Mac De Lago (Nkosi Hlophe)

Charles should prevail

Charles begins his journey to what could lead to the Cape Guineas in the Settlers Trophy Handicap at Durbanville today. But for now the all-important question is whether he will win this.

The R6 million purchase gets into the 1 400m race with bottom weight and yesterday afternoon he was sharing 28-10 favouritism with Jailhouse Rock in the books of Betting World. He was good enough to win at the first time of asking – no mean achievement – and he was then a more than respectable third to One World in the Langerman.

Mac De Lago (Nkosi Hlophe)

Mac De Lago

“It is not easy to find races for him but we have a programme mapped out and this is the first leg,” says Brett Crawford. “He is taking on experienced horses and it will be a nice test for him. He has only had the one grass gallop since the Langerman but he is very well and I am happy with him.”

Francois Herhodlt takes over because stable jockey Corne Orffer has to really struggle to do 52kg and Crawford does not want the colt to have to carry even half a kilo overweight.

He is rated 92, the same as Hemmingway but nine points inferior to Mac De Lago, and gets the weight-for age allowances from his rivals – and at this stage he has more potential than any of them.

But Jailhouse Rock is preferred. Justin Snaith said in a Tellytrack interview on Saturday that anyone who made money that day should play up their winnings at today’s meeting. Seemingly he expects to have a good day. He did not specifically mention this horse but the colt was unable to get a clear run when beaten a short head by Hemmingway last time and is half a kilo better. Admittedly that was three months ago but at 28-10 Richard Fourie’s mount makes considerable appeal.

Hemmingway is next in the market at 3-1 and Andre Nel expects him to run a big race – “He had two weeks in a paddock (after his last run) and has had two gallops since. One of those was here and he went well. This is his trip.”

There is no such confidence behind 8-1 top weight Mac De Lago. “His prep has gone haywire,” admits Dan Katz. “I was hoping to get two races into him before the Algoa Cup but both were cancelled so I am using this as his prep run.”

A much bigger danger is Zeb who is on a hat-trick after two wins over this trip and Greg Cheyne’s mount has been backed from 5-1 to 7-2 with World Sports Betting.

Front And Centre carries a first-time-out-of-the-maidens warning in the 1400m handicap (race seven) but she won so well on debut that she should go in again. She has already been backed and, if you can get better than 15-10, you will be doing well.

Stable companion Engage And Beware appeals at 33-10 in the first while 22-10 favourite Minona looks another for the Snaith-Fourie combination in race two.

By Michael Clower

candice robinson hamishnivenphotography

Rainbow Bridge primed for Matchem Stakes

Rainbow Bridge will face ten opponents when the Eric Sands-trained colt (Bernard Fayd’Herbe) puts his unbeaten record on the line in the World Sports Betting Matchem Stakes at Durbanville on Saturday. There has not been a bigger field for this Grade 3 test since Joshua’s Dream beat 12 home in 2007.

Some of the big names entered for the Progress Plates – including Langerman winner One World – will also get an outing, but only after a hectic day at the National Racing Bureau.

candice robinson hamishnivenphotography

Candice Bass-Robinson hamishnivenphotography

Only four horses accepted for the male Progress Plate and just five for the female one with two-thirds of the nine runners coming from the Candice Bass-Robinson stable. Justin Snaith (2) and Vaughan Marshall (One World) were the only other trainers represented.

Snaith switched Miss Katalin to the WSB Diana Stakes and the two Plates were briefly combined only for trainers to report that they couldn’t get jockeys light enough as the fillies were to receive 2.5kg. Both Plates were then scrapped and the NRB introduced a MR 68 handicap to make an eight-race card. That too was scrapped and a revised Progress Plate (including One World and Kasimir) was put in its place.

The popular Barn market will be back on Saturday when the intention is to turn the meeting into a family day with attractions for children as well as braai facilities and the celebrated Jockeys’ Chase.

Justin Snaith, already leading the log by nearly R500 000, has been installed 11-20 favourite to retain his trainers’ championship. Three-time champion Sean Tarry (18-10) and Mike de Kock (7-1), who has won the title eight times, are the only others quoted by World Sports Betting.

Drill Hall winner Perovskia, unable to get a run in the Vodacom Durban July, has top Cape Town ambitions this season and Harold Crawford said: “The aim is the L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate and, while I don’t yet know where he will start, he is now back in work.”

By Michael Clower

Gunner (Candiese Marnewick)

Price tag – no guarantee for success

Every thoroughbred sale is a well of hope for those with the means and in some cases, those without the means, ask any trainer forced to retain shares in many of their string.

The million-rand tag for for an unknown yearling, with only its family and appearance to recommend them, has long been for the elite few. Some turn out fast, many turn out slow and quite a lot are in between, but the million figure is a watermark where expectations lap the levee banks menacingly and “I told you so” is only a short swim in either direction.

Gunner (Candiese Marnewick)

Gunner (Candiese Marnewick)

But as the cliché goes, “not trainer has ever committed suicide with an unraced yearling in his yard”. Hope springs eternal, but even for trainers who are fortunate enough to pick from the top of the tree, life is not easy and the regally bred R1 million yearling can become an albatross around their necks – owners turn sour and the ignorant public demanding results.

The price tag at least suggests that the horse has everything in the right place, but that is not a guarantee. As John Dunlop, trainer of Snaafi Dancer, a $10 million ($25 million in current dollars) yearling, lamented, “He walked very well, looked the part but was very slow.” So slow in fact that his owner, Sheik Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum,  thought it would be embarrassing to run him in public. Snaafi Dancer was retired to stud duty where he was discovered to have fertility problems. From two years of breeding, he sired only four foals, three of which raced with limited success.

Standing on the rails one a chilly morning it became obvious. “Those three,” said the trainer, pointing out a trio of well-grown, striking two-year-olds, “cost over a ‘bar’ each. That one over there, cost 40k and might be the best of them.”

The point here is that the price tag does not guarantee success.

But a lot can happen between sales and a race as horses mature at different rates.

The precocious two-year-old who looks a star in the making, can prove a liability at three. A recent example is Gunner, a winner of the Gr1 Premier’s Champion Stakes at the end of his two-year-old career who took a further two years to win another race.

“He was precocious as a juvenile but you have to be careful of those horses,” cautioned trainer Paul Gadsby. “I never thought he was a Group 1 horse but he’s now down to a more competitive rating,” he commented after his last win.

Gunner has since won again.

Most horses in this country, especially those at the top of the tree, seldom race past six years old. In a personal observation, sprinters are either burned out or no longer competitive off high merit ratings while stayers are poorly catered for and a commercial liability for hard-pressed breeders who need early returns on commercially bred, precocious stock to stay in business.

By Andrew Harrison

Yutaka Take (Racing Post)

4000 winners – ‘Take’ that

Yutaka Take on Saturday became the first rider to reach 4,000 winners on the JRA circuit, further enhancing his position as Japan’s greatest-ever jockey.

Take, 49, brought up the record with a treble at Hanshin, where huge crowds packed in to watch him achieve the feat on Meisho Kazuhime in a 6f allowance race on turf.

Yutaka Take (Racing Post)

Yutaka Take (Racing Post)

The benchmark was set by Take on his 21,235th ride, and the jockey said: “I am relieved I could achieve this record. I was able to do so because I have met many good people, and ridden many good horses, for many years. The owner of this horse (Yoshio Matsumoto) has supported us since my father’s time, so I am very happy.

“This is not the end. I would like to ride more and to grow more as a jockey. As for my next target? I want to win the next race!”

Take, who last year received the Longines & IFHA International Award of Merit, has succeeded at the top level all over the world, winning races such as the July Cup (Agnes World), Prix de l’Abbaye (Agnes World, Imperial Beauty), Hong Kong Cup (A Shin Hikari) and Dubai Duty Free (Admire Moon).

However, it is in his homeland where he has been the dominant force and been associated with champions such as Deep Impact, Vodka and Kitasan Black.

One of the greatest horses to have raced in Japan, Deep Impact was a dominant force in the country in the first decade of the 2000s. He became the first horse for 21 years to win Japan’s Triple Crown and claimed Grade 1 races from ten furlongs to two miles, but failed in his bid to become the country’s first Arc winner when only third to Rail Link in 2006 (subsequently disqualified for a banned substance).

Blessed with an outstanding turn of foot, Vodka achieved a raft of notable feats during her career, including winning the Japanese Derby (Tokyo Yushun) and Japan Cup (first filly for 20 years to do so). Take was not aboard on those occasions but he did ride the filly to Grade 1 success, including in the prestigious Tenno Sho (Autumn) in 2008.

The trailblazing sprinter landed two of Europe’s biggest sprints to supplement his victories at home, both times partnered by Japan’s most famous rider. The Abbaye came first in 1999, when he scored on his first attempt at five furlongs. He returned to Europe the following year to claim the July Cup by two short heads from Lincoln Dancer and Pipalong in a super finish.

– racingpost.com

Justin Snaith (Nkosi Hlophe)

Punters tipped to score

In a refreshing change to the race meeting schedule, Port Elizabeth hosts the Tuesday meeting this week. One thing that stays the same, however, is the ever-fierce competition on the Fairview Polytrack.

That means nice pay-outs are possible and close study of the card can unearth a shrewdy or two.

On the face of it, though, two trainers are likely to dominate proceedings tomorrow – Justin Snaith and Yvette Bremner. Both field several runners with bright chances and both should come away with more than a single winner.

Snaith’s strength lies in the earlier races, with the distinct possibility of a back-to-back treble in races two, three and four.

Justin Snaith (Nkosi Hlophe)

Justin Snaith

Without Limits represents the national champion trainer in the second race, a Maiden Plate for fillies and mares over 1300m. This Querari three-year-old showed middling form in Cape Town following her debut in January, but then moved up the coast for her last run and showed an aptitude for the polytrack with a fast-finishing third, just 0.55 lengths off the winner.

Without Limits goes an extra 300m this time and with a two gate and experienced Robert Khathi in the saddle she looks a good bet against moderate opposition.

Snaith sends out Rio Rhythm in the third race, a Maiden Plate over 1600m. This three-year-old son of Oratorio has been learning about racing, improving in each of his four outings. He stands out in a weak field, with Gavin Smith-trained Mocha To Go and Bremner’s unraced filly In Harmony the only possible threats.

Lightly weighted Fake News can complete Cape Town-based Snaith’s personal triple in the day’s top-rated event, a MR 78 Handicap. This gelding registered his sole victory nearly a year ago, but his form indicates a genuine trier and he looks ready to convert consistency into another win. Having a good draw and Muzi Yeni on top clinch the argument in his favour.

The Bremner yard could kick off the day in first with Rebel Wilson, a filly who has her peak run after two runner-up efforts. Stablemate Coal looks the main threat and combining these two in a swinger, and as bankers in trifectas and quartets, could help punters build a kitty for the afternoon.

Bremner should also have a big say in the last four races on the card.

Her gelding Seattle Spell will put in his usual honest run in the fifth, a MR 64 Handicap, but might find Rokatenda from the Smith yard and Sharon Kotzen’s The Goon Show a bit too quick for him.

Kingston Warren might prove to be good value for Bremner in the sixth race, but her best on the day would appear to be Mary O’Reilly in Race 7, a FM 72 Handicap over 1300m.

This one won most impressively on debut on the Fairview turf in July – under the weight of a ton of money that indicated a special talent. That 5.25-length doddle underlined the potential and this R450,000 National Yearling Sale purchase should have the beating of the opposition here – particularly with champion jockey Lyle Hewitson in the irons and keen to get some momentum into his title defence.

If Mary O’Reilly doesn’t take to the polytrack, or finds the trip too far, or needs the run after a short break, or bumps another of the myriad gremlins that lurk in racing, one of local champion trainer Allan Greeff’s trio – Damaraland, Love Dove and Hashtagselfie – could take advantage, as could Light As A Feather from Sharon Kotzen’s barn.

– TAB news

Rings And Things (JC Photographics)

Fortune favours the brave

Ashley Fortune has had a somewhat fairy tale start to her training career, and has a fighting chance of a second feature race win when Rings And Things and Tsitsikamma Dance line up in the Grand Heritage at the Vaal on 13 October.

The 28 horse adventure was originally supposed to take place this past Saturday, but has been postponed due to complications with the Vaal track.

The wife of legendary jockey Andrew Fortune had paid her dues as assistant trainer to highly successful Noelene Peech in Zimbabwe, before performing the same function with Joey Ramsden for 18 months after moving to this country in 2008.

Famously Ashley’s first winner was at Grade 3 Level, when Let It Rain took the Gold Bowl under stepson Aldo Domeyer in May. The stable’s winning strike rate since opening for business has constantly remained above the 20% mark, which is quite remarkable.

“It’s gone very well so far – way better than I expected to be honest. But we’ve got some good stock, and I think we’ve placed them well in races they can win,” she said.

Rings And Things (JC Photographics)

Rings And Things (JC Photographics)

The stable has really done well with former Cape-based horses bought from Central Route Trading dispersal sales, with Rings And Things and Mount Keith being prime examples.

As Ashley says, “Cape Town form is the strongest, and we thought if we bought horses from there that were going close they could win a couple of races quickly up here. Thankfully we turned out to be right”.

With regard to the two stable hopes in the Grand Heritage, she had the following to say:

“Rings And Things is well and happy, and has done everything right so far. She is back to her best form, and bounces off her races. I was surprised the handicappers dropped her four points for finishing 0.5-lengths off Rose In Bloom last time, but I’m not complaining!”

Indeed the MR drop ruined the plan for Domeyer to ride, as he doesn’t get her amended weight of 54kg.

“Tsitsikamma Dance had an excellent prep run and we learnt a few things about him. He’s a big striding horse with a huge action, and the expected hot pace in this event will be right up his alley”.

As could be expected with the start she has had, she is enthusiastic about the training game.

“I love it. Every day I am learning something new, and while you have to take the ups with the downs, this is something I have always wanted, and long may it continue”.

Of course Andrew Fortune also has a large part to play, and Ashley is happy to give her husband credit with an excellent mixed metaphor.

“Andrew is the ringmaster, and conducts the orchestra. He’s been riding for as long as I’ve been alive, knows a lot about form and is excellent at placing the horses. We make a good team”.

With regard to the coming Gauteng Summer season, she has hopes for Cash Time after he was beaten under two lengths in the SA Derby in May.

“He will run in the Summer Cup, assuming everything goes to plan. We also have hopes for our two recent easy maiden winners Big Blue Marble and Dalai’s Promise. They are both eligible for the $500,000 races on Sun Met Day, and will be aimed in that direction”.

When pressed on her ambitions for the 2017/18 campaign she is cautious.

“We will take it as it comes, as we are still taking baby steps. But ideally I would like to reach the 50 winner mark for the season”.

With seven chalked up so far, this soft spoken but hugely determined lady is right on schedule.

– TAB news

Vaughan Marshall

Marcus gets Marshall’s duo

Anton Marcus has been snapped up for two of Vaughan Marshall’s stable stars at Durbanville on Saturday – Cape Guineas winner Tap O’Noth in the Matchem and the unbeaten Langerman winner One World in the 1 400m Progress Plate.

The four-time champion will also renew his partnership with Goodtime Gal in the Diana Stakes. He won last year’s race on the Mike Robinson-trained mare and finished second on her in a 1 200m conditions plate at Kenilworth a month ago.

Joey Ramsden, who has won the Matchem with high class horses like Variety Club and Act Of War, has supplemented Premiers Champion third Twist Of Fate for the Grade 3 test. The three-time winner gets in with only 50kg.

Aldo ‘Usain’ Domeyer looks like running in the Jockeys Chase after all as the organisers are flying in two speedy opponents from Johannesburg. Kenilworth Racing’s promotions man Clinton Theys expects to know their identities tomorrow.

Domeyer, fresh from his Singapore triumph, said: “I was thinking of sponsoring myself (instead of running) so that the charity does not lose out but, if they are going to fly in two guys from Jo’burg, I will have to run.”

The Cape champion was a runaway winner of the jockeys chase for four years on the trot before last year’s fiasco when it was decided to turn the race into a relay, pairing Domeyer with Corne Orffer (by his own admission one of the slowest in the field). But Grant van Niekerk sabotaged the whole thing by deliberately placing his baton into the unsuspecting Domeyer’s hand. This time the event reverts to a straight race over 100m.

By Michael Clower

Magnificent Seven Cup bid in the balance

Magnificent Seven’s Betting World Algoa Cup bid on October 28 hangs in the balance after the four-year-old failed to score with his customary authority when making it five wins from his last six starts in the Settlers Trophy at Durbanville on Saturday.

Justin Snaith, winning this Listed handicap for the third time in four seasons and the fifth in all, said: “I’m a little worried – and I wonder if this might have taken too much out of him. But take nothing away from the horse – he has done well.”

Richard Fourie (Liesl King)

Richard Fourie (Liesl King)

Nick Jonsson’s gelding ran too freely for his own good early on, and this may been the key to what followed. Certainly those who backed him at 5-8 feared the worst when Richard Fourie, with only three behind him, began to look decidedly uneasy fully four furlongs from home.

Fourie reported: “He dropped the bit and I thought maybe I had burnt him. But it was the right time to get a breather and he is a good horse who wants to win. Going through the 200 I knew I had it won even though I still hadn’t hit the front at that stage.”

Brett Crawford is targeting the R2.5 million of the Lanzerac Ready To Run on 24 November for Vascostreettractor who made all at 5-10 under Corne Orffer in the first, saying: “He has a lot of scope for improvement – his coat is not right yet and he is a much better horse when ridden from off the pace.”

The Philippi trainer also has reason to look forward with Water Spirit who led almost throughout the mile fillies maiden and impressed Anton Marcus in the process – “I like this filly,” said the jockey. “She will go further and there is improvement to come although that will be a couple of months down the line – she is incredibly immature.”

Dan Katz had his first double for Hassen Adams with Skye Lane (Greg Cheyne) and China Wolfe (Louis Burke) with the former heading for the R5 million CTS mile on Met day – “I have high hopes for her but she is looking for ground and you will only see the best of her in three to six months’ time.”

Harold Crawford was also in double form with Ready Steady Go (Cheyne) and 22-1 shot Aldato. Morne Winnaar, who rode the latter, sprang a 66-1 shock when making every metre on the Paddy Kruyer- trained Brandenburg in the Betting World Maiden.

By Michael Clower

Matador Man (Candiese Lenferna)

Matador Man makes them see red

Matador Man, quietly fancied to win the World Sports Betting Champions Cup at the end of last season, reverted to one of his favourites courses and his favourite distance to put a smart field to bed over the Greyville turf mile yesterday.

Anton Marcus, who had another red-letter day, had the favourite well back in the early stages in this Pinnacle Stakes contest and came wide into the straight. With Matador Man galloping freely, Marcus had little more to do than a steering job on Sean Tarry’s runner as he cruised home over three lengths clear of Seattle Skyline.

Matador Man (Candiese Marnewick)

Matador Man (Candiese Marnewick)

American Landing, making his return to the track after a three-month break, was running on well come the final furlong and this race will have done him the world of good when Brett Crawford stretches him over his optimum trip of ten furlongs and further.

Gavin van Zyl was warm in his praised for Perfect Peter after the gelding’s recent maiden win at Scottville and his judgement was on the mark as Perfect Peter made most of the running to beat what looked to be a smart Graduation Plate field.

Warren Kennedy dictated the gallop and Perfect Peter stuck gamely to his guns as he was challenged by raiders Affranchi and the unbeaten filly Nafaayes. Affranchi appeared to head Perfect Peter 50m from home but Perfect Peter came back for more under Kennedy’s urgings to win a neck decision.

It was a tremendously game effort and on that showing a mile and further look well within Perfect Peter’s compass.

The connections of Red Chesnut Road turned down a lucrative offer after making waves early in his career but from there it all went pear-shaped and Robbie Hill’s gelding scored only his third win in three seasons as he held off the game mare Dawn Calling in a driving finish to the second. Dawn Calling looked to have his measure 100 m out but her condition gave out the last bit as Red Chesnut Road plugged on for victory under Marcus.

It was a tremendous effort from Dawn Calling who had been off the track and is prepping for a crack at some of the Highveld features come their season.

Cat’s Legacy, a facile winner of his first crack at 2400m, appears to have found his niche distance although he was forced to work a lot harder in the Track & Ball Gaming Handicap. Crime Victim, beaten six lengths by Cat’s Legacy when last they met, looked to chase down the odds-on favourite who pinched an early lead at the top of the straight as Marcus made a decisive move around the home turn. But the petrol gauge was in the red as Marcus kept Cat’s Legacy to his task to hold the veteran Crime Victim by a fast diminishing neck.

Highveld raiders did not go home empty handed as Copenhagen, in spite of giving apprentice Luke Ferraris a difficult ride, prevailed in the opening leg of the Pick 6 ahead of recent barrier trialist and outsider Cruz Giovanni.

By Andrew Harrison

All eyes on Magnificent Seven

Magnificent Seven is a confident choice to end the ten-year hoodoo on favourites in the Settlers Trophy at Durbanville tomorrow.

Since Justin Snaith scored the second of his four wins in this 2 400m handicap with Caseys Son in 2008 every favourite has been beaten (and four of them didn’t even make the frame) but Richard Fourie’s mount is an improving sort who looks well handicapped.

He has won four of his last five starts and, while the assessors have pushed him up six kilos, they have only raised him 2kg for last time’s length and a quarter victory – despite Fourie making most of the running and having enough in reserve to ease up close home.

Richard Fourie (Nkosi Hlope)

Richard Fourie (Nkosi Hlope)

This is an extra two furlongs and a slightly more competitive race but the Horse Chestnut gelding looks as if he will have no problems with the trip, he is already a course winner and four-year-olds have won three of the last four runnings. He eased from an opening 17-20 to 11-10 yesterday and his in-form trainer reports: “He is in very good shape.”

Red Peril’s opening 20-1 looked too good to last and, sure enough, you could only get 15-1 about last season’s winner yesterday morning. Billy Prestage’s gelding is the oldest horse in the field but Posh Boy was also eight when he won five years ago and Red Peril likes the course and relishes bowling along in front.

Durbanville suits front-runners and they can be hard to peg back up the straight. His trainer likes to change the jockeys and Corne Orffer is the seventh different pilot in eight races. It’s worth noting that here early last month he was a two-length second to Magnificent Seven and renews rivalry on 4.5kg better terms. He looks the biggest danger despite his big price.

However Benjan is the main threat according to the market and the 4-1 second favourite is 1.5kg better with Magnificent Seven for the length and a quarter he was beaten last time. Sister Soozie is weighted to confirm last time’s course and distance placings with fellow 9-1 shot The Silver Fox but history is against top weight Master’s Eye. No horse has won this with more than 59.5kg in at least the last 17 runnings.

Water Spirit stands out in race three. This R2 million filly really flew once she grasped what was required of her on debut and she will be suited by the mile. The 2-1 favourite also has a better drawn than her main market rivals.

By Michael Clower