The Gold Circle Owner Award for the month for June 2019 has
been bestowed on Mario Ferreira.
An invitation to attend a major sale “five or six years ago”
was the beginning of a search – that has become a passion – to obtain or breed
“the ultimate racehorse” and the development of a stable of “40 or 50”
thoroughbreds that have brought Mario 165 winners.
As the passion and the number of horses have grown over the
years, Mario has spread his wings among the trainer community with a number of
conditioners caring for his horses and he has become involved to a greater
degree in the breeding side of the industry.
With a volume of evidence showing that great horses are not always the progeny of great stallions or mares, “there is always the chance of breeding the ultimate racehorse – it has become a dream.”
The Gold Circle Jockey Award
for the month of June has been awarded to Anton Marcus.
It might be said that Anton
gets the best of the rides and he certainly has an advantage to a degree. But
one cannot claim that the 44 horses he rode during the month were all superior
to the others and his opponents never had a chance.
Of those 44 horses he rode,
through his tactical ability and riding talents he steered 12 into the number
one box and another 14 into the placings at a winning percentage of just on 28
and an incredible win-place success rate of 60%.
His successes included the Grade 1 Daily News 2000 on the very difficult individual Hawwaam for Mike de Kock and his talent, dedication and professionalism is worthy of acknowledgement with the award this month.
The Gold Circle Trainer Award
for the month of June has been awarded to Glen Kotzen.
At this time of the year it
is difficult to isolate individuals for honours because of the high standard of
performances all round and, having recorded the highest stake earnings in the
month on which the trainer log is based, Mike de Kock would undoubtedly deserve
the accolade.
However, like Mike with
Hawwaam, Glen has had to deal with a problem horse in Eyes Wide Open and has
managed to return the colt back to his earlier top-class ability to run fourth
in the Vodacom Durban July. In addition, while Mike fielded 15 runners in the
month for three winners and seven places, Glen has also kept his stable turning
over for his patrons and sent out 36 runners of which seven found the winner’s
enclosure and another 11 earned a dividend for their owners.
Gold Circle congratulates both trainers for their performances and recognises others like Justin Snaith, Sean Tarry and Dennis Drier that have kept the overall standard of racing at the highest level, but we single out Glen for his excellent contribution to racing during the month.
It is not an easy time of year for punters but
there do look to be some opportunities at the Vaal tomorrow.
In the second race over 1600m Greenwood Drive is
an effective front-runner who was swamped last time over 1450m in a big field
but he should be able to dictate the pace here over a step up in trip he will
appreciate in a field of just five runners. He has a big weight to carry but
Muzi Yeni knows him well and he has come down one point in the merit ratings.
Manitoba finished second in a useful field last week and could be the chief
threat.
It usually pays to follow in form trainers in
the month of August and Starting Line may provide another winner for Paul
Matchett in the third over 1400m. Matchett has already had two winners this
season, which is not even a week old, and Starting Line ran on well last time
over 1450m after having to come from some way off the pace due to a high draw.
He looks to have scope for improvement and should be closer to the pace down
the straight. Theatre Of Dreams moved up well from last place over 1200m on
debut before her run petered out, but her tongue was found to be over the bit
and she now wears a tongue tie. She will appreciate the step up in trip too.
Princess Penelope has proved disappointing being a R1,4 million filly by
Silvano out of the multiple Grade 1 winner Princess Victoria but she should
earn here and Little Sparrow and Princess Nicole have to be respected too.
Paul Peter
In the fourth race over 1400m Pink bumped a good
one last time but off only a one point higher mark she has a fine chance here
as she has always struck as being a touch better than her current lowly rating
of 63. Sammi Moosa had a wide draw last week when disappointing over 1450m
around the turn but in her last three runs over this straight course and
distance she has finished a close second every time, so should be right there.
Seattle Tango beat Sammi Moosa by half-a-length on one of those occasions and is
only half-a-kilogram worse off so should be right there too.
In the fifth race over 1800m Seventh Of June
from the in form Paul Peter yard just failed last time from the front over this
trip and off only a one point higher mark he can go close again. He does have
another tricky draw to overcome but Warren Kennedy now climbs aboard which will
give his chances a big boost. Powered Beauty will be a big threat despite going
four points up in the merit ratings for his win last time over 1600m because he
will appreciate the step up in trip. Corrido goes for a hattrick for the Peter
yard and the trip is suitable but he has to overcome a five point raise and
Kennedy has jumped ship. Master And Man is always thereabouts and jumps from a
plum draw over a suitable trip. Kurt’s Approval’s last win was over this trip
and he is better drawn this time so he can be involved despite being four
points higher in the merit ratings.
In the sixth race over 1200m What A Red
disappointed last time having made an impressive debut on the Highveld but it
was not a bad run. She was perhaps a touch handy that day in a race run at a
blistering pace so with the blinkers now off she can bounce back as she is
likely still ahead of the handicapper. Fictitious should go close with the accomplished
1,5kg claimer Jason Gates aboard as she is off a competitive mark over a
suitable course and distance. I Ain’t Trippin is in good form and should be
considered and Hear The Trumpet and Only To Win could also earn.
In the seventh race, an apprentice handicap over
1000m, Lithuanian’s Dream was bounced out last time over this trip under this
same 4kg claimer and waltzed in start to finish by 4,50 lengths. He has the
same number one draw and a maximum eight point raise might not be enough to
stop him if the same tactics are employed. Snow In Seattle sneaks into the
handicap with the minimum weight and has won over this course and distance
before. He has accomplished apprentice Ashton Arries aboard. Battle Creek will
be thereabouts if maintaining his recent form and Tripod and Alex The Great
also warrant consideration.
In the eighth race over 2000m the in form Alec
Laird yard could have a winner with Circle Of Latitude. The last time she went
over this trip she stayed on and just failed. After one more run she had a
year’s layoff. She has recently had two comeback runs over 1400m and now steps
back up to her right trip. She also gets blinkers on. The courageous Rabia The
Rebel can be relied on to try her hardest over this suitable trip and she has a
fair draw. Pilgrim’s Progress beat Rabia The Rebel by 2,25 lengths last time
over this trip but is now 2,5kg worse off and has a tough draw.
The last race over 2000m is tricky. African
Sunbird is well drawn and is distance suited so is the selection but all of Emerald
Bay, Itsmydarlin, Always Red, Jacko Boy and Angelic Appeal warrant
consideration for the Pick 6.
Calypso Beat went into the notebooks at Kenilworth on
Saturday even though it was his jockey who stole the show, amazing his audience
with one trick after another like a conjurer at a children’s party.
It was straightforward enough for Greg Cheyne on the R1
million Querari in the 1 000m maiden fillies. The 57-20 favourite took an
early lead and proved far more superior to the opposition than the eventual
two-length verdict would suggest.
“I got out smartly and at the 600m she found her feet,
pricked her ears and took the bit without me asking – always a good sign,”
Cheyne reported.
Greg Cheyne (Liesl King)
Brett Crawford, who has handled more stars than a pop
singer’s agent, was impressed, saying: “I think she has a future and she is
going to be much better when the ground is on top.”
Cheyne teamed up with Crawford again five races later to
take the Interbet.co.za Handicap on Ikebana for the Gujadhur Mauritian training
family. But this was genius stuff. Well inside the final furlong, with
Grant van Niekerk on It Is What It Is two lengths clear and showing no sign of
stopping, Cheyne switched the 3-1 favourite out of the narrowing gap between
the leader and the rails and challenged on the other side. Amazingly, his mount
ate up a seemingly impossible amount of ground and swept past to win a shade
comfortably.
“Grant got first run on me and then he closed the gap,”
Cheyne related. “People might say I was a bit cheeky at the end but I could
feel the momentum – Grant’s filly had come to the end of her run while I was
going away.”
The Cheyne fan club also attracted a whole host of new
members in the previous race, the 2 000m Tellytrack.com Handicap, when he
lulled the opposition into a false sense of security by setting a modest pace
on the Andre Nel-trained Crome Yellow but, when they tried to come at him in
the straight, he kept unleashing the reserves he had kept up his sleeve.
“The race was given to me,” he said, modestly playing down
his masterclass. “My horse came out of the gate with his head in his chest and
the others left me alone.”
Van Niekerk had to wait until Sleeping Single in race five
to get off the mark – “The way the first few races went I thought ‘Oh God, I’m
an embarrassment to Hong Kong.’” Not for long though as he also won the last
for former boss Candice Bass-Robinson on Machiavelli in the Marsh Shirtliff
colours.
However the Hong Kong man took only three rides to renew his
acquaintanceship with the boardroom, being fined R1 000 for using his whip
more than the permitted dozen on runner-up Yosma. The fine means little more to
a man of his earning capacity than a car park tip does to the rest of us and
surely the time has come for the NHA to substitute suspensions if it really
does mean business about over-use of the whip.
Jockeys earn R4 500 for winning the most minor Cape
Town race and, if they believe exceeding the limit will turn defeat into
victory, they are effectively staking a grand at 9-2 on what they think is a
certainty. All they lose is their stake.
Justin Snaith, trainer of Sleeping Single, sprang a 10-1
surprise in the first with Bravura’s three-parts brother Sachdev but the one
that got away was 13-20 hotpot Winter is Over, only fifth to Craig Zackey and
Geoff Woodruff’s Brother Louis in the mile maiden. “I am going to go back to the
drawing board with him and try to find out what went wrong,” said the mystified
trainer.
Joey Ramsden, still buoyed by Dynasty’s Blossom’s eLan Gold
Cup and last season’s successful campaign (“with only 40-plus horses it was
pretty special”), got off the mark for this term with the Ossie Noach-ridden
Celtic Voyager.
Jockeys are supremely fit athletes and anyone who doubts the
skills required in getting the best out of a racehorse would do well to watch
replays of the two ‘non-professional’ races run at Hollywoodbets Scottsville
yesterday.
Aron Xabendlini is a seasoned work rider and is vastly more
experience than his fellow participants in the KZN work rider’s series. That
experience held him in good stead as he wrapped up all three legs in a tight
finish on Dennis Drier’s charge Liquidity. But he was a tad lucky as the
inexperience and lack of racing fitness took its toll on Tristan Mustard who
went down by the narrowest of margins on Kom Naidoo’s runner Juniper Lane.
Harmonica (Candiese Marnewick)
As the line loomed, Xabendlini kept the favourite together while
Mustard tried to get there before his mount, losing rhythm as his condition
gave out and becoming unbalanced. It was valuable experience for the grandson
of ex-jockey Leslie Mustard, successful on the Dessie Rich-trained Lightning
Shot in the 1977 July.
It was a no-sticks-allowed contest as was the Qatar National
Stud Apprentice Cup. The SA Jockey Academy is currently hosting a number of
Qatari apprentices who have been riding out in the mornings although many
trainers have been reluctant to use their services, mainly due to a language
barrier.
But they have been well schooled in other areas at the
academy and the Apprentice Cup was the culmination of their South African
venture.
Favourite Celebration Rock was possibly an unlucky loser but
his rider Salah Salem made a full tour of the Scottsville straight, his piece
de resistance left for last as he cannoned into eventual winner Harmonica.
Riding to instructions from Duncan Howells, Abdulla Rashid kept his head down
and pushed all the way to the line to record an indelible memory, his first
race ride being a winner.
It was something of a rat-race behind these two with no quarter asked and there were a few heated exchanges amongst colleagues back in the weighing room and a stern talking to by the stipendiary stewards.
Winter Is Over looks nailed on for the Betting World Maiden
at Kenilworth tomorrow even though the price is unlikely to do a great deal for
your finances.
This grey gelding – as short as 15-20 yesterday – looked a
certain future winner when, despite showing understandable signs of greenness,
he ran on strongly to be beaten less than a neck by the more experienced
Ashbury Park on debut last month. Significantly the ground that day was soft.
Justin Snaith
Winning Ways singled out the Justin Snaith runner as one to
follow and Luke Ferraris’s mount, odds-on yesterday, should have few problems
confirming the form with Brother Louis who was over a length behind and has far
less scope for improvement.
Grant van Niekerk was a talented jockey long before he went
to Hong Kong – horses really run for him – and it will be interesting to see
how a season in that pressure cauldron has improved him but I think the
bookmakers are going overboard if they expect him to justify favouritism in
four races out of six.
Most of his supposed best chances need to find a bit but
Doppio Oro can start his ball rolling in the first despite being drawn one from
the outside. The going on the sprint course last Saturday was significantly
faster on the inside than in the middle or the outside.
The Candice Bass-Robinson runner has marginally the best
form although it is a concern that we have no idea how he will handle the soft.
Watch out for newcomer Bag Of Tricks. This is a Ridgemont runner, he has
already been nibbled at and Brett Crawford won with a few first-timers last
term.
In race two Van Niekerk’s mount Larentina ran well in the
soft on debut but Calypso Beat, although untested in this going, also showed
plenty of promise first time. She is a slightly better price and at the odds
may prove a better bet. Missisippi Burning also has claims but 13 out of 14
means Craig Zackey is going to have to get across.
Snaith is responsible for 19 of the 74 runners (25%) and in
the 1 000m Tabonline.co.za Maiden he has four out of seven but original
favourite Tambora has been scratched. The Joey Ramsden runner Celtic Voyager accounted
for all except the show-stopping Yorktown in the soft over a furlong further a
fortnight ago and looks the one they have to beat.
BLOB Michael Clower’s winning run faltered when the ground
changed and the profit on his tips to a R10 level stake in the last six months
of the season dropped from a high of R307.40 to R195.40.
The drop in class from Champions Season fields to
bread-and-butter fare is dramatic but there are always a few nuggets to be
mined no matter what.
Coldhardcash rounded off what for him was a disappointing
season at Hollywoodbets Greyville last Wednesday, but Duncan Howells can turn
the page for the new season as he saddles a few with definite chances at
Hollywoodbets Scottsville on Sunday.
Best of
these could come in the last race of the day where stable companions Candy
Apple and Rocket Fire could have the race to themselves.
Howells
rated Candy Apple as one of his better two-year-olds last season but the colt
ran way below expectations in the Gr1 Gold Medallion. He had shown promise
before that and races in first time blinkers which could bring out the best in
him. Stable companion Rocket Fire was not far back first start out of the
maidens, his first run in nearly six months. The spectre of the
‘second-run-after-a-lay-off’ syndrome looms large but he looks a likely threat.
Candy Apple (Candiese Marnewick))
Bravo Zulu
was second best behind Coldhardcash on Wednesday but trainer Louis Goosen is
confident of another forward showing. “The stable has turned,” he said
yesterday, “and Bravo Zulu is my little ATM.”
Bedazzled
Joker is another that should be in the firing line as he is holding form well.
Howells
saddles the mare High Altar in the sixth where she faces half-a-dozen
opponents. She loves this course and distance and was running on well last start
over a trip arguably short of her best. Andre Nel saddles the consistent
Agenteus who seldom runs a bad race. But she has been off the track since
February and if it comes to a tight finish she may just be found wanting.
Of the
balance, Classic Guard is lightly raced but has steady form over shorter while
Roy’s Pony was only run out of it late by Jamaica Bay on Wednesday. She has a
handy galloping weight and can turn the tables on Irish Wonder Girl who got up
late to touch her off when tried in blinkers for the first time.
Dennis Drier
is the perennial master in KZN and finished on top of the pile for the third
season running with his 61 local winners.
So his
charge, The Master, is well named and has good form over Sunday’s 1600m trip
and has yet to run a bad race. From the best draw he should be right there
again although he will face stiff opposition from Farland who has run two
promising races over course and distance and his stable is finding form while
Noble Joshua, who was an easy winner last start, can go in again.
Howells
holds another strong hand in the seventh with his two fillies Wildly In Love
and Starlight. Wildly In Love was much improved when tried in a tongue-tie last
time out and was only caught late for second, finishing ahead of stable
companion and favourite Marsanne. A repeat will see her go close. Miss Calypso
has been in good form since returning from a lay-off and was a comfortable
winner over the Greyville 1400m on the poly last time out. She showed good pace
that afternoon so this 1000m should not be a factor against her.
Of the
balance, French Legend found good market support at her last start and has been
consistent while Starlight has been in good form since her maiden win and has a
light weight.
There are
two novel races on the day, the first a work riders plate where Aron Xabendlini
will be looking to make it a hat-trick of work rider wins and the second for
Drier where he partners Liquidity. The gelding gets first time blinkers and a
tongue-tie and he could prove a little too quick for Dancing Princess and Class
Of Eight.
The SA
Jockey Academy is currently hosting a party of apprentices from Qatar and they
get a chance to display there skills in the tenth race, although it will be run
between the fourth and fifth races and is not included in any of the exotic
bets.
Abdulla
Saleh won this race two years back for Paul Lafferty and he will be aboard
Lafferty’s runner Mokoko on Sunday but Krishnies Jet and Great Dictator look
better propositions.
Lyle Hewitson has retained his national jockeys
championship although nearest rival Muzi Yeni fought until the last.
Going into the last meeting of the season at Hollywoodbets Greyville yesterday Hewitson was on 216 winners, two clear of Yeni.
He went four clear with a double in the first and third
races.
The first of these was aboard the well backed Garth
Puller-trained favourite Wishful Girl Linn, who pulled clear of the Yeni-ridden
second favourite Cersei.
The second of the winners was the Gary Alexander-trained
Marula and Hewitson showed why he is a champion here, getting this horse to dig
down deep in a thrilling tussle with the favourite Ninotto.
Yeni had tried gallantly in the second race on Minister
Without to overhaul the favourite Wolfgang but had to settle for his second
runner up finish in succession.
However, he kept his hopes alive by winning the fourth
aboard the Duncan Howells-trained 7/1 shot Coldhardcash.
However, when both riders went winnerless in races five
and six it was all over.
Fittingly Hewitson was wearing the colours of the
season’s champion owner Chris van Niekerk when Gold Circle’s Graeme Hawkins
officially congratulated him on winning the title. Van Niekerk’s colours are
associated with Hewitson’s guv’nor Sean Tarry, who secured his fourth national
trainers title on Saturday.
Hewitson ended on 219 winners for the season when winning
the eighth race on the Dennis Bosch-trained Padre Pio.
Yeni finished on 215 and Anton Marcus was third on 189.
Two strikes and you’re out! In a ruthless display of riding,
Lyle Hewitson put the jockey championship to bed within the first three races
at Hollywoodbets Greyville yesterday and the championship was done and dusted
after the sixth with Yeni three behind and out of ammunition.
To seal it, Hewitson added one more to his tally as the
Dennis Bosch-trained Padre Pio stretch his lead to four in the eighth.
However, an upset Yeni, who is already facing an inquiry
into his conduct in the steward’s room last Saturday, claimed foul and made his
views clear after winning on Coldhardcash.
Lyle Hewitson (Candiese Marnewick)
Speaking post-race; “Yes, I was giving it my all. I just
find it very much injustice in the whole system in the jockey’s championship.
Lyle was served a two-week suspension in April and they prolonged it until the
end of the season when he can take it and I thought that is was very unfair to
me.
They call it the rainbow nation but there is no fairness. I
was forced to stand down when I was 12 winners ahead while Lyle was riding so
to call it a fair contest? Everyone is coming here to support the championship
but then they must make it clear. How come he can ride?
Interviewer Sheldon Peters tried to defuse the situation but
Yeni was adamant in his views although he would have been well advised to check
the suspension rules before sounding off.
“I can’t talk anymore because obviously I’m not allowed the
playing field to talk, but I’m saying this is all in the media why someone is
in front and why someone is not so. Obviously if I am not allowed to voice my
concerns. Why some people are allowed to ride and some people are not allowed
to ride. If I was good enough to serve out my suspension why not be allowed to
ride out the season.”
In what must have
been one of the most exhausting championship battles ever, Yeni fought all the
way to the line. 1819 rides is no mean feat in itself and Hewitson’s 1554 had
him chasing hard after starting 40 behind after a two-month injury break at the
start of the season.
Hewitson, Hong Kong-bound in the next fortnight, is
confident in his abilities which will stand him in good stead in one of the
world’s toughest racing jurisdictions.
“Ten days ago (when he was six winners clear on the log) I
did not have the best book of rides but I realised that I was riding well. But
Muzi did a fantastic job coming back.”
Hewitson started the last day of the season two winners
ahead of Yeni but had stretched that to four by the third race with wins on Wishful
Girl Linn in the first for a former champion jockey Garth Puller, and Marula in
the third for visiting trainer Gary Alexander.
Yeni picked up a ride
on Cersei for Kom Naidoo in the first but had to be content with a well-beaten
second as Wishful Girl Linn skated home three lengths clear.
Yeni made a fist of it in the second as he gave his all
aboard on the Tobie Spies runner Minister Without but favourite Wolfgang proved
more than a match. Spies has been one of Yeni’s biggest supporters this season
and a win would not have been out of turn.
Duncan Howells is another Yeni supporter and Hewitson’s lead
was cut to three after Coldhardcash made all the running under Yeni to hold off
Louis Goosen’s runner Bravo Zulu with the balance in another race. It was a
fine training feat by Howells as Coldhardcash is not clean winded and races
with a cornel collar.
It pays to follow in form stables and yards that tend to
come to form at certain times of the year. Richmond-based Doug Campbell is
always one to keep an eye on once Champions Season has run its course. With few
runners that can compete with Champion Season raiders, Campbell keeps his
powder dry for this time of the year and although Jamaica Bay did have two
races during the season, she was primed for the fifth yesterday as she and
Craig Zackey out-gunned Such A Rush and luckless apprentice Xola Jacobs.
Lowan Denysschen had a hard taskmaster in his father Paul
who was a supreme horseman and although winner’s have been hard to come by this
term, Denysschen came within an ace of a double yesterday. Such A Rush had to
bend her knee to a faster finishing Jamaica Bay but Thru’ The Trees did the
business for the stable as Mark Khan got him going to get the better of
pacemaker Roy’s Pony in the sixth.
Hewitson ended the season on 219 winners, Yeni on 215 and
Anton Marcus third on 189.
By Andrew Harrison
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