Aldo Domeyer (Nkosi Hlophe)

More Magic to cast his spell

Aldo Domeyer could be in for a bonanza at Kenilworth tomorrow when five of his eight mounts are favourites.

Twice last year he rode six winners at the Cape Town course and, while that would be pushing it, he could win on all five market leaders. He starts off with his best – and shortest-priced – prospect, More Magic, who had the third nearly eight lengths back when running better fancied stable companion Russet Air close a fortnight ago. None of the opposition in the Maiden Juvenile Plate has done anything like that.

Aldo Domeyer (Nkosi Hlophe)

Aldo Domeyer

The opposition is also short of achievement 35 minutes later but Domeyer is on a newcomer, the Trippi filly Bella Summer.  “She is a nice filly but not very ready. It depends how green she is,” says Candice Bass-Robinson but, with the stable’s two-year-olds so strong this season and no Ramsden or Marshall opposition, the 5-2 chance gets preference over the Justin Snaith 15-10 favourite Valderrama whose form so far is nothing to get excited about it.

After Glow, Domeyer’s mount in race three, is 11-10 favourite with World Sports Betting and that looks too short for what she showed on her Durbanville debut. However Domeyer’s mounts for Adam Marcus often deliver and she may have come on enough.

Some shrewd punters have done well betting against Snaith two-year-olds this season but Domeyer hasn’t ridden many of them and in the 1 400m maiden (race four) 3-1 favourite Black Indy holds obvious danger Black Sail, Red Shift and Giant Flag. Seattle Kid could be a big threat.

What A Summer (9-2) looks a bit unlikely in the next where Spectra Force is taken to come out on top.  Greg Cheyne’s mount has finished second in his last three starts and this is the third consecutive race in which he is running off the same mark.

Two-year-olds take on the older horses in handicaps for the first time in Cape Town this season in the Supabets Handicap and Joey Ramsden aims to strike with 22-10 shot Montego Bay. But, if things are going well for Domeyer by this stage, that relentless – seemingly unstoppable – driving may well be enough to get Dalibhunga home in front.

However Pen-Chan is only a 10-1 shot in the Interbet Handicap and the Ramsden juvenile Tarsus (3-1) may beat 5-2 favourite Bwana.

The last race, though, looks another for the jockey of the hour as 22-10 favourite Elegancia has not been raised for last time’s close second.

By Michael Clower

Do It Again (Candiese Lenferna)

Do It Again can do just that

Do It Again, current ante-post favourite for the Vodacom Durban July (VDJ), can cement his place at the top of the boards with victory in the Daily News 2000 at Greyville tomorrow.

He takes on a high-class field but Justin Snaith is bullish about his charge’s chance in the Grade 1 event over 2000.

Speaking to David Thiselton earlier in the week, Snaith said it would be hard for the horses that Do It Again beat in the Gr 2 Daisy Guineas to reverse form as this was “his trip.” Snaith added, “He is doing well and everything has gone according to plan. He is spot on. It’s very competitive and very good horses are taking part, I will be particularly interested to see how Tap O’ Noth runs as he is a high quality horse.”

Tap O' Noth (Liesl King)

Tap O’ Noth (Liesl King)

However, if Do It Again does fluff his lines, there will be some major changes in the market and this year’s renewal looks particularly strong.

Pack Leader was strongly fancied to win the WSB 1900 but a suspected attack of colic saw him scratched at the 11th hour. He made a quick recovery however, and Glen Kotzen said he had not suffered any ill effects. Third behind stable companion Eyes Wide Open and Do It Again in the Investec Cape Derby, Pack Leader made a smart local debut when beaten a short head by the older Head Honcho in the Sledgehammer Stakes at Scottsville in what was a slow-run race and that outing should have brought him on nicely.

Snaith was particularly worried about the challenge from Top O’ Noth and Vaughan Marshall is quietly confident of his charge. Earlier in the week Marshall commented; “He is doing exceptionally well at the moment and I think he is a very big runner. You will see a vastly different performance this time.”

“In the Guineas he was drawn towards the inside, came up the worst going and got sand in his face – the next day both his eyes were closed. But I was happy with the way he finished in that race.”

That said, Do It Again came from last to first in a matter of strides and was extending at the line.

Surcharge was the ‘Alydar’ of the Highveld Triple Crown races, finishing second in all three legs, although to different horses. There is no doubting that Stuart Pettigrew’s colt is right up there with the best but he does take an extraordinary long time to wind up and the short Greyville straight could find him out.

Fiorella (Candiese Marewick)

Fiorella (Candiese Marewick)

White River and Like A Panther are both VDJ entries but do look held on current form.

Do It Again looks the right one and taken to get home ahead of Pack Leader.

Oh Susanna became the first three-year-old filly to win the Met in over a century and will be in warm order for the Woolavington 2000 where she is by far the highest rated filly in the race.

Snaith said the crack in her heel, which forced her to miss the Daisy Guineas, had grown out and he reckoned she would be at her best come Saturday. He concluded, “She is doing well and is fit and ready.”

Fresh in Snaith’s memory will be the defeat of his hot favourite Snowdance in the Daisy Fillies Guineas where Fiorella turned the screws inside the final furlong and went on to a head victory.

Fiorella is in opposition and Duncan Howells will again send out an extremely fit horse. “I don’t know if we can beat Oh Susanna,” said Howells. “But she has not been out since the Met in late January so that may be a chink in her armour.”

Howells supplemented Fiorella for the VDJ after her Fillies Guineas win and in her only previous attempt beyond a mile she finished a 1,55 length fourth in the SA Fillies Classic over 1800m at Turffontein. However, Howells said she had still needed that run as a yard virus had interrupted her preparation and she had consequently been scratched from her intended build-up race. He otherwise reckoned she could have won the race.

Snaith has a strong chance of a feature race treble his two fancied runners, Made To Conquer and Strathdon, doing duty in the Lonsdale Stirrup Cup.

By Andrew Harrison

Fiorella (Candiese Marnewick)

Fiorella can give Howells a double

The Duncan Howells-trained Fiorella downed the Justin Snaith-trained big gun Snowdance in the Grade 2 Daisy Fillies Guineas and she will now be attempting a giant-killing double when she takes on the Snaith-trained Sun Met winner Oh Susanna in Saturday’s Grade 1 Woolavington 2000 at Greyville.

Fiorella (Candiese Marewick)

Fiorella (Candiese Marewick)

Fiorella galloped under Muzi Yeni this week and Howells said the jockey had returned saying it was an exceptional work out.

Yeni is replacing injured Anton Marcus.

Howells said the Captain Al filly had come on from the Daisy Fillies Guineas and was very well indeed at present.

She will relish the step up in trip, being out of Caesour mare Arcola, who won the SA Oaks as well as the Grade 3 Caradoc Gold Cup over 2850m.

In her only previous attempt at beyond a mile she finished a 1,55 length fourth in the Grade 1 SA Fillies Classic over 1800m at Turffontein. However, Howells said she had still needed that run as a yard virus had interrupted her preparation and she had consequently been scratched from her intended build up race. He otherwise reckoned she would have won the SA Fillies Classic.

Howells mentioned Australian-bred Big Brown gelding Who Says as the best of his others on the day.  He said this three-year-old would relish the step up in trip to 2000m and he gave him an each-way chance.

By David Thiselton

Tap O'Noth (Liesl King)

Tap O’Noth could headline

Vaughan Marshall is keen on the chances of Cape Guineas winner Tap O’Noth in the Daily News at Greyville on Saturday even though the colt has over two lengths to find with Do It Again on Daisy Guineas running and is as big as 17-2 in the betting.

Marshall said: “He is doing exceptionally well at the moment and I think he is a very big runner. You will see a vastly different performance this time.”

Tap O'Noth (Liesl King)

Tap O’Noth (Liesl King)

In the Daisy Guineas M.J. Byleveld’s mount seemed uncharacteristically sluggish in the early stages and had to be pushed along. Some observers put this down to unfamiliarity with the lights.

But Marshall said: “He was drawn towards the inside, came up the worst going and got sand in his face – the next day both his eyes were closed. But I was happy with the way he finished in that race.”

Do It Again is 5-2 favourite with World Sports Betting which goes 15-4 Surcharge, 13-2 Pack Leader, 7-1 Majestic Mambo, 15-2 White River, 17-2 Tap O’Noth, 14-1 Like A Panther, 20-1 and upwards others.

Bold Respect has been raised seven points to a new merit rating of 118 for his win in last Saturday’s Tsogo Sun Sprint. This puts him above everything else that ran in the race even though he was receiving weight from five of them.

Brett Crawford said: “He could possibly go for the Mercury Sprint on July 28 but there is nothing for him in the meantime.”

Magical Wonderland, put up a point to 111 for finishing second to Sommerlied (up six to 114) in the South African Fillies Sprint, is to stay on in KZN for the time being but may not race.

Candice Bass-Robinson explained: “I can’t bring her back to Cape Town at the moment because of the quarantine regulations. I will play it by ear but the Mercury Sprint would be a big ask for a three-year-old filly.”

By Michael Clower

Do It Again (Candiese Lenferna)

Do It Again can make the news

The Grade 1 Daily News 2000 is the main drawcard at Greyville on Saturday and should be spectacular to watch.

The strapping Twice Over gelding Do It Again showed a fine turn of foot to go from last to first in a matter of strides when winning the Grade 2 Daisy Guineas and he is now drawn in pole over a trip which is even more suitable, considering he stayed on strongly when runner up in the Grade 1 Cape Derby.

The Grade 1 Cape Guineas winner Tap O’ Noth stayed on in the Daisy Guineas for a 2,25 length third. The yard said a line could be drawn through his Cape Derby run when he was clearly not himself. He is by Captain Al but is a half-brother to the Graded-winning stayer Strathdon and they are adamant that this lanky colt will get the trip. Having the rail in the Daisy Guineas did not really suit him, being a rangy type. MJ Byleveld will have options from a draw of three.

Do It Again (Candiese Marnewick)

Do It Again (Candiese Marnewick)

Highveld raider Majestic Mambo has a magnificent turn of foot and would have gone close to winning the Grade 1 SA Classic if he had not been badly hampered, as he looked set to scythe through the field. The shocking accident led to leading jockey Anthony Delpech being sidelined. Callan Murray now takes over. Majestic Mambo quickened well from the back in the SA Derby last time under Keagan de Melo but did not see much daylight and was unplaced behind the front-running winner Hero’s Honour. If he gets a better pace and some luck when running on this time he will be a definite contender.

Surcharge, who is full of class, has had shocking luck with draws this season and now has his best draw for a while of five. If his efforts to overcome draws when second in all three legs of the Triple Crown have not taken their toll he will also be a big runner as he relaxes beautifully in the running and stays on powerfully. His regular pilot Piere Strydom is unfortunately sidelined and Gunther Wrogemann takes over.

Pack Leader was considered “unstoppable” going into the Grade 2 WSB 1900 but had to be scratched after showing signs of a slight colic attack on course. This Cape Derby third-placed horse has come on a lot from his runner up spot in the Sledgehammer and the yard have made this race his season’s mission. He is another one who could get into the mix, considering how well he plugged on in the Cape Derby, although Do It Again did fly past him in the closing stages that day, and Pack Leader might prefer a more galloping track or further.

Roy Had Enough loves Greyville and ran a flat race when a decent fifth in the SA Classic, so he is the dark horse of the race as on pedigree he should enjoy the trip and he has a fine turn of foot. He will likely be dropped out from a wide draw.

White River looked like a middle distance type when staying on strongly for a half-a-length second in the Cape Guineas but he has been a touch disappointing since so is interesting having his first run as a gelding.

Like A Panther always looked to be a Derby sort so was disappointing in the SA Derby and he has a bit to find with Do It Again and Pack Leader on Cape Derby form too.

Steel Rose made a bold bid to steal the Cape Derby and should have come on from his last run when slowing dramatically in the WSB 1900, so he could have an outside chance of stealing a place from the front.

Warrior’s Rest is a giant son of champion sprinter What A Winter but he is out of a Badger Land mare who won a Listed race over 2000m. He finished a narrow third in the Premier’s Champions Stakes over 1600m at Greyville as a two-year-old but has had an interrupted season and comes in having also missed one of his intended preparation races. The yard reckoned he was fit enough and with his big action he runs as if he would stay the trip.

Sunny Bull Du-Toy is officially the lowest rated horse but this big rangy son of former Daily News winner Irish Flame has caught the eye recently, especially in his last start over this trip on the poly when caught wide and still powering away from them. It’s a giant leap in class but he could sneak into the money.

Alssakhra has the same connections as Majestic Mambo Mambo and it will be interesting to see whether he is there to set a decent pace as he is otherwise a hopeful entry.

Toltec is a big, rangy son of Jay Peg and has no chance on paper, but the good pace a Grade 1 usually offers might bring out the best in him over a likely suitable trip.

By David Thiselton

Pack Leader (Nkosi Hlophe)

Pack Leader on a mission

Glen Kotzen said the Grade 1 Daily News 2000 third favourite Pack Leader had been “flying” at home and this race had through circumstances beyond his control now become his chief SA Champions Season mission.

Pack Leader followed his excellent Grade 1 Cape Derby third place with a short-head second in the Listed Sledgehammer over 1800m at  Greyville after which he was comfortably in the top 18 on the first July log.

However, on the day of his intended next race in the Grade 2 WSB 1900 he cramped on the course and a minor colic attack was suspected.

Kotzen decided to scratch him as a precaution.

They had believed him to have been unstoppable that day

Pack Leader (Nkosi Hlophe)

Pack Leader

He was treated and responded so well he was fresh and bucking the next day on the track.

However, Kotzen had wanted him to run in 1900 for more reasons than one. It would have brought him to his peak for the Vodacom Durban July and by avoiding the three-year-olds it would also have ensured he came into the big race well weighted.

The Daily News 2000 was the best race now available to the Philanthropist colt and as it is a Grade 1 classic it could see his merit rating jumping considerably if he wins, although it does depend on whom he beats. The yard have thus decided to make it his main mission for the season and are now viewing the July as a bonus.

Kotzen said, “He put up a super gallop last Thursday on the grass around the bend at Summerveld and is in a good space, he is on track.”

He is drawn ten but this has been a lucky draw for Kotzen in the past with Big City Life winning both the Daily News and the July from that draw.

Kotzen runs Elusive Heart and Luna Child in the Grade 1 Woolavington 2000.

He said about Elusive Heart, “She is one of the few horses to have beaten Snowdance and I think if ridden differently she will get the ten furlongs.” She is by SA Derby and Daily News 2000 winner Elusive Fort, but has a speedy female line and showed her speed when winning the Grade 3 Vasco Prix du Cap comfortably. She also beat Snowdance in a handicap over 1400m. In her last run she finished a 1,35 length third in the Grade 2 Daisy Fillies Guineas when staying on from second in the running.

Luna Child opened up a big lead last time out in the Scarlet Lady over 1800m at Greyville before coming back to them early in the straight but she then stayed on again to run a gallant fourth. Kotzen said, “We have changed the bit and put a tongue tie on and will ride her softly and see if it makes a difference.”

Richard Fourie rides Pack Leader and Elusive Heart, who is drawn two, and Gunther Wrogemann rides Luna Child who is drawn in pole.

Gone Baby Gone is their other runner on the day and he was said to be working like a “steam train” but the trip is too short and it is being viewed as a preparation run.

By David Thiselton

One World gives the answer

One World, despite running as green as the grass he was racing on, confirmed that he is something special with a brave, front-running display in the Play Soccer Juvenile Plate in uncharacteristically testing ground at Kenilworth yesterday.

Dan Katz (SportingPost)

Dan Katz (SportingPost)

MJ Byleveld decided to make it “because this is a big striding horse” but he had more than a few anxious moments, notably when the 21-10 chance decided to head straight into the rails. His mount looked beaten when Carnage came at him in the final furlong but, despite not keeping entirely straight, he kept answering his rider’s every call to prevail by a hard-fought fifth of a length.

His rider reported: “I probably went a bit slower than I wanted but he was green and at the junction he nearly went off the track. That said, he is a really nice horse.”

Vaughan Marshall, watching from Durban, said: “He is a big baby, still green, but a very good horse. We will see how he pulls up but we’ve got to go the Langerman route. That’s why I left him in Cape Town rather than take him to Durban.”

Arabian Air, who started favourite at 21-20, was beaten over four lengths into fourth but there were excuses. A veterinary examination showed him to be not striding out and Donovan Dillon said: “After he broke though the pens before the off he wasn’t himself and I was outpaced at the 800m mark which wasn’t him.”

Dan Katz is predicting a bright future for Hassen Adams’ Var filly Bouvier who made a winning debut at 14-1 under Louis Burke in the opening maiden juvenile fillies.

He said: “She is very small – I wish she was a hand higher – but she can run and she is good. I am expecting big things from her.”

The Betting World Juvenile Plate, already an exclusive match between Joey Ramsden and Candice Bass-Robinson, was decimated when three of Ramsden’s four runners were scratched ‘off-feed’ at 8.45am. But the opposition’s Cruise Along and Aldo Domeyer were made to fight for every metre by Dillon on Ramsden’s Sparkeling Fire.

Piet Botha, who took that horrible fall from Steel Rose in the Solid Speed Pinnacle at Greyville 11 days ago, sees his doctor today and is optimistic that he will be given clearance to resume next week.

BLOB Rocket Countdown is reported to have come out of his fine Winter Classic run in good shape. Deez Dayanand apparently has other trainers keen to have Jeff Lloyd in the irons in the Vodacom Durban July. He stresses that he will make the booking and that nothing has yet been confirmed.

By Michael Clower

Tarry duo faces a tough field

National champion trainer Sean Tarry has a runner in both the Grade 1 Daily News 2000 and the Grade 1 Woolavington 2000, Warrior’s Rest and Chariot Of Gold respectively but said they were facing tough fields and it would be hard to have confidence.

“We’re going in hoping for the best,” he said.

Warrior’s Rest, a big colt by What A Winter, impressed more than once as a two-year-old, including when finishing a 0,6 length third in the Grade 1 Premier’s Champions Stakes over 1600 at Greyville on Gold Cup day.

Sean Tarry (Nkosi Hlophe)

Sean Tarry

Tarry said, “He missed his intended second run which is not ideal but we seem to have him fit enough and he had his final gallop today (Tuesday).”

He was laid off for six months between October last year and April this year and Tarry explained, “He went unsound, but we have him sound now and I’m happy with him. He proved himself against the best last season but he hasn’t been able to have the exposure against the best three-year-olds this season. He is a big horse with a big stride and the way he races it would appear he could stay the 2000m trip, even though on pedigree there would be a doubt.”

In the Premier’s last year he led before staying on well, but Tarry said it would be unlikely he would lead this time running over 2000m for the first time.

Warrior’s Rest is by the Equus Champion Sprinter What A Winter. However, he is out of a Badger Land mare who won a Listed race over 2000m, so there is hope, even on pedigree, he will stay the trip.

The Silvano filly Chariot Of Gold will have no problem at all staying the trip. She won the Listed Oaks Trial over 2000m and followed up by finishing third in the Wilgerbosdrift Grade 2 SA Oaks over 2450m.

Tarry said, “She took her race in the Oaks very well. Oh Susanna is impossible to beat but if you’re not in the race you will never know.”

The pair will travel down to KZN on Friday.

Shenanigans will also be travelling down to run in the Listed Lonsdale Stirrup Cup over 2400m.

Tarry said, “He is a nice horse and the step up in trip might help.”

Tarry also has the old soldier Hyaku in the Lonsdale, in which he finished fourth last year. The six-year-old Admire Main gelding has lived in KZN for the last couple of seasons and is being prepared by Tarry’s new Summerveld satellite yard assistant trainer Lorenzo Karriem.

Meanwhile, Legal Eagle has been sent to the farm for a layoff and will be brought back next season to prepare for his bid to equal Pocket Power’s four L’Ormarin’s Queen’s Plate victories in succession.

By David Thiselton

Sunny Bill Du-Toy steps up in class

Alyson Wright said Sunny Bill Du-Toy was in good shape ahead of his tilt at the Grade 1 Daily News 2000.

Alyson Wright (Supplied)

Alyson Wright (Supplied)

The good looking and rangy gelding by Irish Flame takes a massive step up in class but Wright confirmed he was improving all the time.

He has won three in a row from 1800m to 2000m, all on the poly, and Wright saw no reason why he would not take to turf.

He has a fine draw of two and might surprise a few as he certainly caught the eye last time over 2000m when running wide and yet still finding enough to power away from the field and win by 2,75 lengths.

However, he was only running off a 74 merit rating and was raised to an 81 so on paper will have to improve on that performance by lengths to finish close to the like of 110 merit rated Do It Again.

Sunny Bill Du-Toy is named after a friend of Owen Heiffer’s, the owner of Hollywood Bets. The horse runs in the Hollywood Syndicate colours.

By David Thiselton

Snaith’s charges primed

Justin Snaith explained the disappointing run of Grade 1 winner Sergeant Hardy last Saturday before talking about his runners in Saturday’s big meeting at Greyville where he saddles the favourites for both the Daily News 2000 and Woolavington 2000, Do It Again and Oh Susanna respectively.

Sergeant Hardy has a habit of jumping left and on this occasion Snaith said he “over-reacted as usual when the pens opened, went left and a horse (Isca) hit him sideways. That was his race gone right there.” Bernard Fayd’Herbe had already been pulling on the right rein in an attempt to straighten him and when the horse hit him the force on the right side of his mouth must have been doubled and the inside of the mouth on that side was cut. “That was why he took off to the left rail,” explained Snaith. “Because of his cut mouth I have had to scrap the original plan to run him in the Post Merchants and will now have to wait for the Mercury Sprint.”

Bernard Fayd'Herbe (Liesl King)

Bernard Fayd’Herbe (Liesl King)

Snaith said in all of his pre-race comments he had pointed out Sergeant Hardy had still been recovering from his trip to Johannesburg and the Scottsville race was not ever going to be his peak event. Sergeant Hardy drifted alarmingly in the betting and from odds-on eventually started 17/10.

Snaith said it would be hard for the horses whom Do It Again beat in the Grade 2 Daisy Guineas to reverse form in the Grade 1 Daily News over 2000m as this was “his trip.” He added, “He is doing well and everything has gone according to plan. He is spot on. It’s very competitive and very good horses are taking part, I will be particularly interested to see how Tap O’ Noth runs as he is a high quality horse.”

Sun Met winner Oh Susanna is at cramped odds for the Grade 1 Woolavington. Snaith said the crack in her heel, which forced her to miss the Daisy Fillies Guineas, had grown out and he reckoned she would be at her best. He concluded, “She is doing well and is fit and ready.”

He also runs Silvano filly Miyabi Gold in the Woolavington and said, “She is a half-sister to Ultimate Dollar and I’m hoping she finishes in the first three, but it will be tough. She is a high quality young horse and she wouldn’t be in the race if I didn’t think she was good enough. She will be running on strongly.”

Snaith runs Captain Splendid, Strathdon and Made To Conquer in the Grade 3 Lonsdale Stirrup Cup over 2400m.

Captain Splendid defends his crown here and he said, “He is the dark horse, he needed his last run and considering he got bumped it wasn’t a bad run at all. He has come out of that race well and is ready.”

“Strathdon was very unlucky in that race (WSB 1900). The jockey was battling to hold It’s My Turn and he bumped Strathdon three wide and he then had to loop the field, so a line can be drawn through that run.”

“Made To Conquer should run his usual consistent race, although I am a little bit worried about the second run after a layoff syndrome so am not as confident as normal. But if he runs well here he will be a contender in any race, he is high quality and will get every bit of the 2400m.”

One Direction runs in the fourth race over 1900m and he said, “He is doing very well and will fight out the finish, it just depends on whether Silva’s Bullet comes back to form, he is high quality and I just wish he wasn’t in the race.”

He runs Captain Courteous in race eight over 1400m and said, “He is doing very well at home and had a very good first run in KZN. He should fight out the finish.”

By David Thiselton