‘Campbell’ disappoints

PUBLISHED: 28 August 2017

Richard Fourie (Nkosi Hlophe)

Cot Campbell may yet recoup punter losses despite costing his backers dear for the third time in four starts at Kenilworth on Saturday. I know it sounds like an old-fashioned record stuck in a groove – and such horses tend to benefit only bookmakers – but the three-year-old showed plenty in defeat in the Mark Well Handicap.

Richard Fourie (Nkosi Hlophe)

Richard Fourie (Nkosi Hlophe)

Richard Fourie and Justin Snaith, faced with a wide draw, opted to rein back and tack over to the rail. Their goose was promptly cooked by Brandon May, drawn one worse on Rocketeer, going straight to the front and setting a gallop that had the favourite third last and 12 lengths adrift after a furlong.

Cot Campbell still had ten lengths to find when Fourie started work early in the straight and, although his mount really motored in the final 200m, he was two lengths away where it mattered. He returned with blood in his mouth but nobody was offering that as an excuse

“Even with a good draw he would have needed further – he wants a mile,” was the rider’s verdict while Snaith added: “Under the old system I wouldn’t have run the horse but with draws after declarations in Cape Town there is nothing we can do. He found a bit of trouble with a horse going in and out in front of him but I was impressed with the ground he made up.”

Others were impressed with Calvin Ngcobo who won the race on the Joey Ramsden-trained Apollo Star, his first ride in Cape Town and his 67th winner.

Fourie had better luck on League Game and Master’s  Spirit in the Green Street Bloodstock colours. The rapidly-expanding Green Street operation, the brainchild of Justin Vermaak, was founded just under three years ago and now has 55 horses spread through 16 trainers. It also has some 90 owners, 16% of them being new to racing.

Aldo Domeyer is on fire once more. He rode a four-timer on Saturday to take his tally for the season to 15 from just 59 rides and his never-say-die determination played a significant part in getting Hemmingway home for old boss Andre Nel in the Rawson Properties Maiden.

He and Sihle Cele on Dayonaut drew nine lengths clear of the rest as they battled it out in the final furlong and the luckless Dayonaut had to give second best (by less than a neck) for the fifth time in his last six races. But there was nothing ungenuine about his performance  – indeed quite the opposite – so his day will surely come.

By Michael Clower