Aldo Domeyer

Domeyer returns to Kenilworth

Aldo Domeyer is to make a surprise return from Hong Kong and he will be in action at Kenilworth on Saturday.

Alan Greeff has booked him for ante-post favourite World Radar in the Western Cape Fillies Championship and he has two mounts for Andre Nel – Congo Compaq in the mile maiden and Vikram in the MR90 Handicap.

When Domeyer did so well in his first few months in Hong Kong that he was offered a contract to return for the current season many feared that he had been lost to South African racing for good. Jockeys can earn a fortune in Hong Kong and Grant van Niekerk (who rode a double at Sha Tin yesterday) has spoken of the thrill of riding in front of 50 000 people at meeting after meeting.

Before he left in April Domeyer was first jockey for Candice Bass-Robinson who said: “I am bringing down Stuart Randolph for my runners this Saturday. Aldo will again be riding for me in the future but it depends on how long he is going to stay.”

Greeff said yesterday that World Radar, impressive winner of her only two starts, is to travel from Port Elizabeth on Thursday. African Warrior is 3-1 favourite for Saturday’s Cape Classic despite doubts about him running because of the weight he has to give away from a bad draw.

Dean Kannemeyer is deferring a decision until this morning and said on Saturday: “I am not ruling anything out at the moment and African Warrior is still under consideration. Liberty Hall and Seventh Gear both did pacework over 1 200m at Durbanville on Thursday. They didn’t gallop together but they worked well. Seventh Gear is nicely drawn but he still has to prove himself. I will see how they go on Monday morning and then decide.”

By Michael Clower

Charles (Liesl King)

Charles pays with attitude

Charles has had a R6 million bill hanging over his head all his racing life but, while removing his stud potential eliminates his long-term earning capacity, seemingly it is going to be the making of him as a racehorse.

“He was gelded in August as soon as he got back from Durban,” relates Brett Crawford. “Since then his whole attitude has changed. He is not playing around anymore and he is now focussed on what he is doing.”

Punters were expecting the old Charles – good enough to get placed but not to win – and were happy to let him drift unbacked from 11-2 to 10-1 in the Tellytrack.com Pinnacle at Durbanville on Saturday but from Keagan de Melo’s position the picture looked very different. “I was always going well,” he said. “Everything seemed to be slowing up 600m out and, when I managed to get a couple of lengths on them, I knew I was going to win.”

Charles (Liesl King)
Charles (Liesl King)

For the horse’s trainer equine psychology is now the deciding factor in future plans. “To win, drawn ten out of ten over a trip that was his shortest, was impressive but I have got to build up his confidence.

“He is only rated 111 and so he is far behind the 130-plus stars. There is a mile coming up next month (Cape Mile) and if he wins that well we will take on the old guns in the L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate and the Sun Met.”

If Charles was a revelation Twist Of Fate was a disappointment. Last into the parade ring, he looked in the picture of health, albeit a bit big round the middle. The money poured on him from 17-10 to 17-20 and he raced handy. But when Stuart Randolph started riding two furlongs out the response was nil. Indeed he weakened to finish fifth. To be fair, he was giving away lumps of weight and it was his first race for nearly three months.

“He needed it,” said the jockey. “Turning into the straight he began to labour a bit but he will come on from this.”

Snapscan had been off just as long but there was confidence behind her – she shortened from 9-2 to 26-10 – and she led 100m out under Louis Mxothwa for a convincing win in the TAB Telebet Conditions Plate. Like Charles she set a new class record.

“She has run in staying feature races to get black type,” said Glen Kotzen. “We will go the soft route with her to start with and run in the Victress (Dec 21) but if she wins that we can look at the Paddock Stakes.”

Justin Snaith clocks up the winners so fast that he is past landmark after landmark with nobody noticing – including himself. His tally now stands at 2 635, an incredible average of 146 a year since he started training in 2001.

He and Richard Fourie chalked up three more on Saturday with Aye Aye, Wild Coast and the wandering Winter Is Over.

Sandile Mbhele is nearing a landmark of his own as he needs just five more winners to lose his claim after scoring on Spy for Vaughan Marshall. However the talented 21-year-old’s personal schedule has been put back a week with an interference suspension.

Donovan Dillon is making the most of his flying visits from Durban and he scored on How And Why for Eric Sands and the well-backed Brett Crawford-trained Khopesh in the last.

By Michael Clower

White Lightning (Candiese Marnewick)

White Lightning is set to strike

The Michaelmas Handicap (Listed) has attracted only eight runners, disappointing in terms of numbers for the R150k stake, but that said, sorting out a pecking order is no easy task.

It may prove prudent to look among the bottom weights for a likely winner where Paul Lafferty’s runners get lumps of weight in the 1900m contest on the turf at Hollywoodbets Greyville on Sunday.

The pick of the Lafferty runners could be White Lightning who has his third run after a break and now tries blinkers. The grey has only recorded a single victory in his 14 starts but has only been out of the money on four occasions and has placed against some useful opposition. He was far from disgraced when just under three lengths back to the promising Jack Of Hearts last time out, giving the winner 7kg. Lafferty has probably had the Michaelmas pencilled in for his colt a way back as he goes well over course and distance. With a light weight and blinkers on for the first time, he could prove the one to beat.

White Lightning (Candiese Marnewick)
White Lightning (Candiese Marnewick)

Lafferty says both of his runners are in with strong chances. “White Lightning and Our Coys are both big runners,” he said yesterday. “The half-cups are on White Lightning just to get him to concentrate,” he said.

Frank Robinson has probably had similar plans for his filly Arianos Shadow who caught the eye in her last two starts over 1400m. She was staying on stoutly in both those races and the step up to 1900m with only 53kg on her back could make her a handful.

Of the balance, The Dazzler has a big weight but is always honest and although Blackball returns from a four-month break and may just need it, he will go close on his best form.

Mike de Kock is back in two and saddles two runners with strong chances, Port Key in the fourth and Balletto in the eighth.

Balletto shows some promise and is sure to be among the fancied runners, many of whom have poor draws to contend with. She is a lightly raced daughter of the ill-fated stallion Soft Falling Rain whose progeny have come to light in recent weeks. Her pedigree suggests that Sunday’s 1400m will be right up her alley and she may prove to be the one to beat.

Lowan Denysschen is enjoying a good spell of late and he saddles Eternal Words, successful in three of her ast five starts including a recent victory over Liquid Irish. She has the benefit of an inside gate and young apprentice Jason Gates has an enviable record aboard the mare.

But the list of possible winners is a long one. Obvious dangers Spam Alert, Linear and Je Ne Sais Quoi have drawn in Marriott Road – not the best place to be in a 1400m dash.

Port Key lines up in a seriously competitive handicap in the fourth race and opening leg of the Pick 6 – there are nine races on the card.

Dean Kannemeyer saddles the progressive Favour who bids for his fourth race on the bounce. He was cleverly placed when winning a lowly merit rated handicap on the poly last time out and takes a jump in class this time around. However, he does come from a very much in form stable and has a handy galloping weight.

Clouds Of Witness is consistent and Gary Rich’s runner caught the eye when two lengths back to Noble Joshua in his warm-up for this event. He will much prefer this trip and with a good draw will make them gallop.

Port Key arrives with useful Highveld form, no further back than second in his four starts, and the lightly raced four-year-old is likely to start at the top of the boards.

Kannemeyer could provide two of the better bets on the card in Ice Baron in the first leg of the PA and Silva Magic in the fifth.

By Andrew Harrison

Twist Of Fate (Liesl King)

Hard to oppose ‘Fate’

Twist Of Fate is well-nigh impossible to oppose in the Tellytrack.com Pinnacle Stakes at Durbanville tomorrow but punters should hold fire until such time as they are sure that the horse is going to run.

The colt was the only one declared without a jockey on Monday and I was unable to contact Joey Ramsden on Tuesday or again yesterday morning. But he often prefers to scratch a horse if he can’t find a rider he considers suitable – and this one is the stable star.

Twist Of Fate (Liesl King)
Twist Of Fate (Liesl King)

He has only been unplaced once in 16 starts and has earned over R3 million. Last season he won the Cape Classic over tomorrow’s trip as well as the Politician and the KRA Guineas. He was second in the Cape Guineas, CTS 1600 and Daily News while he was also third in the Vodacom Durban July and the Concorde.

Just as much to the point he has 5kg in hand on adjusted ratings. True, he is drawn eight out of 12 and has not raced for nearly three months but neither should stop him.

He was trading at a generous-looking 15-10 yesterday, with original main market rival Charles drifting from 9-2 to 6-1, but the Brett Crawford runner is also having his first run of the season. Furthermore he is badly drawn and needs further.

If the favourite does not run then Sacred Arrow could be the best bet. His price will, of course, shorten significantly from his present 11-2 but this is his trip, he is well drawn and has had an outing. “He should go well,” says Candice Bass-Robinson. “He needed his run when seventh (beaten less than three lengths) in the Matchem but he would have been a bit closer with a decent draw.”

Star Chestnut is a big price at 18-1 for a Snaith-Fourie runner, particularly with the combination in such hot form, but he was only tenth in the Matchem.

Keagan de Melo, who rides Charles, could have his work cut out to overcome the widest draw of all in the TAB Telebet Conditions Plate but Star Fighter has the most appealing recent form as she was fifth in the Diana. Unfortunately much of the value has gone with her price shortening from  4-1 to 5-2.

Duchess Of Bourbon (Snaith/Fourie) was the original favourite and, while she won the Winter Oaks, that was over 600m further than this and she is held by the selection on previous Stormsvlei Mile form.

By Michael Clower

La Bella Mia (Candiese Marnewick)

La Bella Mia gets the nod

This time of the year is traditionally greatly looked forward to by the more astute and patient punters of the SA racing fraternity as it heralds the arrival of the summer rains and trainers have their best horses tuned like machines to take advantage of the more forgiving going.

Unfortunately the rains are yet to arrive and there is no sign of them in the forecast this weekend, where the highlight is a MR 104 Handicap over 1200m.

La Bella Mia (Candiese Marnewick)
La Bella Mia (Candiese Marnewick)

The latter race is difficult to analyse, but Grade 2 Post Merchants winner La Bella Mia is given the nod. She has a wide draw to overcome but will be fit, having had recent runs, and has a 4kg claimer up. She has won over this course and distance before and many of the opponents she faces have question marks against them. If she gets the necessary luck in running she will go close.

Winter Storm struck as one who was headed for the top in the sprinting division last season but by the end of the term he needed a layoff and disappointed in his last couple of starts. He should have come on from his comeback run last time. Interestingly, the blinkers have been removed and with Warren Kennedy aboard he has every chance of overcoming a tough draw.

Warrior’s Rest is a highly effective front-runner but such is his style, in which he continually ups the pace, it is essential he gets to the front as he lacks turn of foot when sitting behind a slow pace. This trip is too sharp, so he could battle to get to the front, but he is well drawn so might be worth including. State Trooper is capable of running on so is interesting from a tricky draw. Attenborough had a disappointing last season but this Grade 1 winner can’t be ignored over an ideal trip from a plum draw.

In the previous race, a MR 99 Handicap over 1800m, Silver Spectrum appears to be on the up and can follow up on his last win off a five point higher mark. Green Haze has some class and will be a threat. He has run once over this trip and appeared to not stay. However, he is now having his third run after a layoff and gelding so he should be given another chance, especially being by miler Gimmethegreenlight out of a Western Winter mare who won twice over this trip. Popsicle Toes looks to be an ever improving sort and he will also be right there over a suitable trip if able to overcome a tough draw.

In the seventh race, a MR 92 handicap for fillies and mares, Ouro is the narrow first choice. She has some class and has bounced back to form this season after ending last season on a disappointing note. Double ‘O’ Eight has a tough draw and a welter 61,5kg to carry but has a fine turn of foot, so if finding a good position in the running she will go close. Three Stars improved last time with second time blinkers on when running second, finishing three-quarters of a length in front of Ouro. She has a good draw, but is half-a-kilogram worse off with Ouro, who likely needed that run. Blonde Vision is a small but zippy sort and with first-time blinkers on she can’t be ignored. Twelve Oaks is capable of popping up and is effective over this trip so will be dangerous from a plum draw with a 4kg claimer aboard.  

It should be an enjoyable meeting but many will be keenly anticipating the arrival of the summer rains. 

By David Thiselton

Muzi Yeni (Nkosi Hlophe)

Jockey Challenge teams finalised

The teams for this year’s World Sports Betting International Jockey Challenge supported by Sun International and Air Mauritius, have been finalised.

Muzi Yeni will captain the South African team while Gavin Lerena, Warren Kennedy, Greg Cheyne, Callan Murray and S’manga Khumalo are the other riders to wear the green and gold silks.

The International Team will be captained by Rab Havlin (Scotland), with Paul Hanagan, Martin Dwyer, Hayley Turner (England), Andrea Atzeni (Italy) and Nooresh Juglall (Mauritius) his wingmen and -woman.

TEAM SA

Muzi Yeni is a regular on the South African team competing in international jockey challenges. He is undoubtedly the most hard-working jockey in the country having saddled up 476 times since the start of the season in 1 August.

Gavin Lerena is no stranger to team racing, having represented SA in five International Jockey Challenges on home soil, winning the Longines International Jockey Challenge in 2015 in Hong Kong, and representing the Rest Of The World team at the Shergar Cup a few years back. He was SA champion jockey in the 2014-15 season.

Warren Kennedy currently leads the champion jockey log. Last season he broke through the 100 barrier mark, riding 139 winners at a strike rate of 12,2% and finished 7th on the log. Furthermore, he scored his first Grade 1 win, riding the Gavin van Zyl-trained Gabor to victory in the Thekwini Stakes over 1600m at Greyville on eLan Gold Cup day.

Greg Cheyne is well-travelled, having raced in Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Germany, Mauritius, Zimbabwe, Korea and Macau. He boasts more than 100 international victories.

Callan Murray has proven that he has BMT – that’s big match temperament. Four months after being crowned Champion Apprentice for the 2015-16 season, he bagged a Grade 1 treble on Champions Day in 2018. He has also made his mark in Hong Kong, Singapore and Australia.

S’manga Khumalo was crowned South African champion jockey for the 2013-14 season. He repeated that feat in 2015-2016. He wrote his name in the history books in 2013 when becoming the first black jockey to win the prestigious Grade 1 Vodacom Durban July.

INTERNATIONAL TEAM

Rab Havlin was a member of Team UK at last year’s International Jockey Challenge in Singapore. He has ridden around 900 domestic winners, partnering more than 1000 winners worldwide – in countries like the United Kingdom, France, Ireland, Italy, Germany, Switzerland, Czech Republic, Hungary, Singapore and South Africa.

Paul Hanagan has twice been crowned champion jockey on the Flat in Britain, riding 165 winners in 2011 to defend his title, having won his first title with 191 winners in 2010. Among his major wins are the British Champions Sprint Stakes Grade 1 with Muhaarar in 2015, the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes Grade 1 with Taghrooda in 2014, the Grade 1 Prix Jean-Luc Lagardere in France with Wootton Bassett in 2010 and the Grade 1 Dubai Golden Shaheen aboard Muarrab in 2016.

Martin Dwyer has recorded major wins worldwide, most notably aboard Phoenix Reach. They teamed up to win the Canadian International Stakes in 2003, the Hong Kong Vase in 2004 and the Dubai Sheema Classic in 2005. He has twice been the recipient of the Flat Ride of the Year award, in 2003 for winning the Jockey Club Cup with Persian Punch and in 2006 for his Vodafone Derby win upon Sir Percy.

Hayley Turner became the first woman to ride 100 United Kingdom Flat race winners during a calendar year in 2008. In fact, that year she was only one of five jockeys to ride in over 900 races in the UK. She currently has over 780 career wins. In 2011 Turner became the first female jockey to ride an outright Group 1 race winner in Britain, when partnering Dream Ahead in the Darley July Cup.

Andrea Atzeni won the St. Leger and Moyglare Stud Stakes in the same weekend in 2014, followed by the Dewhurst Stakes and his second successive Racing Post Trophy the following month. In 2015 he won the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes on the Luca Cumani-trained Postponed and the St. Leger for a second successive year on Qatar Racing’s filly Simple Verse. He has won major races in France, Italy, Germany, UK, Republic of Ireland, UAE and Canada.

Nooresh Juglall honed his craft here in SA and won two champion apprentice jockey titles before spreading his wings to Singapore in 2014. He made an immediate impact, booting home his first winner, Majestic Moments, in his very first Kranji ride. The friendly Mauritian went on to ride a total of 217 winners in the city-state. Juglall enjoyed his best season in 2017 when he racked up 50 winners. He rode Twist Of Fate for trainer Joey Ramsden in this year’s Vodacom Durban July, finishing third, a mere 1.70 lengths behind Horse-of-the-Year Do It Again.

The World Sports Betting International Jockey Challenge supported by Sun International and Air Mauritius takes place at Turffontein on Saturday 16 November.

Marcus back in action

Anton Marcus made his long awaited comeback to the racetrack in a barrier trial at Greyville yesterday and hoped to be back race riding within ten days.

Marcus underwent an operation on his wrist and elbow respectively.

Unfortunately, infection set in to two of the incisions after six weeks.’

Therefore, he had to go for a second operation to have it cleaned out.

He said, “I am hoping to be back race riding within ten days.”

He quipped, “But it all depends on how I pull up from all of these barrier trials.”

He said there had been “an improvement” in the mechanics of both his wrist and elbow and admitted fitness was the main obstacle he was facing.

He concluded, “It is nice to be back.”

By David Thiselton

Blackball (Candiese Marnewick)

KZN trainers gearing up

KZN trainers Gavin van Zyl, Frank Robinson, Robbie Hill, Paul Lafferty and Tony Rivalland are gearing up for big races around the country. 

Van Zyl has the most big race firepower in KZN at present. 

He is bullish about the chances of Blackball in Sunday’s Listed Michaelmas Handicap over 1900m.  

This Black Minnaloushe gelding last ran on June 8 in the KZN Winter Challenge 2000 at Greyville and was most unlucky.

He had to be snatched up when squeezed out on the rail just before the 300m mark and then after rallying back he had nowhere to go in the closing stages so had to be eased. Even then Blackball finished only 1,25 lengths behind the winner, The Sultan’s Bazaar, in sixth place. 

Blackball (Candiese Marnewick)
Blackball (Candiese Marnewick)

The 105 merit rated five-year-old is potentially well handicapped on Sunday, as he might well have won that race, and he jumps from pole under national log leading-jockey Warren Kennedy.

Van Zyl’s four-year-old Pathfork gelding Marchingontogether will be raiding for the Grade 2 Peermont Emperor’s Palace Charity Mile on November 2. He will then being staying at Joe Soma’s yard ahead of his main target, the Gauteng Summer Cup.

Van Zyl said this four-year-old by Marchfield, who finished third in the Grade 1 SA Derby last year, had improved with gelding. 

He said, “He is much calmer and more manageable now. He won his last start (over the too sharp 1400m at Scottsville) well.”

Van Zyl’s crack filly Gabor, who was named Equus Champion two-year-old filly last season, is down in Cape Town being taken care of by Dean Kannemeyer. Her chief target is the Grade 1 WSB Cape Fillies Guineas on December 14. Van Zyl’s carefully laid out program will have her making her seasonal reappearance just 17 days before the Guineas in a Conditions Plate for fillies and mares on November 27 over 1400m at Kenilworth. 

After the Guineas she might be targeted at the Grade 1 Majorca Stakes on Sun Met day. 

Van Zyl’s promising Duke Of Marmalade filly Dancing Feather, who has won both of her last two starts by over four lengths, will be aimed at next year’s Grade 1 SA Fillies Classic and the SA Oaks, both at Turffontein.

Frank Robinson was happy with the comeback run of Roy Had Enough in a strong Pinnacle Stakes event over 1600m at Turffontein on Saturday which was won by Soqrat. Roy Had Enough, an Australian-bred five-year-old entire by Pierro, stayed on from a handy position for a five length fourth. 

Robinson said, “He needed it, he was very flat.”

He is staying up in Johannesburg and will now go for either the Charity Mile or the Victory Moon Stakes.

Robinson expected either one of those races to put him “spot on” for the Summer Cup.

His filly Roy’s Riviera might also go for the Charity Mile. However, she will more likely go for the Grade 3 Yellowwood Handicap over 1800m on the same day. He said she did not need as much racing as Roy Had Enough to reach her peak. He thought she would be a big runner if managing to get into the Summer Cup with a light weight. However, she would otherwise go for the Grade 2 Ipi Tombe Challenge over 1600m on the same day.

Robbie Hill said his five-year-old filly Camphoratus, who was named KZN Champion older filly/mare and KZN Champion Middle Distance horse last season, would raid for the Charity Mile, where she would not be at her peak, and then stay in Johannesburg for her chief target, the Summer Cup. He said she had badly needed her recent comeback run in KZN. She will be taken care of by Geoff Woodruff in the lead up to the Summer Cup.

Paul Lafferty is targeting Dark Moon Rising at the Summer Cup and believed he would definitely get in to the race. 

He is excited about his three-year-old Australian-bred Zoffany colt Share Holder. He attained a hoof injury lasts season and was still feeling it in his last start when second over 1200m at Greyville. He will be back to his best once the hoof has fully gown out. Lafferty said Piere Strydom had got off after that last run and said, “This is a top horse,” so wherever he goes this season winning big races will be his aim.

Tony Rivalland would like to run recent winner Tristful in the Charity Mile but was not sure the talented four-year-old Trippi gelding would make the cut. He also has the six-year-old Kahal gelding Wynkelder entered and pointed out that although he was last season’s KZN Champion Sprinter he ran an excellent close up third in the KZN Breeders Million Mile. 

By David Thiselton

Graduate (Candiese Marnewick)

Miss J writes a new story for Gadsby

Horses that have a history of being reluctant to leave the starting gate are not likely to attract much in the way of attention, let alone monetary support, but when they do manage to get it together the exotic bet bomb explodes.

Towards the end of last year, the highly-strung Miss J, who had previously shown in leading up to her maiden win that she did have ability, had become a reluctant starter and Paul and Beth Gadsby were left with the puzzle of breaking the habit.

Graduate (Candiese Marnewick)
Graduate (Candiese Marnewick)

Ten months down the line all efforts looked to have come to naught as Missy Jay missed the jump on her first run back, finishing a distant last of the nine runners.

It was a different story at Hollywoodbets Greyville yesterday. Sherman Brown, who rode Missy J at her previous start, got her out on terms and although last into the straight she was always travelling in her recently equipped earmuffs as Starlight set a respectable gallop. At the business end, Starlight had done her dash as veteran Ginger Biscuit took over but Missy J came from last to fetch her and get up close home. Paying R40 on the tote, she did plenty of damage in the exotics.

More was to follow as the Pick 6 ship, already holed below the waterline for many hopefuls, took another torpedo with Stuart Randolph taking the shortest way home on Karen and Greg Anthony’s mare Zadora paying R13 on the ‘nanny’. Another outsider, Touch Of Magic, looked to have the race in the bag before Zadora loomed up on her inside for the seventh win of her career.

Silent Crusade gave Mark Dixon a welcome winner last Sunday and She’s A Dream will have added to his satisfaction after an extended period in the doldrums with a virus affecting his yard.

She’s A Dream has always been there and thereabouts but the 0.5kg overweight in the Durban Convention Handicap proved no handicap as she finished too strongly for the consistent Gary Rich-trained Connect Me.

Royal Kitty, 4-10 favourite, pushed out a life-boat for the 61 ticket holders left in the Pick 6 with a bloodless victory in the seventh. Alyson Wright’s filly always looked a cut above some modest opposition and duly obliged under replacement rider who travelled into the straight under a double handful. Giving out an inch of rein, Royal Kitty simply lengthened her stride and put the race to bed a long way out.

Donovan Dillon, successful on Kingston Rock for Brett Crawford in the third, rounded off the day on Sovereign Soldier for Wendy Whitehead. Sitting patiently in midfield, Dillon had to work hard to get his mount’s nose in front as apprentice Gates took full advantage of his 1.5kg claim.

By Andrew Harrison

Charles Ndlovu (SportingPost)

Lord Grantham to take on a classy field

The first leg of the annual Workriders Challenge is staged on the Vaal Classic track tomorrow and this meeting is always exciting, especially for the friends and family of the riders who compete for total prize money over the three legs of R50,000.

In the first race over 1000m Lord Grantham has generally bumped good sorts. For example, he stayed on to finish a 6,5 length fourth to Donderweer over this trip last time and the latter then went on to beat a classy field on Saturday. Lord Grantham now faces an uninspiring maiden field and looks the one to beat. Golden Duke could be the chief danger. He has shown pace in both of his races to date and is still green and immature. He has plenty of scope and as he was just 1,40 lengths back last time he should go close. Urban Oasis has some fair form over 1000m so could enjoy the step back down in trip. Anatolio has finished a close up third in both starts with blinkers on over this trip and he should be thereabouts again. Titleist was just 1,25 lengths behind Golden Duke last time over course and distance and can earn again.

Charles Ndlovu (SportingPost)
Charles Ndlovu (SportingPost)

In the second over 1000m Tigermil stormed home on debut over this trip from way off the pace for a one length second, having been outpaced early on. She should be more prominent in the early stages second time out and will in that case be hard to beat. Madame Patrice has been knocking on the door over this trip and can pick up the pieces if Tigermil is left with too much to do. Malteza improved last time in a workrider’s maiden over 1200m where she showed some pace and she can improve further being by Oratorio.

In the third over 1200m Passionate Lad was not disgraced on debut over this trip and should have come on from the run so can beat this uninspiring field. For France stayed on over this trip on debut over 1200m and is a scopey sort so could be the main danger. First-timer Mabella is by the boom sire Vercingetorix out of an unplaced Not For Sale mare and would not have to be a star to beat this field.    

Seraphine is interesting in the fourth race, another uninspiring filles and mares maiden over 1450m. She showed pace with first time blinkers on over the too sharp 1000m last time but would prefer further. If dropped out from a high draw she could run on and go close. Flower Of Scotland and Super Fine both have the form to be able to win this and have fair draws, so they are likely to be the market leaders.   

The fifth race over 1450m could be won by the improving Crime Scene, who wasn’t disgraced on debut over 1160m and then ran a fair third over this course and distance last week. That should be good enough form to win this race although Paul Peter’s usual first choice workrider Charles Ndlovu is aboard the Fabian Habib-trained Kisimu, who has become a bit expensive to follow. Hope For Millions and Pucker Up are fancied to chase Crime Scene home. However, Kisimu and Sea Island can also be included in the Pick 6 and Jackpot. 

In the sixth race Arnica Montana failed at odds of 1/5 last time over 1700m at Greyville, only managing a 0,85 length third. However, he was left with a bit much to do and could be ridden handier from a fair draw of six out of 16 this time. Whipping Boy has improved with gelding and could be the chief threat. Ice Lord showed a fair action in a barrier trial in June when not asked to do a lot. 

In the seventh over 2400m Al Ragnar is the one to beat with Chamu Mabaya aboard. He was stepped up to 1800m last time with blinkers on and charged late to just fail. Being by Captain Al out of a Sadler’s Wells mare he should stay this trip. Petersham has run two fair races over 1800m and will be interesting over this trip. Left Hook has become disappointing as he is capable. He placed in his only start over this trip so is interesting with the blinkers removed.

In the last over 1800m Riqaaby stayed on steadily over 1450m on debut and will relish the step up to this trip. Flagship Fund has been knocking on the door over 1600m and should also enjoy the step up in trip as she is by Jackson whose father Dynasty produced a filly by this mare who won the Listed East Cape Oaks. Gimme A Rock Star was slow away over 1600m last time but managed to stay on into the frame and she can also improve further over this trip.

By David Thiselton