The former Stuart Pettigrew-trained Surcharge, now known as Yulong Prince and trained by NZ and Australian Hall of Famer Chris Waller, won a listed race at yesterday’s Melbourne Cup meeting at Flemington.
The Varsfontein Stud-bred Gimmethegreenlight five-year-old entire was in an awkward spot nearing the top of the straight, in last place and trapped on the rail in the one mile one furlong Furphy Plate, a handicap contested by 12 horses in which he was joint top weight.
However, jockey Nash Rawiller was able to switch him outward and get him through a gap.
Once in the clear he showed his class and stretched out impressively. He got up by a head.
He returned odds of 17/2 as his previous overseas form, consisting of two races in Dubai and three in Australia had not yielded a place, although they were in a higher class including two Group 1s.
Yulong Prince always showed tremendous class in South Africa where he infamously had to contend with a spate of bad draws.
He is one to follow as he could build on this win.
Reigning national Champion trainer Sean Tarry has hit the front in stakes earning for the season but just unofficially as his only feature win at Saturday’s Peermont Emperor’s Palace Charity Mile meeting was in a restricted race, whose stakes don’t count towards the championship.
His Visionaire filly Spiritofthegroove stormed home from way off
the pace to win the R1 million Emperor’s Palace Ready to Run Cup.
In The Dance (JC Photographics)
Jockey Marco van Rensburg dropped her out from a wide draw and in
the straight he faced a wall of horses on the inside.
However, he somehow managed to weave her through and she won going
away by 2,25 lengths.
She is owned by Singapore-based Mark Yong’s Equine Hub SA and was
bred by Tmen Stables.
Tarry, whilst mindful Spiritofthegroove had won this 1400m contest
in testing conditions, was still concerned about her getting the tough
Turffontein Mile of the Grade 3 Fillies Mile on November 23.
He said he would see how she drew in the WSB Cape Fillies Guineas,
which was another option.
Tarry said he had endured an overall disappointing day on
Saturday.
He said, “I would have liked In The Dance to have had another
run going in to the Charity Mile, but she travelled well in the race and still
finished well. She could have got closer with a better draw. Tilbury Fort
needed the run and the soft ground made it more testing. So they will both come
on from the run. Zillzaal looked a picture before his last run and a picture
in the parade ring on Saturday but he then went into a complete sweat
behind the starting stalls, so something went wrong between the parade
ring and the start, so it was disappointing. He and Tilbury Fort will still be
going for the Summer Cup and there is a nice four week gap for In The Dance
into the Ipi Tombe so hopefully she can fluke a draw.”
He continued, “Eden Roc ran a good race at the weights in the
Graham Beck and should be cherry ripe for the Dingaans. Putontheredlight had a
complete no show and the rider stood up at the 300m mark, it was a nothing run,
so I don’t know what to read into it. Sidonie did at least stay on so that was
a result you can live with. “
In the official championship standings Tarry is in third place on earnings of R3,410,838. Justin Snaith leads on earnings of R3,603,163 and Paul Peter is in second place on R3,486,675. Mike de Kock’s halcyon day on Saturday took him into fourth place on R3,197,750. Alan Greeff and Brett Crawford are in 5th and 6th place respectively on R3,183,638 and R3,030,963. Yvette Bremner is in 7th on R2,389,600. Glen Kotzen, Gavin Smith and Garth Puller fill the final three places in the top ten on the log.
The David Nieuwenhuizen-trained Mill Queen was victorious in the
Grade 3 HSH Princess Charlene Starling Stakes over 1400m despite not enjoying a
smooth preparation.
This Digteby Stud-bred Querari filly was bought for R140,000 at
the National Yearling Sale session 2 and has already earned R423,375 in gross
stakes for her owners S Poriazi, WG de Koker and W Volschenk.
Nieuwenhuizen said, “She still has to mature mentally and
physically, she is a late maturer who is still furnishing, so hopefully she
will get a lot better. She is doing extremely well despite being backwards and
that is just down to her ability, so we have to look after her. She is a filly
who gives her all, so we also have to be careful with her in work.”
Mill Queen (Candiese Marnewick)
Nieuwenhuizen lamented the lack of a preparation race for her
going into the Starling Stakes, which he said was due to the benchmark for any
suitable handicap races not being high enough to include his 110 merit rated
horse and there were also no suitable plate races.
He did not want to put her up against older horses at this stage.
He said the lack of a preparation race might have worked in her
favour to some degree due to the conditions of the Starling Stakes, which
penalises horses for having more than two wins. He questioned the logic of this
condition, i.e. why should good horses be penalised for feature preparation
events, when there is already a condition which penalises Graded wins.
Furthermore, the Querari filly had a setback in training, tweaking
her back, and they were forced to only walk her for a few days.
He added, “Thank goodness Gavin (Lerena) has a good feel for
a horse. He rode her with a bit in reserve and it looked like she did need it.”
She won by 0,30 lengths from the persistent Wisteria
Walk.
Nieuwenhuizen said another disadvantage she had endured was the
difficulty of getting one jockey to stay aboard her.
He feared losing Lerena for her next intended target, the Grade 3
Fillies Mile, due to the latter’s retainer with Wilgerbosdrift and
Mauritzfontein Stud.
Lerena had ridden her before Saturday, which was an advantage.
Mill Queen ended her campaign as a two-year-old with a 0,80 length
second in the Grade 1 Thekwini Stakes. However, Nieuwenhuizen pointed out she
had come from a wide draw that day and did not know the track, which was unlike
the winner Gabor on both counts.
He would have preferred her next race, which will be her second
after a layoff, to be on Gauteng Summer Cup day, November 30, but they had
moved the Fillies Mile forward to the 23rd.
However, he said she had come out of Saturday’s race well.
He added he always went in to races positively, so would be able
to adjust her work accordingly.
He concluded, “It’s all about the stable working together and
management.”
Joey Ramsden has decided against moving to Singapore to
train. He will now presumably stay put at his Milnerton base and concentrate on
trying to build up the stable to its former glories.
Ramsden, who has gone out of his way to be helpful to this
writer in the past, has not answered my calls or text messages in recent weeks
and yesterday was no exception. But Singapore Turf Club executive Zenna Teo
emailed: “We would like to inform you that Mr Joey Ramsden has decided not to
train in Singapore.”
Joey Ramsden
In April the Singapore Turf Club took Ramsden and the rest
of South African racing by surprise when it issued a press release to say that
he was one of three new trainers being allocated boxes. Apparently he had only
made inquiries and had not told his owners but he said he would fly over and
have a look. He was soon singing the country’s praises and pointing to the
advantages of its racing compared to that in South Africa, although he did say
what a complex process it was to set up there.
With the possible exception of Charles Laird (who retired),
Ramsden was the trainer who suffered most when Markus Jooste decided to quit
racing in the immediate aftermath of the Steinhoff financial scandal. His
numbers slumped from well over 100 to the extent that he moved to a smaller
yard and the majority of his horses were not of the same class as the Jooste
ones. He has really battled in the first few months of this season and has had
only two winners.
But Singapore’s loss is South Africa’s gain. Ramsden is one
of the few trainers in this country to have won Group 1 races overseas and at
home he was won more than 1 750 races including 26 Grade 1s, notably the
2016 Vodacom Durban July with The Conglomerate. He also has the personality to
attract owners and a world-wide reputation that is likely to attract further
patronage from overseas.
He has recently updated his website to publicise an
attacking policy that extends countrywide, saying: “The yard regularly raids
Johannesburg, Durban and Port Elizabeth. With the recent success of the
Johannesburg stable we are looking to make that yard a permanent fixture and,
with a 10% stakes winners to winners strike rate, we believe our results speak
for themselves.”
Al Bragga, something of a bookmakers’ benefit so far, just
might be worth another chance in the opening maiden at Kenilworth today.
The Mike Stewart-trained three-year-old was backed as if he
couldn’t lose on debut here in August yet he finished with only one behind him
and over 20 lengths off the winner. He was found to be lame afterwards. He then
went on a recovery mission at Durbanville and, although only fifth, he ran a
great deal better. He would, though, have finished a lot closer had things gone
according to plan but he had to be eased 600m out in order to get a clear run.
Liberty Hall (Candiese Marnewick)
“He also gave himself a nasty over-reach,” says Mike Stewart
who said of the debut disappointment: “When he got home he came out of the box
on three legs. Either he knocked himself in the pens or he got kicked and
nobody noticed.”
Al Bragga was gelded between the two races and this time
Greg Cheyne takes over from Donovan Dillon and is fitted with cheek
pieces. Stewart, who doesn’t bet, is determined not to tempt fate by
making predictions but his horse was only a length and a quarter behind Cape Of
Storms (33-10 favourite here) at Durbanville despite that interference.
Empire Glory, cut from 6-1 to 9-2 and the only four-year-old
in the field, was hampered when he had Capkuta (4-1) a neck behind over
1 250m at Durbanville last month.
Happy Wanderer (15-2) is the highest rated but disappointed
at Durbanville and Mike Robinson says: “I don’t think he really enjoyed the
course but also he needed gelding. This was done immediately afterwards but he
might just need this run as I haven’t galloped him.”
The Andre Nel newcomer King Cyrus (15-2) has to be
respected, particularly with Bernard Fayd’Herbe riding, but Al Bragga at 4-1
looks a worthwhile prospect to make it third time lucky.
Dennis Drier only brings maidens to Cape Town if he is
convinced they are good enough to win so it is no surprise to see newcomer
Croisette favourite for race two, particularly as she has already finished
second in a Scottsville barrier trail. But 5-10 against a couple of provenly
useful local fillies looks too short. I prefer to take a chance with Ryanair at
5-1.
Looks Like Magic, 2-1 for the Betting World Maiden (race
three), is a pretty apt description of the Glen Kotzen/Morne Winnaar
combination at the moment and she has a big chance. However slight preference
is for Fayd’Herbe’s mount Springisintheair.
Ryan Munger has been granted a 12-month licence for
Singapore starting January 1.
Munger, who chose this career path after he was inspired to follow into the footsteps of his jockey-uncle Stuart Randolph, enrolled at the South African Jockey Academy in 2011 and after rapidly rising through the ranks, now figures among the leading jockeys on the national log.
Crowned Zimbabwe champion jockey in the 2017-2018 season, the Durban-born Munger was first based in Johannesburg. He moved to Cape Town in October 2018 to briefly join trainer Glen Kotzen as his stable jockey before going freelance shortly after.
Last year, Munger finished eighth on the national log on 127 winners. He currently sits in eighth place on 31 winners.
He has racked up around 570 winners, including four at Grade 3 level and six in Listed races. His first Grade 3 wins came in the Caradoc Gold Cup with Ilitshe at Turffontein in 2017, while other notable feature wins at Turffontein include the Grade 3 Graham Beck Stakes with National Park last November and the Grade 3 Pretty Polly Stakes with Palace Of Dreams in March.
In terms of overseas experience, Munger took part in an apprentice jockeys’ challenge in Abu Dhabi back in 2014.
Mike de Kock leapt from eighth in the National Trainers
Championship to fourth after a fine day at Turffontein on Saturday, where his
six winners included Barahin in the R1 million Grade 2 Peermont Emperor’s
Charity Mile.
Rainfall of 37,5mm in the 24 hours before the meeting led to
testing conditions and it proved vital on the day for horses to conserve as
much energy as possible in the running. Jockeyship was thus of the highest
importance and Callan Murray was at his best, booting home five of De Kock’s
six winners.
Barahin was drawn well in four in the Charity Mile and Murray
secured a good spot on the rail in midfield.
Approach Control went to the front but had to be used up to do so
and was consequently the first horse gone in the straight.
Barahin (Candiese Marnewick)
Chijmes was the early leader from a good draw of three and
apprentice Dennis Schwarz put on the brakes to conserve his energy.
Murray switched Barahin inward coming off the false rail and he
had a clear run on the inside. The Wilgerbosdrift and Mauritzfontein Stud-bred
Gimmethegreenlight colt was clearly relishing the conditions and hit the front
still under a tight hold. Murray did not move a muscle until about the
300m mark by which stage he was a length clear of Chijmes. When he got to work
Barahin found extra and waltzed away to win by 3,50 lengths from the tall and
progressive Ato gelding Chijmes, who stayed on resolutely. There was a gaping
3,25 length gap back to the dead-heaters for third, Cascapedia and reserve
runner Flying Winger. Cascapedia found the spot behind Barahin on the rail
after jumping from draw five and Flying Winger was dropped out from a wide draw
and was placed on the rail two positions behind Cascapedia, proving that
finding cover quickly was the key to staying on in the tough conditions.
Barahin had started second favourite at 6/1. The 47/20 favourite
Zillzaal went handy from a draw of six and was caught one wide without cover
for most of the way, which was his undoing.
Barahin’s win for Shiekh Hamdan Bin Rashid al Maktoum was the
first leg of a quick feature race treble for De Kock.
In the preliminaries of the Grade 3 Graham Beck Stakes over 1400m,
De Kock’s NZ-bred All Too Hard grey gelding Frosted Gold caught the eye,
especially his muscled hindquarters.
However, he drifted out from 4/1 to 29/4 as the favourite
Putontheredlight shortened from 33/10 to 57/20.
The race was full of incident, some of it caused by the loose
horse On My Mind, who dislodged Nooresh Juglall after pecking at the
jump.
Craig Zackey managed to place Frosted Gold on the rail in midfield
and he had one hairy moment when the loose horse veered in front of him.
Earlier, the loose horse had forced the fancied pair Eden Roc and Tallin
outward on the turn. Later, Tallin appeared to clip the heels of the favourite
Putontheredlight and Callan Murray performed a miracle to stay aboard but lost
his stirrup irons.
In the straight the loose horse took up the running of both
Riverstown and the leader Magic School, who was staying on strongly from a
handy position. However, their stride was hardly affected and it did not
materially affect the result as Frosted Gold finished powerfully to win going
away by a length from Magic School. The latter beat Riverstown by a shorthead for
second. The favourite Putontheredlight was caught wide in the running, which
gave him little hope in the conditions.
Juglall was reported okay and just suffering aches and
pains.
Frosted Gold is owned by Dave MacLean, who was due to run the New
York Marathon yesterday.
In the Grade 3 Yellowwood Handicap over 1800m De Kock’s Irish-bred
Exceed And Excel filly Queen Supreme, who is six months younger than her
four-year-old contemporaries, confirmed herself a star in the making. Running
in the Mauritzfontein Stud colours for a syndicate of owners she powered away
to a 4,25 length win from the classy sorts Ronnie’s Candy and Roy’s Riviera.
Later De Kock’s Cape Derby winner Atyaab relished the underfoot
conditions and won the Listed Java Handicap over 2400m cosily from Factor Fifty
and Bondiblu. This Australian bred gelding by Dundeel is owned by Sheikh
Hamdan.
Earlier, De Kock had won two maidens respectively with the
Australian-bred Snitzel gelding Alameery, also owned by Sheikh Hamdan, and the
Rathmor Stud-bred Noble Tune colt Hellofaride, owned by Mario Ferreira.
Eight times SA champion trainer De Kock earned R1,103,200 on the
day to rise to R3,197,750 in stakes for the season.
The David Niewenhuizen-trained Digteby Stud-bred
Querari filly Mill Queen had always struck as one who would train on and she
fended off the persistent challenge of Wisteria Walk to convert 18/10
favouritism in the Grade 3 HSH Princess Charlene Starling Stakes over 1400m
under Gavin Lerena.
The Clifton Stud-bred Kahal gelding Prince Of Kahal claimed a
remarkable fourth win in as many starts this season. He stormed home on the
outside rail to defy third topweight of 61kg in the Golden Loom over 1000m
under Dennis Schwarz, his third Graded win in succession.
The Sean Tarry-trained Tmen Stables-bred Visionaire filly Spiritofthegroove stormed home from way off the pace to win the joint richest race on the day, the R1 million Emperors Ready To Run Cup under Marco van Rensburg.
Last Winter
has his second race since finishing a half-length second to Oh Susanna in last
year’s Sun Met in the Matchbook Floodlit Stakes over a distance just short of a
mile and a half at Kempton today. The race is due off at 6.00pm South African
time.
The
six-year-old, now trained by Sir Michael Stoute, will be ridden for the first
time by Louis Steward. Last Winter comes out equal second with John Gosden’s
2018 Ebor runner-up Weekender on adjusted ratings. The William Haggas-trained
Young Rascal is 3lb clear top.
Candice Bass-Robinson reports that Russet Air, winner of the 1 000m Pinnacle at Kenilworth six days ago, will run next in the WSB Cape Merchants on November 23.
Bernard
Fayd’Herbe, vowing to return with a bang, did just that at Kenilworth on
Saturday when he won on his first ride back.
Concussion,
or rather medical analysis of the need to give his system a break because of
the risk of its long-term effects, may have sidelined him for three months but
his mental faculties were as sharp as ever on the Andre Nel-trained Lady Lu in
the opening maiden.
Bernard Fayd’Herbe (Nkosi Hlophe)
Punters
didn’t give the filly a prayer, despite her jockey’s sky-high reputation, and
allowed her to drift unbacked from 3-1 to 9-1 – but they were left wondering
what had happened to their judgement after hearing Fayd’Herbe’s first-hand
account of his.
“I jumped
out and she was rushing but there was a strong tail wind,” he related. “So I
brought her back a little and she started travelling underneath me. I was watching
Richard Fourie on Linda Loves Lace in front of me. He was going easy fractions.
I sent mine on perhaps too early but when she got going she really took off.”
He followed
up two races later on Gold Medal for the Bass-Robinson stable and some of the
owners for whom he won the Vodacom Durban July on Marinaresco two years ago.
But apparently those three months off were no holiday for a man has spent the
last 20 years keeping his frame at least 7kg below its natural weight.
“I had to do
a lot of work,” he related. “Dougie Whyte from Hong Kong helped me, I went on a
new diet and I rode the Equicizer every day.”
Justin
Snaith and Richard Fourie chalked up their now almost expected treble – with
Pinkerton (backed from 5-10 to an almost unbelievable 2-10), Fleeced and Pay
Pay to take their tallies for the season to 43 and 41. But the rest of the card
went to men for whom life must all too often seem more like Moodys (outlook
negative but otherwise unchanged) than Springbok.
“I’ve had
nothing but seconds – even other trainers are sending me pictures of my horses
finishing second,” rued Paddy Kruyer after Louis Mxothwa on 16-1 shot Savea
stopped the rot in the TAB Telebet Handicap, and he fished out his phone to
show a shot of What A Flirt being beaten less than the thickness of a betting
slip last Tuesday.
Hidden
Strings, in the colours of breeder Willem Engelbrecht jnr and well handled by
Keagan de Melo in the Interbet.co.za Handicap, was Greg Ennion’s first winner
since June. “It’s been a tough few months,” said the trainer with some feeling.
“I had a herpes virus in the yard – but the horses are starting to look good
again and I have some lovely babies.”
Piet Steyn,
most of whose glory days were a long time ago, took the bold step of turning
out old stager Waiting For Rain for the second Saturday running in the
Tellytrack.com Handicap and was rewarded with an 18-1 victory.
“Last week
he got sandwiched on the fence,” the trainer related. “He came out of it well
so I decided to run him. I don’t gallop mine much. If you haven’t got many –
and I have 20 – you have to look after them.”
But in many
ways the real unsung hero of this race was Grant Behr who bided his time to
pounce fast and late, thwarting Fayd’Herbe of victory number three. “Nobody
could have ridden the horse better,” said an admiring Steyn, and with
justification.
Behr seldom
attends the Tellytrack interviews and this was no exception. “I’ve been a bit
down lately,” he said in explanation. “But maybe I should go to them.”
Certainly he should. They provide a real shop window and in racing self-promotion is one of the names of the game.
Anton Marcus may have been out for three months, getting
himself stitched up and back into one piece, but although the limbs may be
taking strain the racing brain is as sharp as ever.
Marcus was given free licence on Fools Gold in the Model Man
Mile (Listed) at Hollywoodbets Greyville yesterday and like a shrewd prospector
who had seeded his claim, he played the field on the break, cruising to the
line unchallenged. Making all the running he delivered what ultimately amounted
to little more than an exercise gallop for Robbie and Shannon Hill’s gelding.
Western Fort (Anneke Kitching)
A proven front runner, Marcus set pedestrian fractions on
Fools Gold and somewhat surprisingly was never challenged as his mount sped
clear at the top of the straight to win as he liked.
The win will have been have been cold comfort for Marcus
with Mike de Kock, who saddled six winners at Turffontein on Saturday, pointing
out that had he been able to take up the De Kock rides he would have added the Gr2
Emperors Palace Charity Mile on Barahin and the Gr 3 Graham Beck Stakes on
Frosted Gold to his CV.
Marcus is tied to a contract with the powerful mainly
Western Cape-based Ridgemont stable that required him to ride Bitter Lemon in a
lowly MR73 Handicap at Kenilworth on the same afternoon. De Kock, in jest
rather than malice, took the opportunity to rub a little salt into the ‘lemon’
of a good friend.
Frank Robinson’s gelding Avro Lancaster has the Summerveld
dogs barking but Tony Nassif, a doyen and one of the really nice men in the
sport, was on hand to lead in Greattobecaptain in the card opener for Karen and
Greg Anthony. Poorly drawn last run and a much better gate at two yesterday.
Serino Moodley steered the colt home. “On his work we knew he would run a big
race,” confirmed Anthony and knowing the owner’s, Greattobecaptain will not
have been allowed to ‘run loose’.
Avro Lancaster pulled up with a myriad of reported problems
so do not write him off.
Mark Dixon was in Gauteng hoping to pluck another plum at
the Emperor’s Palace Ready To Run Sale, but Victor Tojeira, owner Brian
Burnard’s son-in-law, appears to have picked a good one at the National
Two-year-old sale in Dinetto. Pressed to a mile last time out, the wheels came
off, but yesterday it was all smooth travelling as Dinetto put in a telling run
up the inside of the pack to head off Themba and Elusive Force with favourite
Fred emulating a Manchester United dud signing.
Dixon was on the mark again as Presumptuous continued is
steady improvement with a comfortable win in the third.
Exion and Battle Of Alesia were the expected flag-bearers for the raiding Paul Peter yard, but it was the less expected Western Front, down the field in a work-riders maiden on debut, who paid their way, getting the better of Twice Golden in the fifth.
By Andrew Harrison
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