Candice Bass-Robinson is to try again with her three fillies
who failed to run up to form in the Allan Robertson at Scottsville and step
them up to 1 400m in the Grade 2 Golden Slipper at Greyville on Vodacom
Durban July day.
Roll In The Hay fared best of the trio in sixth but Vandah’s
Spirit started joint second favourite and finished with only four behind her –
she was reported by the course vet to be not striding out on her right fore –
and Miss Honey finished last of 16, coming back with abrasions on her left
fore.
Freedom Charter (Candiese Marnewick)
Their trainer said: “It was a very rough race and Roll In
The Hay suffered traffic problems four times over – she would have gone close
otherwise. Vandah’s Spirit was hampered against the fence and didn’t enjoy the
race at all while Miss Honey reared up in the pens, put her leg over the gate
and got a cut on her knee.”
Little went right for the stable that day. Freedom Charter
(tenth in the SA Fillies Sprint) suffered an epistaxis and was suspended for 60
days while Dutch Philip finished last but one in the Tsogo Sun Sprint.
Mrs Bass-Robinson said: “It was a disastrous day and very
frustrating. Freedom Charter might run again at the end of the season,
otherwise she will go to stud, while Dutch Philip has rather lost his way. He
didn’t enjoy Scottsville and he will probably go and race in Port Elizabeth.”
The Milnerton trainer has her own yard adjoining Summerveld
and with Marinaresco three years ago she went down in racing history as the
first woman to train a July winner and, in all probability, the first to win
the country’s greatest race in her first season. This term she has had more
Cape Town two-year-old wins (13) than any trainer with the exception of Justin
Snaith (14).
The Vaal stages a low key nine race card
tomorrow but there look to be opportunities for both on the nose and exotic
punters.
In the eighth race, an Assessment Plate over 1400m,
Running Brave looks to be a ready made banker. She is well in at the weights
here and this is an ideal trip. The only concern is she might just need the run
having likely been freshened up after a busy campaign. Cordillera, who has two
wins and a narrow second to her name over this trip, is one of the dangers.
Afrostar could also be a big danger as a scopey horse who is having her third
run after a layoff over a step up in trip she will relish. She is a good
looking filly and will likely be going places. However, a chance is taken and
the nuggety Running Brave is made a banker in all bets.
Devin Habib
In the first leg of the PA over 1800m Moroccan
Flame is a typically big and rangy daughter of Ideal World who failed on the
head bob over 1450m on debut. She should relish the step up to this trip and
can make amends from a good draw of two. It might be worth including Vijeta,
who is drawn well and flew from last when stepped up to 1700m last time and
being by Duke Of Marmalade she should also be improving continuously.
The first leg of the Pick 6 is an Assessment
Plate over 1000m and Gimme A Wave has plenty of substance and struck as a nice
type from day one. Last time out over 1200m he moved up well to hit the front
against a decent field but was then run out of it. He was not disgraced
finishing just 5,50 lengths in third behind the well regarded former Cape horse
Crown Guardian. He should relish the step down to 1000m on the evidence of that
race and is the one to beat. Big Blue Marble is well regarded and little went
right in his Highveld comeback run last time out after a Cape Summer campaign.
He must be respected and so must the well regarded Royal Cavalier, who has
always struck as one who is better than his current mid-sixties merit rating
suggests. He did well in first time blinkers last time and could be a threat to
the two aforementioned three-year-olds.
In the first leg of the Pick 6 Romi’s Boy has a
record of one win and two seconds over this 1200m course and distance. He
has been competitive off a 106 mark and now drops one point to 105 so should be
in the shake up in his third run after a layoff. Angel’s Power has a fine
record over this course and distance and off a mark three points higher than
his last win he is also a contender. The classy Monopolize returned from a rest
to win over the sharper than ideal 1000m last time and he can follow up over
this more suitable trip. Billy Silver is talented and is coming to hand. Danza
disappointed last time but should go close if repeating his penultimate start
where he was a touch unlucky.
In the sixth race over 1200m, an apprentice
handicap, the talented Bockscar bounced back to his best last time and can
continue fulfilling his potential off a three point higher mark. Casual Wear is
a quick filly who might find this further than ideal but in the prevailing fast
conditions she could be a threat. The in form Moon Warrior has to be included,
especially as 4kg claiming apprentice Juglall knows him well. Written In Stone
disappointed first time out the maidens but is much better than that and could
be an outsider to consider here. Mount Keith has been back in form and
Brigtnumberten is another quick 1000m type who could be dangerous in the fast
going.
In the seventh race over 1200m What A Poet had
been selected as the value bet of the day. Last time out he caught the eye
taking a strong hold over 1400m and just found no extra late. He could well
appreciate the step down to 1200m and he has Gavin Lerena up. However, it a lot
will depend on whether the number one draw is disadvantageous on the day, as it
can sometimes be. The suggestion is to go as wide as possible in this race.
The last race over 1500m is an apprentice
handicap and the topweight Florida Quays makes most appeal as a hard-knocking
sort running over a suitable trip. Tsitsikamma Bush can go close if repeating
his penultimate start over 1400m. Shortstop stayed on well last time over
this trip. Manhattan Cocktail, Supa Mufti and Visigoth are other to consider
for the Pick 6.
Track And Ball yesterday cut Do It Again from 5-1 to 3.85-1
clear second favourite for the Vodacom Durban July. Hawwaam still heads the
market but he has been eased from 16-10 to 2.1-1 while Rainbow Bridge is out
from 5.25-1 to 6.25-1. Other major layers have done much the same although
at least one is still offering 5-1 about Do It Again
Punters are now weighing up whether to take advantage or
whether to wait, and indeed whether Do It Again’s chances three weeks on
Saturday have actually improved as a result of Saturday’s performance. History
is all against last year’s winner and there is more to it than simply no horse
succeeding in winning the country’s greatest race twice since El Picha at the
turn of the century.
In truth, the Rising Sun Gold Challenge has been a poor
guide to the July. Since Flaming Rock won both races back in 1991 only one
horse has won the Gold Challenge and the July in the same season and that was
the dead-heater Dancer’s Daughter 11 years ago. Possibly significantly
both horses were trained by a Snaith. But in addition the July winner has not
even run in the Gold Challenge in nine of the last ten seasons.
Do It Again will need to overcome the dreaded
second-run-after-a-rest syndrome and apparently also temperament problems
that were revealed for the first time on Saturday – Justin Snaith: “I was very
nervous. We had a few hiccups in the parade ring and I could see his head was
starting to turn. He was getting annoyed.” Snaith had even taken the
precaution of flying in the famous horse whisperer Malan du Toit from Cape Town
(“and thank goodness we did”).
And those whose price has lengthened? Well, Rainbow Bridge
would surely not have been beaten anything like the official length and
three-quarters had Anton Marcus not been forced to switch as he was making his
run while the supremely talented shadow of Hawwaam hovers over the race like a
colossus. His price will surely shorten if Mike de Kock is given the green
light.
Armando may have run his last race in South Africa. When
Brett Crawford trained Elusive Gold for a Tony Millard client the horse stayed
here until he had won the Cape Guineas but Crawford, after watching the
Lammerskraal-bred What A Winter colt put up a performance in the Cape Of Good
Hope Nursery that had Guineas written all over it, expressed doubts about
history repeating itself.
He said: “I am waiting to hear from Tony and Mr Ng but, now
that Armando has proved that he is Group winner, it’s more than likely he will
get going for Hong Kong.”
Understandable – that is what he was bought for – but he won
as if he could put the Cape Nursery a bit more on the classic map and Bernard
Fayd’Herbe was impressed, saying: “He won a gutsy race. The horse of Vaughan
Marshall’s (Fearless Warrior) is decent. I picked him up about the 300 and I
thought I would have him quite easily but he went on again.”
Armando (Liesl King)
By this stage Fayd’Herbe was in the sort of inspired form
that does not countenance defeat. His five-timer embraced the last four races
and he had already landed the Kenilworth Fillies Nursery on 61-20 shot Cousin
Liz who also had a Marshall-M.J. Byleveld fancy as her principal victim.
“I knew it was going to be hard to hunt down Mirage (the
22-10 favourite) because M.J. had a length and a half on me,” Fayd’Herbe
related. “Mine got tired in the last bit but she is a smart filly, a sprinter.”
Candice Bass-Robinson, who has now won half the six runnings
of these two nurseries in the three seasons she has been training, is
optimistic that the Captain Al filly will get further. “I am sure she will try
a mile and I hope she will get it but she does have a lot of speed.”
The situation is complicated – and clouded – by soundness
issues. “She has a knee problem. It was tough getting her here today and I
couldn’t get a run into her.”
Marshall and his jockey might have suffered Group reverses
but they unleashed a good’un in the first In Silver Operator who had the
bookies running for cover – he was backed from 9-1 to 11-10 – and came away
from a furlong out to score by three and a half impressive lengths.
“You can see from the betting that we did fancy him,”
confirmed Marshall’s assistant Adele Alsop. “This is a super, super colt.”
Byleveld added: “His work was magnificent and I thought it
would take a very good horse to come and fetch him. It’s early days yet but he
is something to look forward to.”
Greg Cheyne was the only other jockey to get a look-in, deputising for the sidelined Donovan Dillon on the Geoff Woodruff-trained last gasp winner Retro Effect and following up on Sacred Arrow who initiated a Bass-Robinson double in the Tellytrack.com Handicap.
The Mike de Kock-trained Gimmethegreenlight colt Barahin booked his place in the Vodacom Durban July yesterday when storming home under Anton Marcus to win the Grade 3 Jubilee Handicap over 1800m at Turffontein Standside.
The classy and laid back three-year-old was
coming off a rest and “a bit of an injury” and seemed to be battling
to find extra at the 400m having made some ground up from second last in the
running.
However, Marcus continued to ride him and he
steadily built up a head of steam until it was clear he was going to get there
after all.
He charged into the lead with about 100m to go
and held off Shenenigans, who also ran on well from behind, to win by a length.
Captain And Master was third followed by The Dazzler and Soldier On.
The De Kock yard had a fantastic day, notching
up a four-time, three of them ridden by Marcus.
The first race was a competitive event over 1400m with some decent types involved and the Ashley Fortune-trained two-year-old Twice Over colt Invidia might be on his way to run in the Grade 2 Golden Horseshoe over 1400m on Vodacom Durban July day after an impressive win under Muzi Yeni.
The Grade 3 Jubilee Handicap over 1800m at
Turffontein Standside on Sunday is a traditional pointer to the Vodacom Durban
July and there will be a few horses involved either having preparation runs or
trying to impress the selection panellists.
Barahin, who finished second to Hawwaam in the
Grade 1 SA Classic over this course and distance, was 15th on the second July
log but will want a good run here to cement his place. De Kock thinks highly of
this Gimmethegreenlight colt who defeated Soqrat in the Grade 2 Golden
Horseshoe over 1400m at Greyville as a two-year-old. He jumps from a wide draw,
eleven out of 12, but he has Anton Marcus aboard and a wide draw did not stop
him finishing third behind National Park and Hawwaam in the Grade 2 Gauteng
Guineas. This is a less inspiring field and he looks capable of rising above
his current 108 merit rating so should do well in this handicap.
Hero’s Honour won the Grade 1 SA Derby last year
and ran a good third over this trip last time. He was drawn widest of all in
that race and ran on strongly from off the pace for a decent third. He now has
draw seven of 12, which should make it slightly easier, and he is 2kg better
off with Infamous Fox for a 3,30 length beating. He was 14th on the last July
log so will also be looking to cement his place.
Mike de Kock
Infamous Fox has some class and goes well for MJ
Byleveld. The Cape Town-based jockey flies up for the ride again. Last time the
Australian-bred by Foxwedge relished the step up to this trip and stormed home
from a handy position to win easily. He has a tricky draw of eight now and has
a four point merit rating raise to contend with but having possibly found his
right distance he could follow up.
The Dazzler will be trying to get into the July
as he was on the outside looking in on the last log. He was running on last
time to be beaten just 0,70 lengths by Hero’s Honour, but he did not have much
room and could have done better. He is half-a-kilogram better off with Hero’s
Honour and is drawn well so has a shout.
Soldier On has talent and won
going away over 1600m last time, so could get this trip, although he does have
a three point raise to contend with.
Shenanigans was running on well in the
aforementioned race won by Infamous Fox and he should relish the switch to the
Standside course.
Sean Tarry regarded him as the best of his three
runners here, although he is 2kg under sufferance.
Tarry will be trying new hold up tactics with
Captain And Master, who could possibly need gelding as he has been
disappointing.
Banner Hill has talent and just needed his last
start following a long break. He is still among the July entries so will be
going all out. He is a big horse so that last run would have bought him on
plenty and as a rangy horse he will relish the switch to the Standside track.
Flying Fable is another talented horse and she
can rise above her current merit rating of 91. She should also enjoy the course
and distance as she has been seen to run on over a mile. However, it is never
easy against the boys.
Being Fabulous is 2kg under sufferance so it
won’t be easy, but she did find a form return last time with second time
blinkers and a tongue tie on, so could now begin to fulfil the potential she
always had.
Arctica was just 2,10 lengths back in the Summer
Cup. He is two points lower in the merit ratings now, so has a shout, although
this is his second run after a layoff.
Royal Italian was finding no extra last time
over this trip but did not have a great trip, so from pole position he could
find cover and possibly stay the distance this time. However, he is 5kg under
sufferance so it won’t be easy.
The selection is Barahin to
beat Hero’s Honour with Infamous Fox, The Dazzler and Soldier On next
best.
An earlier Pinnacle Stakes
event over 1400m will be interesting as a number of July horses warm up for the
big one, including Legal Eagle.
Armando can stretch his unbeaten run to three by confirming
Somerset form with Captain Tatters, Ground Control and Fearless Warrior in the
Cape Of Good Hope Nursery at Kenilworth tomorrow.
Brett Crawford considered his colt good enough to go to
Scottsville for the Gold Medallion and it was only the horse’s long term future
– he is to race in Hong Kong – that kept him at home.
Armando (Liesl King)
True, he only has a length to spare on the book but he would
have won by further five weeks ago had he not hung fire for a few seconds when
pulled out to go and win his race. Corne Orffer said at the time that
this was because he had never been to Kenilworth before and was having a look
at what was in front of him. When he did accelerate he quickened like a good’un
and he opened favourite at 12-10 with Track And Ball yesterday morning.
Fearless Warrior (13-2) was well beaten that day but he has
won well since and Vaughan Marshall said that the reason for the below-par run
was because the race did not go according to plan. It would be unwise to
underestimate M.J. Byleveld’s mount, not least because Marshall has won three
of the last 13 runnings.
Candice Bass-Robinson, bidding for her third consecutive
Cape Nursery following Dutch Philip and the filly Clouds Unfold, runs the wide
margin Durbanville winners Snow Report (11-2) and Three Two Charlie (8-1).
Durbanville form is not Kenilworth but either could make the frame.
However stable companion Cousin Liz can gallop straight into
the winner’s box in the Kenilworth Fillies Nursery despite not having raced for
four months. When she won at odds-on on debut, beating four subsequent winners,
Aldo Domeyer described her as “the real deal” and her trainer said she would
put her away as she didn’t want to risk her getting too hot.
Bernard Fayd’Herbe takes over and his mount is joint
favourite at 2.65-1. Also heading the market is Marshall’s Mirage who was well
supported when winning on debut in mid-April. In the Perfect Promise Amy
Johnson (third to Mirage) just got up to pip Drama Queen who had been beaten
nearly three lengths when fourth to Cousin Liz.
But beware. This race has more often than not produced a
major upset in recent years. Although the favourite has won half the past ten
runnings, only once has she been successful in the last four and two of the
three most recent winners started at 45-1 and 28-1.
If you are looking for a longshot you could do worse than
15-1 chance Queen Of Quiet who finished like a certain future winner on debut.
There were a lot of locals miffed at Mike de Kock referring
to Greyville as a ‘go-cart’ track after Soqrat finished up fourth in the KRA
Guineas but it was a performance way below what the Australian import is
capable off and he did have excuses. A wide draw over the Greyville 1600m is
always a concern but Santa Clara had shown in the KRA Fillies Guineas, a
half-hour before, that it is not an unsurmountable obstacle.
However, one does need the cards to fall in your favour in a
competitive race and Randal Simons’ decision to slot in behind and ending up
way out of his ground instead of pushing forward from the draw may have cost
him.
Whatever; you commit early and take your medicine.
Soqrat has a plum draw of four in the Gr1 Rising Sun Gold
Challenge over the same course and distance tomorrow and victory will almost
certainly see him garner an Equus award come season’s end.
Soqrat (Candiese Marnewick)
Soqrat showed tremendous courage when fighting off the challenge
of Cirillo in the Gr1 HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut Stakes and the Gr1 Cape
Guineas winner was less than a length back to Do It Again in the Gr1 L’Ormarins
Queens Plate, both races against older opposition.
He faces a similar task tomorrow in the face of what has
stacked up into the strongest Rising Sun Gold Challenge field seen in the past
decade.
Do It Again is again in opposition but this will be his
first outing back since finishing second in the Sun Met at the end of January
and although Justin Snaith has expressed confidence that his charge is close to
his best, he will need to be sharp to win a race of this nature off a break.
Rainbow Bridge had to bend his knee to Do It Again in the
Queens Plate but the favour was returned in the Sun Met, although Richard
Fourie copped a fair amount of criticism for his handling of Do It Again.
This time around Rainbow Bridge has had a superb blow-out in
the Drill Hall Stakes when under a length back to class act Undercover Agent
and over the extra furlong, Eric Sands will be looking to turn the tables, or
at least a sharp showing in the gelding’s build-up to the Vodacom Durban July.
Anton Marcus will be in the saddle for Rainbow Bridge and he
was also aboard the gelding’s half-brother, and ruling VDJ ante-post favourite,
Hawwaam, in the Gr1 Daily News 2000 last week.
Quizzed on who is likely to ride Hawwaam in the July, Mike
de Kock was non-committal. “Speak to the king,” he shrugged. “He has a few
balls in the air.”
The picture might be clearer come tomorrow evening.
But of the eight runners, New Caledonia can be regarded as
the least likely winner with Cirillo, Lady In Black and course and distance
specialist Matador Man all in the mix.
It should be a cracking race, possibly more a tactical
battle than an out-and-out slog.
What could develop into a slog is the Gr3 Cup Trial, the
traditional ‘last chance saloon’ for those hoping to make the July field. The
last Vodacom Durban July log has pretty much cemented places for Eyes Wide Open
(10) and Made To Conquer (11) on the
list but Doublemint (17) is marginal and will be up against Roy Had Enough,
Dark Moon Rising and Run Red, all still in the hunt for a place in the big
race.
So, taking desperation into account, Doublemint may prove to
be the safest bet but the trio of VDJ outsiders will be pressing hard.
Also, on the outside and looking in is Camphoratus, who
takes on Oh Susanna in the Gr3 Tibouchina Stakes a half-hour later. First
reserve on the VDJ log, she beat Oh Susanna in the Gr1 Empress Club Stakes in
what was a major upset, but she followed up with a smart effort in the WSB
1900, finishing a length back to Eyes Wide Open. The seven-furlong Tibouchina
is arguably on the short side but the 2200m of the VDJ may also prove beyond
her compass which could sway the VDJ selection panel.
So it boils down to victory or bust for Robbie and Shannon
Hill’s filly where Oh Susanna is rated some 6.5kg superior.
The three KZN Winter Series races, all long handicaps, will
keep punters on their toes and with a number of exotic bet carryovers in the
offing, there will be some tempting odds available.
Brett Crawford’s Somerset winner is quoted at 9-10 with the early layers and Bernard Fayd’Herbe takes over from the Gold Challenge-required Corne Orffer. Captain Tatters, who has a length to find but whose trainer Justin Snaith has a good record in the race, is second favourite at 4-1.
Vaughan Marshall, like Snaith bidding for his fourth Cape
Nursery success in 15 seasons, is doubly represented with 11-2 chance Fearless
Warrior (M.J. Byleveld) and 7-1 shot Ground Control for whom Greg Cheyne
has been booked.
The Marshall-trained Mirage, a well-backed winner of
her only start, is 5-2 favourite for the Kenilworth Fillies Nursery with Cousin
Liz next at 3-1 despite not having raced since her debut win four months ago.
Mike de Kock said Soqrat
had been doing very well up at Randjesfontein and would arrive at Summerveld
today (Thursday) ahead of his engagement in the Grade 1 Rising Sun Gold
Challenge.
De Kock said, “He was
very unlucky in that last race from the wide draw and on how the race panned
out, if you see how the horse next to him pushed him outward from the start.”
Randall Simons will be
aboard Soqrat, who jumps from a good draw of four in the eight horse
field.
De Kock recognised the
strength of the field but still gave Soqrat, a three-time Grade 1-winning
miler, a good chance of winning.
He has two runners in
the Listed Gatecrasher Stakes over 1400m, Ehsaan and Alramz.
Both have decent form
and he gave both of them a chance of winning too.
Anton Marcus is aboard
Alramz from draw three and Simons rides Ehsaan from pole position.
By David Thiselton
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