes event over 1160m at Turffontein, as he lost ground at the start and Tarry reckoned S’Manga Khumalo then “panicked”. Tarry hoped the starter would have taken notice of Trip To Heaven’s tendency to miss the break when asked to stand in the stalls for too long. He will likely defend his crown in the Gr 2 Merchants over 1160m on Sansui Summer Cup day, November 28, before being put away for a Johannesburg Autumn campaign.

Legal Eagle’s “blue print” plan remains the J&B Met, although he will be prepared in Johannesburg. Tarry added that an African Horse Sickness outbreak such as the one which occurred last year had the potential to affect his and other horses’ Cape Town programs.

Legal Eagle’s top class contemporary French Navy is still on track for the Summer Cup and Tarry was “very happy” with his Peermont Emperor’s Palace Charity Mile run in which he carried top weight and ran on powerfully from way back in the running to finish an eyecatching 3,9 length sixth.

Trip To Heaven (JC Photo)

Trip To Heaven (JC Photo)

Meanwhile, Tarry’s KZN yard had a treble on the Greyville poly on Sunday and are now one off the pace in the race for the KZN Championships behind the many-times KZN Champion yard of Dennis Drier, while another former KZN Champion Duncan Howells is just one winner behind Tarry. Tarry was not even thinking of the KZN title at this early stage but was full of praise for the “fantastic” job being done by his Summerveld assistant Dishone Steyn. Steyn has now been at Summerveld for a year and clearly knows the tracks well as he always has the yard’s charges in tip-top condition as was the case on Sunday when all of Arabian National, Strategic Move and Chennai Babe won to add to the Friday night poly victory of Jade Vine and last Tuesday’s poly win with In Other Words.

Tarry looks likely to make a bold bid to wrest the KZN title, as he is carefully selecting horses from his Johannesburg string who look likely to be suited to the Greyville poly. He will not just be sending the sand horses, of which he had many a good one, lock-stock-and-barrel down to KZN as he pointed out that while the now defunct Vaal Sand track tended to suit galloping types, the Greyville poly requires horses who can quicken.

The four-year-old Kahal filly Chennai Babe is one who has been a revelation on the poly, having arrived in KZN as a merit-rated 51 one-time winner and then reeling off four wins and two places in her six poly starts to date. Arabian National, a five-year-old National Emblem gelding who has tremendous early pace and the ability to kick again, also looks suited to the surface and his three 1000m Greyville poly starts to date have yielded two wins and an unlucky third when missing the break.

By David Thiselton

Gavin Lerena

Prince in line for Victory

The Racing. It’s A Rush – International Jockeys’ Challenge (IJC) adds a bit of spice to this weekend’s racing menu with the country’s best jockeys, captained by Gavin Lerena, taking on an international team headed by England’s Hayley Turner.

The IJC is contested over two racemeetings with the first leg consisting of four races run at Fairview today (R5-8) and the second at Turffontein tomorrow (R4, R5, R8, R9). Sandwiched in between tomorrow’s four races is the all-important Sansui Summer Cup pointer, the Gr2 Victory Moon Stakes.

Last year’s winner, Judicial, went on to finish third in the Summer Cup and is back to defend his crown. Trainer Tyronne Zackey appears to be using a similar routine this season running the improving five-year-old fresh. Judicial has his work cut out with top weight and a wide draw but it’s worth noting that his last run, a Pinnacle Stakes win over course and distance back in July, was assessed by handicappers as a career best.

Disco Al is six now but trainer Joey Ramsden’s decision to take him up north could see further improvement yet from the son of Captain Al who has a habit of leaving it late. The Turffontein standside track should be ideal and Disco Al was finishing best of all in his prep run behind St Tropez last time out.

Another to impress behind St Tropez last time out (1800m Pinnacle on the Turffontein inside track) was the lightly raced Deo Juvente. The Geoff Woodruff yard have been patient with this four-year-old Trippi gelding and he comes into this race with a similar profile to that of Judicial entering last year’s race.

Ahlaam finished ahead of both Deo Juvente and Disco Al last time out but, despite being well in on official ratings here, the four-year-old filly is worse off at the weights with those two this time around. The daughter of Asiatic Boy is, however, still on the up and could be a danger if allowed to dictate.

It’s a competitive race and a good case can be made for many of the remaining carded runners. But the most intriguing of these could be the recently gelded Prince Of Orange. The four-year-old disappointed in features last season but caught the eye in his first start as a gelding last month, a close up second to the progressive Toro Rosso over a too short 1450m.

A chance is taken on Prince Of Orange who is probably aimed at bigger races to come but is most likely better than his current rating (94) with healthy respect for Disco Al and Deo Juvente.

By Brendan Pather

Picture: Gavin Lerena

aldo domeyer site

Line Break speed will be significant

Tevez attempts to win the Cape Merchants for the third year in a row at Kenilworth tomorrow and no-one knows how to land this hotly competitive handicap better than the Mike Bass stable which has won seven of the last 17 runnings.

Aldo Domeyer’s mount has followed the script that worked so well last year and the year before, reappearing in the October pinnacle – he was third in 2013, fourth last year and sixth this time – and then going straight into the Merchants. No second run after a rest problems with this horse. Also he has only gone up three points in the ratings since last season’s win.

“Tevez has come on (since the Pinnacle),” confirms Candice Robinson. “But at the weights I think Line Break could be the pick of our three. He ran well in that Pinnacle and he is a bit better off with Exelero.”

Bass, whose third runner is the Fairview scorer Tomba La Bomba, has long held Line Break in high regard and the yard now thinks he could be a sprinter even though he is by Dynasty. In what is a wide open race he is the one that makes most appeal. He has a light weight and a cracking good, even if still under-rated, jockey while his low draw is a plus. The sprint course is evening out but the latest penetrometer analysis shows that the ground is still fractionally faster on the inside to the middle.

No Merchants winner has carried more than 60kg in 15 years which stacks the odds against Same Jurisdiction, 5-1 favourite in the TAB sheet forecast. “This is a bit short for her but the concern is the amount of weight,” says Duncan Howells. “She could run into the money.”

Exelero looks much more likely to start favourite but that is not exactly a plus – every one since 2001 has been beaten. However MJ Byleveld’s mount has bounced back to his best and, although raised 3kg for his Pinnacle win, he is still weighted to beat those that finished behind him. He is also the best age – five-year-olds have won six of the last 14.

“That was the maximum they could have put him up. Had it been an ordinary race he would have gone up more,” says Vaughan Marshall. “I think he will run very well.”

Dennis Drier’s Cape Town contingent are beginning to run into form and for a few weeks last season Generalissimo held the 1 200m course record. “He may need it,” says the trainer, emphasising the word may, “but he is doing very well.”

Mister Matchett started slowly when third to Exelero three weeks ago and is now 1.5kg better. However Chris Puller says he didn’t lose very much ground that day.

Gulf Storm, fourth in that race, could pose a bigger threat while stable companion Sail South (seventh) and Happy Forever (ninth) did lose ground at the off. The latter has since been dropped a kilo.

Asstar (eighth) has a chance – he still looks as if he has yet to reach his potential – while Zambezi River has won half his ten starts and has a back-to-form genius in the irons. But it’s too short for King Of Pain and Double Whammy has surely been off too long, Triptique is 1.5kg under sufferance and for once the Snaith runners are hard to fancy while the much-travelled Talktothestars attempts what would be an amazing inter-province hat-trick and will be a big price.

By Michael Clower 

Picture: Aldo Domeyer

Across The Ice (JC Photos)

Jade Vine can have them in a tangle

With the Vaal sand a thing of the past, the next best surface for the confirmed sand larks appears to be the Greyville poly track. Many an older horse with mileage on the clock has been given a second chance as the more forgiving surface seems to be a little kinder on aging legs.

Further, given that the polytrack ratings are the same as turf ratings, most of the horses with high sand ratings and low turf ratings appear ‘tossed’ in at the weights in their first few outings on the poly.

This has been a valuable point to consider when hunting winners on the poly and Jade Vine is an example. She was unlucky not to make a winning poly debut behind stable companion and poly specialist Chennai Babe and looks set to run another big race this evening.

Across The Ice (JC Photos)

Across The Ice (JC Photos)

With a sand rating of 96 she made her poly debut off a 67 and came in for a ton of market support, backed in from 10-1 to start 28-10. However Andrew Fortune made a rare error of judgement running up a blind alley and she finished fourth beaten less than two lengths. Sean Tarry’s runner jumps off the same mark in the sixth at Greyville tonight and Fortune will be looking to make amends.

Jade Vine takes on a progressive filly in Way Out Front looking for her third win on the bounce but although she is probably running off a capped merit rating after getting the maximum six pounds for her last win in a Novice Plate, she still has to give Jade Vine 2,5kg which could be beyond her.

Another interesting runner tonight is the veteran Across The Ice. Tarry does not give up on his horses because of age and if he thinks there is still potential he keeps them rolling. Nine-year-old Across The Ice is an accomplished sprinter on the sand with a peak rating of 106. Recent form has seen him drop to 100 but he jumps off an 88 turf rating this evening. That coupled with apprentice Eric Ngwane taking a further 4kg off his back he could well prove to be the joker in the pack in spite of his indifferent recent sand form.

Likely favourite here is the Glen Kotzen-trained Hip Hop Dancer. The lightly raced gelding pulled up lame last run after making a smart return to the track from a three month break. This will be his third outing since and with a handy weight and inside draw he should be a factor.

Another to have found his form on the poly is the American-bred Nicklaus. Unbeaten in two starts for his new stable he takes a further rise in class when he contests the fifth. However, he showed no signs of stopping when beating Last Tiger recently jumping from the worst of the draw. He has pulled gate 2 tonight and he can row in again in spite of the stronger opposition.

By Andrew Harrison

Alec Laird

Follow the money

The Highveld spring season is in full swing and the form is starting to hold up with an increased number of well-backed favourites arriving at Turffontein in the past week. With this trend in mind, it could pay to follow the money at the Inside Track tomorrow.

Dublin Rebel should get favourite-backers off to a good start in the opener. The son of Jay Peg is returning from a slight break but the form of his last outings is far superior to anything else on offer in this Work Riders Maiden Plate.

Market movements are likely to be of less significance in a competitive first leg of the Bipot with the primary fancies being the two course and distance specialists, Beach In A Bottle and Loco Por Ganar, together with Finchatton who has been campaigning against stronger.

But it’s worth monitoring the boards before attempting a Place Accumulator with the third looking open to domination by first timers. There’s very little to enthuse over in terms of recent form, although the keen-racing Sweet Singer could be better suited by this shorter trip, and any support for debutantes Sapphire Girl, Clever Move and Submergence should be respected.

First timers are often avoided in the Pick 6 but it may be safer to include a few this time around with again little form on offer in the fourth. Of the raced runners, big improvement is expected from Sao Paulo who was green on debut and possibly Relampago who has been running on over shorter. But the jockey bookings for the first timers Invincible Flame, Trip To India and Winning Sister have not gone unnoticed and neither will any market support they attract.

Alec Laird’s Ntoma will be a popular banker in the opening leg of the Jackpot and justifiably. The 89-rated maiden, well clear of the rest in her last two starts, finally cracks a decent draw and should get off the mark.

The next three races are tricky and punters are advised to go as wide as possible in exotics. Noah From Goa and Bull Valley are likely to top the boards in the sixth but handicaps limited to three-year-olds often throw up results and it could pay dividends to look further down in the weights toward Coral Fever and Lunar Approach.

Similarly, Sapsan and Sharp Princess will be popular inclusions in the seventh, a three-year-old fillies handicap. But it’s difficult to eliminate any of these on overall form and once again it’s worth considering runners further down the weights, especially Miracle Rising, News Filter and Gold Shades.

Sean Tarry has a strong coupling in the eighth, Hawaiian Sun and Heptagon, but both have wide draws to contend with and this brings quite a few others into the race. Flaming Ace and Pyramus are easy to find on form but Nahoon Beach could be one that’s overlooked. He ran a cracker at the weights behind Brazuca and Front Rank in a Graduation Plate last time out and looks well in here back in a handicap.

The market could again be a good indicator in the last with a few noteworthy first timers to consider but the consistent Golden Man could be worth bankering in smaller Pick 6 perms to qualify as the first raced runner home.

By Brendan Pather

Picture: Alec Laird

Pat Eddery

Remembering Pat Eddery

Pat Eddery, champion Flat jockey 11 times and the winner of 14 British Classics, has died at the age of 63. Eddery was one of the most successful riders of all time and partnered more than 4 600 winners. He also won four Arcs and was aboard Dancing Brave for his breath-taking triumph in 1986.

His CV is punctuated with many of the world’s other great races including a brace of Gold Cups, two King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes and he was also champion jockey in Ireland in 1982, 27 years after his father Jimmy had won the title for the second time.

As well as Dancing Brave, he was associated with some of the best racehorses of the late 20th century, among them Bosra Sham, Sadler’s Wells, Rainbow Quest, El Gran Senor, Grundy, Zafonic, Warning and Pebbles, whom Eddery won the Breeders’ Cup Turf on in 1985. Only Sir Gordon Richards has ridden more winners than him in Britain.

Pat Eddery

Eddery retired in 2003 and began training, sending out his first runner in 2005. It would have been almost impossible for him to match his achievements in the saddle, but he did enjoy a Group 1 victory when Hearts Of Fire won Italy’s Gran Criterium in 2009.

Eddery and Michael Roberts became very good friends over the years. “We travelled together a lot – to Japan, Breeders’ Cup, all over so I got to know him well,” he said yesterday. “He became a very good friend. His passing is so sad.

“He was tough jockey and a great horseman. He had one of the best pair of hands ever. He also had a unique style and to watch him ride was like watching poetry in motion.”

Robert Edmondson, Eddery’s close friend and former weighing room colleague, said on Tuesday morning: “He was one of the greats – without doubt.

“He was a wonderful rider and loved horses. He was a natural and wanted to win more than anything.”

Steve Drowne, Joint President of the Professional Jockey’s Association, said: “Pat was a truly great jockey in every way. He was the man we all aspired to be in the saddle. Everyone looked up to him in the weighing room. Just a great person to be around. A Professional’s Professional.”

By Andrew Harrison 

Jockeys John Egan, Eddie Ahern, Frankie Dettori and Franny Norton lift Eddery after his final race (aboard Gamut in the CIU Selby Stakes Race run at Doncaster on November 8, 2003).

Photograph: Andy Watts/Racingphotos/Rex Shutterstock

Visit http://www.theguardian.com/sport/gallery/2015/nov/10/pat-eddery-a-life-in-pictures for the full slide show.