Immeasurable can give Sean Tarry his first Cape Town
two-year-old winner of the season in the R225 000 Klawervlei Farm Sale
Stakes at Durbanville tomorrow.
Greg Cheyne’s mount raced green when a five and a half
length-second to Captain Of Stealth on debut a fortnight ago but the winner is
the best juvenile seen out so far down here this season and the third was
nearly three lengths back.
Greg Cheyne
Stable companion Rock The Globe (bought for only
R25 000) has a good chance on his second to smart all-the-way winner
Ground Control but is likely to be handicapped by his poor draw.
Path Of Choice has run two good races and should again go
well but, on what he has shown so far, you would expect one or both of the
Tarry runners to finish in front of him.
Immeasurable opened favourite with World Sports Betting on
Wednesday at 22-10 and Rock The Globe came next at 3-1. The filly Don’t Be Blue
(5-1) is bound to have come on from her promising debut while the
bargain-basement buy (only R12 000) newcomer Seventh Express has been
nibbled at from 10-1 to 17-2.
Candice Bass-Robinson has won the most two-year-old races in
Cape Town so far this term and Sweet Karma should make it number six in the
opening Streamline Agencies Maiden Juvenile. Aldo Domeyer’s mount is short at
15-20 but she went close first time and was then a decent third to ultra-smart
stable companion Vandah’s Spirit in a winners’ race.
The Equi-Feeds Maiden Juvenile has a much more open
appearance. Midwinter is favourite at 12-10 but gets only a tentative
selection. He has been placed in all his three runs but it is significant that
Vaughan Marshall is putting blinkers on 22-10 second favourite Lasata and
Capkuta (33-10) could easily have come on enough.
Punters have been waiting for Boomps A Daisy ever since that
eye-catching debut four weeks ago and even at odds of 13-20 many will plunge –
and why not? If ever a horse looked certain to win next time it was this one.
Starting second favourite she took time to understand the meaning of Anton
Marcus’s urgings but, once she did, she accelerated like a good ’un, making up
five lengths inside the final furlong and going under to Fluttering by only a
head.
Trap Queen finished one and a half lengths back third that day and didn’t get an entirely clear run so, if there is to be a danger, it could be this 6-1 shot.
1st
Red Hot Night (Khan/Forbes A 59kg draw 10) Showed some
pace and stretched out well, although was hanging a touch in the straight.
Scope for improvement. 59.8 seconds
2nd 0,05 Samsonite (Ferraris/Bosch
MR69 AB 60kg draw 3) Some pace
and strode out okay 59.81 seconds
3rd 1,15 Kir (Kennedy/Bosch MR63 A
58kg draw 8) Strode out
okay without being asked a lot. 60 seconds
4th 2,65 Padre Pio (Marcus/Bosch S
57kg draw 2) Has scope
and a fair action and showed a good turn of foot when asked the question. 60.2
seconds
5th 5,45 King Julian (Wright/Humby
A 59kg draw 7) Has quite a
rangy action but a speedy pedigree and ran on quite well. 60.7 seconds
6th 5,60 I Write The Songs (Jacobs
-4 kg/Lafferty A 58kg draw 11) Showed zip
from a wide draw to lead but was green and then faded. 60.75 seconds
7th 6,35 Seen The Light
(Samuel/Humby A 59kg draw 9) Has plenty
of scope and took a keen hold before staying on. Will improve. 60.8 seconds
8th 6,45 Retrial (De Melo/Dixon S
58kg draw 1) Showed some
pace but made little impression on the leaders when held together in the
straight. 60.85 seconds
9th 10,45 Mojave Nights (B
Lerena/Dixon S 59kg draw 6) Outpaced
but has quite a big action and might be looking for further. 61.5 seconds
10th 12,35 Magic In Seattle (De
Gouveia/Humby A 59kg draw 5) Outpaced
and green. 61.8 seconds
11th 17,15 Arthur Shelby (Moodley/Van Wyk s 59kg draw 4) Outpaced and green. 62.6 seconds
Willie
Mullins is the most successful trainer in Cheltenham Festival history and
should have another good week at the famous four day meeting in the Cotswolds
next week.
The
Festival’s biggest race, The Gold Cup, has always eluded Mullins but that could
change this year.
He has
a trio of lively candidates, Kemboy, Al Bourn Photo and Bellshill, as well as
an outsider in Invitation Only.
Kemboy
caught the eye as a young horse and is currently one of the most progressive
chasers in Britain and Ireland.
Mullins
was quoted by Martyn Thomas of The Mirror, “The ground in Leopardstown at Christmas, where Kemboy put in a
huge performance, was very, very good. If it comes up like that on the fourth
day at Cheltenham, which it can, he must have a very good chance and the
further he’ll go, the better he’ll be.”
Kemboy
He continued, “I
think Al Boum Photo shouldn’t have any problem with the trip. I don’t think
we’ve seen the best of him yet.”
Bellshill and Invitation Only have
both won on their only outings in 2019.
“Bellshill has lots of stamina,
he jumps particularly well,” said Mullins. “That’s a huge plus for
him. We can see him improving all the time. He’s always gone on soft or heavy
and I took a chance running him on the ground the other day but I felt we had
to and he’s by Kings Theatre, they love good ground and he can handle it well,
even though he’s a big, heavy type of horse.
He added, “Invitation would probably have to step up a
good bit.”
One
of Mullins best chances of the meeting comes on day one, Tuesday, with Benie
Des Dieux in the Grade 1 OBLG Mares’ Hurdle over two miles and four furlongs.
Mullins’ legendary mare Quevega created a Cheltenham record by winning this
race six times in succession and Benie Des Deux can begin following in her
footsteps. She upset Apple Jade last year and the latter looks likely to be
going the Champion Hurdle route this year which will make it easier for her.
Ben Des Dieux hasn’t been seen on
the track since winning at the Punchestown Festival in April last year.
However, that was the way Quevaga used to do it. In the last five years of her
career, Quevega only ran twice a season, at Cheltenham and Punchestown. In
those ten runs she was only defeated once, in her final race at Punchestown. So
it should be no problem for Benie Des Deux to be running fresh.
On the same day Mullins has a good chance with Ballyward
in the Grade 2 National Hunt
Challenge Cup Amateur Riders’ Novices’ Chase over three miles and seven-and-a-half furlongs.
Mullins must think highly of Ballyward as he is his only entry and is the
current second favourite. His son Patrick is likely to take the ride. Ballyward
was last seen winning a Grade 3 novice chase over three miles in decent fashion
and he can go close here in a race that will all be about stamina. He is by the
stamina influence Flemensfirth out of a mare who won over three miles.
On the Wednesday Uradel will have a fine chance in the
Grade 3 Coral Cup Handicap Hurdle over two miles and five furlongs. Mullins
sent out Bleu Berry to victory in last season’s Coral Cup, Uradel is entitled
to be heading the betting at the moment. He is entered in a few handicaps over
the four days, but the Coral Cup looks an ideal fit for a horse that finished
second in a Cesarewitch on the Flat and warmed up for this race with a decent
fifth place finish in a competitive handicap hurdle at Leopardstown over a trip
on the sharp side.
On
the Thursday Mullins has Min in the Grade 1 Ryanair Chase over two miles
and four furlongs. He might well run here in preference to taking on the top
class Altior in the Queen Mother Champion Chase. A winner over 2m 4f at
Punchestown this season, Min lacks the pace needed at Championship level over
two miles, so the Ryanair is ideal for him and with question marks hanging over
Cyrname’s participation then this classy performer can strike gold on the third
day of the festival.
Also
on the Thursday Mullins has Faugheen in the Grade 1 Sun
Racing Stayers’ Hurdle over three miles. Paisley
Park is the favourite after romping the Cleeve Hurdle. The latter is an
exciting stayer but Faugheen is the forgotten horse in the field and could
cause a minor upset. Faugheen was the star hurdler a few years ago and won the
Champion Hurdle in memorable fashion. However, following a litany of injuries
he has fallen down the pecking order. A faller when trying to close down
Apple’s Jade at Leopardstown over Christmas, the horse once dubbed ‘The
Machine’ can bounce back to form and be a major player over three miles in the
Stayers’ Hurdle on March 14. His last win was in the Grade 1 Champion Stayers
Hurdle over this same three mile trip at the Punchestown Festival last year. In
that race he beat the Cheltenham Stayers Hurdle winner Penhill by 13 lengths,
so his form over this trip is good.
Mullins will have less runners than usual at this Festival but still brings over a string of about 40. He has had 61 Festival winners, one more than his English contemporary Nicky Henderson.
The Sean Tarry-trained Immeasurable, second to the Vaughan
Marshall star Captain Of Stealth on debut, has been installed 22-10
favourite for the R225 000 Klawervlei Farm Sale Stakes at Durbanville on
Saturday and importantly has a good draw at three.
Tarry is also responsible for 3-1 second favourite
Rock The Globe who is drawn ten out of eleven while World Sports Betting makes
the Justin Snaith representative Don’t Be Blue – at R500 000 easily
the highest priced horse in the field – a 5-1 chance.
Aldo Domeyer, who rides Rock The Globe, looks like starting
off with a winner because Candice Bass-Robinson’s Sweet Karma has easily the
best form in the opening Streamline Agencies Maiden Juvenile and is 7-10.
Boomps A Daisy, already many people’s idea of the biggest certainty of the day, is quoted at 13-20 for race three with Greg Cheyne taking over from Anton Marcus.
There are few more passionate owners than former Msunduzi
Municipal manager Alderman Rob Haswell, and given the current treacherous state
of affairs in the KZN Capital, he is probably relieved that he doesn’t have anything
to do with it anymore.
Master Keys (Candiese Marnewick)
Be that as it may, Cumulus obliged in his colours at
Scottsville last weekend and Master Keys came to the fore at Greyville
yesterday, both for Nathan Kotzen. Also, in the Master Keys partnership was novice
breeder Nothemba Mlonzi whose fledgling stud is based in Birnham Wood on the
outskirts of Howick in KZN.
It was a stable double for Kotzen with Anton Marcus
successful on Amex a half-hour earlier.
Amex snapped a string of runner-up berths, coming from off
the pace to win going away, but Marcus had a more difficult time on Master
Keys. Racing well off a good pace in the early exchanges, Master Keys showed an
alarming tendency to hang in under pressure, threatening runners on her inside
as is Marcus’s custom to head for the outside rail on the poly track. Fortunately
for her supporters, Master Key was travelling far better than her opposition
and once clear of the traffic, Marcus allowed her to shift ground and she won
convincingly.
Walterthepenniless appeared to be named after the punters
that sent him off as favourite twice before landing his maiden win, but he made
amends yesterday as Charlie Touzel’s home-bred went in again in the sixth – not
penniless anymore.
Dennis Drier’s decision to fit blinkers has paid dividends
as the son of Crusade is unbeaten in two as Sean Veale took the shortest way
home and ‘Walter’ finished with a wet sail.
Grecian Laurel, after surprising all on debut, appears to have found her surface as Duncan Howells’s filly out-duelled Laat Lammertjie in the seventh. Grecian Laurel’s pedigree suggests that she should go a bit of ground and the way she stuck to her guns under Mark Khan in a mile suggests that this may be the way forward.
The Vaal stages a nine race meeting down the straight and the
exotics look catchable.
The first race of the day is a Maiden Juvenile Plate over 1200m
and the Soft Falling Rain filly Makara has some pace and will appreciate the
step up in trip, having been up there and staying on when not disgraced against
the exciting Gin Fizz. Mill Queen was staying on strongly over 1000m on debut
behind a fair sort and the form has worked out well, so it would be no surprise
to see her beating the first choice. Dive Captain showed pace on debut over
1000m and although she does not have as much substance as the first two choices
she should earn here as none of the first-timers make much appeal. Black Tie
was staying on from well back on debut over 1000m and can not only improve but
will enjoy the step up in trip. However, she is held on formlines by Mill
Queen. Margot’s Magic finished ahead of her there and could possibly confirm
the form as she was staying on well late. Malteza was green on debut when three
lengths behind Makara and can improve.
State Trooper (JC Photographics)
The first leg of the Bipot will be fought out by three promising
sorts, Comaneci, Lady Lexington and Dancing Queen. They are chosen in that
order as that is how their form reads.
The first leg of the PA over 1400m yields a banker in Undiscovered
Gem. She has been close up to three fair sorts from 1160m to 1400m and the form
has worked out well. She faces an uninspiring field and will be hard to beat
despite being the only filly in the field.
The first leg of the Pick 6 over 1600m could be fought out by the
trio Josi Di Nero, Cape Ash and Bated Breath. All three have some substance and
scope for improvement and will enjoy the trip. They are selected in the order
mentioned. The others do not have much to enthuse about.
The first leg of the Jackpot also looks straight forward on paper.
Hafla is a talented horse and might have benefitted from her 110 day layoff as
she has a touch of class which she is yet to fulfil. This will be a suitable
trip running fresh. Saints Alive likely did no stay the 2000m trip last time
and before that was well beaten in both the Gauteng Fillies Guineas and the
Three Troikas. However, her form in this sort of company reads well and this is
an ideal trip. State Star is best in at the weights and should enjoy this trip,
so has to be included.
In the sixth over 1500m Royal Italian created a good impression
last time as he was expected to lead or be handy and then kick on as he had
done in his previous start, but instead he was dropped out and produced a
flying finish. This shows a versatility associated with class and he is on the
way up so can overcome a three point raise and win off an 81 merit rating.
Nordic Rebel is the one to beat on paper as he is 2,5kg better off with Royal
Italian for a one length beating over 1450m. However, he is a five-year-old and
will not be improving like Royal Italin is. Lake Kinneret has to be considered
too as he has been close up to some decent sorts this season and was a touch
unlucky in the Grand Heritage over 1475m.
In the seventh over 1500m Electromagnetic has caught the eye before
and has his third run after a layoff off a merit rating dropped three points.
He is usually slow way but this should allow him to get a tow in a big field
and he is capable of running on well. This trip could be ideal too. Orapa
looked to have plenty of promise early in his career so has been disappointing
overall. However, he has dropped to a mark just two points higher than his last
win and if he can reproduce that effort, which was over a 1450m trip, he should
go close. Snorting Bull is an interesting runner having his third run after a
layoff and gelding. He has presence and will appreciate the step up to this
trip, although it will still be on the sharp side for him. Those three could be
enough to get punters through, although others to consider are Manitoba, Baahir
and Visigoth.
In the eighth race over 1200m Mythical Bolt had some good form in
Cape Town and is held in good regard. State Trooper has always had ability and
is coming into his own so those two should fight it out.
In the last race Soul Of Wit was unlucky from a tough draw around the turn last time and has a high draw down the straight now so can make amends. Generous Notion is fulfilling the promise she had always shown and it would be no surprise to see her make it two wins on the trot. Florence ran well first time out the maidens over the too sharp 1000m and now steps back up to her winning trip. Gold Dawn has excellent recent form over this trip so can’t be ignored. Arikel didn’t enjoy blinkers last time and on pedigree should enjoy this step up in trip. Colour Of Light and Ninjara were two former talented sorts who have become disappointing but they are off lowered merit ratings and could bounce back. Rock Pigeon, Twelve Oaks and I Ain’t Trippin are also capable of winning it.
There is
often a fine line between ‘race-riding’ and reckless riding with stipendiary
stewards taking a dim view of the latter as illustrated at Greyville a
fortnight back.
While making
what was possibly a winning move, Mokoko was cut-off in midstride with Anton
Marcus accusing young apprentice Jason Gates of “attempted murder”. Gates was
already facing a pending 14-day suspension for a similar offence and faces a
further inquiry for this latest indiscretion.
Master Keys (Candiese Marnewick)
Gates is an
intelligent and talented rider but if he keeps emulating an unguided missile,
he will be spending more time on the bench than in the saddle.
Mokoko and
Marcus can make amends when they line up in a seven-horse field at Greyville
today and as 13-10 favourite in the ante-post market, Paul Lafferty’s runner is
widely expected to finally get off the mark after a string of placed efforts.
He was
promoted to third behind Alfonso Spagoni and he should be able to stay out of
trouble in this small field.
Garth Puller rode many a winner for Milnerton-based Greg Ennion in Cape Town before hanging up his boots and he saddles the Ennion and Terry and Annabel Andrews owned Samsara in the opening leg of the Pick 6. The mare has steady Cape form and not too far back in her local debut. However, the switch to the poly is probably the reason that she has been sent to Puller.
Samsara is
in a tough handicap where the Paul Peter-trained Afro Star is currently
ante-post favourite at 9-2 with apprentice Yuzae Ramzan giving her 4kg relief.
Amex will be a popular choice to break her string of runner-up berths in the Greyville Convention Centre Qualified Maiden and Marcus could well be in line for an opening treble as he partners Natty Kotzen’s filly. Marcus has been aboard at her last two outings when narrowly beaten and today’s 1400m should be right up her alley.
Major
threats are Kir, who barrier trialled well for Dennis Bosch after an opening
spell on the Highveld, and the often lethal Hewitson/Paul Peter combination
with Destiny’s Game.
The fifth is
another tricky affair but Kotzen and Marcus team up with the consistent Master
Keys. The filly has been running on nicely in both recent outings over a mile
and the drop to 1400m could bring out the best in her.
Peter sends
out Quebec Queen, who never got a look in when confronted by more traffic than
the N2 Highway in rush hour last time out, and Hewitson is unlikely to get
himself into that position.
A possible
upset could come in the form of Mela Stregata who has been consistent but a
little disappointing. The switch to the poly could be what she is looking for.
Marcus
switches brothers in the sixth where he partners Final Attempt for Glen Kotzen.
The gelding is currently 28-10 favourite in the ante-post market but there will
be many changers with Lotsa Silver from the very much in form Tony Rivalland
yard a major contender along with the Mark Dixon pair of The Poet and Master
Sam.
The seventh
is another minefield. Path To Glory is seldom far back and Mike Miller has
declared blinkers on his mare. Older runners often benefit from the headgear
first time out and as a five-time winner she is not short
of ability.
Stable
companion Sheza Rockstar also has claims along with On The Bright Side and
Grecian Laurel.
Josephine
Baker has a tricky draw in the last and also faces a competitive field where
Green Ice and Crystal Ball will be contenders.
Hawwaam’s emphatic win
in the Grade 1 SA Classic over 1800m on Saturday was exhilarating to watch and
he was raised nine points to a 121 merit rating.
However, his stable
companion Soqrat remains the highest rated three-year-old in the country,
despite having been outshone by Hawwaam on the day.
Soqrat (Candiese Marnewick)
Handicapper Matthew Lips
said a case could have been made to raise Hawwaam even higher, but it was
decided third-placed 117 merit rated National Park had not stayed the trip, and
second-placed 108 merit rated Barahin had been used as the line horse instead.
National Park and Barahin’s
merit ratings remained unchanged and fourth-placed Zillzaal also remained on
his 106 merit rating.
Hawwaam beat them by
5,75, 7,25 and 11,25 lengths respectively.
Soqrat
was beaten narrowly into third in the Grade 2 Hawaii Stakes over 1400m earlier
in the meeting, where he carried a Grade 1 penalty.
The Australian-bred had
moved up well from the box seat to hit the front but could not repel the strong
finishes of Zouaves and Cascapedia respectively.
He likely needed the
run, his first since returning to the Highveld from Cape Town.
Lips, explaining the
decision not to lower Soqrat’s 124 merit rating, said, “His run in the Queen’s
Plate was too good to drop him on the basis of just one disappointing race.”
The Grade 1 SA Fillies
Classic winner Return Flight was raised three points to 105, having won start
to finish in a time 2,74 seconds slower than Hawwaam’s.
There
are two consequences of yesterday’s SA Classic which are cast in stone.
Firstly, Halfway To Heaven, the dam of both Hawwaam and Sun Met winner Rainbow
Bridge, will be this season’s Equus Broodmare Of The Year. Secondly, Hawwaam,
unlike Rainbow Bridge, will never be gelded now that the value of the family is
known.
Hawwaam has been cut from 17-2 to 11-2 joint favourite for
the Vodacom Durban July following his breathtaking near six-length win in
last Saturday’s SA Classic.
World Sports Betting has also clipped stable companion Buffalo Bill Cody from 13-2 to 11-2 in its pre-nomination book and pushed out Rainbow Bridge (previously outright favourite at 5-1) by half a point to make it three on 11-2. Last year’s winner Do It Again stays on 15-2 but stable companion Doublemint (sixth in the Sun Met) has been cut from 14-1 to 11-1.
Muzi Yeni
Mike de Kock, an 8-1 chance for much of the season, has been
cut quite sharply to 9-2 to record a ninth trainers’ championship. Justin
Snaith is 12-10 favourite with Sean Tarry a close second on 14-10. Tarry leads
the log with stakes of R8.7 million and Snaith has just over R8 million but De
Kock is fast closing the gap and is now on R7.9 million.
Muzi Yeni went into yesterday’s Fairview meeting on 123 wins,
seven behind Anton Marcus, but he is now as short as 16-10 favourite to win the
title for the first time. Marcus is on 28-10, the same price as the 2014/15
champion Gavin Lerena who has ridden 94 winners this term. Current champion
Lyle Hewitson (107 wins) is a 9-2 chance.
Concerns that two of the races at Durbanville on Saturday
would be scrapped for lack of support have proved groundless. All six nominated
for the opening Streamline Agencies Maiden Juvenile Fillies stood their ground
at yesterday’s declaration stage as did eight of the nine nominated for the
Crawford Racing Maiden.
Race sponsor Klawervlei is also backing a seven-a-side
soccer tournament before racing with teams coming from several studs as well as
from the Snaith Racing and Eric Sands’ yards.
The big target for most punters, though, will be Boomps A
Daisy in race three, the 1 250m Crawford Racing Maiden. This
Australian-bred started second favourite for her debut in a 16-runner field at
Kenilworth last month and simply flew home to make up five lengths inside the
final furlong and go under to Fluttering by a fast-disappearing head.
Greg Cheyne takes over from Anton Marcus on the
Brett-Crawford trained Ridgemont filly. Crawford, incidentally, reports that
Cape Fillies Guineas winner Front And Centre goes to Durban and has the Daisy
Fillies Guineas at Greyville (May 4) on her shopping list.
By Michael Clower
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