THE first race at Turffontein on Wednesday over 1450m was won by the Sean Tarry-trained Eagle Alley, who is by Silvano out of Magnolia Lane, a full-sister to the legendary Yeats.
The
latter won the Ascot Gold Cup four times in succession.
Tarry said afterwards about the
Klawervlei Stud-bred Bernard Kantor and Chris van Niekerk-owned three-year-old
colt, “We felt a bit of pressure bringing him out on a track like this,
the Inside course, over 1450m. It is definitely a distance way short of his
best. We always said the pedigree may be a bit too stout, but if he’s come out
and won over 1400m the future bodes well. He could well be an exciting horse.
I’ve always said I had some decent three-year-olds but not early
three-year-olds and hopefully in the second half of the season we can play
catch up with the big guns.”
Lyle Hewitson was
aboard and managed to find the rail in midfield from draw 6. He drove him from
a long way out and his resolute finish just got him up in time to beat Manterio
by 0,25 lengths and thus convert 22/10 favouritism.
Eagle Alley’s Sadler’s Wells dam, Magnolia Lane, was placed as a three-year-old and has previously produced Torcedor (Fastnet Rock). The latter won two Group 3 staying events in Ireland and the UK and later finished a length third to Stradivarious in the Ascot Gold Cup in 2018 and a half-a-length second to the latter stalwart in the 2018 Goodwood Cup.
Justin Snaith’s filly KEEP THE LIGHTS ON runs in the Sea Cottage Graduation Plate at Hollywoodbets Greyville today. Picture: Candiese Lenferna
Andrew
Harrison
SOME smart fillies line up in the Sea Cottage Graduation Plate that
heads the card on the poly at Hollywoodbets Greyville today, the meeting
swopped with Gauteng to accommodate the Two-Year-Old Sale at Gosforth
Park.
Top of the list is Justin Snaith’s filly
Keep The Lights On. Snaith has recently opened a satellite yard at Summerveld
that houses many runners owned by his KZN-based owner Nick Jonsson. Keep The
Lights On races in Jonsson’s silks and the one question punters will be asking
is if Keep The Lights On is fit enough to win. She boasts some smart form in
strong company from the worst draws and is well weighted here.
Her last start was in The Debutante on Gold Cup day where she jumped from the extreme outside gate and only found the top filly Ecstatic Green too strong for her.
Snaith gave her a break after that and she
makes what officially amounts to her seasonal debut tomorrow but if not short
of a run she should be hard to beat.
The year older Stella Act has done well in
strong company but returns from an even longer break. But she does have a touch
of class and should be competitive. Golden Slipper winner Love Bomb is another
making her seasonal debut but was a touch disappoint at her last start after
her previous win in the Golden Slipper. She is the highest rated filly in the
race but could find it tough going at the weights. Sav’s Star also returns from
a break but has shown promise. She had a tricky draw in feature company last
time out but Nathan Kotzen keeps 2.5kg claimer Thabiso Gumede aboard that
should see her more competitive at the weights.
Wendy Whitehead has been sending out
winners on a regular basis of late and saddles African Sunrise in the
Conditional Progress Plate. He is a gelding with his quirks but is more than just
useful on his day. He drops in trip but has a good draw and if he brings his A
game, he should be difficult to beat.
Should he fail, thinks get trickier. Colour
Of My Fate has been consistent in useful company and comes in with a light
weight. Williams Land steps up to a more suitable trip and he may just have
needed his latest. Anton Marcus has jumped ship from Pearl Of Asia to ride
African Sunrise but Robbie Hill’s gelding is no slouch and can do better than
his last start.
The fifth is another handicap puzzle for
punters but Cherry Road
is top class and Gavin van Zyl’s filly has done well from bad draws at her last
three. She has a plum draw this time around and can beat the weight. She will
face plenty of opposition from Diamondsandpearls who is also smart but may need
a touch further to show her best from a wide draw. Eightfolds Lass has been in good form, her
best recent effort over course and distance from a tough draw while Connect Me
has not had much luck at recent outings. She has the best of the draw here and
can make good improvement.
It takes a lot to make the genial Kom
Naidoo lose his sense of humour but apprentice Gumede was on the receiving end
after a less than inspiring ride on Fives Wild last time out. Gumede gets a
chance to make amends in the last as Naidoo has kept him aboard in another
difficult handicap. Five’s Wild has useful form on the poly and seems sure to
improve. Jerry The Juggler has his second run for his new stable and the
blinkers go on. He was not far back in his first run for the yard. Hammam took
on stronger when back to a sprint last outing and his recent form is
consistent.
The Stuart Pettigrew-trained ANYTHING GOES. Picture: Candiese Lenferna
David Thiselton
CHAMPION filly Anything Goes was found to have
only suffered a superficial injury after rolling in her stable shortly before
her intended engagement in the Peermont Emperor’s Palace Ready To Run Cup at
the end of last month and she might be back for the Grade 2 WSB Ipi Tombe
Challenge over a mile on WSB Summer Cup day.
Trainer Stuart
Pettigrew said about the country’s highest rated three-year-old filly,
“She just took some hair off the whither and it was exactly where the
saddle goes, so it is the same sort of thing as having a boil in the mouth and
putting the bit in, but there was no injury to either bone or tendon so it was
not serious. I will give her a bit of work on the grass and she might then run
in the Ipi Tombe but only if I am 100% happy. There are seven races for her in
the future and there is no rush.”
The unbeaten
daughter of Var does not have a Cape
Summer campaign on her
itinerary.
Pettigrew
said, “I skipped Cape Town with Surcharge and will do the same with her,
so if the Capetonians want to take us on they will have to get off their beach
chairs and come up to Jo’burg. There are a number of races for her in Jo’burg
and after that we will take her down to KZN for the SA Champions Season.”
Pettigrew is
not sure about Anything Goes’ stamina capacity.
He said,
“The Thekwini put us off (she only just held on in that Grade 1 mile at
Hollywoodbets Greyville from her arch-rival War Of Athena). Before that I was
not even worried about 1800m and maybe she was let go a bit early in that race.
I will judge her on her mile run at the end of the month, but I think she will
get 1800m.”
On pedigree
she is by the speed influence Var but her dam Dance Domain is by the stamina
influence Parade leader. Dance Domain is a half-sister to Capetown Noir, who
was a champion miler who did also win the Grade 1 Cape Derby over 2000m.
Anything Goes is a half-sister to the Gimmethegreenlight colt Green Laser, who
has twice proved he stays every inch of the tough Turffontein Standside 1800m,
first when easily winning the Grade 3 Sea Cottage Stakes and then when
finishing a 0,75 length second to Got The Greenlight in the Grade 1 SA
Classic.
However, no
matter what distance she is campaigned at, this classy bay is sure to provide
plenty more thrills for her ever-growing fan club.
The Paul Peter-trained SUMMER PUDDING.Picture: (JC Photographics)
David Thiselton
THE darling of the SA turf, Summer Pudding, inched closer to
the 51 year-old record of Home Guard when cruising to victory at Turffontein
Standside yesterday.
When Home
Guard won the Grade 1 SA Guineas at Greyville on June 7 1969 he made it eleven
unbeaten runs and Summer Pudding has now won eight out of eight.
The Paul
Peter-trained four-year-old Silvano filly was making her first appearance since
being named Equus Horse Of The Year of last season and those who had questioned
that award will have to eat their words, at least for the time being.
She was
carrying 62kg and giving away lumps of weight to some useful sorts in a
Pinnacle Stakes race over 1600m, which is on the sharp side for her.
However, she
never looked in danger of defeat.
Warren Kennedy
placed her second behind a fair pace set by her stable companion Elusive
Force.
There were
none of her customary flat spots in the straight and the strongly built bay was
soon displaying her big stride as she sauntered to an effortless two length
victory from Rouge Allure, to whom she gave 8kg. Mount Laurel,
to whom she gave 2kg, was a short-head further away in third.
Her chief
market rival Lady Of Steel had earlier been scratched but it was nevertheless a
pleasing comeback.
Home Guard
lost his unbeaten record in the Durban July and Summer Pudding will tested to
the hilt on the last Saturday of this month when running in the Grade 1 WSB
Summer Cup, Johannesburg’s biggest race.
On the bright
side the weights have already been published for that Turffontein Standside
2000m event and she is due to carry 57kg having been set 56,5kg. This is
presuming the current top weight Queen Supreme stands her ground. The original
topweight Got The Greenlight has been scratched so Queen Supreme will go up from
59,5kg to 60 kg and the other weights will all be dragged up
half-a-kilogram.
On the
downside Summer Pudding is drawn 40 out of the 44 remaining entries.
Summer Pudding
is currently 5/2 favourite with the sponsors.
The Joe Soma-trained GOT THE GREENLIGHT. Picture: Candiese Lenferna
David Thiselton
JOE SOMA has a number of options for last
year’s Equus Champion Three-year-old colt, Got The Greenlight, and the first
choice would be to run him in the QE II Cup in Hong Kong
in April.
However, that
all depends on the export protocols changing, so his more likely program will
be an August campaign in Johannesburg
followed by the SA Champions Season in KZN, culminating in his ultimate target,
the Vodacom Durban July.
A Cape Town campaign is
also a possibility but that would depend on horses being allowed to travel
freely and also on the stakes levels.
Any African
Horse Sickness case within a 30km radius of the training centres means an
automatic 40 day ban on travel down to Cape
Town, which is part of the AHS Controlled Area.
However, there
is an option under those circumstances for a horse to spend 14 days in the
vector protected barn at Randjesfontein.
If they do
take that option they are only allowed out between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.
Soma did
choose that option last year and pointed out, “It is very hard on a horse
having to live under those conditions and then get on a vector protected float
and travel 1400km to Cape Town,
he does not know where he is. The proof of the pudding is in the eating and the
CTS 1600 was the only unplaced run of Got The Greenlight’s career and he was
beaten by E division horses!”
Soma said he
would unlikely exercise that option again.
However, he
hinted a Cape Town
campaign would be a possibility if there were no more AHS cases within a 30km
radius of Turffontein (there is currently a 40 day ban in place due to an AHS
case in early October).
He said,
“Raiding Cape Town in normal circumstances is fine. The horses get on the
float on the Tuesday after a normal training regime and arrive there
fresh.”
However, he lamented,
“It is amazing how an AHS case will always crop up just before the horses
are due to leave for Cape Town.
We are then expected to race down there on playing fields that are not level,
then come back to Jo’burg and race here and then go down to Durban
where we meet the Cape Town
horses who have been kept fresh. We also have big races in Jo’burg but the Cape trainers do not come for them.”
Soma admitted
he would probably do the same if he trained out of Cape Town.
However, he
pointed to the great Syd Laird and Politician to prove that it was possible to
travel to Turffontein and still win in other centres. Politician traveled up to
Johannesburg in the November of both 1977 and 1978 before winning the Met,
Queen’s Plate and July in the first of those seasons and he did the Met-Queen’s
Plate double the following season too.
Soma’s
life-long dream has been to win the Vodacom Durban July and he said if the
likely Johannesburg Autumn and SA Champions Season route was followed Got The
Greenlight will probably make his reappearance in January.
The Kom Naidoo-trained VIHZOE’S MAGIC, with Tristan Godden up, wins the Gold Circle Racing Youtube Maiden Plate at Hollywoodbets Greyville yesterday. Picture: Candiese Lenferna
Andrew Harrison
KOM NAIDOO boasts the largest string in Ashburton and he sends out winners on a regular basis. Vihzoe’s Magic, by his own admission had been disappointing before yesterday’s success at Hollywoodbets Greyville.
Speaking after her final piece of work
mid-week Naidoo comment; “She has been disappointing. She should have won her
maiden a long time ago. She put up a cracking piece of work yesterday and I’m
hoping that the blinkers make a difference.”
They certainly seemed to do the trick as
the daughter of Willow Magic ran down the favourite Umzinduzi in the run to the
wire for the first.
In behind pace-setter Captain’s Rosy for
much of the race, Umzinduzi moved up smartly to take the lead crossing the
subway with Tristan Godden hunting a gap on Vihzoe’s Magic. Once in daylight
she started to reel in Umzinduzi with Captain’s Rosy staying on gamely.
Umzinduzi drifted in sharply under pressure forcing Vihzoe’s Magic onto Rule
The Runway who was forced to check out of a closing gap. But Vihzoe’s Magic was
not to be denied and fought on to win well.
Tyrion Prince came in for a ton of market
support before the off of the secondand the gamble looked to have been landed
before outsider Palace Music slipped up the inside rail to run him out of it.
With a strong tailwind helping the runners’
home, the race was run at a cracking pace as Ashton Arries took no prisoners on
Mark Dixon’s runner, stretching the field in what looked to be a winning
gambit.
But it all came apart over the final
furlong as the early exertions took their toll on Tyrion Prince who shifted to
the outside rail. Warren Kennedy, deputising for a suspended Donovan Dillon,
slipped Palace Wind up the inside rail to collar Tyrion Prince.
Palace Wind had finished a distant last at
his previous start but as Wendy Whitehead explained, he had been loaded first
in that race and played up in the stalls, losing any chance he had after
blowing the start.
Reschooled and last up yesterday he
produced the goods.
The former Kimberley trainers who moved to
KZN at the beginning of the season are slowly making their mark. Kimberley had
garnered a reputation as the last chance saloon for moderate gallopers but that
in turn forced their trainers into becoming seriously good horseman in order to
squeeze the best out of their charges.
Ashburton-based Tinnie Prinsloo snapped a
string of placed runs with Jay’s Dancer obliging in the third, an apprentice
handicap. In the money at his last five starts, yesterday’s win was not overdue
although at one stage it began to look like another second.
Twice As Cold under Mfanelo Zuma shifted
ground late onto Jay’s Dancer who for a few strides looked as if he was not
going to make the gap.
However, Jay’s Dancer had plenty in hand,
slipping though under Jeffrey Syster, a split second before the door slammed in
his face and going on to win comfortably.
For the dedicated followers of the Star
Wars series the double, Chewbaca and Carbon Fibre, was an obvious wager.
Chewbaca, Han Solo’s right-hand man, and Han Solo was frozen in Carbonite to be taken to JabbaThe Hutt. Originally Luke Skywalker was to be frozen in carbonite to be taken to the Emperor. A Geek tragedy in space.
There was no tragedy for punters as Chewbaca
made heavy weather of shaking off Tiger Tank but prevailing in the end while
Syster scored the second win of his afternoon as he drove Carbon Fibre home
ahead of the grey Mighty Smart.
Drama came in the sixth as Matterhorn and Anse
Lazio came together in the finish. Matterhorn, for no obvious reason, suddenly
veered off a straight course, cannoning into his rival. With only a head in it
at the line, the objection hooter was a foregone conclusion as was the protest
being upheld.
The Alyson Wright-trained MATTERHORN runs in the sixth at Hollywoodbets Greyville on Sunday. Lyle Hewitson will be in the irons. Picture: Candiese Lenferna
Andrew
Harrison
PUNTERS face another competitive card on the turf at Hollywoodbets
Greyville on Sunday where the scratching of the mare
Flichity By Farr may have reduced the Trackandball.co.za handicap, seventh on
the card, to a match race.
Matterhorn has made major improvement at recent outings, winning his last two,
but climbing the ladder makes things all that more difficult. His task was made
that much easier with the scratching of stable companion Flichity By Farr,
close-up in two recent long-distance features including the Gold Cup, but off
her food this last week and is an addition to the scratching’s list
Matterhorn has come good since being send over ground and although he goes
this trip for the first time, he should see it out comfortably.
Biggest threat will be from Anse Lazio who
comes with some fair Cape staying form and
although he takes on stronger here, he only has 52.5kg to shoulder which will
make him extremely competitive. The Andre Nel satellite stable, overseen by
Byron Foster, has hit a purple patch of late with a brace of winners last
Wednesday, and he is confident of a big effort.
Of the balance, Clouds Of Witness has been
a little disappointing of late but did lose his jockey at the start of his last
race and can do much better here.
The experiment of introducing ‘conditional’
Graduation Plates with weights allotted in bands according to merit ratings in
an effort to boost field sizes, has obviously failed first time out with only
nine runners lining up in the seventh.
The merit rating system has been
gerrymandered to a point where it is often worthless as a handicapping
guideline.
Give punters – and owners and trainers – a
break. If a two-time winner carries the same weight, irrespective of its 110
MR, against another two-time winner with a 74 MR, so be it.
The owners get a win and punters get an
exotic bet banker.
Mostly trainers are afraid to run their
half-decent horses in these races in fear of incurring penalties for their next
handicap appearance.
If
the stakes were worth it, the risk would not be so bad, but on the flip side,
these are also great races to give the weaker horses a good public gallop
without fear of incurring a penalty.
In the days before Merit Ratings, punters
had to rely on their intuition as to whether one horse was better than another
at level weights with no ratings to guide them.
In a time where the powers that be are
making it more and more difficult to win with a decent horse, it is no wonder
that new owners are becoming like hen’s-teeth.
Be that as it may, Special Blend and
African Sunrise look the pick of the seventh. They are at the top of the
‘handicap’ band and meet at level weights.
There was two lengths behind them when last
they met with Duncan Howell’s runner two lengths to the good. The two step up
in trip and drawn alongside of each other should make for an interesting
tactical race between Lyle Hewitson on Special Blend and Anton Marcus taking
over from an indisposed Donovan Dillon on Wendy Whitehead’s runner.
Exotic bet bankers could be difficult to
find but two that appeal are Jay’s Dancer in the opening leg of the PA and
Chewbaca in the next.
Tinnie Prinsloo has not had much luck of
late with his runners in the money but not able to convert but Jay’s Dancer
could set that straight. Jay’s Dancer has been knocking at the door for some
time now and goes very well over course and distance. He must have a change of
fortune soon.
Dangers! Trumps Express, having his first
run for a new stable, has shown some promise on the Highveld and can do better
here while Bernie’s Dream found strong market support on debut and did not
finish far back. He should come on from that run.
Lightly raced gelding Chewbaca has been a
touch disappointing had had a wide draw last time out. He can make amends in the opening leg of the
Pick 6 and appeals as the best bet on the card.
Upset chances go to Gonetravelin and Tiger
Tank, who has his first run for a new stable and is capable of a surprise.
AFRIEL, with Lyle Hewitson up, wins the Greyville Convention Centre Maiden Plate for trainer Clinton Binda at Hollywoodbets Greyville today. Picture: Candiese Lenferna
Andrew
Harrison
WITH the Kimberley
sand now consigned to the dustbin of history and Fairview on the other side of the country,
the Hollywoodbets Greyville poly track is likely to attract a lot more
up-country visitors looking for the synthetic surface.
Clinton Binda and Weiho Marwing are
regulars and they seldom leave without the odd plum. Binda got off the mark in
the first with the filly Afriel. Quizzed post-race he said the daughter of
Master Of My Fate, himself an up-tight individual, was ‘scared of everything’.
He said that she was alright at home where she gets ridden bare-back but it was
a different story at the race course.
He also revealed that as a young horse she
had escaped from her box early one morning and was found in a ditch where Binda
had to use a front-end loader to get her out. He said it was a long time ago
but the memory has surely stuck.
Nirvana Girl looked to be one of the better
bets on the card and was duly sent off in the red, but after making most of the
running she was nailed on the line by Doug Campbell’s lightly raced filly
Montfort.
Marcus made plenty of use of the favourite
getting to the front early and extended his lead to a good few lengths at the
top of the straight.
However, with Nirvana Girl crying for the
line over the last 100m, the pack was closing fast led by Montfort and
replacement rider Keagan de Melo timed his run to a nicety, getting up on the
line. According to Campbell,
the daughter of Elusive Fort, one of the country’s most under rated stallions,
is a big immature filly who should go much further than the mile of yesterday.
Montana Sky has been knocking at the door
for Ashburton-based Tienie Prinsloo and had to settle for second once again as
Captain Zee showed remarkable improvement to run him out of it with
Whateverittakes, the ham in the sandwich, game in third.
It was a quick double for the Sabine
Plattner/Andre Nel yard as they followed up Captain Zee with Run To Denmark in
the next. It was a case of anyone’s race approaching the final 100m but Run To
Denmark stuck to his guns to keep reserve runner Samsonite at bay. Kyle Strydom
picked up the ride on Dennis Bosch’s charge and the apprentice continues to
impress.
Jabu Jacobs, under the tutelage of Garth
Puller and Peter Muscutt, seldom lets them down and he rode a copybook race in
the fifth on Purple Persuasion who put her recent disappointment behind her,
when drawn 12 from 12. She fired all the way to the line to hold a
late-charging light weight Marsanne.
Binda earlier indicated that Phinda Mzala
was the main reason for this raid but after cracking on the pace the plan fell
apart. It was probably pace that was his undoing as Whizz Of Odds and Di Mazzio
came from off the gallop to dispute the finish where it was the seasoned
champion Warren Kennedy putting one over his apprentice rival as Strydom got
his reins in a tangle.
THE National Horseracing
Authority confirms that at an Inquiry held in Johannesburg on Tuesday, 20 October 2020,
Jockey Chase Maujean was charged with a contravention of Rule 62.2.2.
The particulars being in that
during the running of Race 1 at Turffontein Racecourse on 26 September
2020, whilst riding the horse PUERTO MANZANO (ARG):
He changed his crop into his left hand at about the
150m and struck PUERTO MANZANO (ARG) to which this gelding clearly
responded. He then changed his crop back into his right hand, for no
apparent reason and this resulted in a pause in his riding of the gelding, and
Thereafter the vigour with which Jockey Maujean rode PUERTO
MANZANO (ARG) up until about the 75m, after this gelding had responded to
the use of the crop in his left hand, (as stated above), was not to the
standard expected of a competent and professional Jockey.
Jockey Maujean pleaded not
guilty to the charge, but was found guilty of the charge.
The Inquiry Board, after
hearing all the evidence in mitigation put forward in this matter and taking
Jockey Maujean’s record into account, unanimously ruled that:
Jockey Maujean be
fined the sum of R60 000 (sixty thousand rand) of which R30 000
(thirty thousand rand) is suspended for a period of 12 months, provided that
Jockey Maujean is not found guilty of a contravention of this rule during that
12-month period.
Jockey Maujean has the Right
of Appeal against both the finding and penalty imposed.
The Justin Snaith-trained CROWN TOWERS. Picture: Candiese Lenferna
David Thiselton
JUSTIN SNAITH said there was a good chance that Crown Towers, winner of Sunday’s Listed Michaelmas Handicap over 1900m at Hollywoodbets Greyville, would take his place in the Grade 1 Summer Cup over 2000m at Turffontein Standside on November 28.
He
spoke further about his new satellite yard at Summerveld and about the ongoing
hindrance to equine travel within South Africa brought about by
measures to control the spread of African Horse sickness (AHS).
Snaith
said, “Crown
Towers is a handicap type
and being by Camelot we have never doubted he would get the Summer Cup
distance. His only bad race was when going too fast in front in the Queen’s
Plate. He deserves his place and it does not look to be one of the stronger
fields, nothing stands out although there might be a few who will improve with
a couple more races.”
Crown Towers is drawn 27 of the 49 entries.
On
Sunday the five-year-old Australian-bred gelding had to carry 62kg and was
caught wide in the early stages from a high draw. Anton Marcus thus took him up
to second place where he could sit on the leader Duc D’Orange’s quarter,
although he made the move at a steady pace to ensure no wasted energy. At about
the 1100m Marcus was able to slot in behind the leader ahead of his main market
rival Sworder Street.
Crown Towers has more natural speed than the
latter and in the straight he skipped a few lengths clear under the hands. He
was asked the question at the 300m mark and kept going to beat Sworder Street, who
made late inroads, by 1,20 lengths. Crown
Towers, off a merit
rating of 109, gave the 92 rated runner up 9,5kg. He has been raised six points
to 115 and Sworder Street
has been raised four points to 96.
Snaith,
who flew in for the meeting, said, “Our only concern beforehand was the
weight, 62kg is a lot to carry. I was very excited to be there for the
satellite yard’s first feature win. It was great for Megan Trott, who runs the
Summerveld yard, especially as she is a hometown girl. She is from KZN and went
through the Summerhill School of Equine Management Excellence and then did the
Darley course in the UK.
She then spent a few years under my wing, so knows exactly how we think and how
we like to do things. I will be flying up and down and want to see the
satellite yard gain the momentum it needs to sustain itself. A big thanks to
Michel Nairac, Tony Rivalland and Raf Sheik for going out of their way to help
us start the satellite yard and making us feel welcome.”
Meanwhile,
Sworder Street
runs again over 2000m at The Vaal on Thursday in a Progress Plate. This
four-year-old Judpot gelding will need to get his merit rating up significantly
to make the Summer Cup final field. He looks tailor made for the Summer Cup
course and distance so trainer Paul Peter will likely be eyeing the Grade 3
Victory Moon Stakes over 1800m on November 14 as his ultimate qualifier.
Snaith
then got on to the subject of AHS and lamented the fact that a case in
Germiston and potentially more cases to follow would possibly prevent the best
horses from Gauteng travelling to Cape Town for the prestigious Cape Summer
Season.
He
said, “I want to compete against the best guys and not having some of the
top trainers race here dulls the racing a little bit. I do believe we have to
get the exports right and Adrian Todd is doing the best he can under trying
circumstances. I really hope all the time and effort spent will reap the
rewards for breeders, owners and trainers in South Africa. Never has it been
needed more than right now. But on the other hand, if we are going to be doing
this for the next ten years with the hope of getting exports right, all
concerned need to sit around the table and devise a plan that will help sustain
rather than hinder our own racing while at the same time not effecting the
export drive. Racing in South
Africa is also a priority.”
Snaith
provided a few examples of the above-mentioned hindrance including a recently
retired mare who is not allowed to travel into the Western Cape from KZN as she had been given
her AHS vaccinations. She is consequently going to miss the breeding season.
The
Western Cape’s
training centres and stud farms fall within the AHS Controlled Area and
movement in to this area is very strictly monitored, especially during the high
risk AHS season, which is usually from February 1 to June 30, and also in
relation to outbreaks and vaccinations.
There
is a special vector protected barn at Randjesfontein where racehorses can spend
14 days instead of waiting out a 40 day travel ban, but living under these
conditions and being allowed out only between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. is not
conducive to a good preparation.
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