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VDJ tote betting open

Totalisator betting for the 12 races being run at the 2019 Vodacom Durban July race meeting on Saturday, 6 July opens at all Tabgold outlets – and on all Tabgold online platforms – tomorrow, Monday 1 July,  and racing fans have many huge exotic pools to look forward to on the big day.

The Pick 6, which starts with Race 4, kicks off with a carry-over of R5-million and the pool is expected to reach a mammoth R15-million before the 1st Leg jumps at 13:35 on Saturday. Finding Pick 6 bankers in a very competitive environment is not easy but the Justin Snaith trained pair of Strathdon (Leg 1) and last season’s horse of the year Oh Susanna in the final leg, will be popular options.

The Quartet Pool on the Vodacom Durban July, Race 7 on the programme due off at 16:20, is expected to reach R16-million. The Quartet requires punters to pick the first four runners past the post and in the Vodacom Durban July most will be relying on the three leading contenders Do It Again, Rainbow Bridge and ruling favourite Hawwaam to help solve the puzzle. Over the years many an outsider has boosted the pay-out by finding its way into the Quartet and notable runners in this category include Twist of Fate, Doublemint, Eyes Wide Open and last year’s runner-up Made to Conquer. But, the Pick 6 and main race Quartet apart, there are many different bet types available – catering for both the seasoned punter and the “once-a-year” racegoer. Gold Circle is expecting turnover for the day to top the R60-million mark as “July Fever” kicks into top gear over the final week.

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Eyes Wide Open (Candiese Marnewick)

Hattinghs’ ready for the July

Prolific owner Hugo Hattingh is the type of racing personality this country needs more of as he loves horses and has a desire to grow the sport. Few would begrudge him and his family a win with the Glen Kotzen-trained Eyes Wide Open in the Vodacom Durban July on Saturday.

Hugo regards Eyes Wide Open as the best horse he has ever owned, better even than the like of Light The Lights and Gold Standard, although he admits to possibly being a touch biased.

The family race under the name Chrigor Stud and the Kotzen-trained Gold Standard was their first July runner last year.

Hugo said, “He also drew on the outside, but Eyes is suited to Greyville and Gold was probably not.”

Eyes Wide Open (Candiese Marnewick)
Eyes Wide Open (Candiese Marnewick)

Eyes Wide Open has run five times on the Greyville turf, including a win in the Grade 1 Premier’s Champion Stakes over 1600m as a two-year-old, a third in the Grade 1 Champions Cup as a three-year-old last year, and this season he has won the Grade 2 WSB 1900 and finished second in the Grade 3 Cup Trial. 

Kotzen was philosophical after he drew wide in barrier 18 and said at least he would be able to stay out of trouble, while there also looked to be a lot of pace around him.    

The Dynasty colt will sport the most colourful silks in the July.

Hattingh used to race under the name Triple H Trust, whose colours were royal blue with a yellow band and red sleeves and cap.

These three colours were the company colours of a business he owned called Anchorpharm.

Later when forming a set of silks for his wife Suzanne he used the same three colours but because of her love of diamonds the body is now alternate blue and yellow diamonds, the sleeves and cap are red and there is a blue diamond on the cap.

These are now the colours of Chrigor Stud. 

Hugo formed the name of the stud operation during a flight overseas by combining the names of his daughter Christil and son Gordon.

Hugo grew up on a farm in the Hartebeespoort area and hence his love of horses. His first experience of horseracing was as a jockey in bush meetings, where they raced on dirt tracks. That was in the 1960s and he said, “Very pleasant … those were the days!”

When he became too heavy he switched to gymkhana events and later took part in dressage.

He ventured into thoroughbred racehorse ownership in the late 1980s and said, “The breeding part to me has always been attractive, the bloodlines, the stallions and the broodmares and that’s also why we’ve registered Chrigor Stud now. I think we have more fillies and mares now than colts and geldings. At one stage Glen said we should call it Chrigor stallions but I don’t think that’s the drive going forward. At the end of the day it’s all about passion. We are trying to get the horseracing industry to grow and this is why I have my children very excited and involved.”

Christil is 27-years-old and Gordon 25. The enthusiasm of young racegoers like themselves has a knock on effect which will be vital for the future of the sport.

Suzanne has also become an avid horseracing fan.

Hugo and Suzanne live in Pretoria but Gordon lives in the Cape and that’s where the family keeps their horses.

He said, “I believe the Cape develops stronger horses through the South-Easter wind (the Cape Doctor), which cleans the air. The KZN season is also very close to our hearts. The pinnacle, as I see it, is the Cape and KZN seasons combined. I have the odd horse in Jo’burg with our first trainer Alec Laird, but obviously we have come a long way with Glen. Funnily enough Glen won the July ten years ago with Big City Life in 2009 and we met that year at a pre-J&B Met function. His Woodhill Racing Estate farm is a very relaxed environment and with me growing up on a farm the penny dropped.”

As an indication of the Hattingh family’s love of horses they departed the game for about five years due to the trauma they experienced when one of their best horses The Eiger Sanction broke a leg a week before the Gold Cup in 2004.

However, they have had many highs since their comeback. 

He continued “To win a big race is the pinnacle but a big motivation behind our operation is to breed a Group 1 winner. I think that is even more of a challenge.”

Gold Standard, who stands at Drakenstein Stud, became the Hattingh’s first stallion. Chrigor Stud has a ten percent share in him,

He added, “Obviously we would like Eyes to go to stud, but we are going to race him another year because he’s come so well.”

Hugo was on a hunting trip when Eyes Wide Open won the WSB 1900 and watching on TV recalls saying to his colleagues, “This is the first time in a very long time I have seen him go down so well.”

Eyes Wide Open is a big horse who takes a lot of racing, so will be at his peak on Saturday having had one more run in the Cup Trial and then rounding off his preparation with a fine July gallop last Thursday.

The former Cape Derby winner will be attempting to add a third Grade 1 to his CV and a July win will obviously increase his stud value.

He has a realistic chance under top jockey Warren Kennedy and if he does pull it off there are sure to be many joyous family embraces in the winner’s enclosure. 

By David Thiselton

Lyle Hewitson

Al Mutakawel will appreciate the trip

The Turffontein Standside course has a low key eight race meeting and the highlight will be the appearance of the promising Al Mutakawel is the fifth over 1600m.

This full brother to the SA Derby winner Al Sahem has impressed in two starts over 1200m and 1400m and will be hard to beat over a step up in trip he will very much appreciate. The wide draw of six out of seven should not pose a problem as he will likely be dropped out. In a small field and with plenty of time to unwind in to his big action down the long Turffontein straight he should mow them down. Apache Too is progressive and can fight out second place with The Rising Legend, who is usually dropped out and is capable of producing a resolute finish from off the pace.

Lyle Hewitson
Lyle Hewitson

The first race over 1160m is competitive but El Patron has good pace and the ability to stay on and his experience will count in his favour too.

Arabian Air is given the nod in the second over 1600m as he is having his third run on the Highveld so should have come on from his good win over 1450m last time. Approach Control is the best weighted horse and also has talent so it should be a humdinger.

The first leg of the P6 over 1400m is tough. Full Force should relish the step up in trip but a few will have to be included.

The first leg of the Jackpot could fall to the hard-knocking Captain Flynt, although his wide draw means one or two others might have to be considered.

The sixth over 1000m could be fought by Tripod and Brigtnumberten.

The consistent Kings Cup and the improving Lemon Drop Shot are the main protagonists in the seventh as both will enjoy the 2000m trip.

Final Occasion will enjoy the step up to 2000m in the eighth but he has a very wide draw so the professional maiden Smart Deal can be included from a good draw and Mr Cuddles is course and distance suited to.

Image: Lyle Hewitson rides Al Mutakawel at Turffontein this Sunday.

By David Thiselton

St Vladimir can give Crawford a first

The progressive St Vladimir can give Brett Crawford and Corne Orffer their first Winter Derby successes at Kenilworth tomorrow.

The Fort Wood colt won the East Cape Derby in convincing style and could well be going into this as the winner of five races on the bounce had he not been badly hampered when starting favourite at Durbanville.

Brett Crawford (Liesl King)
Brett Crawford (Liesl King)

The two concerns are his rating and the ground. He is officially 5kg inferior to Majestic Mozart and 4.5kg behind Herodotus who have both raced in better company. It was good to soft here on Tuesday and 3mm of rain was forecast for last night and today. The selection’s only run on anything softer than good was last August when he finished halfway down the field on yielding going – but it was his debut.

He was second favourite yesterday at around 3-1 with Majestic Mozart heading the market at 28-10. The latter is ridden by Bernard Fayd’Herbe who has won two of the last four runnings of this race while the favourite has won three of the last four.

Justin Snaith has won the last three – with horses of the calibre of Elusive Silver, African Night Sky and Doublemint. Nexus (11-2) has not been further than a mile yet the stable had no hesitation about nominating him for this race after his win 11 days ago.

Herodotus (33-10) was third in the Cape Derby and, as the betting suggests, is quite close with Majestic Mozart. Retro Effect is the only one of the 11 runners to have won on ground softer than good but he is rated 10kg behind the selection. At 16-1, though, he might be worth considering for a place.

Helen’s Ideal looks good to complete the fillies’ winter series in the Winter Oaks and is an understandable 17-10 favourite. She carries plenty of stable confidence with Paul Reeves reporting: “I don’t think I could have her any better and I don’t have a problem with the trip – she is bred for it, and in any case I don’t think they are going to go that fast because none of the others has been this far before.”

Star Fighter is the obvious danger at 22-10 as she was only a neck behind in the Stormsvlei Mile but Silver Operator stands out in the Langerman and he is one for whom there are no going concerns. It was yielding when he made that immensely impressive debut over the 1 400m trip three weeks ago.

By Michael Clower

Matador Man (Candiese Lenferna)

Tarry holds all the aces

Sean Tarry is a valued customer when it comes to KZN-bred horses and he often reaps the rewards on KZN Breeder’s day where his runners generally excel. Tarry targets this day of inflated stakes and won six of the nine races, including the Million Mile with Matador Man, back in 2017.

Matador Man is back over his favourite course and distance at Hollywoodbets Greyville tomorrow in an effort to regain his crown, and along with stable companion Africa Rising, gives Tarry a strong hand in the race.

Matador Man (Candiese Marnewick)
Matador Man (Candiese Marnewick)

With Do It Again playing up in the start of the Gr1 Rising Sun Gold Challenge, Matador Man was forced to stand in his gate for some time, Tarry commenting along the lines, “That will do for Matador Man. He will be slow to go.”

They were prophetic words as Matador Man ‘walked’ out of the gate and was never in the hunt.

The Million Mile field does not stack up to the strength of the Gold Challenge field and with Lyle Hewitson back in the irons, a reproduction of his penultimate start when comfortably accounting for Vodacom Durban July hopeful Head Honcho in a Pinnacle Stakes, he should take some beating.

Africa Rising comes off a tremendous effort behind stable companion Chimichuri Run in the Gr1 Tsogo Sun Sprint where he was beaten less than a length. The majority of his recent form has been over sprints but from a good draw he will give Matador Man a run for his money.

Camphoratus, was first reserve for next week’s Vodacom Durban July and with the scratching of Magnificent Seven, she has made it into the 18-horse field. As a result Robbie Hill has been given permission to scratch from the Mile.

Of the balance, evergreen Unagi pops up on occasion and with Marcus in the saddle must be respected along with Wynkelder who is an accomplished sprinter stepping up to a mile for just the second time.

Given the nature of the meeting, many of the runners are under sufferance in the handicap that should give punters an edge over the ‘Olde enemy’.

The first of the plums could come in the fourth, opening lg of the Pick 6 where top weight Vision To Kill should have the wood on her rivals. Paul Gadsby’s mare does not have the best of legs but she can get along a bit. She was a good third in the Gr1 SA Fillies Sprint behind Celtic Sea and Snowdance, either of which would be odds-on should they have been in this line-up.

Cumulus and Hard To Play are weighted to fight out the fifth, Hard To Play is marginally better off at the handicap but Cumulus is in receipt of 6kg from his rival and goes very well over course and distance. Hard To Play has earned his weight with some consistent form in useful company. These two look set to fight it out.

By Andrew Harrison

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

Bright future for Gold Circle and Hollywoodbets

Hollywoodbets and Gold Circle are delighted to announce a ground-breaking R10m – 3 year naming rights sponsorship of Greyville and Scottsville Racecourses hereafter to be named the Hollywoodbets Greyville Racecourse and Hollywoodbets Scottsville Racecourse. Whilst stadium sponsorship has become commonplace in other forms of sport in South Africa, this represents the first deal of its kind in the South African Horseracing Industry.

Gold Circle is part of a multi-faceted and integrated industry, organising thoroughbred horseracing events throughout KwaZulu-Natal and is now partnering with Hollywoodbets which is South Africa’s most dynamic bookmaker, offering the widest range of betting markets on Horseracing, Soccer, Lucky Numbers, and all other Sporting codes.

Hollywoodbets is proud of the contribution it has made to horseracing over the past years through their trainer and work-rider sponsorships, and the number of horses that run in the Hollywood Syndicate colours.

The collaboration between Hollywoodbets and Gold Circle will encourage other bookmakers and corporate brands to get involved in sponsoring the Sport of horseracing.

Hollywoodbets and Gold Circle look forward to working together in ensuring that KZN continues to be the ultimate racing destination in South Africa. Together we welcome the world to Hollywoodbets Greyville for the 123rd running of the Vodacom Durban July on Saturday 6th July 2019.

Hollywoodbets Greyville
Hollywoodbets Scottsville

Oh Susanna (Candiese Marnewick)

Oh Susanna can make the Province interesting

The reigning Equus Horse Of The Year Oh Susanna has been priced up at 12/10 by Track and Ball for the Grade 1 Jonsson Workwear Garden Province Stakes over 1600m to be run on Vodacom Durban July day having drawn well in three.

Her stablemate Snowdance was not as lucky and is drawn widest of all in barrier 14.

Trainer Justin Snaith said about them last week, “They are flying, Snowdance has just gone to another level. She needed the run in the SA Fillies Sprint. She was meant to be in a barrier trail before that but they cancelled it, so she never got to have her proper prep. She’s come on lengths from that race. Oh Susanna has come on for her Tibouchina win. She’s not a 1400m filly, she’s better over a mile. So I think the Garden Province is going to be very interesting.”

Oh Susanna was allowed to go to the front in the Tibouchina which favoured her as she is hard to catch once she winds up into her huge stride. This time the jockeys might not allow her to have her own way and the danger is she will begin racing too strongly if she does not reach the front. This will blunt her excellent turn of foot and punters might have to exercise caution.

Oh Susanna (Candiese Marnewick)
Oh Susanna (Candiese Marnewick)

Snowdance might have no option other than to go to the front from her wide draw. This might suit her as her best performances have been when allowed to stride freely behind a strong pace. In this race last year she started pulling in a handy position behind a slow pace and after showing her usual superb kick those over-racing antics then told as she was caught late after looking the winner. She showed she can settle well enough in front when leading in the KRA Fillies Last year. She was caught late in that race too but might well have needed it as it was her first run since winning the Majorca more than three months earlier.

Santa Clara showed a blistering turn of foot when winning the Grade 2 KRA Fillies Guineas at the first meeting of the SA Champions on May 3. She also showed fine gatespeed that night and was able to find the rail in front from a wide draw of ten and ended up in the box seat. If Oh Susanna does indeed go to the front Bernard Fayd’Herbe could get her into the box seat again with the same tactics.  

The Grade 1 SA Fillies Sprint winner Celtic Sea was unplaced in the KRA Fillies Guineas, but a line can be drawn through that race as it did not pan out at all well for her. She was caught one wide near the front without cover and did not settle.  She was drawn seven of 13 in that race and now has a better draw of six out of 14. If she does find a nice position she is capable of turning it on. She finished third in the Grade 2 Gauteng Fillies Guineas on the tough Turffontein Standside track so should get the easier Greyville 1600m.

The classy Front And Centre finished strongly in the KRA Fillies Guineas for second but has the problem of a wide draw. It is particularly problematic due to her tendency to hang inward, which might have cost her the Daily News 2000. This time she might have to be dropped right out and make a run down the inside. 

Vistula is an up and coming three-year-old who possesses a superb turn of foot. She is the dark horse and represents good each way value at 40/1 with Track and Ball, although her draw of nine is tricky.

Al Danza has her second start for the Dennis Drier yard, who are no strangers to winning this race. If able to recapture the form which saw her finish close seconds in both the Grade 1 Empress Club Stakes and Grade 2 Ipi Tombe Stakes she will be a runner, although she will have to overcome a wide draw, which as a handy sort will not be in her favour.

Temple Grafin stayed on well for third in the KRA Fillies Guineas from a handy position, but now has a wider draw. However, she came home strongly when dropped in from a wide draw in the Umzimkhulu Stakes over 1400m so is a contender if it pans out as well again.

Stablemate Elusive Heart ran a fine race in this event last year, coming from near the back to run third and she will be looking to repeat this feat from a similar draw of eleven.

Rose In Bloom is a talented horse with a good turn of foot and finished third to Snowdance in the Majorca last year, but the mile does probably stretch her.

Roy’s Riviera has a fine turn of foot and showed in the King’s Cup when just behind Dark Moon Rising and Matador Man that she enjoys a mile, although she has had a busy campaign.

The enigmatic Desert Rhythm won the Golden Slipper over 1400m here as a two-year-old two years ago and looks to be better over shorter than a mile.

Being Fabulous struck as a classy sort from day one but after becoming disappointing she flew home to win the Syringa Handicap over this trip in her penultimate start. However, on weight for age terms here she has a tough task.

Twice As Smart will appreciate the step up to 1600m and although outgunned at the weights on paper she does have close up form behind the like of Lady In Black and Camphoratus, so can’t be ignored.

By David Thiselton

Muzi Yeni (Nkosi Hlophe)

Muzi gives Barahin the thumbs up

Every serious punter in the country sat up and took note when Mike de Kock indicated on Winning Ways 17 days ago that Barahin had a better chance of winning this year’s Vodacom Durban July than the favourite.

Yet Hawwaam still heads the market at around 18-10 and, surprisingly, Barahin has hardly come down from the 7-1 at which he was available at the time of the James Goodman interview – but Muzi Yeni shares De Kock’s view about the horse’s chance and that he (Yeni) is the right man for the job.

“I’m at a prime age for a jockey (32) and over the years I have gained good experience of the July,” he says. “I know the dos and don’ts of the race, I can read the pace and how to understand how the track is running. Also I know my way round Greyville and all this will allow me to ride the horse accordingly and to the horse’s strengths.”

Muzi Yeni (Nkosi Hlophe)
Muzi Yeni

Greyville, apparently, is difficult and the July makes it more so: “It’s tight and in the July they tend to go fast early before slowing it down and then turning it into more of a sprint.”

Yeni has had a long association with De Kock, starting with his first winner Storm King and including Solo Traveller who finished fifth in Mike Rattray’s colours – less than a length and a half behind Pomodoro, seven years ago.

Yeni believes he could have won that year. “Solo Traveller was the best chance I’ve had so far but listening to other jockeys who had ridden him gave me the wrong idea and may well have cost me the race. Mine was the fastest 400m to the finish and, if I’d had him closer and in a better position, he would have gone very near.”

He has yet to ride Barahin in a race but this time he has put a lot of concentration into sussing the horse out for himself rather than consulting those who have partnered him in public. “I have worked him and I found him a bit of a lazy horse, the sort who will do better and give you more on a raceday.”

Yeni has also studied the horse’s racecourse performances – “He is reasonably straightforward. He doesn’t show a lot of pace in the early stages and I don’t think he is a horse that likes to be bustled so I am going to allow him to find his feet and get into the race at his own rhythm.

“My draw (6) will help as I am with fancied horses who run similar to the way he does which is coming from mid-field, or a little bit further back, so I will have my dangers around me.”

Yeni has had six previous July rides and did best on his first, Thundering Jet, who finished fourth to Big City Life in 2009. Happy Valley was fifth to Bold Silvano 12 months later but eighth is the closest he has come in three subsequent rides. 

He has put a phenomenal amount of effort into trying to win the championship this season. Which would he rather win, that or the July? He grins and shakes his head. “I am not fussed – just one of them would be fantastic.”

You have to go back to Hunting Tower in 2007 to find the winner starting from gate six and, curiously, the high numbers have proved best in recent runnings. Indeed in the last nine years the winner has only twice come from a single figure pen. The winners were drawn 10 (2009), 2, 10,20,11,11,18,8, 15 (2018).

During this nine-year period four-year-olds won the race three times and three-year-olds on all the other six occasions thus supporting the long-held view that the one to go for is an improving three-year-old – like Hawwaam or Barahin.

By Michael Clower

Jack's Bird (Candiese Marnewick)

American Indian counts coup

Stuart Pettigrew seldom leaves for home without drawing some blood and it was no different at Hollywoodbets Greyville yesterday as American Indian continued his good form with a fluent victory in the fifth.

Apprentice Luke Ferraris – who unfortunately will miss out on the Vodacom Durban July with his mount Magnificent Seven being scratched yesterday – had something of an armchair ride as he went clear a long way out. He was chased home by the luckless Silva’s Bullet who must surely have a change of luck soon.

Jack's Bird (Candiese Marnewick)
Jack’s Bird (Candiese Marnewick)

The scratching of Magnificent Seven left the way clear for the filly Camphorates. Robbie Hill has her entered for the KZN Million Mile this Saturday and it will be interesting to see whether he scratches from this Saturday or next Saturday or races the Gr1 Empress Club winner in both.

Hill was in the winner’s box as Hey Jude motored home in the fourth. Bernard Fayd’Herbe was hard at work on favourite Isikhwami Sami a long way out and just when it looked as if his vigorous efforts had paid off, Anton Marcus arrived with a wet sail, Hey Jude rattling home under hands and heels.

Point Of Sale looked to be the right horse in the opening leg of the Pick 6 but she found one too good for her in Jack’s Bird. Well handled by apprentice Ashton Arries, Jack’s Bird flew home to collar Point Of Sale with the balance well beaten.

Michael Roberts has high hopes for the filly that was part of the groom’s cooperative at Cheveley Stud and bought for R175k.

Apprentice Jason Gates rounded off the day with a double and will next step out claiming 1.5kg. It was a welcome change for Lowan Denysschen as Eternal Words put plenty of daylight between herself and favourite Kilvington.

Gates was on the mark again, this time for Brett Crawford with Oloye revelling in the switch back to poly.

Dons Assembly, an entry for the Super Sale at Greyville next week, scored a timely win in the second for Dean Kannemeyer. Badly hampered at his last start, Dons Assembly made short work of his opposition. “He’s on the market,” concluded Kannemeyer.

By Andrew Harrison

Barahin (Candiese Marnewick)

Barahin gets a plum draw

Muzi Yeni was delighted to find, soon after his arrival at Kenilworth yesterday, that Barahin had collected one of the plum draws.

He said: “Six is a very good draw and I appreciate getting it, particularly as I am drawn among the fancied horses like Rainbow Bridge (4) and Hawwaam (3) while I have Richard Fourie on Do It Again on my outside at ten.”

Barahin
Barahin (Candiese Marnewick)

Barahin will be Yeni’s seventh July ride whereas Keagan de Melo on Head Honcho will be riding in the great race for only the second time. He had mixed views about picking up slot 19 and said: “It’s not a good thing but on a front-runner it’s not a bad one either. I am just going to have to make my own luck.”

Doublemint, one of Justin Snaith’s five-strong armada, will be July ride number six for Corne Orffer who said: “Twelve is better than 18 but I would have preferred eight (the draw of Magnificent Seven) but I am going to make the best of it.”

Last year’s winner Do It Again is the ninth in the July for Richard Fourie who won on Legislate (drawn 11) five years ago. “Ten is brilliant,” he said. “I prefer being drawn out a little because the inside is a big tussle.”

Lesedi La Rona, for whom great hopes were held this season after she won her only two starts last term including the Perfect Promise, finally returned to form with a comfortable success under Lyle Hewitson in the Pinnacle Stakes and looks set to stay in training as a four-year-old.

Mark Bass, representing sister, Candice, said: “We thought very highly of her but she injured herself in the Diana Stakes when she pulled muscles quite badly. We sent her back to Drakenstein but in her last start she choked so we fitted a tongue tie here.”

Kevin Sommerville, Gaynor Rupert’s racing manager, said: “We will sit down and discuss things but it’s likely that she will stay in training. There are some nice black type races for four-year-olds over today’s sort of trip.”

By Michael Clower