Fairview Poly Tuesday 3 February – Comments by David Thiselton
PUBLISHED: February 2, 2026
Race 1 7 ICED MARMALADE improved when the headgear was removed and can go one better than last time. 8 TIMELINE had some fair Cape Town form and has been knocking hard in the East Cape. 1 RIVER FERN will appreciate being back on the poly and can go close. 5 KINGSBOY ran some […]
Race 1
7 ICED MARMALADE improved when the headgear was removed and can go one better than last time. 8 TIMELINE had some fair Cape Town form and has been knocking hard in the East Cape. 1 RIVER FERN will appreciate being back on the poly and can go close. 5 KINGSBOY ran some fair races in KZN and could earn on East Cape debut. (David Thiselton 7-8-1-5)
Race 2
5 TOTAL ERUPTION went close on East Cape debut in first time blinkers and has a good draw with Fourie up. 1 OCEAN FLAME has been knocking on the door but has a tricky draw over this suitable trip. 2 PRICELESS TREASURE has a fine form chance from a reasonable draw. 3 MISSOURI FLAME is drawn well and has the form to earn. (David Thiselton 5-1-2-3)
Race 3
2 VIHAAN’S QUEEN disappointed last time but is much better than that and goes well for Van Rensburg. 5 FIRST WISH is 3,5kg better off with Ginger Delight for a 5,35 length beating and should get closer. 6 FLIGHT DISPLAY is 2kg better off with Ginger Delight for a three length beating and should be right there, although she does have a tricky draw. (David Thiselton 2-5-6)
Race 4
3 SALAGADOOLA is off a competitive mark and should go close. 4 MONT TREMBLANT is consistent and should be thereabouts again. 1 AETHELWULF is always thereabouts and has a good draw over a trip he will see out. 2 BOMBER BAY should enjoy the step back up to this trip and has a chance. (David Thiselton 3-4-1-2)
Race 5
2 HAZE AND SMOKE has a plum draw and tries the trip again as there is no reason why she should not enjoy it. 4 DESERT CLOUD ran a fine race first time out the maidens and can earn again. 3 GORGEOUS CAPE has a good draw over what should be a suitable step up in trip and she should go close. 5 POMEROL is in fine form and should also relish this trip. (David Thiselton 2-4-3-5)
Race 6
6 KING VISERYS is drawn well for a change and can be right there of producing his best. 8 HOSPICES DE BEAUNE is consistent and has the ability to be in the shake up but has to overcome a wide draw. 2 PORFIRIO won well last time and has to overcome a four point raise and has a tricky draw. i3 DOWNING SEVEN might enjoy the step down in trip and can’t be ignored. (David Thiselton 6-8-2-3)
Race 7
1 HOT SAUCE has class and should start progressing. 7 MAKE BELIEVE three fine runs and can still improve. 6 HOPE CHEST has some class and bounced back to form last time. 3 HAPPY WIVES is in good form and should be thereabouts. (David Thiselton 1-7-6-3)
Race 8
3 PRINCE FLORIAN has the ability to win and should be cherry ripe. 1 RAVILIOUS should be in the shake up here. 4 NOTORIX has a chance in this line up. 5 CAPTAIN CLEVER has the form to be a contender. (David Thiselton 3-1-4-5)
Faith in Twice Over does Jonsson proud
PUBLISHED: February 2, 2026
David Thiselton See It Again’s WSB Cape Town Met victory highlighted how good the male crop he hailed from was as well as the astonishing lack of interest in Twice Over as a stallion. Durban-based owner Nick Jonsson, after achieving the extraordinary feat of winning four successive Mets with four different horses, thanked many people […]
David Thiselton
See It Again’s WSB Cape Town Met victory highlighted how good the male crop he hailed from was as well as the astonishing lack of interest in Twice Over as a stallion.
Durban-based owner Nick Jonsson, after achieving the extraordinary feat of winning four successive Mets with four different horses, thanked many people after the race and among them was Bernard Kantor, who was responsible for bringing Twice Over to South Africa.
Twice Over has had three multiple Gr 1-winning horses and Jonsson has owned every one of them, which is another feather in the cap for surely the country’s pound-for-pound most successful owner.
The three horses did not just win ordinary Gr 1s either.
Do It Again is one of only six horses in history to win the July twice and he won four Gr 1s in all, including the L’Ormarins King’s Plate and the Hollywoodbets Gold Challenge, which are perennially the two highest rated races in the country, both being weight for age miles. Do It Again went close to winning both the July and the Met, a feat that only seven horses in history have achieved.
Double Superlative’s two Gr 1s were the Cape Guineas and the Met. The former is known as the country’s greatest stallion producing event and Double Superlative is duly standing at stud in the KZN Midlands. His other win was in the WSB Met, Cape Town’s biggest race and one of two Gr 1 Weight For Age races over 2000m in the country. The WSB Met is considered one of the country’s three major races, along with the Hollywoodbets Durban July and Betway Summer Cup,.
See It Again won both of the country’s 2000m classic events as a three-year-old, The Cape Derby at Hollywoodbets Kenilworth and the Daily News 2000. That same season he failed by 0,25 lengths to carry 56,5kg to victory in the July, which would have been a record weight for a three-year-old to carry to victory in the country’s most celebrated horseracing event.
Justin Snaith trained both Do It Again and Double Superlative, while Michael Roberts was See It Again’s trainer for all of his races bar his last two at which time he was moved to the Snaith yard. It was thus Snaith who was his conditioner for his WSB Met win.
See It Again is out of Visionaire mare Supreme Vision, who is a half-sister to Do It Again.
Twice Over’s only other Gr 1 winner was Sand And Sea, who won the Gold Medallion as a two-year-old, but he disappointed thereafter and ended up only having 14 career runs.
Twice Over, who is by Observatory, was a twice winner of the Gr 1 WFA Champion Stakes over 2000m and he also won the Gr 1 Coral Eclipse and Gr 1 Juddmonte International, all of them prestigious WFA races over a distance in all three instances of roundabout 2000m.
Juddmonte did not want Twice Over for stud purposes only due to their overcrowded stallion ranks at the time, which included the legendary Frankel. South Africa thus benefited and Twice Over stood at Klawervlei Stud.
Do It Again was one of Twice Over’s first crop and fetched R1.1 million at the National Yearling Sale, purchased by John Freeman.
However, Twice Over never became fashionable and See It Again was purchased for a bargain R125,000 at the Cape Yearling Premier Sale, while Double Superlative, who is out of Jet Master mare Come Fly With Me, fetched R375,000 at the Cape Premier Yearling Sale.
An indication of his unfashionable status is that Twice Over covered only nine mares in 2025, having covered only 27 in 2024, although he is now 21 years old.
He did not have a single horse at last year’s National Yearling Sale, but he does have eight at the Race Coast Sales Premier Yearling Sale next month and three of them are on the prestigious Day One of the Sale.
See It Again was from the same male crop as the much celebrated Charles Dickens and his record against him was actually 2-2. He beat him in a major shock in their first meeting in the Cape Derby, romping home by 1,25 lengths at 50/1 odds with the 1/5 shot Charles Dickens in second place.
Charles Dickens reversed placings in the Gr 2 WSB Guineas, beating second-placed See It Again by two lengths. See It Again later won the Gr 2 Green Point Stakes at odds of 11/2 with 5/10 shot Charles Dickens beaten 2,15 lengths into third.
However, Charles Dickens (Trippi) then had his finest hour in the L’Ormarins King’s Plate, beating runner up See It Again by 2,75 lengths.
Another stalwart from that male crop is Dave The King (Global View), a three-time Gr 1 winner who was the Equus Horse Of The Year in the 2023/2024 season and he has won a Gr 2 this season.
Cousin Casey (Vercingetorix) is another Gr 1-winning champion from the crop and he is now standing at stud. Gimme A Prince (Gimmethegreenlight) is a three-time Gr 1 winner from the crop and was an Equus Champion Sprinter.
Royal Victory (Pathfork) is a twice Gr 1 winner from the crop.
Gladatorian and Atticus Finch are Gr 1 winners from the crop who are still prominent.
In fact a lot of this crop are still performing at good class as six-year-olds and they include the like of I Am Giant, Cafe Culture, Mercantour, Mover And Shaker, Zatara Magic, Laguna Verde, Quantum Theory, Royal Aussie and others.
Fortune takes Met centre stage
PUBLISHED: February 1, 2026
David Thiselton The 2026 WSB Cape Town Met day will always be remembered for events unfolding like a fairytale with the central characters being Andrew Fortune, Justin Snaith, Nick Jonsson, Aldo Domeyer and Gaynor Rupert’s Drakenstein Stud. The bare facts were the six-year-old Drakenstein Stud-bred Twice Over gelding See It Again being backed into 5/2 […]
David Thiselton
The 2026 WSB Cape Town Met day will always be remembered for events unfolding like a fairytale with the central characters being Andrew Fortune, Justin Snaith, Nick Jonsson, Aldo Domeyer and Gaynor Rupert’s Drakenstein Stud.
The bare facts were the six-year-old Drakenstein Stud-bred Twice Over gelding See It Again being backed into 5/2 favourite and running out a 0,75 length winner in his third attempt at Cape Town’s biggest race.
The win gave both trainer Justin Snaith and owner Nick Jonsson a fourth successive victory in the Gr 1 WFA 2000m event and, incredibly, they have done it with four different horses.
The four were Jet Dark, Double Superlative, Eight On Eighteen and See It Again.
Of those only Double Superlative was not bred by Drakenstein Stud.
Mike Bass won the Met four years in succession between 2007-2010 but only did it with two horses.
Multiple successive wins of Gr 1 races are rare, but do happen around the world to trainers and jockeys. However, it is unheard of for an individual owner to do it simply due to the numerical odds involved. To put it into perspective Snaith’s charges have collectively had 556 runs this season, while Jonsson’s have had exactly 100 runs.
See It Again’s victory gave 58-year-old Andrew Fortune a first ever win of one of South Africa racing’s three “majors”, the Hollywoodbets Durban July, the WSB Met and the Betway Summer Cup.
His son Aldo Domeyer was on one of the biggest outsiders in the race, the Snaith-trained Regal Counsel, and he finished second.
It is not known whether this was the first ever father-son participation as jockeys in the big race, but it was certainly the Met’s first father-son exacta.
That exacta came 45 minutes after Andrew and Aldo had finished first and second in the only other Gr 1 race of the day, the Maine Chance Farms Majorca Stakes over 1600m with the Snaith-trained Double Grand Slam and the Candice Bass-trained Rainbow Lorikeet.
In the Met winner’s enclosure, Fortune brought many to tears when going down on his knees and lifting his hands to the heavens before thanking God.
He had just put the cherry on one of the finest sporting comebacks in history and it followed his even greater comeback as a human-being.
The talented Fortune fought back from being virtually down and out through drug addiction about 19 years ago to be crowned champion jockey in the 2008/2009 season and what made that feat even more incredible was he was a heavyweight jockey.
Fortune retired from the saddle in 2017 with many highlights to look back on, although the absence of a win in any of South African racing’s three “majors” was glaring.
A few years later his weight had ballooned to 90kg.
His position on a thoroughbred farm in Australia was quite physical and he lost plenty of weight, but he was still scoffed at by some when talking of a comeback to the saddle.
The process of regaining his license was a long one and he had almost given up and was going to fly back to his family in Australia when it finally came through, allowing him to resume race-riding on March 1, 2025.
Fortune has a nutrition regime which he does not call dieting, but rather “fasting”, and having battled with weight throughout his career he now, incredibly, rides at 53,5kg and has revealed he has a frightening amount of energy.
He accumulated a lot of suspension time in his first few months back in race-riding, but he did land the Gr 2 Golden Horse Sprint on Tenango and then won the Gr 1 Ridgemont Garden Province on Double Grand Slam.
However, since putting his suspensions behind him he has bounced back to his best and it is unlikely he has ever ridden as well in his career as he has in the last month or two.
It is a thing of beauty to watch horses settling in his sublime hands and then finding extra with minimal use of the whip and, ever the showman, he invariably entertains by standing up in the saddle and pointing to the crowd before he has crossed the line.
His legendary interviews are full of humour, but they are sometimes not for the faint-hearted, although on Saturday even the biggest prude would have forgiven him a couple of swear words.
Fortune won four races in all on Saturday, three of them for Snaith, including the two Gr 1s.
Snaith had five wins in all, including the Gr 3 New Turf Carriers Western Cape Stayers over 2800m.
See It Again had won the Gr 1 Splashout Cape Derby and the Gr 1 Daily News 2000 for Summerveld trainer Michael Roberts as a three-year-old and went close in the July that season.
He had knocked hard for more Gr 1s, but this season was under a cloud as he refused to load in his first two starts at Hollywoodbets Greyville and this scuppered the plan to run him in the Summer Cup.
He was still running under Roberts’ name when charging home for a close third in the Gr 2 Ridgemont Green Point Stakes over 1600m at Hollywoodbets Kenilworth on December 13 after losing a couple of lengths at the start. That was his first race under Fortune.
However, he has been at the Snaith yard since early November and his starting stall issues have been worked on by renowned ‘horse whisperer’ Malan Du Toit.
Jonsson put him in Snaith’s name at the end of December and in his first start for the champion trainer he came flying from well back in the field for a narrow third in the Gr 1 WFA L’Ormarins King’s Plate over 1600m.
But Fortune was supremely confident of winning the Met. From a tough draw of ten of eleven See It Again was caught three wide in the running, but he had cover behind Garrix and was settled.
He produced his usual turn of foot in the straight before wearing down the gallant Legal Counsel to win easily with Fortune saluting the grandstand.
The Real Prince ran on from last for third with Okavango and Native Ruler next best.
London News July centenary victory
PUBLISHED: December 22, 2025
David Thiselton The 2026 Hollywoodbets Durban July will be a milestone one with the prize money doubled to R10 million and with a longer handicap introduced as the topweight will be upped to 62kg and bottom weight lowered to 52kg. It will fittingly fall on the 30th anniversary of the centenary July, which turned out […]
David Thiselton
The 2026 Hollywoodbets Durban July will be a milestone one with the prize money doubled to R10 million and with a longer handicap introduced as the topweight will be upped to 62kg and bottom weight lowered to 52kg.
It will fittingly fall on the 30th anniversary of the centenary July, which turned out to be one of the greatest of all Julys as it was won by the legendary Alec Laird-trained London News, who went on to put South African racing on the map by winning the QE II Cup in Hong Kong.
The renowned South African wildlife painter Henk Vos released his celebrated work, the Painting Of The Century, depicting a century of July winners, after the July’s centenary running.
The iconic painting now hangs in the Classic Room at Hollywoodbets Greyville.
Alec Laird actually ordered one of the prints of the painting before it was completed as the print had the first of his great Uncle Syd Garrett’s five July winners on the left and the greatest of his father’s record seven July winners, Sea Cottage, was in the centre.
The right hand side just had a blank with a silhouette of a horse, because Vos did not know yet which horse he was going to paint there.
Alec, who trained out of Randjesfontein on the Highveld, related, “He hadn’t made up his mind what horse he was going to put in the last panel (the 20th panel) and he even said to me ‘I would like you to win the July because I would like to put you as the last painting.’ With about a year to go I said to him I’m not going to make it.’”
However, fate then had it that London News not only became the 14/10 favourite for the 100th running of the July, but he was also saddle cloth number 20, being the only three-year-old in the field and the bottom weight.
Piere Strydom recalled, “I remember at the traditional Friday night cocktail Henk Vos was there with his big painting and there was one spot left for the 100th winner and I can still remember saying to someone that I think my picture’s going to be up there.”
London News duly won the race and Alec, London News and Piere Strydom are now at the forefront of the famous painting’s 20th panel and the horse is fittingly carrying the no. 20 saddle cloth.
The London News story starts at the National Yearling Sale of 1994.
Alec recalled big owners Laurie and Jean Jaffee’s chief aim at that Sale was to buy a yearling by their own 1987 July winner, Bush Telegraph.
Alec recalled Harmony Forever being his number one choice at that Sale.
However, he remembered London News being “a nice horse.”
He added, “On the first day a Bush Telegraph colt called Mr Newspaperman went for about R300,000. London News looked more athletic and Jean Jaffee actually said to me, ‘What about this one?’ On the first day they didn’t get a horse, the second day they didn’t get one and the more they asked me about London News the nicer he got, because I was otherwise going to go home without a horse!”
The Jaffees managed to secure London News.
Alec recalled, “He was a light youngster and even as a three-year-old was quite light. He didn’t show immediately, but we always had the feeling that he would be a nice horse when he matured.”
In fact, London News made a particularly inauspicious debut, beaten no fewer than 16,5 lengths under Anton Marcus in a 1200m Maiden Juvenile Plate over 1200m at the Vaal on June 6, 1995.
However, he got better and better and when he smashed the Greyville 2000m course record, which still stands today, in the Gr 1 Daily News 2000, he had won six out of eleven starts including the Dingaans and two middle distance Gr 1s.
Piere Strydom was aboard for the Daily News 2000 too.
He reflected on the 1996 July, the first of his four victories in South Africa’s greatest race, “London News was a lekker horse to ride because he had gate speed, a lot of natural speed and he would travel right up there in front and he had a good kick. But at the top of the straight (having led) I thought with a light weight let me just let the reins go a bit and get a length or two for the short straight. But he accelerated way quicker than I had expected and that’s when he made up three or four lengths on the field. Obviously it was going to tell at the end and he was stopping quite badly at the end. I heard the horses coming and I was just hoping for the line and he held on.”
Alec added, “Mike Rattray had invited me to watch in his box because it was on the line and he won by a neck but my eyes wouldn’t believe it because there was so much pressure. I wanted to see the number up!”
Alec described the emotion of being on the honour roll together with his late record-breaking seven-time July-winning father Syd.
In fact his extended family is comfortably the most prolific July-winning family in history with his grandfather Alec winning one as a jockey, his great Uncle Syd Garrett winning two as a jockey and three as a trainer, his father Syd winning a record seven as a trainer, and the cousins Dennis Drier, Alec Laird and Charles Laird each winning one July apiece – a total of 16 for the July dynasty.

A New Era of Racing: Colossus Pools Launched on 1st December with UK Racing!
PUBLISHED: November 28, 2025
Race Coast is thrilled to announce a game changing new era for South African horse racing punters with the official launch of horse racing with Colossus Pools on Monday, 1 December 2025! Following the successful introduction of Colossus world class sports pools, we are now bringing this innovative technology to the multi-leg racing bets. To kick off […]
Race Coast is thrilled to announce a game changing new era for South African horse racing punters with the official launch of horse racing with Colossus Pools on Monday, 1 December 2025!
Following the successful introduction of Colossus world class sports pools, we are now bringing this innovative technology to the multi-leg racing bets. To kick off the launch, the horse racing pools will feature predetermined, high value UK race meetings, giving local punters access to massive international jackpots.
This marks a major step forward for the sport, combining the thrill of racing with modern, flexible features.
Introducing Unprecedented Control
For the first time in South African racing, you will be able to take advantage of key features that put you in control of your bet:
- Cash Out: Don’t wait until the last race! You will now receive leg-by-leg offers to Cash Out all or part of your ticket as the pool progresses. Secure a profit early or reduce your risk, giving you unprecedented control over your potential winnings.
- Syndicate Betting: Join forces with other punters to crowdfund a single, high stakes ticket. Share the cost, increase your chances of hitting the jackpot, and share the rewards with the betting community. You can become a Syndicate Captain or contribute to a ticket led by an expert.
Race Coast is committed to innovating and ensuring our horse racing proposition is the most exciting and engaging in the country.
Get Ready to Play!
Look out for the Colossus button on the www.tote.co.za website and from December 1st, toggle between Football and Horse Racing, and experience the new generation of betting.
Massive UK Jackpots, More Control, and Shared Success—get ready to elevate your racing experience!




