Captain Of Stealth (Liesl King)

Captain Of Stealth flies to victory

A third successive Langerman winner for Vaughan Marshall? And could this be yet another Captain Al-sired Cape Guineas winner for him?

Doubtless the Milnerton trainer will be throwing up his hands in horror at such chicken-counting predictions but Captain Of Stealth again delivered the goods like Pegasus incarnate in the opener at Durbanville on Saturday.

Starting almost unbackable at 1-3, he was nudged into the lead almost from the off and 400m out he was asked to quicken. He was then shown the whip to make sure he got the message and, when MJ Byleveld looked back it was almost as if he himself couldn’t believe it. Twice more he turned his head round while his mount coasted home six lengths to the good.

Captain Of Stealth (Liesl King)
Captain Of Stealth (Liesl King)

“He was giving weight to two of the others and you are always seeing horses getting beaten when they do this,” he said, explaining why he kept looking round. “I know it’s early days yet but I think this horse is special. He is very good and his big asset is his speed.”

Marshall added: “You are always a bit worried that the first run might have been a fluke but his work at home has been phenomenal and this is what I expected. He is very good. We will see how he comes out of this but the Langerman is at the end of June and we will see how we go.”

The winner’s task was undoubtedly made a bit easier by the enforced withdrawal of Minnesota Dream but beating two previous winners by six lengths easing up takes some doing, and this is an exciting prospect even if he does not look the most straightforward of rides. On the way to the start he veered right instead of left at the bend past the stands and refused to stop until he had taken his jockey almost back into the parade ring.

Owner Pat Firestone sported a tie in his yellow and blue colours and his partner in the horse, John Habib, took things a colourful stage further with a shirt to match! “We are thrilled that the Captain came back and won so easily again,” said Firestone. “We have a lot to look forward to and we are very excited.”

Bernard Fayd’Herbe’s enforced absence cost him a winner on Celestial Storm in the next (Corne Orffer deputised) and possibly another on Lip Service. Keagan de Melo replaced him in the fillies maiden, had trouble securing a clear run and was only beaten a fast-dwindling three-quarters of a length by Bella Summer.

De Melo had some compensation on the Dean Kannemeyer-trained Var’s Boy while Justin Snaith, out of luck with Oh Susanna at Turffontein, struck with Jailhouse Rock and What A Red.

By Michael Clower

Fayd’Herbe escapes injury

Bernard Fayd’Herbe was lucky to escape serious injury when Minnesota Dream took fright in the pens for the opening juvenile plate at Durbanville on Saturday.

Viewers, both on TV and at the racecourse, looked on in horror as the gelding repeatedly bounced himself from one side to the other, crashing violently against the metal framework, before Fayd’Herbe reached up to the stanchions above him and pulled himself clear of danger.

Bernard Fayd'Herbe (Liesl King)
Bernard Fayd’Herbe (Liesl King)

The jockey, who had arrived back from Dubai less than two hours before the race, was stood down on medical advice for one race after another before going off to hospital for x-rays with a suspected broken foot.

However he reported yesterday: “Fortunately there is nothing broken. I am badly bruised on both feet, my knee and my neck but it’s nothing serious. I will try to be back riding by Tuesday and, if not, I will be back by Friday.

“The damage happened when he went back and I got caught between the horse and the back gate. Then I hit my head on top of the gates when he flipped up. I managed to grab onto the top bar and pull myself up. I was lucky.”

Minnesota Dream somehow got his right front leg over the partition in the process and was withdrawn by the vet. However Joey Ramsden’s assistant Ricardo Sobotker said that the horse was OK afterwards. He has had his starting stall certificate withdrawn.

Eric Sands is to work Rainbow Bridge at Greyville for the first time next week as he prepares the Sun Met winner for his bid to achieve a lifetime’s ambition for new owner Mike Rattray in the Vodacom Durban July.

The four-year-old, who sweats buckets every time he goes into a float, travelled to Summerveld from Milnerton last Tuesday and took the journey surprisingly well. “I was pleased with how he travelled,” said Sands. “Anton Marcus has already cantered him at Summerveld, we show him the track next week and his first race there will be the Independent on Saturday Drill Hall on May 3.”

By Michael Clower

Camphoratus (Candiese Marnewick)

A plan comes together

A long held plan came to fruition at Turffontein Standside on Saturday when the Robbie and Shannon Hill-trained Camphoratus upset some big fish in the wfa HSH Princess Charlene Empress Club Stakes over 1600m and thus the stallion Byword, who now serves as a teaser, gained a first Grade 1 winner.

Robbie Hill is based at Summerveld but has been up at Randjesfontein since March 2 training just two horses, Camphoratus and Red Chesnut Road, for target races in Johannesburg.

He said, “When Camphoratus won the Flamboyant Stakes (on December 26 over 1600m at Greyville) we felt she was good enough to compete in the Empress Club and the plan was put in place.”

She was a 36/1 shot in the Flamboyant but Hill pointed out her previous bare form had not told the whole story.

Camphoratus (Candiese Marnewick)
Camphoratus (Candiese Marnewick)

He said, “She had a bad habit earlier in her career of messing around in the starting stalls. They have now begun accommodating her but prior to that she was not getting away on terms.”

After the Flamboyant the four-year-old filly ran a 2,80 length fifth in a Pinnacle event over 1500m at Scottsville on February 10. 

She arrived in Johannesburg on the morning of the Grade 3 Acacia Handicap over 1600m at Turffontein Standside on March 2.

Hill said, “She ran not a bad race there.”

Then when she finished second in the Listed Jacaranda Handicap over 1800m at Turffontein Standside on March 30, carrying joint topweight of 57,5kg, it confirmed the Empress Club Stakes plan should go ahead.

Hill does not believe 1800m stretches her and said, “Gareth (Wright) sent her for home too soon in the Jacaranda, he made a mistake. My only instruction on Saturday was to sit and wait and not go too early.”

Wright followed the instruction to a tee. Camphoratus clearly had a ton in hand in the straight when held together in midfield. He pressed the button at the 400m mark and she then showed what Hill describes as her “unbelievable acceleration”. Wright had to switch her inward and she then became involved in a stirring dual with the narrow Wilgerbosdrift Gauteng Fillies Guineas runner up Running Brave. Camphoratus surged in the final strides to win by a neck.

She had been the third lowest rated horse in the field off a merit rating of 95 and had not surprising started at odds of 66/1.

Among the defeated in a star-studded field was the 119 merit rated reigning Equus Horse Of The Year Oh Susanna. The trip was short of her optimum and she could only stay on at one pace from a handy position to finish a 2,20 length fourth. 

The Gauteng Fillies Guineas and Ipi Tombe winner Nafaayes, merit rated 107, was third and other beaten horses were the Graded-winning stars Celtic Sea, Fiorella, Fresnaye, Ghaalla, Cascapedia and Redberry Lane as well as last year’s narrow Empress Club runner up Al Danza.    

Hill, who stood on the stands and said he had remained surprisingly calm as the drama unfolded, added, “She obviously relished the soft conditions and some others might not have liked it, but it was nice that the plan came together.”

In contradiction, Byword’s sire Peintre Celbre had relished fast ground when winning the 1997 Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe by five lengths. However, he did also win a heavy ground Group 1. Byword’s only Group 1 win, in the Prince Of Wales Stakes over a mile and two furlongs at the Royal Ascot meeting, also came on fast ground, although he did manage two stakes wins on good to soft going.

Byword defeated none other than Twice Over in the Prince Of Wales but at stud in South Africa, starting in the same 2013/2014 season, their respective paths have followed divergent courses. Byword was originally with Rob Pickering’s Middlefield stud in the KZN Midlands but after one season he was transferred to Mauritzfontein Stud. Pickering felt that was the right move and still had high hopes for him. However, with just one decent horse in his first two crops it was soon apparent he was not going to make it in an ultra competitive environment where buyers expect early results. He was thus demoted to a role of teaser stallion at Wilgerbosdrift Stud. However, stud manager Guy Murdoch of Mauritzfontein said, “After yesterday’s Grade 1 we might have to reconsider.”

Camphoratus was bred by Pickering. She is out of the unraced Horse Chestnut mare Wild Camphor, whose only other foal, Scent Of The Tiger (Tiger Ridge), was a four-time winner.

Hill picked Camphoratus out at the BSA KZN Yearling Sale at Sibaya and said, “The chief reason I liked her was her beautifully big girth and she was also very well balanced.”

He bought her up for what has proved a bargain R50,000.

Camphoratus travelled home to Summerveld on Saturday night. Her obvious target SA Champions Season target is the Grade 1 wfa Jonsson Workwear Garden Province Stakes. Her fine turn of foot is an asset at the tight Greyville circuit. 

Meanwhile, Hill is preparing Red Chesnut Road for a crack at the Grade 1 Premier’s Champions Challenge over 2000m at Turffontein on May 4.

This horse was a top prospect as a two-year-old but has been plagued by injury since developing a bone sequestrem beneath the hock. A bone sequestrem is when a piece of dead bone detaches itself from the healthy bone.

“He is a hard horse to train,” admitted Hill.

However, the five-year-old Pathfork gelding proved he stays middle distances when “settling beautifully” and running second in the Listed Michael Roberts Handicap over 1750m last year and he later finished a decent fourth to Head Honcho in the umThombothi Stakes over 1950m.

Hill concluded, “If I can get him 100% right on the day he is a proper horse and will have a shout.”

By David Thiselton

Twice As Smart (Candiese Marnewick)

Handicappers prove ‘Twice As Smart’

The merit rating system in this country has been jerrymandered to a point where it hardly makes sense anymore. As one trainer put it, races have become a handicap within a handicap and far to complicated for the average punter to unravel. Little wonder turnovers are down.

There are a myriad of examples but just one played out at Turffontein on Saturday. Camphoratus had no right winning the wfa Gr1 Empress Club Stakes given the ratings. Gr1 Sun Met winner Oh Susanna is rated 119, Camphoratus a lowly 95, a full 12kg inferior if you believe the handicap. Oh Susanna may not have been at her best but she was only beaten two lengths in a race where she was rated at least 10 lengths superior to the winner.

Twice As Smart (Candiese Marnewick)
Twice As Smart (Candiese Marnewick)

We can all say yes, “that’s racing” but try and explain that to the layman who will wander off to the casino where all that they are required to do is push a button.

So tomorrow’s handicapping meeting should be interesting and thanks to National Horseracing Authority CEO Vee Moodley’s efforts at transparency, we should get a full explanation.

But the ratings do sometimes work out as they did at Scottsville yesterday where the filly Twice As Smart proved too good for a host of promising three-year-old males. Wendy Whitehead’s charge was rated 4kg superior to another filly, Sweet Mary Lou, and 6.5kg superior to her nearest male rival Vikram but she proved a little too good for the opposition as she should have.

Stuart Randolph was confident enough to take his mount to the front early in the straight and scrubbed her to the line, only resorting to a couple of reminders as Captain Of Tortuga kept her honest.

‘Patience’ is Shane Humby’s second name. His horses arrive at work in the morning as if they are in a coma but they sure know what to do when they get onto the racetrack.

Mr Fitz is a late maturing son of Bold Silvano and he gave notice that he is a horse with a future as he scored a comfortable win in the fourth. Mr Fitz was in a useful field where pre-race commentator Sheldon Peters was hesitant to commit, not so Warren Kennedy who was hunting a gap a long way out with plenty of horse under him. Once in the clear Mr Fitz accelerated through to hold off the year older Dyno Man, Anton Marcus possibly wishing that he could have shed an extra 2kg to make the weight on Mr Fitz who he had steered to his maiden win.

The title chaser did not go home empty handed however, as he brought home the first two on the card.

Justin Snaith opened his winter season account in KZN with Somewhere In Time scoring a bloodless victory in the card opener but it was not all plain sailing for Marcus. Somewhere In Time is obviously a filly with a few temperament issues and went down to the start with a lead pony and ear-muffs and Marcus had his job cut out to keeping her focussed in the race.

“She was not supposed to run here,” commented Snaith, “but when the field cut up to five or six runners, I thought this would be a good R60k gallop.”

Tony Rivalland’s good form continued with the well-supported Fiorano storming home in the second. Great Stohvanen set the pace and was going great guns approaching the two furlong marker, but once Marcus released the brake Fiorano won with plenty of daylight to spare.

Barring accidents, Luke Ferraris should be something of a shoo-in for the apprentice championship. He is a polished rider and all his skills were on display as he produced Tripple Z with a telling late run to deny Marcus a hat-trick, Spring Fling edging out long-time leader Astral Flight.

Alderman Rob Haswell was one of the umpteen thousands in the crowd watching the US Masters at Augusta and Cumulus will have paid for some of his travel expenses as Natie Kotzen’s runner took full toll of the absence of ante-post favourite Woodstock Festival.

By Andrew Harrison

Twice As Smart (Candiese Marnewick)

Twice As Smart has all in her favour

With the solid support of grandfather Ormond Ferraris and leading trainer Sean Tarry who is quick to pounce on any young talent, apprentice Luke Ferraris has had it good so far in his short career. But there will be roadblocks, there always are in this sport, but he has plenty of ammunition at Scottsville on Sunday where he has some plum rides for his grandfather.

The regally bred Captain Of Tortuga, only once out of the money in ten starts and a close but comfortable winner of an Assessment Plate last time out, will be in short order for the Blinkers Bar Graduation Plate but he may have to take a back seat to the year older filly Twice As Smart, the highest rated runner in the field.

Wendy Whitehead’s stable has turned the corner in recent weeks and Twice As Smart has earned her rating in some useful company. She was beaten less than a length in the Flamboyant Stakes and in retrospect and more recently, third to last Sunday’s Beyerly Turk winner Tristful.

Twice As Smart (Candiese Marnewick)
Twice As Smart (Candiese Marnewick)

She has much in her favour and given that form she can give her male rivals a stich.

Captain Of Tortuga is the obvious danger but Andre Nel has seeded his Summerveld satellite yard with some of the better inmates of his Yzerfontein yard, readying up for Champions Season and the lightly raced Vikram will be a threat. He was quietly fancied for the CTS Mile won by the smart One World but his form prior to that suggests that he will be a mighty contender here.

The Ferraris combination can kick off the Pick 6 with Tripple Z who has shown good improvement since again being sent over a bit of ground.

He looks primed for this event but Glen Kotzen has started off his Champions Season raid in good style with Temple Grafin winning the Gr3 Umzimkulu Stakes last Sunday and Spring Fling looks a serious contender after making marked improvement at his last start and Anton Marcus booked for the ride.

But it’s not an easy race and the local contingent of Frankie Two Shoes, At The Opera and Just Prime must also be contenders.

The fourth is an intriguing race with a number of three-year-olds out to prove that they deserve a place in the KRA Guineas come the first day of Champions Season.

Run To Denmark made a smart local debut behind Tristful in a Progress Plate and is sure to come on from the effort but he could be hard-pressed to get the better of Shane Humby’s Mr Fitz. The lightly raced colt caught the eye when a close-up second to The Last Of The Legend on debut and followed up with a bloodless victory next time out. That form has held up well and Mr Fitz looks to have plenty of scope. Off bottom weight will have plenty of supporters. Dyno Man, Marchetto and Mr Greenlight are other contenders in a race that could sort out some wheat from the chaff come live contenders for the classics in Champions Season.

Darryl Moore has a smart gelding in Woodstock Festival and he rates the horse to beat in the sixth although he does face some stiff opposition. Woodstock Festival steps up to 1200m for the first time but given his pedigree and the presence of Anton Marcus in the saddle the extra furlong is unlikely to compromise his chances.

Marcus has jumped ship from Cumulus, on whom he beat Woodstock Festival two runs back, so the inference is obvious. However, Muzi Yeni was aboard when Cumulus fourth behind the speedy Di Mazzio on the Greyville poly last time out. Cumulus also steps up to 1200m but does seem to be a better horse on the turf and could again put one over his rival and be some compensation for Alderman Rob Haswell who was looking forward to a Rolling Stones concert in New Orleans before Mick Jagger pulled up lame. Fleetwood Mac are a second-rate replacement for a seasoned ‘rocker’.

Roy’s Magic is a hard knocker and Kom Naidoo has been in good form of late while surprise package could come in the form of Affranchi. Down in class, weight and trip, Gavin van Zyl’s gelding bears all the hallmarks of a sudden improver and may be worth including in all calculations.

By Andrew Harrison

Oh Susanna (Candiese Marnewick)

Draw will help Oh Susanna

The Royal Race Day presented by HSH Princess Charlene Of Monaco at Turffontein Standside tomorrow features the Grade 1 wfa Empress Club Stakes for fillies and mares and this 1600m event is full of class.

Oh Susanna, as a high class filly, is sparingly raced and is unbeaten in her last three Grade 1s against fillies and mares. These included two wfa Paddock Stakes’ over 1800m and one Woolavington 2000 over 2000m. So this is a touch on the sharp side but considering she has a tendency to over race the tough Turffontein 1600m should be right down her alley. The pole position draw will be a big help as she can either get to the front for free or find cover. 

Celtic Sea will be a threat considering the way she won hand and heels, easing up over 1400m last time. This three-year-old struck as top class when winning the Grade 2 Golden Slipper over 1400m as a two-year-old because nothing went right in the running yet she still got up. She has to reverse form with Ghaalla from the Fillies Mile and with Nafaayes and Running Brave from the Gauteng Fillies Guineas but she was not at her best in the former race and lost three lengths at the start in the latter. She is blossoming now and is a big runner.

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

Cascapedia looked threatening when moving up to Oh Susanna in the Paddock Stakes but the latter had extra and drew away to beat her by four lengths. However, she might prefer this trip, whereas Oh Susanna is suited to further so this big and classy sort has a shout. 

Nafaayes is a courageous sort who proved she can stay on resolutely from handy positions when winning both the Ipi Tombe and Gauteng Fillies Guineas over this course and distance, but she was well drawn there and now has a tough draw. 

Al Danza brings the Geoff Woodruff factor. The five-times champion trainer is known for his ability to peak horses for big races and last year Al Danza came within a whisker of upsetting the top class Nother Russia in this race. She has to reverse form with Nafaayes from the Ipi Tombe and Cascapedia also narrowly beat her in the HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut Stakes last time over the course and distance, but she does have a plum draw and can’t be ignored. Running Brave just has a short-head to find on Nafaayes from the Gauteng Fillies Guineas and from a fair draw is a dark horse. Fresnaye has some top form in Cape Town but would prefer further and comes off a slamming by Celtic Sea in her first Highveld start. She will improve from that run though. Fiorella beat a good field in last season’s Grade 2 Daisy Fillies Guineas at Greyville and has a chance if reproducing that run. Redberry Lane won last season’s Grade 1 Jonsson Workwear Garden Province Stakes over this trip at Greyville so also can’t be ignored. She has come into her own but has a tough draw, particularly considering she is a handy to front-running sort.

There look to be a number of fair bets on the card.

The choice for best bet is Jetorio in the 8th over 2400m. This daughter of River Jetez needed her last run over 1800m and was staying on well. Her mother stayed this trip and further so she has a big shout from pole position and is made a banker.

Zillzaal will be hard to beat in the second race over 2000m as an improving sort who went close in the SA Derby.

Eskimo Kisses is a nice type with plenty of substance and she should enjoy the step up to 1400m in the third, although the draw of seven could be tricky as the best scenario will be for her to find cover and run on. 

In the next race Stockbridge is a progressive sort who is well drawn in this race over an ideal 1400m trip.  

In the ninth race Fire And Rescue also looks to have a touch of class and should be ahead of the handicapper off a mere 69 merit rating. He should also enjoy the step up in trip to 1600m and has a fair draw. 

By David Thiselton

Do It Again (Candiese Lenferna)

Do It Again to defends July crown

Justin Snaith confirmed yesterday Do It Again’s SA Champions Season priority would be the defence of his Vodacom Durban July crown.

He is also looking forward to reigning Equus Horse Of The Year Oh Susanna’s raid of Turffontein on Saturday for the Grade 1 HSH Princess Charlene Empress Club Stakes over 1600m.

Do It Again was magnificent as a three-year-old and has developed into a monster of a horse this season. The Twice Over gelding is likely to have a titanic clash with his arch rival Rainbow Bridge in the July and the outcome will almost certainly decide this season’s Horse Of The Year title. Rainbow Bridge’s chief Champions Season target became a forgone conclusion when purchased in training by owning and breeding doyen Mike Rattray, whose lifelong dream has been to win South Africa’s greatest race.

Snaith’s only uncertainty at present is whether Do It Again will have a pipe opening run in the Drill Hall Stakes on Champions Season opening night, Friday May 4. His definite targets are the Grade 1 wfa Rising Sun Gold Challenge and the July.

There will also be an Equus Award-deciding clash of the titans in the Rising Sun between Do It Again and Soqrat. Do It Again is in pole position to be named Equus Champion Miler, being the winner of the Grade 1 L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate and the Grade 2 Green Point Stakes. However, Soqrat was a narrow runner up in the Queen’s Plate and has won two Grade 1 miles, the Cape Guineas and the wfa HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut Stakes. Their Rising Sun clash on June 8 will likely decide the Miler award.

Do It Again (Candiese Marnewick)
Do It Again (Candiese Marnewick)

Snaith said Do It again had been doing very well since arriving at Summerveld.

He also has high hopes for his other two July candidates, Doublemint and Magnificent Seven, and was particularly bullish about the latter.

He said, “They are both well weighted and I intend keeping them well weighted. Doublemint is doing well and will likely run in the WSB 1900. Magnificent Seven has an 80% chance of going in that race but I might try and find something a bit further, as he is better over more ground. He is an all rounder and is doing really well. He has taken to Durban like a duck to water. They are two dark horses, but won’t be dark horses come race time. Magnificent Seven’s current July price is particularly ridiculous.”

In the WSB July book Do It Again is 15/2, Doublemint is 14/1 and Magnificent Seven is 55/1.

Magnificent Seven won the Grade 2 New Turf Carriers Stayers over 2850m on Sun Met day. However, Snaith said the winner of this race was always severely punished, so he was viewing the Gold Cup as a bonus race to be considered later. Magnificent Seven received eight points for that win and went to 104, the same rating as Doublemint.

Snaith said a stayer to watch out for though would be Strathdon, “He is going to be a big runner in the Champions Season staying races.”

He said raiding Johannesburg with Oh Susanna would be possible from Summerveld. However, he wondered whether she had been at Summerveld for long enough to be able to deal with the altitude factor. Summerveld is approximately a third of the altitude of Jo’burg, but she has only been there since March 23. He said, “Her work has been phenomenal, although there has been a lot of rain, so she did miss two days work. Her run in the Met can be ignored as she was carved up and returned lame with slices on her back legs.” He was not concerned about the over-racing antics she has displayed in recent starts. He pointed out the pace of races in Johannesburg was generally fast enough.

Oh Susanna’s program after Saturday is still in the air.

Kasimir will start fast work next week at Summerveld and Snaith might look for a warm up race before running him in the Grade 1 Mercury Sprint on July 27.

He said Silver Maple was nicely handicapped. He said if he ran well in his opening race the Tsogo Sun Sprint would then be targeted. He said, “I saved him for the Durban season.”

He continued, “Juniper Spring is a very nice three-year-old sprinter who will get a three-year-old allowance in the Poinsettia and this will be a very nice race for her. If all goes well there she will go for the SA Fillies Sprint.”

He said, “Snowdance will also go for the SA Fillies Sprint. The Queen’s Plate took a lot out of her so I rested her after the Majorca and now have her the best I have had her since her three-year-old season. She has been unlucky and is not done yet.”

Snaith then spoke about his three-year-olds, “Bunker Hunt will only come into his own over 2000m, so he will need the outing in the KRA Guineas and then be ready for the Daily News where he could be competitive.

Madonna will run in the East Cape Oaks and if she runs well she will go for the Woolavington 2000.

Silvano’s Pride ran a good race in the Umzimkhulu as she is not a 1400m horse. She had it all to do and was on the wrong leg the whole way in her first try at a right hand track so under the circumstances it was a good effort to finish a close third. She can’t carry on doing it the hard way from the front though, so I want to try and teach her to settle.”

Snaith said he had his best ever two-year-old crop and had brought some of them to KZN. He said the best of them would avoid the Scottsville Festival Of Speed meeting and go for the big Greyville two-year-old features.

By David Thiselton

Pantsula (Candiese Marnewick)

Kennedy makes a statement

Seventh on the national log with 91 winners to his credit before yesterday’s Greyville meeting, Warren Kennedy took full advantage of two chance rides to ease his way three closer to the top of the standings, one behind Richard Fourie, with a treble.

Season rider Mark Khan took a tumble from third-pleaded Noble Beat shortly after the finish of the first and was carted off to hospital with a suspected hip injury.

This left the way open for the first of Kennedy’s winners as he produced Kom Naidoo’s filly Call Me Tonight with a telling run up the inside to get the better of Allez Les Bleu and favourite Hey Jude.

Pantsula (Candiese Marnewick)
Pantsula (Candiese Marnewick)

Anton Marcus also cried off his rides for the day and Kennedy proved to be a more than capable replacement as he steered Heart Of A Legend to a convincing win in the fourth at the expense of Petra who got going late but never a threat to the winner.

The lightly raced Vase, a comfortable winner of her maiden on her KZN debut, was never able to get in from a wide draw when making her handicap debut behind Beat It, but Gareth Wright make no mistakes from his better gate yesterday to get Andre Nel’s filly home ahead of the lightly weighted Noemi.

Apprentice Luke Ferraris looked to have pinched a winning margin on March Preview, a comfortable winner of his last start, but Kennedy had him in his sights from a long way out on Gavin van Zyl’s Pantsula. The addition of blinkers can have an instant effect in improving a horse’s performance but horses can also go ‘sour’ and with the ‘scoops’ removed Pantsula had made marked improvement and was rewarded here. Kennedy pounced a furlong out and March Preview had no answers to Pantsula’s telling challenge.

Ferraris was on the wrong end of another photo in the sixth as Apple Magic lost out in a driving finish with Keagan de Melo extracting just that little bit extra out of the favourite Orient Queen.

The pair hooked up at the top of the straight with Dean Kannemeyer’s filly pulling out just that little bit more when it counted.

Mark Khan missed out on a double as Eric Ngwane, recently out of his apprenticeship, produced Lady Abigail with a perfectly timed run to win the seventh in a carbon copy of Khan’s victory aboard Lezeanne Forbes’s filly when landing an inspired gamble at the filly’s previous start. Apprentice Jason Gates was bidding for a third success on the bounce aboard Wayne Badenhorst’s Imperial Royal as he took them on up front, but Ngwane’s patient tactics pay dividends and he ran down the pacemaker when it counted.

Josephine Baker has been costly to follow but a sweeping late run when just out of the money and only a length behind at her last start may have been the key to her success yesterday. De Melo produced Dean Kannemeyer’s filly with a telling late run to snaffle the race inside the last 50m, five of the opposition covered by a blanket a neck back in a handicapper’s dream.

Barinois has such an awkward high head carriage in work that it seems impossible that she can run but she won her third race for Duncan Howells and owners Ricky and Thora Nidd as Muzi Yeni gave her a peach of a ride in the last. Drawn wide, Yeni hunted a gap in the straight and drove the mare through to win smartly.

By Andrew Harrison

Captain Of Stealth (Chase Liebenberg)

Captain Of Stealth opens at 9-20

The bookmakers are taking no chances with the highly regarded Captain Of Stealth in the Itsarush.co.za Juvenile Plate at Durbanville on Saturday and have opened the Vaughan Marshall potential star at 9-20.

Interestingly World Sports Betting makes Minnesota Dream the principal danger at 11-2 even though the Joey Ramsden debut winner managed only fourth on his subsequent appearance. He has since been gelded and Bernard Fayd’Herbe, who takes over from S’Manga Khumalo, rides three favourites on the eight-race card – Celestial Storm at 17-10 in race two, 28-10 shot Empire Glory (race four) and Icon Princess at 5-2 in race seven.

Rockachino, who will be the first two-year-old to take on older horses in Cape Town this season, is the 28-1 outsider of the field for the Tabonline Maiden – Louisa May heads the market at 16-10. However the Eric Sands juvenile Capacity Crowd is second favourite (28-10) for race seven.

By Michael Clower

Forest Express (JC Photographics)

Ehsaan gets the green light

The Vaal meeting tomorrow features the Listed Spook Express Handicap over 2400m and purists will also be looking forward to race three of the eight events as this sees the promising Ehsaan attempting to exact revenge on another potentially good horse, Got The Greenlight.

Got The Greenlight was defeated by the prospect Frosted Gold on debut and second time out beat Ehsaan over 1200m down the Vaal straight when stealing a march. Ehsaan got going late that day and was finishing fast. Ehsaan duly followed up with a win over 1200m on the Turffontein Inside track. Gavin Lerena will know this time what he has underneath him and will know something about his chief opponent. So Ehsaan is given the nod although there won’t be much in it. De La Cruz could also have a say having won well on debut over 1000m and being one who should relish the step up in trip.

Forest Express (JC Photographics)
Forest Express (JC Photographics)

The Spook Express could also turn into a match race between Forest Express and Gottalottaluv. Forest Express is a rangy daughter of Oracy out of a Fort Wood mare. She is improving all the time and has come into her own since being sent back over staying trips, winning two of her last three starts comfortably and narrowly beaten in the other. Her draw of seven out of seven will be tricky and she will require a bit of luck, but if things go her way she is the one to beat. Gottalottaluv has always struck as one with some class but needed maturing. She has now come into her own and has proved she stays this trip when winning her penultimate start over 2400m comfortably.

Last time she was not herself but she is now reunited with Diego De Gouveia, who has been aboard for both of her last two wins. Topweight Silver Thursday has overall been a disappointment since finishing a narrow second in the Gauteng Fillies Guineas last season. The reason why that run was so promising was that she had seemed to be staying type. However, she disappointed in both the SA Fillies Classic and the Oaks when stepped up in trip. She has won over 1800m this season though and has been one-paced in the finish in her last two over 1600m and 1800m respectively in feature races, so she might now be ready to take on a staying trip again.  

Earlier in race six Galactic Warrior should get it right over his favourite 1000m trip. This horse was well regarded from day one so has turned out to be a touch disappointing. However, he has not been at all disgraced in his last two races over this trip in stronger fields than this one and he remains on his same 75 merit rating with the same 4kg claimer in the saddle. What A Captain could provide fair value in this race. He has got some pace and as a typically long-striding son of What A Winter he should also be improving. He finished six lengths back to Donny G when he last tried this trip and could have got closer but for having to be switched late. He is now 14 points lower in the merit ratings, so could have a say.

The last leg of the Pick Six looks to be the trickiest race on the card. In this MR 74 Handicap over 1800m Defy Gravity comes out best on formlines. Verdier is not far behind and if Wild Fire settles better than he did last time he can go close from pole position having been transformed by blinkers. However, Kurt’s Approval, Manitoba, Street Flyer, Mambo Symphony and Storm Outgoing also need to be included.

The second leg of the Pick 6 over 1800m could be fought out by Jive Express and Flirty Girty. The former is a three parts sister to Dancewiththedevil, whose multiple Grade 1 victories included the Summer Cup over 2000m, so this filly should relish the step up in trip. Flirty Girty has proven her stamina capabilities and is well drawn.

The next race looks to be a three cornered contest between three improving sorts, Maroon Bells, Lasair and Movie Magic, who should all enjoys the step up to 1800m. They should be enough to get punters through.

By David Thiselton