Queen Supreme (Candiese Marnewick)

Queen Supreme eyes Summer Cup

Exciting news emerging from Mike de Kock’s six winners at Turffontein Standside on Saturday is that he is “seriously” thinking of running the impressive four-year-old Irish-bred filly Queen Supreme in the Grade 1 Gauteng Summer Cup on November 30.

On Saturday she became the third stakes winner for her USA-bred Gone West dam, Call Later, when cruising to a 4,25 length victory in the Grade 3 Yellowwood Handicap over 1800m, beating two classy fillies in Ronnie’s Candy and Roy’s Riviera.

It was her fourth win in five starts.

Queen Supreme (Candiese Marnewick)

Queen Supreme is by Darley shuttle stallion Exceed And Excel, who was Australian champion sire in 2012/2013.

De Kock said, “She didn’t beat much but I have been impressed with the way she has gone through the divisions and am seriously thinking of running her in the Summer Cup. She will go down to Cape Town for the Paddock Stakes and Sun Met later.”

Queen Supreme was originally bought at Ireland’s foremost yearling sale, the Goffs Orby Sale, in September 2017 on behalf of Markus Jooste.

She was landed for 130,000 Euros.

De Kock bought her back at a later dispersal sale and she is currently owned by a syndicate consisting of Mauritzfontein Stud, De Kock himself, Larry Nestadt, JR van der Linden and Noeline Malherbe. 

Queen Supreme is six months younger than her contemporaries, being Irish-bred, and will be improving continually.

She wears a sheepskin band on her forehead to solve a habit she had developed of rearing up.

De Kock’s Grade 2 Peermont Emperor’s Palace Charity Mile winner Barahin sounded a warning to his Summer Cup opponents.

Jockey Callan Murray said after the 3,50 length win on Saturday, “The blinkers made a massive difference. We just tracked the speed and when we turned into the straight it felt like a five furlong race the way he quickened up. I just held on to him, he extended to the line impressively.”

The maestro trainer added, “Barahin has always been a nice horse, in fact he’s a proper horse. He was unlucky as a three-year-old to be bumping Hawwaam all the time. But today the rain helped him, he’s never been the greatest mover or strider. The sting out of the ground was fantastic for him.”
Barahin was raised nine points by the handicapper to 131, which is going to make his Summer Cup task tough. The weights for the big race were set on Monday and he was allotted joint topweight of 60kg together with his stablemate Soqrat. They will have to give the field 5,5kg and more. On the other hand there are only 13 horses in the handicap as it stands, the rest are under sufferance. 

Before Saturday, a mile was considered to be a touch on the sharp side for Barahin, but three of his earlier wins were from 1200m to 1400m. However, he ran on strongly when winning the Jubilee Handicap over 1800m last season so should enjoy the Summer Cup trip.

Queen Supreme was raised from a 97 to 110, but she will nevertheless be 3,5kg under sufferance as it stands if she lines up in the Summer Cup. 

Another impressive winner for the yard on Saturday was the three-year-old New Zealand-bred gelding Frosted Gold. This strongly built grey is by All Too Hard, a four-time Group 1 winner in Australia from 1400m to 1600m, and he is out of a stakes-placed sprint-miler by Verglas. Frosted Gold won the Grade 2 SA Nursery last season and also looks to be a sprint-miler, although his second dam produced the winner of the Grade 1 Grand Prix de Saint Cloud over 2400m.  

De Kock said, “He is a nice horse although he is temperamental. He will go for the Dingaans and we will take it from there.”

Frosted Gold was raised two points to 114, which puts him level with last season’s Equus Champion two-year-old male Got The Greenlight. 

One of De Kock’s maiden winners on the day, the Noble Tune colt Hellofaride, looks a possible SA Derby prospect as he is an imposing horse who won effortlessly over 1600m in just his second start despite still being green. 

However, De Kock is never one to jump the gun and said, “It was a weak field, but I liked the improvement he made from one run to the next, it was impressive. But he needs to improve again. I am not one to overrate a horse like the handicappers do. He is definitely looking for further though.”   

The yard’s Australian-bred gelding Atyaab won for the first time since his victory in a weak renewal of the Grade 1 Cape Derby at the beginning of the year. He stayed on to win the Listed Java Handicap over 2400m. De Kock said he had “come well” and gelding him in June had made a big difference. However, he admitted he was no more than “a handicapper.”

His other winner on the day was the Australian-bred Snitzel gelding Alameery who won a maiden over 1160m. De Kock said this horse was looking for further.

By David Thiselton

Je Ne Sais Quoi (Candiese Marnewick)

Class tells as Sunset Eyes motors home

Class told yesterday as Sunset Eyes ran out a comfortable winner of the Gold Circle Podcast Handicap at Hollywoodbets Greyville. Competitive at the highest level, the three-month break was of minor concern for Brett Crawford’s runner and his supporters.

Taking the ‘golden highway’ as Anton Marcus has dubbed the outside of the Greyville synthetic track, the six-year-old went to the line virtually unchallenged.

Elusive Heart chased shadows for second with the lightly weighted Hey Boy staying on for second. Fillipo, expected to make some impression, folded early to finish out with the washing.

Je Ne Sais Quoi (Candiese Marnewick)
Je Ne Sais Quoi (Candiese Marnewick)

The question of soundness is of major concerns for trainers. Vets bills are an unwelcome attachment to training bills, but find a solid and sound horse and you have a ‘champion’, no matter what the horse does to make it to the top.

Big King, an eight-year-old gelding, turned the tables on the three-years younger Mutawaary when landing the fifth. Greg and Karen Anthony’s gelding winning his seventh race from 40 starts.

Multiple champion Marcus is not a man to be run down easily but Joshwin Solomons, son of Western Cape jockey Morne Winnaar, came from a long way back on the Dennis Drier-trained Dune Dance to out-point race favourite Captain Of Colour when the race looked all over.

Jason Gates is one of the more driven apprentices in the SA Jockey Academy. “He even wants to win barrier trials,” commented one trainer who was looking for an easy introduction to the track for his charge.

With that in mind, one would do well to take cognisance of all Gates’s mounts although Dust Storm gave little early notice that he was a contender in the card opener.

Gates had ridden Garth Puller’s charge in both his barrier trial and one debut, finishing down the field in both outings. A four-year-old that pulled up lame on debut, it was little wonder that he started at 45-1 yesterday but finished like an even money shot.

Favourite James Peter, later reported to have pulled up lame, and visiting Touch Of Fate set quick early fractions and when James Peter fell away, Touch Of Fate looked set for victory. But Gates coaxed a finishing burst that took Dust Storm past his rival.

Warren Kennedy started the day 20 winners clear of nearest rival Greg Cheyne in the jockey championship, and although there is still a long way to go before the cock crows, Kennedy rarely goes a meeting without a winner. He restored some confidence in favourites with a hard-fought victory on Arianos Spinner for Robbie and Shannon Hill, holding off a game challenge from At Your Request, having her first run for Dean Kannemeyer.

Desolate Road looked very much the best bet on the card in the third but Anton Marcus earned his riding fee as he was hard-pressed on Tony Rivalland’s gelding to keep The Master at bay.

Lowly Fillies and Mares Handicaps are notorious for results that don’t necessary correspond with current form although Je Na Sais Quoi’s win was not entirely unexpected as she was going over her prefer trip. Up from the Western Cape, Glen Kotzen’s filly was given a pipe-opener from a poor draw on her KZN debut, but sent over 2000m yesterday, Stuart Randolph waited until the final furlong to pull the trigger and Je Ne Sais Quoi responded with a burst of speed to overhaul Abbey.

By Andrew Harrison

Perfectly Putt (Candiese Marnewick)

Creation makes his comeback

The Turffontein Inside track stages an eight race meeting tomorrow and the exotics look the best way to approach it.

In the first race Creation makes his comeback having last been seen in March. This Vercingetorix gelding is a half-brother to the Listed placed Querari filly Champery. In his two starts to date he has not been disgraced finishing 4,60 lengths behind Guantanamo Bay over 1000m and 6,90 lengths behind the Equus Two-year-old champion male of last season, Got The Greenlight, over 1200m. He looked to have class and will have matured in his eight months off. He is thus preferred to those who have run before as none of them look to be world beaters. Crazy Charlie stayed on well last time over this trip, showing a good turn of foot. That was a weak workrider’s race but he does have a good draw here and has gone close with Muzi Yeni up before. Trend Master has done well in all three of his starts and has proved effective over this trip. However, a place in the trifecta positions must also be found for the R4,5 million Mike de Kock-trained Dynasty colt Oscar Wilde. He is out of the Western Winter mare Lady Windermere, who won both the Grade 1 SA Fillies Sprint and the Grade 1 Garden Province Stakes. He jumps from a fair draw of six under Gavin Lerena. Temenee is another interesting first-timer. She is the only filly in the race but is by Var out of the Grade 2 Gerald Rosenberg winner Tamaanee.

Perfectly Putt (Candiese Marnewick)
Perfectly Putt (Candiese Marnewick)

In the second race over 2600m Romantic Sea has run two fair races over 1600m and 1800m respectively and should relish the step up to this 2600m trip being by stamina influence Lateral out of a Caesour mare who won up to 2400m. Poppycock is proven over staying trips having narrowly failed in two outings over 2400m. Magic Vision has shown some ability and steps up in trip. However, on pedigree there is a stamina doubt as he is by Visionaire out of the Grade 1-wining Jet Master miler Little Miss Magic and he also has a wide draw to overcome. 

The third race over 2600m could be won by Glamorous Scandal who has never quite lived up to her potential and has only won one race in 26 starts. However, she has dropped to a competitive mark and is the one to beat based on the form of her penultimate start. One factor against her is her wide draw. Perfect Light beat Glamorous Scandal by 3,25 lengths over 2400m last time, but she was raised four points, and before that was beaten two lengths by Glamorous Scandal over this course and distance. Cranberry Crush won the latter race and followed up with another good effort over this same course and distance off her current mark of 72. However, her last run puts her on the back foot and she has to carry 60kg from a wide draw. Ritchi is thus preferred for third with a 4kg claimer up off a reasonable opening merit rating. It hard ignore the rest, especially Flying Fantasy and Shezahotti. 

In the fourth race, also over 2600m, Gentleman’s Wager has always struck as one with some ability and has a long stride and a good turn of foot. He won a maiden handicap over 1450m easing up by 3,25 lengths last time out. He is by Oratorio out of the Var mare Princess Of Light, who won over 2450m and finished second in the Gold Cup, so has a chance of staying this trip and with bottom weight will be hard to beat if he does. Gold Griffin has drawn well and this consistent stayer makes most appeal of the rest. 

In the fifth over 1600m Waqaas was raised two points for just failing to beat the improving Captain Flynt over this course and distance, although he has to come from another wide draw. Marshall Foch was progressing nicely last season after being stepped up to this trip and can continue from where he left off, although he also has a wide draw. Supa Mufti’s win last time has been franked by Captain Flynt and Waqaas. He is half-a-kilogram under sufferance but 4kg claimer Cole Dicken, who carries 1kg overweight, is aboard. He is another with a wide draw. Tokyo Drift and Gimme The Fire should be considered as horses with runs under their belts.

In the sixth, a Graduation Plate over 1600m, Spero Optima is not officially well in but impressed second time out and looks to have plenty of scope. This Dynasty gelding is well drawn too and might be making a bid to qualify for the Dingaans. The best weighted horse is Glider Pilot but he was beaten 15 lengths last time in a comeback from a layoff of more than a year. Promiseofmyheart is the best weighted three-year-old and has some good form up to this trip. The filly Frosted Steel looks to have class and should enjoy the step up in trip. Informative has decent form over sprints and is also interesting stepped up in trip from pole position, being by Greys Inn out of a Jet Master mare who won over 1300m and placed second over a mile once.

In the seventh over 1000m Madamoiselle is a form choice and should get away with returning from a five month layoff over this trip. Ocean City will make a bold bid from the front from draw two. Arikel comes off a good win over course and distance. 

In the last over 1200m Chainsaw has a chance on some of his best form although he ran badly in his only start over course and distance. King Of The Delta is in good form and is well drawn and distance suited. Gemcutter, Strikeitlikeamatch and Perfectly Putt also have to be included. 

By David Thiselton

To take a bet go to www.tabgold.co.za or www.trackandball.co.za

Dennis Drier (Nkosi Hlophe)

Drier off the mark in Cape

Dennis Drier got off the mark for the Cape season in some style when newcomer Croisette made a winning debut – and like a real good horse – in the Tabonline.co.za Maiden at Kenilworth yesterday.

Dennis Drier (Nkosi Hlophe)
Dennis Drier (Nkosi Hlophe)

The Var filly, a half-sister to SA Fillies Classic and SA Oaks winner Juxtapose, was surprisingly easy to back considering the promise she had shown in a Scottsville barrier trial, and she went off at 8-11. Sean Veale had her first away and, although the more experienced Cyber Blossom soon headed her, it was only on sufferance. The favourite came away from two furlongs out to win in a common canter with her rider patting her admiringly down the neck.

Veale said: “I know she didn’t beat much but it was the way she did it. I rate her highly and I think she is very special and very classy.”

Drier echoed this, saying: “I am thrilled with this run. I think she could be something special although I will take it slowly with her.”

He has brought 15 others down from Durban “but no Beach Beautys or Master Of My Fates this time.”

However he had some disturbing words – disturbing that is if you are an owner or trainer with horses in Cape Town – about the comparative level of the stakes in the two centres. “Most of the 16 are Cape Town-owned and I am very grateful to their owners for allowing me to bring their horses down here because they are not going to be racing for the stakes we have in Durban.”

Apparently several of his owners based elsewhere were not keen for their horses to race for the prize money now on offer at Kenilworth. 

BLOB The Eric Sands-trained Bitter Lemon, who was Anton Marcus’s only ride of the day when a disappointing seventh of eight in the 1 400m fillies handicap at Kenilworth last Saturday, has been suspended for 60 days.  The 11-2 shot was found to have suffered a bilateral epistaxsis (burst blood vessel with blood coming from both nostrils).

By Michael Clower

Sunset Eyes (Candiese Marnewick)

Make a date with Sunset Eyes

The arrival of many long-shots at recent Hollywoodbets Greyville meetings these past couple of weeks has made it difficult for an army of punters. However, the flip side is decent pay outs for those that got it right. But it is another one of ‘those’ cards on the poly at the same venue today and although the field sizes are relatively small, it has not made finding winners any easier.

Sunset Eyes (Candiese Marnewick)
Sunset Eyes (Candiese Marnewick)

With the Western Cape Summer season on the horizon one could reasonably speculate that Sunset Eyes would have a date with some of the big sprint races during their season. But Brett Crawford elected to keep the gelding in KZN with assistant Peter Muscutt after his win in the Umgeni Handicap on the last Saturday of last season.

Sunset Eyes romped home in that race, beating Filippo who will be in opposition again today. In contrast, Yogas Govender has kept Filippo on the boil since the Umgeni Handicap and may strip the fitter horse this afternoon. He followed up his Umgeni second with victory at Scottsville and turned in a useful effort in a strong Pinnacle Stakes last time out, finish just over a length back to the promising Ultra Magnus.

Govender has declared blinkers on his charge for the first time, no doubt on the advice of regular pilot Sherman Brown, so there should be very little between Filippo and Sunset Eyes.

The balance of the eight-horse field have smart sprint credentials so it would be unwise to write any of them off lightly although it would be pointless going through their individual credentials, but Filippo and Sunset Eyes look the principal contenders.

After two good showings in barrier trials, admittedly eight months apart, James Peter made his debut as favourite early last month over course and distance and can get punter’s off to a good start. In spite of his two educationals in barrier trials, the penny still had to drop for Gavin van Zyl’s runner on debut and he arrived on the scene too late to trouble Treading Water.

With that experience under his girth he can make amends in the card opener.

The second is something of a head-scratcher. Annaberg has shown up well in both starts to date and from a good draw should contest the finish although she faces difficult opposition. Arianos Spinner has improved at her last two on the poly and has a good draw while At Your Request needed her last run, her first for a new stable. She makes her poly debut and is one to watch in the betting. Trap Queen makes her local debut after showing some improvement at her last two in the Cape and is another in with a winning chance.

Unlike some trainers with big strings where the attrition rate is not always of paramount importance, small yards have to nurture what they have. Mai Tai has been off the track since June after pulling up lame in the Devon Air stakes, some four lengths off the winner, that after making a winning debut. Wayne Badenhorst will have been ever cautious with what is possibly the best horse in his small string and has picked a race with a favourable draw.

Dive Captain and Accidental Tourist should be there to pick up the pieces should Mai Tai let the side down.

By Andrew Harrison

To take a bet go to www.tabgold.co.za or www.trackandball.co.za

Surcharge (JCPhotographics)

Surcharge gets first Aussie victory

The former Stuart Pettigrew-trained Surcharge, now known as Yulong Prince and trained by NZ and Australian Hall of Famer Chris Waller, won a listed race at yesterday’s Melbourne Cup meeting at Flemington.

The Varsfontein Stud-bred Gimmethegreenlight five-year-old entire was in an awkward spot nearing the top of the straight, in last place and trapped on the rail in the one mile one furlong Furphy Plate, a handicap contested by 12 horses in which he was joint top weight.

However, jockey Nash Rawiller was able to switch him outward and get him through a gap.

Once in the clear he showed his class and stretched out impressively. He got up by a head.

He returned odds of 17/2 as his previous overseas form, consisting of two races in Dubai and three in Australia had not yielded a place, although they were in a higher class including two Group 1s.

Yulong Prince always showed tremendous class in South Africa where he infamously had to contend with a spate of bad draws.

He is one to follow as he could build on this win.

By David Thiselton

In The Dance (JC Photographics)

Options open for Spiritofthegroove

Reigning national Champion trainer Sean Tarry has hit the front in stakes earning for the season but just unofficially as his only feature win at Saturday’s Peermont Emperor’s Palace Charity Mile meeting was in a restricted race, whose stakes don’t count towards the championship.

His Visionaire filly Spiritofthegroove stormed home from way off the pace to win the R1 million Emperor’s Palace Ready to Run Cup.

In The Dance (JC Photographics)
In The Dance (JC Photographics)

Jockey Marco van Rensburg dropped her out from a wide draw and in the straight he faced a wall of horses on the inside.

However, he somehow managed to weave her through and she won going away by 2,25 lengths.

She is owned by Singapore-based Mark Yong’s Equine Hub SA and was bred by Tmen Stables.

Tarry, whilst mindful Spiritofthegroove had won this 1400m contest in testing conditions, was still concerned about her getting the tough Turffontein Mile of the Grade 3 Fillies Mile on November 23.

He said he would see how she drew in the WSB Cape Fillies Guineas, which was another option.

Tarry said he had endured an overall disappointing day on Saturday.

He said, “I would have liked In The Dance to have had another run going in to the Charity Mile, but she travelled well in the race and still finished well. She could have got closer with a better draw. Tilbury Fort needed the run and the soft ground made it more testing. So they will both come on from the run. Zillzaal looked a picture before his last run and a picture in the parade ring on Saturday but he then went into a complete sweat behind the starting stalls, so something went wrong between the parade ring and the start, so it was disappointing. He and Tilbury Fort will still be going for the Summer Cup and there is a nice four week gap for In The Dance into the Ipi Tombe so hopefully she can fluke a draw.”

He continued, “Eden Roc ran a good race at the weights in the Graham Beck and should be cherry ripe for the Dingaans. Putontheredlight had a complete no show and the rider stood up at the 300m mark, it was a nothing run, so I don’t know what to read into it. Sidonie did at least stay on so that was a result you can live with. “

In the official championship standings Tarry is in third place on earnings of R3,410,838. Justin Snaith leads on earnings of R3,603,163 and Paul Peter is in second place on R3,486,675. Mike de Kock’s halcyon day on Saturday took him into fourth place on R3,197,750. Alan Greeff and Brett Crawford are in 5th and 6th place respectively on R3,183,638 and R3,030,963. Yvette Bremner is in 7th on R2,389,600. Glen Kotzen, Gavin Smith and Garth Puller fill the final three places in the top ten on the log.

By David Thiselton

Mill Queen (Candiese Marnewick)

Mill Queen has more to come

The David Nieuwenhuizen-trained Mill Queen was victorious in the Grade 3 HSH Princess Charlene Starling Stakes over 1400m despite not enjoying a smooth preparation.

This Digteby Stud-bred Querari filly was bought for R140,000 at the National Yearling Sale session 2 and has already earned R423,375 in gross stakes for her owners S Poriazi, WG de Koker and W Volschenk.

Nieuwenhuizen said, “She still has to mature mentally and physically, she is a late maturer who is still furnishing, so hopefully she will get a lot better. She is doing extremely well despite being backwards and that is just down to her ability, so we have to look after her. She is a filly who gives her all, so we also have to be careful with her in work.”

Mill Queen (Candiese Marnewick)
Mill Queen (Candiese Marnewick)

Nieuwenhuizen lamented the lack of a preparation race for her going into the Starling Stakes, which he said was due to the benchmark for any suitable handicap races not being high enough to include his 110 merit rated horse and there were also no suitable plate races. 

He did not want to put her up against older horses at this stage.

He said the lack of a preparation race might have worked in her favour to some degree due to the conditions of the Starling Stakes, which penalises horses for having more than two wins. He questioned the logic of this condition, i.e. why should good horses be penalised for feature preparation events, when there is already a condition which penalises Graded wins.

Furthermore, the Querari filly had a setback in training, tweaking her back, and they were forced to only walk her for a few days.

He added, “Thank goodness Gavin (Lerena) has a good feel for a horse. He rode her with a bit in reserve and it looked like she did need it.”

She won by 0,30 lengths from the persistent Wisteria Walk.  

Nieuwenhuizen said another disadvantage she had endured was the difficulty of getting one jockey to stay aboard her.

He feared losing Lerena for her next intended target, the Grade 3 Fillies Mile, due to the latter’s retainer with Wilgerbosdrift and Mauritzfontein Stud.

Lerena had ridden her before Saturday, which was an advantage.

Mill Queen ended her campaign as a two-year-old with a 0,80 length second in the Grade 1 Thekwini Stakes. However, Nieuwenhuizen pointed out she had come from a wide draw that day and did not know the track, which was unlike the winner Gabor on both counts.

He would have preferred her next race, which will be her second after a layoff, to be on Gauteng Summer Cup day, November 30, but they had moved the Fillies Mile forward to the 23rd. 

However, he said she had come out of Saturday’s race well.

He added he always went in to races positively, so would be able to adjust her work accordingly.

He concluded, “It’s all about the stable working together and management.”

By David Thiselton

Joey Ramsden

Ramsden says no to Singapore

Joey Ramsden has decided against moving to Singapore to train. He will now presumably stay put at his Milnerton base and concentrate on trying to build up the stable to its former glories.

Ramsden, who has gone out of his way to be helpful to this writer in the past, has not answered my calls or text messages in recent weeks and yesterday was no exception. But Singapore Turf Club executive Zenna Teo emailed: “We would like to inform you that Mr Joey Ramsden has decided not to train in Singapore.”

Joey Ramsden
Joey Ramsden

In April the Singapore Turf Club took Ramsden and the rest of South African racing by surprise when it issued a press release to say that he was one of three new trainers being allocated boxes. Apparently he had only made inquiries and had not told his owners but he said he would fly over and have a look. He was soon singing the country’s praises and pointing to the advantages of its racing compared to that in South Africa, although he did say what a complex process it was to set up there.

With the possible exception of Charles Laird (who retired), Ramsden was the trainer who suffered most when Markus Jooste decided to quit racing in the immediate aftermath of the Steinhoff financial scandal. His numbers slumped from well over 100 to the extent that he moved to a smaller yard and the majority of his horses were not of the same class as the Jooste ones. He has really battled in the first few months of this season and has had only two winners.

But Singapore’s loss is South Africa’s gain. Ramsden is one of the few trainers in this country to have won Group 1 races overseas and at home he was won more than 1 750 races including 26 Grade 1s, notably the 2016 Vodacom Durban July with The Conglomerate. He also has the personality to attract owners and a world-wide reputation that is likely to attract further patronage from overseas.

He has recently updated his website to publicise an attacking policy that extends countrywide, saying: “The yard regularly raids Johannesburg, Durban and Port Elizabeth. With the recent success of the Johannesburg stable we are looking to make that yard a permanent fixture and, with a 10% stakes winners to winners strike rate, we believe our results speak for themselves.”

By Michael Clower

Liberty Hall (Candiese Marnewick)

Al Bragga worth another chance

Al Bragga, something of a bookmakers’ benefit so far, just might be worth another chance in the opening maiden at Kenilworth today.

The Mike Stewart-trained three-year-old was backed as if he couldn’t lose on debut here in August yet he finished with only one behind him and over 20 lengths off the winner. He was found to be lame afterwards. He then went on a recovery mission at Durbanville and, although only fifth, he ran a great deal better. He would, though, have finished a lot closer had things gone according to plan but he had to be eased 600m out in order to get a clear run.

Liberty Hall (Candiese Marnewick)
Liberty Hall (Candiese Marnewick)

“He also gave himself a nasty over-reach,” says Mike Stewart who said of the debut disappointment: “When he got home he came out of the box on three legs. Either he knocked himself in the pens or he got kicked and nobody noticed.”

Al Bragga was gelded between the two races and this time Greg Cheyne takes over from Donovan Dillon and is fitted with cheek pieces.  Stewart, who doesn’t bet, is determined not to tempt fate by making predictions but his horse was only a length and a quarter behind Cape Of Storms (33-10 favourite here) at Durbanville despite that interference.

Empire Glory, cut from 6-1 to 9-2 and the only four-year-old in the field, was hampered when he had Capkuta (4-1) a neck behind over 1 250m at Durbanville last month.

Happy Wanderer (15-2) is the highest rated but disappointed at Durbanville and Mike Robinson says: “I don’t think he really enjoyed the course but also he needed gelding. This was done immediately afterwards but he might just need this run as I haven’t galloped him.”

The Andre Nel newcomer King Cyrus (15-2) has to be respected, particularly with Bernard Fayd’Herbe riding, but Al Bragga at 4-1 looks a worthwhile prospect to make it third time lucky.

Dennis Drier only brings maidens to Cape Town if he is convinced they are good enough to win so it is no surprise to see newcomer Croisette favourite for race two, particularly as she has already finished second in a Scottsville barrier trail. But 5-10 against a couple of provenly useful local fillies looks too short. I prefer to take a chance with Ryanair at 5-1.

Looks Like Magic, 2-1 for the Betting World Maiden (race three), is a pretty apt description of the Glen Kotzen/Morne Winnaar combination at the moment and she has a big chance. However slight preference is for Fayd’Herbe’s mount Springisintheair.

By Michael Clower