Ladder Man looking to step up

Justin Snaith, on the crest of a wave at the moment, can hit the ground running with Ladder Man in the first at Durbanville today.

This colt, by sire of the moment Twice Over, lost ground at the start and raced green when fourth of seven on debut. At the time the form didn’t seem to amount to much, largely because the race was won by Quarllo who had been a maiden for 21 races and nearly four seasons. But second-placed Lanza has won well since while the third (Elusive Trader) had gone close on his previous start.

“Ladder Man has come on a fair bit since and I have managed to get a gallop into him which always helps,” says the new champion trainer. “He will be in the first two.”

Richard Fourie (Nkosi Hlope)

Richard Fourie (Nkosi Hlope)

Richard Fourie’s mount was 16-10 joint favourite yesterday with World Sports Betting which has More Magic on the same price. This one keeps running well – he has been beaten an average of only just over a length in his last three starts – but he has proved expensive: 8-11 last time and a very costly 2-7 in his previous race. “He doesn’t get a draw and he hasn’t again here,” comments Candice Bass-Robinson.

The Dean Kannemeyer-trained Hidden Influence, although an 8-1 shot, seems certain to get into the shake-up. He ran well in the race won by the above average Clouded Hill and now Bernard Fayd’Herbe is in the irons.

Snaith’s The Suit is 9-2 for race two after disappointing when favourite four weeks ago (Snaith: “It was the wide draw and he is again drawn badly here”) and preference is for 33-10 joint favourite  Apollo Ace who is well drawn while the last two of his three runs read well.

Seattle Force is also on 33-10 but the Glen Kotzen colt is drawn eight out of 11 which is going to make life difficult for Robert Khathi.

Hither Green at 9-2 has a bit to do on ratings in the Tabonline.co.za Maiden but Fourie’s mount had 33-10 shot Arinza nearly two lengths behind last time when Elusive Diva (8-1 here) threw away her chance by pulling hard and finished tailed off.

The normally consistent Spectra Force ran below par when favourite last time (he played up in the pens) and could be worth another chance at 9-2 in the Play Soccer 6 Handicap (race five). He has a good draw and is ridden by an in-form 4kg claimer.

In the Supabets Handicap 22-10 favourite Para Handy’s weight advantage may enable him to beat Fayd’Herbe’s mount Silver Master.

By Michael Clower

Dutch Philip (Liesl King)

Dutch Philip on a recovery mission

Dutch Philip, winner of the hugely valuable CTS 1200 at Kenilworth in January but only sixth behind Procal Harum when starting favourite for the eThekwini Sprint on July day, will go on a recovery mission in the Mercury Sprint at Greyville on Saturday week despite being drawn widest of all.

Dutch Philip (Liesl King)

Dutch Philip (Liesl King)

Candice Bass-Robinson said: “He got a fair bit back on the poly and had to come from well behind. I am not sure that he is not a better horse up the straight but there is nothing else for him so he will run in the Mercury.”

Drill Hall winner Perovskia will step up to Grade 1 company for the first time in the World Sports Betting Champions Cup that day and is another who will start from the outside. He failed to make the cut for the Durban July and was unlucky when a two-length second to Infamous Fox in the Greyville Convention Centre Handicap.

Harold Crawford said: “Jeff Lloyd told me that he could have sat closer had he been drawn better in the Convention Centre (he started from pen nine) but he had to come wide into the straight. He is drawn 21 out of 21 in the Champions Cup but I can’t bring him back to Cape Town before then so he might as well run.”

The sponsors make Perovskia an 18-1 chance and have Undercover Agent 9-2 favourite with Elusive Silva on 5-1 and African Night Sky on 11-2. Bold Respect is 33-10 favourite for the Mercury Sprint with Dutch Philip a 12-1 chance.

By Michael Clower

Surcharge (Candiese Marnewick)

Champions Cup will be top class

Gold Cup day on July 28 at Greyville will be the classiest day of the SA Champions Season as it features two weight for age Grade 1s and two level weights two-year-old Grade 1s as well as the Grade 3 Gold Cup, Grade 2 Gold Bracelet and two other Grade 3s and two Listed events.

The Grade 1 WSB Champions Cup over 1800m looks to be a particularly good race to look forward to.

Gimmethegreenlight three-year-old colt Surcharge is an interesting entry considering trainer Stuart Pettigrew had said after his Grade 1 Daily News 2000 win he would not be seen again this season. His Daily News victory was proof of how well he takes his racing as he had an ultra tough Triple Crown campaign, in which he had to overcome a succession of terrible draws yet still finished second in all three legs. The laid back horse has obviously pulled up well again as the connections look to have had a rethink. They might be thinking of the Equus awards as there is yet to be a three-year-old male who has won two Grade 1s this season. Unfortunately, having finally cracked a good draw of four in the Daily News, his luck is out again as he has drawn 13 out of 21.

Surcharge (Candiese Marnewick)

Surcharge (Candiese Marnewick)

The one interesting scratching so far is the Vodacom Durban July favourite African Night Sky, who endured a tough Vodacom Durban July when the slow pace of the race went against him and he was sent for home at the 800m mark.

His Justin Snaith-trained July-winning stablemate, three-year-old Do It Again, was not among the entries. This is not surprising when considering the well below par run of July winner Marinaresco in this race last year.

Nevertheless, there is a strong three-year-old presence.

The Captain Al colt Undercover Agent avoided the Daily News 2000 as the Brett Crawford yard had doubts he would stay the trip and he went for the Grade 1 Rising Sun Gold Challenge against older horses instead. He duly won in impressive fashion. The form took a slight dent when the runner up Snowdance was beaten in the Grade 1 Jonsson Workwear Garden Province Stakes on July day. However, Undercover Agent is getting better and better and his big action should be able to carry him 1800m. He has cracked another fine draw too.

The Grade 1 Cape Guineas winner Tap O’ Noth, another classy colt by Captain Al, ran a gallant third in the Daily News 2000, beaten only a length by Surcharge. He stayed on gamely despite the race not having panned out perfectly for him. He is a half-brother to Silvano middle-distance to staying type Strathdon and this distance will likely be ideal, although he does have a potentially tricky draw of nine.

The Grade 1 Investec Cape Derby winner Eyes Wide Open was staying on in eyecatching style from last in his Champions Cup preparation run on July day in a 1600m handicap. This race usually suits horses coming in fresh and he will be the freshest of them all. He is drawn ten.

His stablemate, the Cape Derby third-placed Philanthropist colt Pack Leader will likely appreciate the step down in trip from the 2200m of his last race and the 2000m of the Daily News. He will have to be handy as he has not struck as being one who turns it on from off the pace, so his good draw of four will help his cause.

Three-year-old Alado gelding Rocket Countdown is a good looking sort and stayed on well for sixth in the July, considering he over-raced a little bit in the early stages behind the crawl. He will have a tough task with Undercover Agent and Tap O’Noth on Cape Town form but is improving and is drawn seven.

Australian-bred colt Roy Had Enough is the other three-year-old. He is coming off a disappointing effort over 2200m on July day and on Daily News and SA Classic form has a tough task with Surcharge.

It's My Turn (Candiese Marnwi)

It’s My Turn (Candiese Marnwi)

The older horses are led by the defending champion Sail South and his stablemate Captain America. They will both come in fresh and Captain America will improve on his Gold Challenge run which he needed.

 

Last year’s third-placed Matador Man did not have the race pan out at all well for him in the July and back to this trip can charge home again from off the pace.

Crowd Pleaser just failed in the Betting World 2200 on July day, despite giving the winner Head Honcho 2kg. He loves this track and will set a good pace but at Grade 1 weight for age level it is going to be tough.

Elusive Silva finished a fine third in the July and is another who loves Greyville, due to his exceptional turn of foot.

Perovskia ran a good race on July day over 1600m considering it didn’t pan out perfectly and having beaten Undercover Agent in the Drill Hall over 1400m he can’t be written off over a trip he should prefer.

It’s My Turn has come into his own but looks more likely to go for the Gold Cup.

Former SA Classic winner Heavenly Blue made a comeback from a six month layoff on Saturday and this race might come too soon.

His Mike de Kock-trained stablemate, the big filly Cascapedia, has class and is progressive but hasn’t been seen out since April.

Gold Standard will be having his last run before going to Stud and he will enjoy the trip, but he has been disappointing this season having returned from injury.

Bulleting Home finished a good fifth in the Gold Challenge and enjoys Greyville but might be stretched by the trip.

Sabina’s Dynasty faces a tough step up in class and Mambo Mime has a tough task on Cup Trial form over course and distance.

By David Thiselton

The betting with the sponsor is:

21   Undercover Agent            9/2-17/20

19   Surcharge                           5/1-19/20

1     African Night Sky             11/2-1/1

7     Eyes Wide Open               15/2-57/40

20   Tap O Noth                       10/1-19/10

3     Captain America              12/1-57/25

18   Sail South                          12/1-57/25

5     Crowd Pleaser                  12/1-57/25

6     Elusive Silva                     14/1-133/50

15   Rocket Countdown          16/1-76/25

13   Pack Leader                      16/1-76/25

12   Matador Man                   18/1-171/50

10   Its My Turn                      18/1-171/50

14   Perovskia                          18/1-171/50

9     Heavenly Blue                 28/1-133/25

4     Cascapedia                       28/1-133/25

17   Sabinas Dynasty              35/1-133/20

11   Mambo Mime                  35/1-133/20

2     Bulleting Home              45/1-171/20

8     Gold Standard                45/1-171/20

16   Roy Had Enough             55/1- 10/1

Peter Blyth

Blyth is on a crusade

KZN Midlands breeder Peter Blyth, whose roots in horseracing were founded in the same soil as those of legendary jockey Felix Coetzee, embarks on another chapter in his career as the promising stallion Crusade is set to join his Mooi River-based Clifton Stud.

Crusade has been standing at Scott Brothers and will be paraded at their dispersal sale on Tuesday before being relocated to Clifton.

Crusade, who is by Mr. Greeley, won the Group 1 Middle Park Stakes over six furlongs at Newmarket as a two-year-old for Aiden O’Brien O’Brien and was retired after only one run as a three-year-old.

His dam La Traviata has also produced dual Group 1 winner, Seventh Heaven, as well as Group 1-placed Cristoforo Columbo and Group 2-runner up Coat Of Arms. The O’Brien-trained Seventh Heaven (Galileo) won both the Group 1 Darley Irish Oaks and the Group 1 Darley Yorkshire Oaks and as a four-year-old finished second in the Group 1 Dubai Sheema Classic and won the Group 2 Jockey Club Stakes over a mile-and-a-half at Newmarket by five lengths.

Peter Blyth

Peter Blyth

La Traviata had only four starts, all as a three-year-old, and won the first three of them from five-and-a-half furlongs to six furlongs by a combined margin of 27,5 lengths. In her last win in the Group 3 Victory Ride Stakes over six furlongs at Saratoga, she stumbled at the start yet still won by 9,25 lengths.

She acquired her speed from her sire Johannesburg, whom Aiden O’Brien sent out seven times as a two-year-old and he finished the season unbeaten. These victories included four Group 1s from six furlongs up to eight-and-a-half furlongs. Johannesburg had an exceptional turn of foot.

Crusade’s best progeny to date is Covered In Snow, who won the Listed Swallow Stakes and the Listed Bauhinia Handicap. Fittingly this Diane Stenger-trained four-time winning filly, who is out of five time-winning Anytime mare Blue Nevada, is owned by Peter White and was bred by Clifton Stud.

White is Clifton Stud’s biggest client. However, he is a racing man through and through so his breeding stock, including Blue Nevada, are registered under Clifton Stud.

White had early success in his thoroughbred ownership career with the Anne Upton-trained New Zealand-bred North Island, who won the Grade 1 Holiday Inns in 1983.

White once worked for the late great owner-breeder Graham Back in the coal mining industry before branching out and becoming one of the foremost coal mining specialists in the country.

Beck made his fortune in coal in the Ermelo-Carolina-Witbank region, the same region in which Clifton Stud was originally located.

Blyth was sad to leave Lothair in the highlands near the Swaziland border as he was the third generation owner of the farm founded there in 1916 by his grandfather Fred. His grandfather was a horseman as it was his main mode of transport. However, it was his father Tim who was bitten by the racing bug and was one of a few well-known racing men who hailed from the region.

In Carolina bush racing was organised by Billy Pearce, whose son Neville later trained out of Clairwood. There was also bush racing in Barberton and in Mbabane in Swaziland.

A farmer in the region, Felix Coetzee, had five sons JF “Coookie”, Hennie, Loekie, Gert and Felix, and all five of them became racing men. Hennie became the father of jockey great Felix Coetzee.

Tim Blyth acquired his racing colours in 1945 and these black and white quartered silks with red sleeves and a cap are still used by Clifton Stud today. He bred his own horses and leased them to Loekie Coetzee, who trained in Johannesburg. Together they had many winners.

Tim also had his own training license and won a few races in Johannesburg. However, his horses were trained chiefly for bush racing. In 1950 he won the Mbabane Gymkhana Club trophy over eight furlongs for the third time, on that occasion with a horse called Black Banjo. He was thus awarded the floating trophy permanently and it is proudly displayed in the Blyth household today.

Loekie Cotezee had also been a jockey and became an outstanding riding teacher. Brilliant jockeys James Maree and Gerald Turner learned underneath him.

With the genes he inherited it is not surprising Felix Coetzee became a jockey legend and also an outstanding riding master. Hennie trained out of Summerveld so Felix had a geographic advantage growing up next to the South African Jockeys Academy.

Another racing man who hailed from the region was the Mbabane born-and-bred Mike Tillet, who rode in bush races despite having lost a leg as a teenager in a car accident. Tillet, who passed away in April this year, was later involved in breeding and training before making his mark as an outstanding and notably courageous chief stipendiary steward in main stream racing in South Africa.

Peter Blyth relocated to Mooi River for financial reasons. However, he said his new farm was a “home from home”, one similarity being the early morning frosts which kill all manner of potentially harmful bugs.

He will be glad to be standing Crusade, who is syndicate-owned by most of the KZN breeders, and whom he said had been “doing a lot” lately.

He has commandeered the career of a good stallion before, Allied Flag, who died prematurely of colic having sired the Durban July winner and Horse Of The Year Classic Flag. Allied Flag was by Danzig and came from one of the best families of the major Kentucky USA breeding farm, Lanes End.

Peter’s wife Jenny shares his passion for horses. The popular couple are sure to give Crusade every opportunity to fulfill the high potential his pedigree suggests he possesses.

By David Thiselton

One World (Liesl King)

Coral Bay takes hold with courage

The most impressive performance in Saturday’s racing around the country was a brilliant win by the Vaughan Marshall-trained One World in the Listed Highlands Stud Langerman over 1500m at Kenilworth under MJ Byleveld.

The Captain Al colt led from pillar to post and obliterated the field by 5,25 lengths.

Marshall won the race last year with Tap O’ Noth. He was the first Captain Al to win it.

Marshall-trained Captain Al himself and has won many Grade 1s with his progeny, including the Met with Hill Fifty Four.

One World (Liesl King)

One World (Liesl King)

Captain Al was the champion sire in the 2014/2015 season and is in with a shout of landing another title this year. At close of play on Saturday his progeny’s stakes earnings for the season were on R17,396,063, just R1,306,407 behind the reigning champion Silvano.

One World is not entered in the Grade 1 Premier’s Champions Stakes at Greyville so will likely be put away now and brought back for the same targets Tap O’ Noth had.

Earlier the big Glen Kotzen-trained filly Coral Bay proved herself yet another classy daughter of the star stallion Ideal World. She led from the off in the Highlands Stud Irridescence Stakes over 1500m and held on courageously under Richard Fourie to land her second Listed event in succession. She had won the Kenilworth Fillies Nursery over 1200m last time out. Ideal World is in 12th position on the National Sires log and is the only sire in the top 12 to have had less than 100 individual runners this season.

Later the Adam Marcus-trained Horse Chestnut four-year-old filly Brave Move made it five wins on the trot when easily winning the Listed Highlands Stud Ladies Mile under a fine ride by Aldo Domeyer.

Bernard Fayd’Herbe then made no mistake on the Joey Ramsden-trained Western Winter filly Fresnaye, who started at 9/10 in the Listed Highlands Stud Winter Oaks over 2200m. Fresnaye moved up fluently to challenge the gallant leader Dynasty’s Blossom and always had her measure despite the winning margin being only 0,3 lengths.

Grant van Niekerk later produced the Justin Snaith-trained Twice Over colt Doublemint from midfield with a strong run to easily win the Grade 3 Winter Derby over 2400m and convert 2/1 favouritism. Twice Over is also the sire of Vodacom Durban July winner Do It Again and is currently in 15th place on the National Sires log despite only having had 75 individual runners this season.

In the lower key ten-race Turffontein meeting apprentice Dennis Schwarz rode a treble and national champion jockey elect Lyle Hewitson rode a double.

By David Thiselton

Winx (sahracing.com)

Winx to return with honour

Australian wondermare Winx, ranked by Longines as the best racehorse in the world, avoided a trip to Royal Ascot this year in order to go for an unprecedented fourth successive Cox Plate and she is set to make her comeback in a race named in her honour.

The Street Cry mare will resume in the A$500,000 Group 1 Winx Stakes over 1400 metres at Royal Randwick on August 18, Racing New South Wales reported. Formerly known as the Group 2 Warwick Stakes, Winx was successful in the 2016 and 2017 editions and it was consequently upgraded to Group 1 status and named in her honour. Prior to the Winx Stakes, the six-year-old will run in two barrier trials, the first one being late this month.

Winx (sahracing.com)

Winx (sahracing.com)

“She’ll run over 1400m first up,” trainer Chris Waller told Racing NSW. “The Winx Stakes is where she’ll run. It makes it a little bit easier to prepare her here in Sydney.”

The winner of her last 25 trips to the post, the dark bay has pleased Waller in her recent trackwork with regular rider Hugh Bowman aboard.

Waller said, “Her attitude and body language is great. We’ve been training her long enough to almost be used to it. The first year was just like training any other horse, the second year the pressure was on with the expectation to keep her performing. The third year she went to a whole new level again, getting close to Black Caviar’s records and other records, but now she has reached her fourth year, it’s just like last year but we’ve been there before. I’m actually feeling quite relaxed about her.”

On March 24 this year Winx set a new worldwide mark for Group 1 wins when she hit 17 in Rosehill’s Group 1 George Ryder Stakes over 1500m. Three weeks earlier when winning the Group 1 Chipping Norton Stakes over 1600m at Randwick she had broken Black Caviar’s Australian Group 1 record, Then in her last start on April 14 in the Group 1 Queen Elizabeth Stakes over 2000m at Randwick she equalled Black Caviar’s Australian record of 25 consecutive wins, just five years and one day after the latter had been retired unbeaten. Winx was defeated six times as a three-year-old but her 25 consecutive victories were all in stakes races, including 18 Group 1s, six Group 2s and one Group 3. On 17 May 2017, it was announced that Winx would be inducted into the Australian Racing Hall of Fame, becoming only the third horse (after Sunline and Black Caviar) to be so honoured while still in training.

She will now be attempting to join the like of South Africa’s Pocket Power in the history books as the winner of the same major race four times in succession. Pocket Power won four Grade 1 L’Ormarin’s Queen’s Plates in succession from 2007 to 2010 and Legal Eagle will attempt to emulate him next year. The only horse in history to have won the same major race five times in succession is the 1957 born USA horse Kelso. He won the Jockey Club Gold Cup, which today carries Grade 1 status, every year from 1960-1964.

The Cox Plate run over 2040m at Moonee Valley in late October is Australia’s most important middle-distance, weight for age race and carries huge prestige as well as an $Aus 5 million stake, which is the equivalent of close to R50 million.

Winx has earned $Aus18,998,420 in stakes to date.

By David Thiselton

Aidan O'Brien (racingpost.com)

O’Brien and Moore bag Group 1

A stellar day on Saturday for Aidan O’Brien and Ryan Moore yielded major Group 1 victories on either side of the Channel as they bagged the July Cup with U S Navy Flag and the Grand Prix de Paris with Kew Gardens. The Ballydoyle trainer also saddled the third and the fifth in the English race, a stylish and dramatic improvement from what had been a fruitless week for him at the July meeting.

Kew Gardens has also turned things around, his prospects in the sport having looked modest after last month’s Derby, when he was tailed off after helping set the pace for more fancied stablemates. He impressed in landing the Queen’s Vase at Royal Ascot but Saturday night’s success, at the expense of the French-trained Neufbosc, was a bigger step forward and puts him in contention for Ascot’s King George in a fortnight.

Aidan O'Brien (racingpost.com)

Aidan O’Brien (racingpost.com)

“You couldn’t be happier with him,” O’Brien said. “Ryan took his time on him and rode him for pace. He quickened up well and was brave at the end.” Kew Gardens’ odds for the King George have tumbled from 25-1 to 10-1, making him O’Brien’s strongest contender for the midsummer prize.

Five hours before raiding Longchamp, O’Brien had been accepting the trophy at Newmarket. His fourth July Cup success was achieved by the gritty U S Navy Flag, who turns out to be a speedball despite having been campaigned as a miler so far this year.

“Probably what threw us was that he was able to win a Dewhurst,” the trainer conceded. “He shouldn’t have been able to do that.”

The Dewhurst is supposed to be the key race for flagging up the next year’s Guineas prospects and so, having won it by daylight in the autumn, U S Navy Flag was stepped up to a mile in the spring and tried his luck in the French Guineas, the Irish Guineas and the St James’s Palace Stakes. Excuses could be made but the bottom line was, he came up short in three countries.

A loser five times in a row, the colt came here with a diminishing reputation under suspicion of having failed to train on. But all he wanted was a 25% cut in the distance of his races and, faced with six furlongs to cover for the first time since he won the Middle Park in September, he made every yard of the running and won tidily.

U S Navy Flag is best understood as a kind of boxer, if you accept the rhetoric from O’Brien and Moore; in a short fight, he has too much power for his opponents, but a longer one lets him punch himself out. “He is aggressive,” the trainer mused. “He can go forward and he’s very happy to lead.

“If anyone wants to lead him, that’s fine, but you have to go very hard because if you don’t, he’ll go hard himself. He’s so genuine, his head goes to the floor.” Moore said: “U S Navy Flag loves a fight. The second came to him and he found plenty.”

The horse will be given a break before being aimed at Australia’s fantastically valuable Everest Stakes in October. The richest turf race in the world, it will be worth A$13m (£7.3m) this year and is a natural target for a firm as ambitious as Coolmore, the power behind O’Brien, which has significant bloodstock interests in the country.

By The Guardian

One World delivers on talent

The third Vaughan Marshall Cape Guineas winner in three years?

In his previous two starts the unbeaten One World looked talented but temperamental. However his awesome performance in the Langerman at Saturday’s Highlands Stud Kenilworth meeting was completely devoid of any sign of attitude. Seemingly he now knows what is required and, even more importantly, that he has the ability to deliver it.

byleveld an

MJ Byleveld

MJ Byleveld sent  the Captain Al colt into an immediate lead and once into the straight the 21-10 favourite strode further and further away to win by more than five lengths with his jockey looking back into the distance wishing he had brought his binoculars.

“The way he quickened at the top of the straight I didn’t think anything was going to get to him but there had been a lot of talk about Charles and I was waiting for him to come at me,” related Byleveld who is also now dreaming of a third straight Guineas.

“Last time One World tried to duck in at the junction but this time he raced like a professional. He is a good horse.”

Marshall, asked if he was surprised by how well the colt pulled away in the straight, replied: “Not at all. This is a very special horse and he will now be put away for the Guineas.”

The Klawervlei-bred was a welcome 54th birthday present and tonic for Etienne Braun who had been in bed with ‘flu and owns him in partnership with Braam van Huyssteen and the Truters (Ken: “Vaughan was very bullish but I didn’t think the horse would win like that”).

The well-backed Charles was beaten six and a half lengths into third but Corne Orffer reckons his day will come, explaining: “It was a very good run – he is still inexperienced and it was his first time round a bend. He will come on a lot.”

Second, receiving 4kg from the winner, was the smart maiden Frank Lloyd Wright and Justin Snaith said: “He will be better on better ground and over further but this was a good effort.”

Doublemint’s decisive win under top weight in the Winter Derby, coming only seven days after Do It Again in the July, provided further testimony to the class of Twice Over’s first crop and surely – in terms of racecourse performance – the dual Champion Stakes winner is the best horse to come to South Africa straight off the racecourse for a very long time.

It was also the third consecutive Winter Derby for Snaith Racing and, typically, the new champion trainer is already mapping out big race targets. No, not the Met. “That is going to be a very tough race,” said the man who holds most of the aces. “This one is a July horse!”

The Winter Derby was the last big race win, and indeed the last South African meeting, for Grant van Niekerk who has two ten-day interference suspensions to sit out before he leaves to seek international  fame and fortune in Hong Kong.

Ancestry and Rock My Soul faded in the closing stages and Joey Ramsden found out why in the racecourse stables afterwards. Both horses were full of mucus.

Ramsden, now operating from a smaller 70-box yard between Eric Sands and Piet Steyn, had first and second in the Winter Oaks and he will talk to Drakenstein manager Kevin Sommerville about whether the Bernard Fayd’Herbe-ridden Fresnaye should attempt to follow up in Saturday week’s Final Fling. Second-placed Dynasty’s Blossom in Grant Knowles’ sale on Thursday week.

Adam Marcus is eyeing the Final Fling (and no doubt much bigger things too) for Brave Move who had no difficulty in making it five in a row in the Ladies Mile. Dan Katz is targeting the Algoa Cup after 2016 Durban July third Mac De Lago returned to winning form in the Silver Mountain Handicap and Glen Kotzen has the Cape Fillies Guineas as an obvious target for Coral Bay.

The Ideal World filly gave weight all round in the Irridescence and Richard Fourie reported: “She had the race won from the 900m point. She could be anything.”

By Michael Clower

Durbanville gets the go ahead

Tomorrow’s Durbanville meeting will go ahead as planned despite all last week’s rain and the loss of its two most recent fixtures to waterlogging. The first was abandoned and the second switched to Kenilworth.

Racing manager Dean Diedericks said: “When we did all the work on the track we weren’t sure how it would drain and we have had some trouble at the 600m mark. We are going to put in more drainage there but obviously we can’t do that at the moment. However we won’t have a problem on Tuesday if the weather stays fine.”

Grant Knowles has switched his Central Route Trading Sale on Thursday week (July 26) from Kenilworth to Durbanville for AHS quarantine reasons.

He said: “Durbanville is outside the free zone whereas Kenilworth is the free zone. There are some well bred weanlings – by Captain Al, Twice Over and others – in the catalogue and I want them in the sale so I changed the venue.”

Sixteen of the 69 lots are submitted by Mayfair Speculators including the expected star of the show Lady Of The House. The Woolavington winner finished strongly to take third in last Saturday’s Ladies Mile, her first run for seven months.

By Michael Clower

Punta Cana (JC Photographics)

Punta Cana has a touch of class

Turffontein Standside stages a ten race card tomorrow and the exotics could yield good dividends for those who do their homework.

The Graduation Plate in the ninth is the highest class event of the day and could be fought out by Punta Cana and Full Mast, although Tammany Hall also has to be respected. Punta Cana has always had a touch of class and in his third run after a layoff and gelding is tried with blinkers again. Last time he moved up well from the back over 1600m but couldn’t find any extra so will likely appreciate the step down in trip and is well drawn. Full Mast was handy in the latter race and stayed on well to only just be cut down by the classy Royal Crusade.

Punta Cana (JC Photographics)

Punta Cana (JC Photographics)

He is effective over this trip too and Lyle Hewitson aboard is a bonus. However, there is a reversal in draw fortunes and Punta Cana should be cherry ripe so he is taken to make up the 1,5 lengths despite being half-a-kilogram worse off. Tammany Hall has shown glimpses of class and looks distance suited. The blinkers are off after she disappointed last time over 1200m. Aurelia Cotta has been disappointing since a good start to her career so after a decent effort last time could be coming back into her own and can’t be ignored.

The two-year-old Louis The Seventh was staying on well last Saturday over 1400m to be second in a classy Juvenile Plate event, so has to be considered with 4kg claimer Luke Ferraris up, despite a wide draw. Winter Forge is interesting stepped up in trip as she has finished strongly in sprints before. Mutrib returns from a layoff since January. He made a good debut over this trip but disappointed second time out when producing a somewhat laboured finished over 1600m. The rest could have done him good and he can’t be ignored.

The exotics look the best way to play this tricky card. The PA Banker is chosen to be Smart Deal in the second leg over 2400m as he is an improving son of Ideal World and has finished second in his two staying race starts, both times to promising sorts. However, Imoto should also be included in the Pick 6 as a son of Traffic Guard who will enjoy the step down in trip from 2600m to 2400m.

The rest of the Pick 6 legs are all competitive, although Rebel Renegade, Singaswewin and Tripod could get punters through the fifth leg and Punta Cana, Full Mast and Tammany Hall could get them through the last leg.

The best bet on the card is taken to be Arctica in the second race over 2000m. He was produced too late last time when failing to reach Divine Oddyssey over 1600m. Before that he was staying on well over 1800m in the Jubilee Handicap, so he should enjoy this trip and Hewitson can get him home. Top Shot is proven over the trip and is knocking hard so is the main danger. Heavenly Blue is the class of the race but returns from a second successive layoff of greater than six months so has problems.

The value bet is chosen to be Time To Be Great who is an effective front runner and should relish the fast conditions over his ideal 1400m trip. He has a good draw which will help him get to the front and also has a 1,5kg claimer up.

By David Thiselton