MUZI YENI is bracing himself for the Grade 2
Wilgerbosdrift Gauteng Fillies Guineas on Saturday where he will be riding the
rising star, the Paul Matchett-trained War Of Athena.
Yeni said the
recent heavy rains had interrupted her preparation slightly but it will be the
same for her arch rival Anything Goes as both fillies are residents of
Randjesfontein.
Yeni said,
“She is doing well and as far as I am concerned she is flying. I have
always got to respect Anything Goes and keep an eye on her as she has a
tremendous turn of foot whereas War Of Athena is one who unwinds. The long
Turffontein straight will be in our favour but a slow pace will favour Anything
Goes.”
There are only
seven runners and a small field usually leads to a slow pace.
However, War
Of Athena has two stable companions, Gee For Go and Only The Brave, in the race
and all three stablemates have the same ownership of RS Wentzel and RE
Waterman-Wentzel.
A plan might
be concocted to ensure a good pace and this looks particularly possible due to
the low rating of Only The Brave. She might be the one who can afford to be
sacrificed.
The tally
between the star fillies stands at Anything Goes two War Of Athena one.
However, if
the saying “you are only as good as your last race” is anything to go
by War Of Athena has the edge as she downed Anything Goes by 1,75 lengths in
the Grade 3 Three Troikas last time over 1400m. However, she was receiving 1kg
from her that day and the latter likely needed it as she was returning from a
layoff.
Possibly in
War Of Athena’s favour is her pedigree which contains more stamina than
Anythings Goes’ as the Turffontein Standside 1600m is a tough test, especially
if the ground is rain affected.
The Dean Kannemeyer-trained MOUNT ANDERSON runs in the Call Now! Or Play Online. www.trackandball.co.za MR 97 Handicap at Hollywoodbets Greyville today. Picture: Candiese Lenferna
Andrew
Harrison
SOME horses love it, some horses hate it, most are not fazed by it. That
question will be foremost in many punter’s minds when trying to sort the form
for the fifth at Hollywoodbets Greyville today.
Caliente, Guru’s Pride and Duc D’Orange
have scored all their success on the synthetic surface. Trip To Africa’s last
two wins have been on the poly while Mount
Anderson boast a three
from four wins on the surface.
Dean Kannemeyer has never been one to shy
away from running his horses on the poly and leading up to his recent Christmas
Handicap victory, all three of Mount
Anderson’s wins were on
the poly.
He has only once finished out of the money
in seven outings on the inner track and although he takes on a few seemingly
confirmed poly specialists he can more than hold his own jumping from his
inside gate on a surface that clearly does not faze him.
Early in his career Mount Anderson
looked to have a three-year-old feature somewhere in his locker but it took the
Christmas Handicap win for him to earn some long-expected black type. He was at
the bottom of the weights for that race but put in a sustained finish to get
the better of another light-weight Mr Fitz who has since gone on to frank that
form.
Mount Anderson
currently stacks up as a solid handicapper and he will be fully tested this
afternoon.
Regular pilot Keagan de Melo is back from
his month-long stint in Cape
lockdown and is back
riding on home ‘poly’.
Caliente claimed the scalp of Mount Anderson
when last they met, up with the pace throughout and holding Mount Anderson’s
challenge. Mount Anderson is marginally better off at the
weights this time around but there should not be much between the two.
Caliente has since twice been undone by
Trip To Africa who he meets again today. Duncan Howells has always had a high
opinion of Trip To Africa but it has not all been smooth sailing with the
gelding. However, he now appears to be fulfilling his promise and front-running
tactics and the poly seems to be his preference.
He only faded late in the recent Michael
Roberts Handicap over 1750m, but his previous two successes were over today’s
course and distance.
Apprentice Thabiso Gumede appears to get on
well with the gelding and the pair are again expected to call the tune.
All four of Guru’s Pride’s win have been on
the poly and recent showings suggest that he if finding his better form. The
blinkers come off and he is 3.5kg better off with Trip To Africa on their last
meeting.
The blinkers go on Kapen Pride, another
poly specialist, but riding arrangements point to Mount Anderson
as the stable elect although Stuart Randolph is riding with a lot of confidence
of late.
Al’s
My Daddy lost the fight to stave off the attentions of the vet and has his
first run as a gelding for a new stable. He had shown some potential when in
the care of Adam Marcus at Milnerton and came off a long break after winning
first up out of the maidens. In his final start for Marcus he was sent to the
front over 1950m and faded late.
He has not been out since November but
jumps straight into a ten-furlong contest on a quick surface so the indications
are that Gareth van Zyl has his charge firing.
However, he is not
one to bank on and the consistent Run To Denmark, Jack Of Hearts, Teichman and
Arrow’s Mark are all worth closer scrutiny.
Pick 6 bankers on today’s card are like
hen’s teeth but a quick double with Alwaysonmymind and Irish Belle in the first
two races could help boost the wallet.
Alwaysonmymind was narrowly beaten in two
starts since being fitted with blinkers and Donovan Dillion seems to have
chosen her ahead of what looks to be her most likely danger, Good Girl.
Irish Belle ran up a string of seconds
before shedding her maiden against males last time out. She is quick and if she
holds form in her poly debut, she could prove difficult to catch.
The Lezeanne Forbes-trained MARY O. Picture: Candiese Lenferna
Andrew
Harrison
TOMORROW’S meeting at Hollywoodbets Scottsville is not for the faint-hearted
punter with some seriously competitive racing on the nine-race card. To further
complicate matters, there is a prediction of some rain. Let’s hope that the
Norwegian weather gurus have it wrong.
A Pinnacle Stakes for fillies and mares
heads up the card where the two most obvious protagonists are Mary O and Silent
Crusade. Lezeanne Forbes saddles WSB Fillies Guineas runner-up Mary O who took
on a strong field of males from the worst of the draw at her last outing in the
Michael Roberts Handicap. Prior to that she was close-up in the Flamboyant
Stakes and the winner of that race, Indi Anna was deemed good enough by Peter
Muscutt to send her to Cape Town
where she lines up in the Gr1 Majorca Stakes.
There should be little between Mary O and
Mark Dixon’s mare Silent Crusade. The latter ran a cracker in her comeback
sprint when second to Hawker Typhoon giving the winner 10.5kg. She will much
prefer this trip and with a good draw she should make a bold bid.
The Alyson Wright-trained Preferential is
in a rich vein of form in weaker company since being tried in blinkers and
although she takes on a useful field, she can finish in the money again. Petra had a tough draw in
the Flamboyant but won well at her previous start. She should maybe be judged
on that effort.
Another to consider is Drama Queen who has
her third start for her new stable and although badly in at the weights she
could come along enough to finish in the money.
Two smart sophomores Sav’s Star and Stella
Act look the principal contenders in the seventh but again the list of likely
winners does not stop with them.
Sav’s Star needed her last run. Although
lightly raced Nathan Kotzen’s filly shows plenty of potential and should come
on nicely from her first run back from a lay-off. It was a useful field and
Vivid Jet is no slouch. John Buckler will saddle Stella Act for Glen Kotzen and
the filly returns from a fairly lengthy break, not having been out since
November last year. However, she takes a three-point drop in the ratings and at
best will go close.
Tienie Prinsloo’s winners have generally
been ignored in the betting in spite of having obvious chances. He saddles the
Silvano mare Hareer who put up a good piece of work at Ashburton on Tuesday.
The Mike de Kock-trained QUEEN SUPREME runs in the Cape Town Met at Kenilworth today. Picture: Candiese Lenferna
Andrew Harrison
THE CAPE TOWN MET has panned out into a re-run of last
season’s Grade 1 Vodacom Durban July with four of the first six past the post
in the VDJ in the line-up. In fact, all of the country’s main actors will face
the starter, the only one missing being VDJ runner-up Got The Greenlight.
With
a projected R15 million Pick 6 pool in the offing, there will be no shortage of
interest in today’s 12-race meeting.
Last
year’s VDJ winner Belgarion is currently at the top of bookmaker’s boards for
the race, where he faces the usual suspects Rainbow Bridge,
Do It Again and Golden Ducat. Added to this year’s main cast
is recent Grade 1 Paddock Stakes winner Queen Supreme, Grade 1 Summer Cup
runner-up Running Brave, African Night Sky on the comeback trail, and the only
three-year-old in the race, Princess Calla.
Queen
Supreme posted back-to-back victories in the Grade 1 Paddock Stakes, cruising
to a most impressive win. Mike de Kock then shipped her back to his base at
Randjesfontein and most surmised that the Met was off her agenda so it came as
a surprise that De Kock opted for the filly to make the arduous 1600km road
trip back to Cape Town in just over three weeks, surely an indication of what
the multiple times champion trainer thinks of her chances.
She
is reported to have travelled well so the boys will need to pick up their feet.
Belgarion
was weighted to win the VDJ but has since met Rainbow Bridge
on level terms in his last two. Justin Snaith’s charge was a facile winner of
the Green Point Stakes but didn’t quite get to a fitter Rainbow Bridge
in the Queen’s Plate, the latter fighting on when seemingly beaten. That may be
the case again tomorrow.
Do
It Again, a dual winner of the VDJ, finished a creditable third last year in
his bid for his third success VDJ victory, just ahead of Golden Ducat with
Rainbow Bridge putting in a below par performance, finishing in sixth place.
Rainbow
Bridge showed his true worth when going on to be involved in possibly the race
of the season, edged out on the line by stable companion Golden Ducat in the
Grade 1 Champion Stakes at Hollywoodbets Greyville.
The
Grade 1 L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate is one of the country’s big three Grade 1 WFA
1600m races, the other two being the Gold Challenge, run at Hollywoodbets
Greyville and the HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut Stakes run at Turffontein, and
is most often used as a stepping stone into the Met.
This
year was no different although the big three of Belgarion, Rainbow Bridge
and Do It Again were upstaged by Jet Dark.
However,
the three filled the minor placings led by Rainbow Bridge
and their respective trainers will have left a little meat on the bone for the
Met, all three horses more at home over the extra 400m.
Golden
Ducat, a winner of the Champions Cup and fourth in the VDJ last season, ducked
the Queen’s Plate, the 1600m way too sharp for the former Grade 1 Cape Derby
winner, the race run over the same course and distance of the Met. He turned in
an exceptional effort to win the Grade 3 Peninsula Handicap over 1800m run on
the same day as the Queens Plate. In a race run at a pedestrian gallop, not
suited to Golden Ducat, Eric Sands’s charge fought on gamely to win a race in
which he looked dead-and-buried 400m out.
African
Night Sky, highly touted early in his career, returns from serious injury and
was a tad unlucky behind Golden Ducat in the Peninsula
after almost being stopped in his tracks when making his run. A 20-1 shot, he
may be worth an each-way nibble.
Fanie
Bronkhorst has had his trainer’s brief for less than a month but he saddles
Summer Cup runner-up Running Brave who sports his colours. For the Summer Cup,
Paul Matchett was at the helm but Bronkhorst steered her to her recent win in the
Grade 2 London News Stakes.
The
‘big four’ are all fancied in the betting market but the ‘Queen’ can reign
supreme head of Rainbow
Bridge and Golden Ducat
with Belgarion and African Night Sky in the mix.
The Clinton Binda-trained WHORLY WHORLY runs in the World Sports Betting Wolf Power at Turffontein today. Picture: Candiese Lenferna
David Thiselton
TURFFONTEIN STANDSIDE hosts the Listed WSB Wolf
Power 1600 today, a tricky handicap event on what is a
tricky meeting overall.
Youcanthurrylove
finished third in the Grade 2 Peermont Emperor’s Palace Charity Mile over
course and distance and is only two points higher in the merit ratings so
looks to be the one to beat from a fair draw of six. Last time out the Summer
Cup trip might have stretched him so he could well appreciate dropping back to
this distance.
Pack
Leader has impressed in both of his Highveld starts over this trip. He has a
wide draw but S’Manga Khumalo will know him well by now and always gets the
best out of him.
Cornish
Pomodoro was beaten 2,80 lengths by Youcanthurrylove in the Charity Mile but
nothing panned out well for him that day and he is now 3.5kg better off. He
improved immediately after gelding and has likely not shown his full potential
yet, so should be a big runner from a good draw under national log leading
jockey Lyle Hewitson.
Green Haze is one point lower than his last winning mark
which came in the Listed Drum Star Handicap over 1800m in March last year. He
comes off a good third in the Grade 3 London News Handicap over 1800m where he
beat Divine Odyssey by five lengths. He enjoys this trip too and has a plum
draw of two so would not be a surprise winner.
Golden Pheasant is a big good-looking horse who is in a rich
vein of form. He has won his last two attempts at this trip but does have to
overcome a five-point raise for his last win over 1400m. He does have a plum
draw of three though and Muzi Yeni gets on well with him.
Whorly Whorly has been a revelation since stepping up in trip
to between 1400m and 1475m. He now tries a further step up in trip and if he
takes to it he should be right there. However, he does have a tricky draw of
nine.
Divine
Odyssey is back to the 114 mark of his last win which was in the Grade 3
Jubilee Handicap over 1800m. He would prefer the latter trip but is effective
over this trip and has a fair draw.
Approach
Control has proved capable of running off a 108 mark which remained static for
over a year but he has now been dropped two points at last and this could see
him involved in the shake up, although he has a tricky draw.
Full
Mast proved he stays further than a mile last time when winning over 1800m.
This is a stronger field though and he has to overcome a two-point raise. He
finished more than ten lengths behind Whorly Whorly in the Grande heritage over
1475m and was more than nine lengths behind Golden Pheasant.
Captain
Of Tortuga sneaks into the handicap with the minimum weight He looks held by Full
Mast and Whorly Whorly on 1800m and 1400m form. He enjoys this course and
distance but has a tough draw.
D’Arrivee
is 2,5kg under sufferance but has struck as one who has not lived up to his
potential and he is drawn in pole, so he can’t be written off in this open
contest.
In the
other feature on the day, the Non-Black Type WSB Allez France Stakes the
Zimbabwean Derby winner Lily Blue goes over the 2400m distance of the latter
race for the first time since arriving in South Africa. She has class and on
a difficult day is made a banker in the Pick 6 but only because there has to be
a banker somewhere on such a competitive card. In the Jackpot it is advised
that Smoking Hot and Pomander are also included.
The Brett Crawford-trained RUN FOX RUN. Picture: Liesl King
David Thiselton
BRETT CRAWFORD, whose single Grade 1
win last season ended a sequence of seven multiple Grade 1-winning seasons, has
a full card of runners on Cape Town Met day including a trio of runners in both
the Grade 1 Cape Flying Championship over 1000m and the Grade
1 Majorca Stakes over 1600m.
Crawford said Run Fox Run
was undoubtedly his stable elect in the Cape Flying.
He said about the
Australian-bred Foxwedge filly who has won seven of her ten career starts,
“She is in great form and I am expecting a good run.” Last year she
finished a 1,20 length fourth having won the Grade 2 Southern Cross Stakes over
the same 1000m course and distance in the build-up. This year she comes in off
a one length second to Celtic
Sea in the Southern
Cross. She received 1kg from the latter so is going to have a tough task
reversing form in this weight for age event. Celtic Sea is the favourite with
Track & Ball at 2.65/1 while Run Fox Run is at 13/2 and has regular pilot
Anton Marcus up from draw three out of 14.
Crawford also runs Bold
Respect and Pacific Trader and said, “These two older horses need to come
back to their best form. I have put a pair of blinkers on Pacific Trader and
hope that helps. Bold Respect finished second in this race last year so obviously
has the ability. It will just depend on his well-being on the day. They have
both had good preps.”
Crawford runs Pretty
Young Thing, Sing Out Loud and Kelpie in the Majorca.
He said, “They are
all doing well and are all capable although Pretty Young Thing has a tough draw
to overcome. Clouds Unfold and Captain’s Ransom are the horses to beat but
after that it is an open race and all three have the potential to run into the
money.”
Crawford’s day begins in
the third race over 1600m with Global View colt Grand Escape, who was doing his
best work late when green on debut and finishing a 0,90 length third.
He said, “He
obviously has a poor draw but is fit and well.”
To date the form of his
debut has worked out quite well with two horses he beat by about three lengths
placing in the first three in their respective next starts.”
In the fourth race over
1400m Grade 2 Charity Mile winner Hudoo Magic is prominent in the betting.
Crawford said, “He
is in good form and this being a Pinnacle he is pretty well weighted. He always
appreciates a long straight like this one.”
King Of Gems is a
fascinating runner as he is a former Grade 2 Concorde Cup winner over 1600m. He
had to be given a nine-month break for a wind operation this year and he has
had three runs since.
Crawford said, “His
last run was better and I hope he can continue to improve. He finished four
lengths behind Kasimir in that start over 1200m and we know he has the ability
so if he feels right on the day, he has a definite outside chance.”
Hudoo Magic jumps from a
tough draw of nine under Marcus and King Of Gems has draw five under Warren
Kennedy.
In the Grade 3 Politician
Stakes over 1800m Crawford runs the progressive Captain Al colt Kaptein who
carries only 54kg and jumps from draw seven under Greg Cheyne.
He said, “He is
doing well and comes off a very good run (a Progress Plate over this trip where
he ran above his 83 rating). This will be good test for him and I am expecting
him to run a competitive race and be in the first four I hope.”
Crawford runs Grade 1
Cape Derby third-placed Super Silvano in the Grade 2 New Turf Carriers Western
Cape Stayers over 2800m and he said, “He is in good form. There is a
question mark whether he gets the trip but if he does, he will be
competitive.”
Oddly enough Super
Silvano, who is by Vodacom Durban July winner Bold Silvano, is a full-brother
to stablemate Bold Respect, a Grade 1-winning sprinter. However, their mother
Respectable Lady won over 1800m and their third dam was the top class
Respectable, who finished third in the July and won three Grade 2 staying
races.
Crawford runs Social
Butterfly, Qaaraat and Variety Breeze in the eleventh over 1000m.
He said, “Social
Butterfly is in great form. She has a big weight but has been doing very well
at home. Qaaraat’s form has been very good since the blinkers were put on and
she must be respected as an each-way chance. Variety Breeze has not run over
1000m for a while and I think this is her best trip so she should improve on
her current form.”
In the last over 1200m
Crawford runs Real Gone Kid, who made it two wins in five starts last time out
over this trip.
He said, “There is a
bit of a weight turnaround with Tarantino but he has been working well and I
see no reason why he can’t run another good race.”
This Australian-bred colt
is well related being by top sire Schnitzel out of the former Justin
Snaith-trained dual Grade 1 winner In The Fast Lane.
The Gavin van Zyl-trained SHASTINA runs in the fourth at Hollywoodbets Greyville today. Picture: Candiese Lenferna
Andrew
Harrison
RACING
in KZN is taking flak from some quarters, mainly
due of the large number of recent Pick 6 carryovers and other big dividends.
Accusations range from race fixing to crooked jockeys and trainers and other
unsavoury practices.
Anyone familiar with the intricacies of the
sport knows that these accusations are mostly hogwash. Racing in KZN is highly
competitive at the best of times but the modest quality of horses racing in
this province at this time of the season is probably the root cause of the many
shock results.
These horses are mostly not competitive
during the high season, some due to a plain case of the slows, others with
recurring niggles that in some cases lead to inconsistent performances.
Some advice to exasperated exotic
bet punters is to structure your bets. Be wary of false favourites. Dissect the
form of the so-call ‘good things’ and if it doesn’t stand up to close scrutiny
and is also ‘light’ in the betting, pasop.
A banker or two always helps ease the
financial outlay but also the occasional ‘field’ option in what is perceived as
a difficult race, guarantees survival in that leg – and 10% of a million-rand
pot is not a bad return.
In short, give it some thought.
Racing at Hollywoodbets Greyville today is
another that will test punter’s skills.
It may be a case of take the plunge and
know your fate early or load up in the opening leg of the Pick 6 where Policy
Target will never get an easier chance to shed his maiden. Andre Nel’s runner
has finished runner-up in all three of his local outings and should get it
right this time around. Dangers! Zero Rated was not far back at his penultimate
start, finishing a length behind Policy Target, and the experiment with
blinkers failed next time out. Blinkers come off. Golden Duck switches to the poly but has been
consistent and stays the trip well. He is a possible threat along with Liaoluo Bay who was a distant third last run but
can feature in this line-up.
Shastina has put in two promising efforts
since her maiden success for Gavin van Zyl and although she does not have the
best of draws, she should be competitive in the opening leg of the first
jackpot. The draw is a concern but she does have a 4kg claimer up and two who
look to be among her biggest rivals are drawn just inside. Sacred Ibis appears
to be regaining her best form while Fire Faerie was two lengths behind Shastina
at their last meeting. However, Shastina is 3.5kg better off at the weights
given the apprentice allowance and both were drawn wide in that race.
Another open affair faces punters in the
fifth. Justfortheepenny has come to hand again and was close-up in a useful
field last outing. With a claiming apprentice aboard should make another bold
showing. Purple Powahouse will have his supporters as he has been in mustard
form of late. He got a six-point rise in the handicap for his last win but
steps up in trip and could go in again.
Lowly fillies and mare’s handicaps are
always tricky and the seventh is no different. Lady Legend made major
improvement when fitted with a tongue-tie and did well to go all the way to
hold off the well thought of Vihaan’s Pie. A 2.5kg claimer up sees her face
this field on similar weight terms and from a good draw she can go in again.
Marsanne has the worst of the draw but does come from off the pace so this
should not trouble her. She was only a length off Lady Legend last start and
can turn the tables. Maiden’s Prayer has been a little disappointing but was
only three lengths back to Lady Legend. She now tries blinkers which could see
her fight this one out.
Clinton Binda makes the trip from the
Highveld with King’s Road whose last two wins have been on this track, the last
on the turf, the previous on the poly. He has patchy form but nearly made all
in his last Vaal start and has a 4kg claimer
up to help. Valiente, Bernie’s Dream and Hampton Court are others to consider but
that may be a ‘field’ option for the Pick 6.
Gary Rich does wonder with his small string
and Arctic Princess can round off the meeting. She has come good for her new
stable and is unbeaten back in blinkers. She was a comfortable winner last
start and can go in again. Casadoro was a recent easy maiden winner from the
worst of the draw while Foxy Lady has another poor draw to contend with but was
running on nicely behind Arctic Princess at her last outing and can feature
again.
The Peter Muscutt-trained ULTRA MAGNUS. Picture: Candiese Lenferna
David Thiselton
SUMMERVELD trainer Peter Muscutt has taken two
horses down for the big Cape Town Met meeting to compete in Grade 1s, Ultra
Magnus and Indi Anna, and neither of them should be written off because their
last respective races showed them to be potentially better than their form
suggests.
They have been
in Cape Town for three weeks and Muscutt said,
“They galloped at Kenilworth last
Wednesday and I was more than happy with both of them. They will have to put up
career best performances to be competitive but they are both in good
order.”
Ultra Magnus,
who runs in the Cape Flying Championship over 1000m, won the Grade 3 New Turf
Carriers Merchants over 1160m at Turffontein last time out. He had been up
against it from draw 12 out of 15 because, although high draws are usually
advantageous down the Turffontein straight, on that particular day, Summer Cup
day, it was noticeable that the high drawn horses were not going through with
their runs.
Yet the
five-year-old Oratorio gelding stuck to his outside station and still managed
to win by two lengths. The second horse home, Eden Roc, adds merit to the win
as he had previously won a Grade 1 and a Grade 2 over 1200m. Ultra Magnus did
receive 1,5kg from Eden Roc but beat him comfortably. The third horse home,
Bold Ransom, also adds merit to the win. This up and coming four-year-old
sprinter was carrying just 52kg and jumped from a favourable draw of two but
was beaten 2,10 lengths. He has subsequently finished a narrow second in the
Grade 3 Lebelo Sprint over 1000m and he then won a strong Pinnacle event over
1000m in which he received 6kg from Eden Roc and gave him a 1,40 length
beating.
Muscutt said
about Ultra Magnus, “He comes in under the radar. Five furlongs is not
ideal but the Kenilworth five is more testing
than anywhere else in the country and that will suit him.”
Ultra Magnus
is lightly raced with only 12 starts under the belt, He has won six times and
been placed four time, including a short-head runner up finish in the Grade 1
Golden Horse Sprint over 1200m. In the latter race he received 7.5kg from
Kasimir and beat him by 1,10 lengths so has a tough task on Saturday but he
could well have improved and looks to be the dark horse of the race.
Indi Anna, a
five-year-old Master Of My Fate mare, won the Grade 3 Flamboyant Stakes over
1600m at Hollywoodbets Greyville in her last start. The impressive part of the
victory was that she had over-raced throughout in a handy position and yet went
on to win comfortably by 1.50 lengths.
Muscutt said,
“She was not entitled to kick the way she did after over-racing. I have
removed all extra equipment, including the tongue tie, and have declared her in
a compression mask but am probably going to take that off too. So, if she
settles this time she should run well.”
Ultra Magnus
is drawn nine out of 14 and Keagan de Melo replaces Donovan Dillon and Indi
Anna is drawn six out of eleven and Gavin Lerena replaces Raymond Danielson.
Noks Zimu poses with dual Vodacom Durban July winner DO IT AGAIN who will be out to add the Cape Town Met to his record when he lines up at Kenilworth on Saturday. Justin Snaith has booked Anton Marcus for the ride. There are a number of big carryover pools on offer with R5 million already in the Pick 6 pool that is expected to top R15 million. Photo: Liesl King
David Thiselton
SATURDAY’S Grade 1 Cape Town Met over 2000m at Kenilworth has attracted a small field of eleven but it
is full of quality.
Golden
Ducat should be coming into his own half way through his four-year-old year.
This high quality twice Grade 1-winner is distance suited and has a plum draw
under the reigning national champion jockey Warren Kennedy. He is versatile, as
he is able to lead and find extra, or come from off the pace and use his good
turn of foot.
Belgarion
has improved into a genuine Grade 1 weight-for-age horse this season and it
easy to imagine him being dropped out from a wide draw and then making a bold
bid to mow the field down in the straight. He will relish the step up in trip
from the mile of the L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate where he ran on well for third in
a race that was run too slowly for his liking.
The
twice Vodacom Durban July winner Do It Again has never won the Met but was
possibly an unlucky loser in 2019 when ending up too far back and arriving just
too late to catch Rainbow Bridge. In the Queen’s Plate he looked his old self
for the first time in a while and was unlucky as he was cramped for room when
running on strongly from last. He was entitled to need that reappearance run
and if arriving in the same fettle, he is a big runner.
Rainbow Bridge and Golden Ducat went too
quickly in the July so did well to stay on for sixth and fourth respectively.
An interesting point was that Rainbow
Bridge ran the first
2000m of that race in a time that was slightly better than the 2000m course
record set by London News in the Daily News 2000 in 1996. That shows just how
good he is over this 2000m trip and he did in fact win the Met two years ago.
The
one possible concern is that he has come out second best in a number of races
that saw him involved in a dog fight, including last year’s Met. He is at his
best in his third run after a layoff, which he has here, and draw six gives him
options.
Queen
Supreme is a fascinating runner as she comes off a second successive Paddock
Stakes win and has been impressive in her last two starts. She gets a 2,5kg
female allowance but does have a tricky draw of eight. In her only previous
attempt at a Grade 1 against the boys this five-year-old mare ran fourth in the
Summer Cup in her four-year-old season carrying just 52kg. That form would not
be good enough to win here on the face of it but it should be remembered that
she is Northern Hemisphere-bred so was still a three-year-old in real terms in
that race. She has blossomed lately as she is now fully grown and this race
will show just how good she really is.
The
other female in the race, Princess Calla, has to carry 51.5kg and is drawn in
pole. She has 2,30 lengths to find on Queen Supreme from the Paddock Stakes.
However, that was only her fifth career start and has always struck as one who
would get better and better as she got older and as she went further. However,
it has to be said, Queen Supreme did win with a bit in hand.
African
Night Sky was an unlucky loser last time in the Glorious Goodwood Premier
Trophy over 1800m when squeezed out on the rail and having to switch. However,
he is now 2kg worse off and in his only previous attempt at the Met in 2018 he
was beaten two lengths into sixth.
Silver
Operator was a 3,65 length sixth in the Queen’s Plate and tries this trip for
the first time. His dam by Captain Al was a Listed-winning sprinter, but he is
by Silvano which give him hope of getting 2000m, but he will need a big step up
on form.
Cirillo
is a perennial placed horse in Grade 1s and should be handy turning for home
but this trip might stretch him and his old foes might be too good again.
Running
Brave is well-named as she is courageous, particularly from the front, and she
has two wins in Grade 2 company over this trip. She finished second in the
Grade 1 Summer Cup. However, this is a big step up from that handicap event and
she is officially 4kg under sufferance with the highest rated horse, Rainbow Bridge.
Sovereign
Spirit might not yet have shown his best and is capable of a strong finish but
he looks held on form.
PEARL OF ASIA, with Donovan Dillon up, wins the Marula Sprint for trainers Robbie and Shannon Hill at Hollywoodbets Scottsville yesterday. Picture: Candiese Lenferna
Andrew Harrison
THE Marula Sprint
(Non-Black Type) was always going to be a tricky affair given the quality of
the field but it was a race that was always going to pan out for winner Pearl
Of Asia.
Robbie Hill’s gelding possesses a smart turn of foot but for
him to be most effective he needs a solid early pace from the front runners and
that’s just what he got at Hollywoodbets Scottsville yesterday.
Ziva La Winter and Celebration Rock set the desired pace and
Donovan Dillon was content to sit off the early gallop before moving into
contention up the inside fence. It was soon clear that it was going to take a
good one to blunt his challenge and Pearl Of Asia scored comfortably from an
ever game Good Rhythm to give Dillon his third success of the afternoon.
The was some serious scrimmaging as riders hunted gaps
coming through the two-furlong mark, chief victim being Solid Gold who was the
meat in the sandwich and squeezed out to last.
Mike Miller is having a tremendous trot with his
two-year-olds and Edgartown was another to oblige in the card opener. However,
Edgartown may have been a tad lucky to survive an objection lodged by Donovan
Dillon aboard second-placed Crested Eagle.
Edgartown had been re-schooled after missing his first
engagement due to unruly behaviour at the start, but it was all good yesterday
as Ashton Arries had his mount out and galloping in a matter of strides, never
to be headed.
About 150m from the line, Crested Eagle was looming large on
his outside when Edgartown, racing green, shifted across Crested Eagle forcing
Dillon to snatch up and track to the inside.
Arries, cleverly,
pushed his mount out to the line under hands the last bit with Dillon hard at
work on Crested Eagle. There is no doubt that Crested Eagle was closing on the winner
but not fast enough to force the issue according to the stipendiary board.
Ashburton-based Shane Humby has a reputation for not being
hard on his horses and as a result many of them don’t see the racetrack too
often. His general philosophy being, if the horse is not happy within itself,
it doesn’t run – that’s not to say that they are all good enough to win!
Humby and first call stable rider Donovan Dillon banged home
a quick double with Star Act obliging in the second and Purple And Green doing
the honours in the next. Star Act, nicknamed ‘Pumpkin’ at home, put in a
sustained finish to run down Flying The Star while Purple And Green fell off
the early pace but picked it up when it mattered to get the better of Final
Destiny.
There was drama in the seventh with Solar Flare being
declared a non-runner. Solar Flare appeared to be hampered as the gates were
sprung and others, most notably Sofia Erin and Wildly In Love were slow to go,
Sofia Erin being restrained by her rider and fighting for her head before
settling.
The race went to recent maiden winner Calulo who went
back-to-back with Michael Roberts keeping faith with light-weight apprentice
Mfanelo Zuma.
Many Pick 6 hopes rested on East Coast Star going into the
last but after hitting the front early in the home straight, she was swamped
close home as Jarred Samuel threaded Tinnie Prinsloo’s filly Love Of London
through the pack.
Ashburton-based Prinsloo has been holding his own since
arriving from Kimberley
while Samuel seldom gets opportunities on horses with chances.
Once Covid restrictions are eased, he will take up a work
riders’ position in Hong Kong.
Racing Tools
Calendar, stats, racing videos, it's all here!
Get all the latest race stats on your favourite filly, watch racing videos from your couch or find out who's running where!