Grant van
Niekerk takes over from Aldo Domeyer as the jockey to display his Hong Kong
talents at Kenilworth on Saturday and he rides in all but one of the eight
races.
He has two
mounts apiece for Justin Snaith and Candice Bass-Robinson and one each for Eric
Sands, Piet Steyn and Mike Stewart. But his hand is nothing like as strong as
Aldo Domeyer’s last Saturday, let alone the veritable bonanza that last
season’s Cape champion appeared to have at yesterday’s abandoned meeting.
Van Niekerk
did well in his first Hong Kong season, riding 31 winners from 422 rides,
finishing ninth on the log and building a reputation with many of the local
trainers.
Kenilworth
was hit with 17mm of rain during Monday night and, although the course was
passed fit after horses were galloped on it, further downpours saw racing
called off following an 11.00am track inspection. No more than three
millimetres is forecast between now and Saturday’s meeting so that should go
ahead.
Justin
Snaith is a runaway winner of the Western Cape trainers’ championship with 132
winners and stakes of R15.4 million, nearly R7 million in front of Mrs
Bass-Robinson (73 winners) and Brett Crawford (82). Sabine Plattner is the
leading owner.
Snaith’s
first jockey Richard Fourie heads the Western Cape log with 106 winners and
Domeyer, despite spending so long in Hong Kong, is second with 60, six in front
of Bernard Fayd’Herbe. Greg Cheyne is the highest Western Cape-based jockey on
the national log in fifth with a personal best of 160 boosted by a fabulous
five-timer at Fairview on Monday.
Gary Alexander brings a string of five runners down to
KwaZulu-Natal today for an eight-race program at Hollywoodbets Greyville on the
poly and has a strong chance of bagging a few winners.
See Me Run (JC Photographics)
See Me Run jumps from gate two in the sixth race with Denis
Schwarz up and is currently trading at 5-1 with Track & Ball. The 3 year
old Visionaire filly ran a creditable 4.5 lengths behind Running Brave who won
the Gold Bracelet last Saturday. The yard is expecting a good run as Alexander said
‘’she must have a decent shout from a good draw’’.
The second race sees them saddle up Amandla who put in a
solid debut finishing 2.25 lengths behind Var And Away over 1160m at
Turffontein, “He is working well and should have a good each way chance in this
line-up” commented Alexander.
In race three, Marula is joint favourite with the Dennis
Drier trained Ninotto currently trading at 19-10 on the books. ‘’His last two
runs have been decent and this is not the strongest of fields with all due
respect so he should be in the firing line” said Alexander. Eighties Rock ran a
useful barrier trial and could be one to watch at decent odds. Magnificus is
another who wasn’t far back in a barrier trial which makes the opening leg of
the place accumulator very tricky.
Ideal Cut in race five doesn’t have the best draw but should
be in with each way chance if taking to the poly. The last to be saddled up
from the Alexander yard is Liberado in the eighth. ‘’He is looking for a mile
plus but we’ll take our chances from a good draw and he will be doing his best
work late’’. Alexander concluded that many of his runners haven’t been on the
poly so if they do take to it good runs are expected overall.
The seventh sees an interesting contest where Myrrh and Luxemburg should fight it out. Myrrh from the Wayne Badenhorst yard gets an eye-catching jockey booking Lyle Hewitson from gate four and was running on well very late in the day. If he has a decent position this time around he will be right in the thick of things as he will be receiving all the assistance from the saddle. Luxemburg comes off a second on paper, however he lost his race in the boardroom. He took well to the poly at Fairview and if repeating that performance has a decent winning chance.
KZN Breeding’s newest acquisition, New Predator, has a chance of
following in the footsteps of other non-Group 1-winning KZN-based stallions Kahal,
Mogok and Muhtafal, due to his magnificent pedigree.
New Predator was in fine condition and full of zest when paraded
at the Bush Hill Stud stallion day last Friday and so were his colleagues
Flying The Flag and Redoute’s Promise.
New
Predator’s pedigree is particularly exciting as it contains the Galileo-Fastnet
Rock nick 2X2. It is not surprising this nick is proving full of potency,
because the mix of their respective fathers Sadler’s Wells and Danehill delivered
some of the world’s best racehorses including Frankel and Minding.
New Predator
Galileo needs no introduction, being a ten-times champion stallion and producer of 80 individual Group 1 winners.
Fastnet Rock is also held in high esteem and
has been rated among the world’s top five stallions.
The world’s leading
stud operation, Coolmore, once had a saying among their connections,
“There are only three certainties in life, death, taxes and Fastnet
Rock.”
Fastnet Rock won two
Group 1 sprints over 1000m and 1100m respectively in Australia but then
suffered from travel sickness when sent to race in Britain and was retired to
stud.
He has produced 37
individual Group 1 winners.
The
Galileo-Fastnet Rock nick has already produced seven Group 1 winners.
New
Predator is the first son of stallion sensation New Approach to stand in
South Africa and is out of a winning Fastnet Rock mare.
New Approach was trained by ireland’s Jim Bolger and this
brilliant son of Galileo won all five of his starts as a two-year-old, all over
seven furlongs, including the Group 1 National Stakes at the Curragh and the
Group 1 Dewhurst at Newmarket.
As a three-year-old he was narrowly beaten by Henrythenavigator in
both the 2000 Guineas and Irish 2000 Guineas.
Just two weeks after the Irish 2000 Guineas he showed just how
tough he was by winning the Epsom Derby, despite having pulled in the early
stages.
He ran three times as a four-year-old, all over a mile and two
furlongs, starting off with a third place to the supreme Duke Of Marmalade in
the Juddmonte International.
In his second start he beat Traffic Guard, who is now an
underrated stallion at Summerhill Stud, by half-a-length in the Irish Champion
Stakes. He then beat Twice Over, sire of South Africa’s best current racehorse
Do It Again, by an incredible six lengths in the Champion Stakes at Newmarket
in record time. Third in the latter race was Linngari, who now stands in the
KZN Midlands at Rathmor Stud.
New Approach produced two classic winners in his first crop, the
brilliant 2000 Guineas winner Dawn Approach and the Epsom Oaks winner
Talent.
He has produced over 40 stakes winners including seven Group 1
winners, and among the latter is Epsom Derby winner Masar.
He became the first stallion to ever sire three Royal Ascot Group
stakes-winning juveniles in the same season.
Warwick Render, owner of Bush Hill Stud, said another advantage of
New predator’s pedigree is it allows him to be matched with any mare.
As a
racehorse, New Predator was all about speed and class and possessed a fine turn
of foot.
Trainer Johan Janse van Vuuren described him as a tremendously
athletic individual. However, he admitted to wrapping him in cotton wool to a
certain extent. He said given the luxury of more of his class he would no doubt
have targeted more Grade 1’s and reckoned the strongly built bay would have
picked one up on the way.
New Predator won the Grade 2 Drill Hall Stakes over 1400m as a
three-year-old, beating former Equus Horse Of The Year Legislate in the process
as well as Grade 1 winners of the like of The Conglomerate and Gold Onyx. In
his previous start he had finished third to twice Equus Horse Of The Year Legal
Eagle in the Grade 1 weight for age HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut Stakes over
1600m. Later, he finished fourth in the Grade 1 wfa Rising Sun Gold Challenge
over 1600m just two weeks after not staying the distance in the Grade 1 Daily
News 2000.
As a four-year-old New Predator won the Grade 2 Peermont Emperor’s
Palace Charity Mile and once again had a number of Grade 1 winners behind him,
including the Grade 1 wfa-winning miler Mac De Lago.
He later finished third in the Horse Chestnut Stakes again.
Janse van Vuuren was supremely confident before New Predator’s
participation in the Mercury Sprint over 1200m but unfortunately his powerful
finishing run came just too late and he had to be content with third place.
Janse van Vuuren was in fact gobsmacked he had lost such was his bullishness
that day.
New Predator is already receiving fine support and has about 60
mares booked. A number of them will be sent by his racing owner Laurence
Wernars, who has syndicated him and retains shares.
The chestnut Flying The Flag impressed all of Friday’s patrons
with his magnificent looks.
Mike de Kock rated him a Group 1 performer and has consequently
sent some of his own mares to him.
This son of Galileo is out of a Pivotal mare. He won a Group 3
over a mile and two furlongs at The Curragh as well as a race over the same
trip at Meydan in Dubai.
Render believes breeders have not taken enough advantage of
Redoute’s Promise, an magnificently-bred unraced horse. He is the first son of
Danehill’s sensational son Redoute’s Choice to stand in South Africa and is out
of Perfect Promise. The latter was the first SA-bred horse to win a Group 1 in
Australia and is a full-sister to another
Group 1 winner Irridescence. Redoute’s Choice is a twice Australian
Champion sire.
Alan Greef had six winners at Fairview yesterday, five of them ridden by Greg Cheyne, and in the exciting race for the national jockeys championship Muzi Yeni reduced the lead of Lyle Hewitson to two.
Greef repeated the recent feat of Paul Peter, who had six winners at the Vaal in one meeting, all ridden by Warren Kennedy.
Yeni rode the Duncan McKenzie-trained Bushy Park to victory in the last race.
Hewitson’s dry spell continued and he had another blank.
The lead which was ten winners at the beginning of last week is now down to two.
The two protagonists now head for Kenilworth tomorrow and there could be a thrilling conclusion at Greyville on Wednesday.
If they finish on an equal number of winners the title will be shared.
Aldo
Domeyer, having delighted his growing army of followers with a heavily
supported double at Kenilworth on Saturday, returns there tomorrow but sadly
that is all we are going to see of him for another year.
“I’m only
back here for a fortnight – really just to say hello – and then I must resume
riding work in Hong Kong,” he explains.
Such is the
Cape champion’s reputation after doing so well in his new base that all but one
of his six mounts on Saturday started either favourite or joint favourite. “He
has come back twice the jockey,” said an impressed Chris Snaith who has legged
up more world class riders over the years than most of us have had holidays.
Aldo Domeyer
The most
immediately noticeable difference in the new Domeyer is that he is now
race-riding from the off. No more just slotting into a position where he and
his horse feel comfortable and leaving the tactics until the straight. He now
works out beforehand where his mount should be and, without unnecessarily using
up the horse’s energy, makes sure he is there.
Sacred Arrow
in the Pinnacle was a case in point. “He went down to the start really well but
I felt it was imperative to switch him off – he probably wouldn’t find a kick
if I allowed him to run free.”
The
relentless driving of old is still there, and still with all the inevitability
of a metronome, and Sacred Arrow duly got up to justify Candice Bass-Robinson’s
selection – “Aldo asked me to give him one decent ride and I thought this was
my best runner of the day.”
Honey Pie,
Domeyer’s other winner, was for Justin Snaith and won by a staggering six
lengths. Go Jewel, ridden by Robert Khathi, initiated a stable double half an
hour earlier.
Getting the
better of Domeyer in a close finish has never been easy, doubly so now, yet
Anthony Andrews managed to do so on the Mike Stewart-trained top weight Icon
Princess in the 1 200m handicap despite dropping his rein. “I didn’t have
time to pick it up. If I’d taken a stride or two to gather up the rein I would
have lost the race.”
Andrews also
won the Tabonline.co.za Maiden Juvenile on Call Me Al, the first winner Mike
Robinson has trained for nuclear physicist Steph Steyn and his family.
It was
red-letter day for Tyrell Maharaj,19, who rode his first winner when making all
on the Paul Reeves-trained Moon Rock in the 1 200m handicap. Remarkably
the four-year-old won despite drifting across to the outside in the last two
furlongs. Penetrometer readings indicate that the ground was significantly
slower here than on the inside.
Binoche,
named by owner-breeders Craig and Michelle Davis after the French actress
Juliette Binoche of The English Patient fame, did them all proud by
scoring at the first attempt for Vaughan Marshall and Ossie Noach in the last.
Mncedi
Sigenu, universally known as Godfrey, is not a name that springs to mind in
work riders’ races but perhaps it should be. He has only had three rides this
season but he has won on two of them and seven-length scorer Outoftheordinary
was his second success for the Bass-Robinson stable.
The battle for the national jockey championship is not
lacking needle and it spilled over in the second at Greyville on Saturday. Muzi
Yeni finished the day four winners behind log leader Lyle Hewitson with four
meets left to the end of the season on Wednesday.
Muzi Yeni
The two came together repeatedly during the running of the
race with the stipendiary stewards taking a dim view of some unprofessional
riding by both jockeys. The official stipes report does not go into detail but
both riders will face an inquiry.
It all started at the 900m mark with Yeni’s mount Mr
Greenlight shifting out off the heels of Tommy Grand resulting in Mr Greenlight
and Hewitson’s mount, Moon In June, coming together. Yeni appeared to elbow
Hewiston who retaliated by forcing Mr Greenlight back in behind horses. The bland
report reads “…. bumping when racing in close proximity. An inquiry will be
opened into this incident.”
From here, Hewitson took his mount around runners but his
challenge was short-lived in the straight allowing Mr Greenlight to come back
at him with Yeni taking up his running forcing Hewitson it ease Moon In June
off the heels of Mr Greenlight. “At the 400m Moon In June was carried out and
was eased off the heels of Mr Greenlight. An inquiry will be opened into this
incident.”
Yeni then took his frustrations into the boardroom. “A
further inquiry will be held into jockey M Yeni’s conduct in the boardroom,”
concluded the report.
Both riders have been maintaining a punishing schedule in their hunt for winners and exhaustion must be a mitigating factor. Yeni will have ridden in over 1800 races this season for 212 winners while Hewitson has clocked up over 1500 races for his current tally of 216 winners.
Joey Ramsden landed the second eLan Gold Cup of
his career on Saturday and the keys besides training skills were jockey Nooresh
Juglall taking full advantage of his low draw of two and the tough four-year-old
filly responding obediently to his adept instructions.
Dynasty’s Blossom was not favoured by the
compressed handicap conditions of the race, as opposed to her last start in the
Gold Vase over 3000m, where she was well weighted.
However, it has been proven time and time again
in South African racing that weight in 3200m races is not the deciding factor.
Staying every inch of the trip and being tuned to the minute are just as
important and enjoying a good passage in the race is crucial.
The way it panned out for Juglall was the pole
opposite to the way it had happened just one race earlier on Ramsden’s charge
Double Alliance in the Grade 1 Premier’s Champion Stakes over 1600m. This Twice
Over gelding began pulling from a good draw of three and was then caught
without cover for a few strides, so his race was run before they turned for
home.
Dynasty’s Blossom (Candiese Marnewick)
Dynasty’s Blossom, on the other hand, relaxed
well from the off, even when she faced the breeze for the first 250m. Juglall
was then able to ease her on to the rail as the wider draw horses came across
to take up the running. She had thus found cover without any exertion
whatsoever.
She was much more relaxed in those first 250m
metres than the favourite Doublemint, who was quite strong on the bit until the
cover had come across.
Doublemint’s fancied stable companion Strathdon
began pulling before the first turn and it took him a while to settle after
that.
Another fancied horse, Shenanigans, found
himself trapped wide down the back straight and jockey Lyle Hewitson was forced
to go forward.
The second favourite Gimme One Night was crossed
by Dynasty’s Blossom 250m after the start, forcing him to ease, and he became
unsettled for a few strides. However, after that he settled well and can
have few excuses, so perhaps his pedigree, which is not as suitable for this
trip as Dynasty’s Blossom, was the telling factor. He had won a Listed race
over 3200m at Kenilworth in January, but that race was run at a canter for the
first kilometre.
Another horse who was in single figures in the
odds, the topweight Roy Had Enough, was a bit strong in the first 350m before
Piere Strydom expertly placed him one wide with cover in midfield. However,
Strydom sacrificed his good position at about the 11000m mark when deciding the
pace behind the leader Dark Moon Rising, who had gone few lengths clear, was
too slow. He inched his charge forward on the outside of horses. Roy Had Enough
stayed on well in the straight but the weight of 60kg told.
Strydom’s early move might have been necessary,
considering he was still beaten a head in the end by Dark Moon Rising, but it
also helped the horses who were further back. As it happened the first three
home all came from the back half of the field.
Juglall took full advantage of Strydom’s move
and made the race-winning decision at about the 900m mark. He switched outward
off the rail and got on to the back of the train which was beginning to chase
Dark Moon Rising.
Dynasty’s Blossom thus had momentum turning for
home and had plenty of fuel in the tank too due to the good passage she had
enjoyed.
She gave a tremendous kick and now just had to
stay. She also had to get through some traffic and once again Juglall’s
decision-making helped as he switched her a few horse widths inwards when passing
Roy Had Enough. This ensured the filly would not be hampered by the slowing
Dark Moon Rising.
Dynasty’s Blossom began to hang outward late in
the race but had done enough to beat Made To Conquer, who came from last, by
0,80 lengths.
Doublemint ran on well but his exertions in the
first 250m might well have caught up with him and he could only manage a 1,20
length third.
The pole position-drawn Al Bon Dubai, whom
Dynasty’s Blossom had sat behind for most of the journey, also enjoyed a good
passage but didn’t have the same momentum coming into the straight. He stayed
on well for a 1,80 length fourth.
The unlucky horse was no doubt Shenanigans.
Despite the poor trip he had. He still managed to battle on for a 2,05 length
fifth.
Dark Moon Rising also did remarkably well to
hold on for sixth, beaten 2,75 lengths, considering he led by about seven
lengths at one stage.
It was a peach of a ride by Juglall and another
fine training feat by Ramsden, whose expertise as a horseman will be sorely
missed if he does relocate to Singapore.
Juglall gave credit to four time-winning Gold
Cup jockey, Glen Hatt, for advising him how to ride the filly.
Hatt is the racing manager of Dynasty’s
Blossom’s part-owners Maine Chance Farms. Another part-owner is of high profile
in world racing, Mrs John Magnier, and the other part-owner is Jagessar Limited
(nominee Alan Cooper).
Dynasty’s Blossom was bred by Highlands Farm
Stud and Georgina Jaffee.
If lessons were to be learned by punters and
pundits it is that how a horse behaves in the first half of a race should be
studied just as much as it does in the closing stages. Pedigree analysis and an
attempt to calculate how the race will pan out for the first 1000m are also of
importance.
However, by the time the Gold Cup arrives next year these lessons will likely have been forgotten and the usual collateral form and weights will likely take precedence over all other predicting factors.
Justin Snaith, still basking in the glory of back-to-back
Vodacom Durban July wins with Do It Again, saddles three proven stayers in
tomorrow’s Gr3 eLan Gold Cup and although Do It Again will not emulate Space
Walk’s July and Gold Cup double some three decades back, he has other strings
to his bow.
Snaith has given Strathdon the somewhat dubious nick-name of
‘Matthew Lips’ after one of the NHA’s senior handicappers, pointing out that
Strathdon has not won a race for nearly two years, his last win coming in an
eight-horse race off a merit rating of 87. He now has a rating of 101 without
having won a race since, a situation that riles Snaith every time the subject
is brought up.
Doublemint (Candiese Marnewick)
Strathdon has paid for his consistency but stable rider
Richard Fourie has stuck with the gelding which speaks volumes.
Snaith was fairly bullish of Doublemint’s chances in the VDJ where he was heavily supported in the market, in from 28-1 to start 13-1 on the day. He was only four lengths back to Do It Again but runs like a horse that is looking for today’s trip and has a pedigree that suggests that he will be at home over the extra. In Anton Marcus he has a jockey who knows exactly what is required and this could be Snaith’s parting shot.
Frank Robinson has turned to currently Mauritius-based Piere
Strydom to partner top weight Roy Had Enough. The colt ran an excellent race in
the VDJ, beaten less than three lengths but it was possibly telling that
Marcus, who partnered the colt in the Track & Ball Derby, suggested the
Gold Cup rather than the July after that win.
With Track & Ball offering 5-1 and better the field there is plenty of opportunity and Brett Crawford is responsible for the 10-1 chance Gimme One Night who was a cracking second to Shenanigans in the Betting World 2200 on July day. Crawford has brought him on slowly leading into this event. He stays well, has a good draw and a handy weight which ticks many of the boxes.
There are plenty of others in with chances but Doublemint gets
the nod ahead of stable companion Strathdon with Gimme One Night having the
ideal prep.
One of the highlights of the afternoon will be the clash
between VDJ runner-up Rainbow Bridge and the progressive Buffalo Bill Cody in
the Gr1 Champions Cup.
Rainbow Bridge has done little wrong for Eric Sands except
win this winter and rounding off his season with a Gr1 victory would be
fitting.
With Hawwaam being scratched at the start of the VDJ,
punters were denied the opportunity of seeing possibly the country’s best
three-year-old perform against his elders but stable companion Buffalo Bill
Cody has only once tasted defeat and cruised to a comfortable victory over the
smart Cirilo in his only start this year.
Off the track for close on eight months with a virus is not
ideal but Mike de Kock is a master of his trade and the match-up between two
top horses is a mouth-watering prospect.
There are three other Gr1 races on the card, The Mercury
sprint possibly an Equus Award decider in the sprint category and the two Gr1’s
for Juveniles, the Premiers Champion Stakes and the Thekhwini Stakes for
fillies are both hotly contested affairs.
A win for recent Gr2 Golden Slipper winner Eden Roc will cement his place at the top of the pile for two-year-old males but the filly’s category is not cut-and-dried with many of the leading candidates having coffin draws next Saturday.
Aldo Domeyer is going to have a field day on his return at
Kenilworth on Saturday if the bookmakers are right. When the early prices were
posted yesterday five of Domeyer’s seven mounts were favourites and another was
second favourite.
The favourites comprise the Justin Snaith-trained newcomer
Peaceful Day (race 2) and stable companions Honey Pie (4) and Spirit Festival
(7), Andre Nel’s Round The Horn (8) and the Candice Bass-Robinson-trained
Sacred Arrow in the Pinnacle (5).
A spell in Hong Kong can improve a jockey quite considerably
and punters with long memories will recall how five years ago Karis Teetan
returned from his first stint there to win on seven of his 21 rides. Most of
the winners were so little fancied that all except the last of them started at
7-1 or more. Judging by Saturday’s prices the bookmakers have not forgotten
either!
His rowdy backers did not take the slightest bit of notice
of all the black looks as they bellowed home 36/1 chance Justfortheepenny in
the second at Hollywoodbets Scottsville yesterday. With only one behind him
turning for home, the volume gradually grew from a hopeful cry of “come on
Muzi” to a crescendo as Muzi Yeni drove the colt home to a commanding victory
for Nathan Kotzen and owner Rob Haswell who had brought along an enthusiastic entourage
to share in the moment.
Bred by his good friend Anton Procter, it was a sentimental
win for Haswell as the colt was named in honour of his late wife Penny who was
a pillar of ‘Maritzburg society and well known for her philanthropic work. A
strapping son of Just As Well, Justfortheepenny won with authority, showing a
sharp turn of foot which bodes well for his future.
Haswell is not one to shy away from a good punt and there
will have been a few sighs of relief around the betting shops as Cumulus played
second fiddle to Ultra Magnus in the seventh.
Linear (Candiese Marnewick)
But Haswell will have known his fate early, as Brett
Crawford’s runner put plenty of daylight between himself, Cumulus and the
opposition. Ultra Magnus has had his fair share of niggles but Zimbabwean Brian
Makwabarara, well known in racing circles here and north of the border, and
partner Graeme Hawkins have been patient and things are looking rosy.
Gareth van Zyl will have taken great satisfaction in Noble
Joshua’s victory in the Track & Ball Gaming Apprentice Handicap as Kabelo
Matsunyane got the often difficult gelding home ahead of another not so easy
ride, Legend.
“He is self-destructive,” confirmed Van Zyl. “He was
scratched at the start twice before but we have been working on him and he
seems to have got over that now.”
It was not an easy day for supporters of favourites and
Bella Ballarina got the ball rolling in the first, Yeni producing Yogas
Govender’s filly with a timely run to out-point the two more fancied rivals,
Talia Al Ghul and Katie’s Treasure. The latter appears to be another problem
child, Mark Khan mounting up only once the filly had been loaded.
Anton Marcus steadied the ship somewhat in the third as he
scored on the odds-on chance Arizona Silk to give Kotzen a quick double. Up
against winners at his last two, Arizona Silk franked the form of stable
companion Kayden’s Pride and the Mike de Kock runner Alibi Guy, both runners on
eLan Gold Cup day this Saturday.
Corinne Bestel has a small string but her runners appear to
have an affinity for Scottsville with Blaze Of Silk doing the honours under
apprentice Tejash Juglall in the fourth.
Serino Moodley made his trip to Scottsville for one ride
count as he steered Carmella home for Mike Miller in the fifth. The filly was
saddled by Craig Eudey. Eudey handed in his trainer’s brief earlier this year
but has now signed up with Miller in partnership, the two having known each
other for over 40 years.
Marsanne lost her unbeaten record in the Blinkers Bar Handicap
but this was her first outing on a firm turf track, her two wins both coming on
the poly, but she did well enough finishing a close-up third behind the
progressive Linnear trained by Lezeanne Forbes and less fancied stable
companion Wildly In Love.
It was a tough day at the office for visiting trainer Paul Peter who had a number of well fancied runners disappoint, but he did not go home empty handed with Corrido rounding off his afternoon.
By Andrew Harrison
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