Legal Eagle (Liesl King)

Legal Eagle stamps his status

It was a day of high drama at Turffontein on Saturday, which illustrated the up and down nature of the Sport Of Kings.

The first highlight was provided by the imperious Legal Eagle, who stamped his status as one of the greatest milers in South African history by winning his sixth weight for age Grade 1 mile. In January he won South Africa’s most prestigious weight for age mile race, the L’Ormarin’s Queen’s Plate for the third time in succession and on Saturday made it three HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut Stakes in a row. He is now unbeaten in nine starts over the mile trip. In the Queen’s Plate he displayed his courage as he was out on his feet after chasing runaway leader Captain America and still had to fend off challenges from a number of horses flying from behind. On Saturday the margin of victory was less, only 0,25 lengths, but it was a less taxing race as Anton Marcus had timed his front-running performance perfectly and the line always looked likely to arrive before the gallant filly Nother Russia could overtake him. Marcus has been associated with a number of great milers whose records over that distance Legal Eagle has now surpassed. Both Variety Club and Empress Club won five Grade 1 miles, while Jet Master won four. Legal Eagle has won seven Grade 1s in all now for earnings of R11,523,375.

Legal Eagle (Liesl King)

Legal Eagle (Liesl King)

Then came the day’s low point. The Tote favourite in the R2 million Grade 1 SA Classic over 1800m, the Paul Peter-trained Majestic Mamba had winner written all over him as he moved up from last place in the straight. He had been unbeaten in three previous starts over this distance. In his fourth career start in the Gauteng Guineas his exceptional turn of foot had never materialised. Maybe he had not liked the fast going that day. But on Saturday it was there in spades and it was perhaps what caused the incident that had the country’s horseracing fans horrified and then fraught with anxiety. Anthony Delpech had opted to make his run on the inside of the first horse he overtook, Hero’s Honour. He had no doubt eyed Greek Fire moving well up ahead and the latter was at least two lengths clear of Noble Secret to his outside. However, Greek Fire’s run began petering out just as Majestic Mambo was hitting top gear and suddenly there was nowhere to go. Majestic Mambo clipped heels as Delpech attempted to angle him sideways and faltered badly. The reigning SA Champion jockey was thrown out of the saddle and had no option but to fall feet first to the ground, a bad angle at that speed. He lay motionless and was reportedly in great pain when attended to, but was lucid and conscious. He was taken to Milpark Hospital for observation and CT scans revealed nothing serious at all. However, besides concussion, he complained of excruciatingly sore hands so was advised to stay overnight.

That was not only the drama in the SA Classic. The race produced one of the most unusual winners of all time in Lobo’s Legend. After punters had recovered from the shock of his victory they doffed their caps to Joe Soma, whose yard’s numbers had dwindled after the dispersal of a number of Mayfair Speculator horses. Lobo’s Legend had never run beyond 1200m in his five previous starts, had never gone around the turn before and had never run in a black type event before. To cap it all he had won only one of those five races and had finished lame in his last start. He did win his maiden by 8,5 lengths though, which was the reason for him having the eighth highest merit rating in the field of 97. New owners Larry Nestadt, Mark Currie, J Shill and JR van der Linden had faith in Soma but must have pursed their lips for a moment when they saw the speedster fighting for his head in the first few strides of the race. However, Muzi Yeni then settled him well and in the straight his speed coupled with his long stride saw him hitting the front at the 350m mark. His sire Trippi imparts speed but can also get them to stay and his dam, the Western Winter mare Gone Wild, won three times over 1800m. Lobo’s Legend was thus able to keep up a relentless gallop. The luckless Surcharge chased in vain, but the energy he had exerted to overcome yet another bad draw had taken its toll and it was clear he was never going to reach Lobo’s Legend.

However, the best story was still to come. Callan Murray switched the Triple Tiara-chasing Takingthepeace to the outside from last place in the Grade 1 Wilgerbosdrift SA Fillies Classic and the rangy Visionaire filly then produced a repeat of her Gauteng Fillies Guineas finish. She got up on the line. Mike de Kock’s son and assistant trainer Mathew had made it his mission to get young owners into the sport and Takingthepeace’s success is not only the stuff of dreams for himself, Murray Makepeace and Mike Shea but also for the sport as a whole. Takingthepeace is now heading for the R1 million SA Oaks and an unlikely Triple Tiara, which brings with it a R1 million bonus. It is a fairytale story which will build up to a crescendo on May 5 with three passionate and popular young racing enthusiasts on centre stage.

By David Thiselton

Grant Van Niekerk (Nkosi Hlophe)

Mr Crumford surprises all

Frank Lloyd Wright produced one of the biggest Cape Town shocks since the start of the water crisis when the supposed certainty was beaten at 1-3 in the Glasfit Maden Juvenile at Kenilworth on Saturday.

Punters began backing the colt at 8-10 three days earlier but the money simply poured on once word started to spread – correctly or not – that Grant van Niekerk had had to turn his back on potentially lucrative Grade 1 chances to stay loyal to the two-year-old.

Grant Van Niekerk (Nkosi Hlophe)

Grant Van Niekerk

Stable confidence was sky high but seemingly nobody had heard about Mr Crumford’s spectacular home work and the favourite, much to his supporters’ dismay, could never get in a blow and was beaten three lengths.  “He is a smart horse,” Van Niekerk insisted, “but he is still very green and immature.”

Mr Crumford, though, could be something special. Named by the Kieswetters after the way the colt’s trainer is addressed by a Greyville security officer, things didn’t go according to plan on his Durbanville debut – “He was T-boned coming out the gates,” explained Greg Cheyne.

Brett Crawford, thrilled and proud to have his first winner by Jackson – a horse he trained to win the 2012 Cape Derby and Daily News, added: “Today he did everything I thought he could but I wasn’t sure beforehand because they were talking up the other horse as if he couldn’t get beat.”

After he doubled up with Capaill two races later Crawford remarked that the stable’s horses had been a bit in-and-out in recent weeks, something that a legion of disappointed punters already knew to their cost. When asked why, the trainer answered: “I wish I knew. Had I done so, I would have fixed it!”

Spending Spree then underlined that in some cases at least the problem is still around by unaccountably flopping at 16-10 behind Too Phat To Fly in the Midas Handicap. Richard Fourie’s mount was completing a double for Glen Kotzen who was also on the mark with comfortable winner Margot Fonteyn.

With the CTS Yearling Sale starting on Thursday, not to mention the National 12 days later, trainers value winners even more than usual at the moment. Kotzen’s name is seldom out of the shop window but for Mike Robinson victories for African Messiah (given a ride by Corne Orffer that was as inspired as it was determined) and Hemero could not have come at a better time.

Publicity is nothing like as necessary for Andre Nel (his boss breeds most of hers) but Straat-Kind and Hemmingway were a welcome sign that his virus-ridden nightmare is nearing its end.

For Eric Sands, though, patience not publicity is his middle name. After Chris Gerber’s Rainbow Bridge (backed from 9-2 to 26-10 favourite) made a belated winning debut under Fourie in the Suburban Motor Spares Maiden, the Milnerton trainer said: “He got injured and hurt himself behind so I sent him to the farm. After three months he was still lame so I rested him for another six.”

By Michael Clower

legislate snaith racing

Legislate back at work

There are no specific plans or targets for stud failure Legislate even though the 2014 Durban July winner is back in work at Summerveld with the rest of Justin Snaith’s KZN string.

Drakenstein racing manager Kevin Sommerville said: “He has now been back in training for about a month and it’s to see how things go with him. There are no plans to geld him and he seems to be a happy horse at the moment.”

The former Horse of the Year also won the 2014 Cape Derby and Daily News as well as the following year’s Rising Sun Gold Challenge and he still holds the record for the Kenilworth mile that he set in the 2014 Green Point.

legislate snaith racing

Legislate (Snaith Racing)

But his first season at stud (2016) proved a commercial disaster. According to the NHA records his fertility was only 48% – 50 mares, 24 foals and 26 no returns.

Sommerville said: “Twenty or thirty years ago that sort of fertility might have been just about OK but nowadays it is not good enough for him to continue as a stallion. Commercial breeders simply can’t afford the risk of sending a mare to him in case they are forced to miss a year and in his second season he only had 15 to 20 mares.

“Maybe if he does well on the racecourse once more he could come back as a private stallion but even then he could never cover more than 20 or so mares in a season.”

Certain aspects of the horse’s physique apparently lie at the root of Legislate’s poor fertility including, crucially, unusually small testicles. He stood at a fee of R20 000.

Richard Fourie, who rode Legislate to most of his triumphs, has been fined R 7 500 for hitting another rider in what the NHA calls “an altercation” in the jockeys’ room at Durbanville last month. Fourie is normally a pretty calm individual but this happened after he suffered interference on the fancied but unplaced King Of Aces. Fourie admitted his guilt at a hearing last week.

Smart Call proved most disappointing on her return in a Listed race at Kempton on Saturday. She started 7-2 joint favourite and raced in second but she failed to quicken when the race began in earnest and managed only seventh of ten. It was her first run on the all-weather but she had been working well on a similar surface at Newmarket.

Trained by Sir Michael Stoute, the 2016 Met winner last year ran six times in four different countries – all in Group 1 or 2 races, finishing third at York and fourth at both Royal Ascot and in a Deauville Group 1.

By Michael Clower

Brett Crawford (Nkosi Hlophe)

Open and shut for Undercover Agent

Cape classic form stood up at the SA Champions Season curtain raiser meeting on the Greyville turf yesterday in what turned out be an encouraging day for KZN horses.

Brett Crawford (Nkosi Hlophe)

Brett Crawford

In the Grade 3 Byerley Turk over 1400m the Brett Crawford-trained CTS Mile winner and Cape Classic runner up, Undercover Agent, found the box seat from a good draw of three under Corne Orffer. Meanwhile, the Paul Lafferty-trained Judpot gelding Sniper Shot had run five wide around horses from the widest draw of all to race on Undercover Agent’s flank. When they turned for home Undercover Agent, who returned odds of 26/10, went down the inside and hit the front at the 300m mark, but 12/1 shot Sniper Shot, despite his earlier exertions, was going with him. Undercover Agent, a Captain Al colt bred by Moutonshoek, pulled away in the closing stages to win by two lengths from Sniper Shot. The winner’s stablemate White River ran on strongly from near the back for a 3,25 length third, a head clear of the Wendy Whitehead-trained Hard To Play, who ran on well after being positioned on the rail near the back from a pole position draw. The favourite, CTS 1200 runner up Kasimir, was well positioned in midfield but found little extra in the straight and finished fifth.

Peter Muscatt, assistant to Crawford, described Undercover Agent as “still a big baby” but believed once he furnished he would go further. He added, “The Daily News 2000 is probably a bit beyond him now, but something like the Champions Cup might be an option. But first we will see how he goes in the next leg (Daisy Guineas).

Lafferty’s assistant Roy Waugh said, “Sniper Shot has been a different horse since gelding. Let’s hope he gets a draw in the Guineas.”

In the Grade 3 Umzimkhulu Stakes over 1400m the Dennis Drier-trained Paddock Stakes runner up Lady In Black looked a picture in the parade ring and turned it on well in the straight to overtake the Prix du Cap winner Elusive Heart. However, the Wendy Whitehead-trained 20/1 shot Twice As Smart was going with her. Lady In Black, a Grade 1-winning Dynasty filly who was giving Twice As Smart 6kg, found extra to beat the latter by head under Sean Veale. Elusive Heart ran a 2,6 length third receiving 4,5kg from the winner. Sorceress and Fish River were next best.

The Drier and Veale combination had a good day as the once much touted Hack Green bounced back to his best to beat a good field in a Pinnacle Stakes event over 1100m.

By David Thiselton

All eyes on Frank Lloyd

Justin Snaith’s long-awaited first two-year-old winner of the season looks like finally materialising shortly after noon tomorrow when Frank Lloyd Wright stands out in the opening Glasfit Maiden Juvenile at Kenilworth.

The former champion trainer, still over R5 million clear of Sean Tarry at the top of the national log, has run 16 juveniles in 29 Cape Town races with ten making the frame. Significantly, though, only two of his runners started favourite and he didn’t have a single runner in the Met day Listed race that he used to farm year after year.

Grant Van Niekerk (Nkosi Hlophe)

Grant Van Niekerk

Frank Lloyd Wright, though, has all the makings of a nailed-on winner and the American architect after whom the horse is named could hardly have designed a more suitable race for Grant van Niekerk’s mount. None of his four opponents that have raced has finished closer than sixth and only one of the seven newcomers is priced in single figures.

In addition there is considerable stable confidence behind the R3.25 million Captain Al and Jonathan Snaith suggests that punters include him in all relevant bets, adding: “He is a serious horse and he will take a power of beating.”

Certainly there was a lot to like about his debut run at  the end of February. He started joint second favourite in a field of 14 and, despite running green, he was only beaten a head by the experienced Sailor Sam. Two of those behind have won since to frank the form.

He opened at what looked a reasonable 8-10 with World Sports Betting on Wednesday and has since tightened a fraction to 15-20. Second favourite at 6-1 is Machiavelli, a Silvano newcomer in the Shirtliff colours and trained by Candice Bass-Robinson whose two-year-olds are particularly strong this season. Mr Crumford (9-1), squeezed out at the start when only sixth of eight at Durbanville, is the only other in single figures and he wasn’t fancied on debut.

There is no Snaith runner in the other juvenile race, the Suburban Motor Spares Maiden, but with Vaughan Marshall in such form, it could pay to go for newcomer Sherwood Forest a, R200 000 Philanthropist colt out of a half-sister to the top sprinter (in England and Dubai as well as South Africa) National Colour. Perhaps significantly this one carries the same colours as One World and Zinedine and is 2-1 favourite with fellow first-timer Rainbow Bridge next at 9-2.

Many punters will be looking for something to floor Legal Eagle, particularly at 4-10, in the Horse Chestnut Stakes after the way he ran in the Sun Met. But he has never been beaten in eight runs over a mile and it seems folly to bet against him over this distance until he meets his Waterloo.

By Michael Clower

Sand And Sea (Nkosi Hlophe)v

Look out for Undercover Agent

Greyville has two meetings this weekend, poly on Friday night and turf on Sunday.

On Sunday the Grade 3 Byerley Turk and Grade 3 Umzimkhuku Stakes, both over 1400m, are pointers to the classic races in the SA Champions Season.

In the Byerley, Undercover Agent showed his class in the CTS Mile when finding extra to score cosily. Earlier, he had gone close to beating subsequent Cape Guineas winner Tap O’ Noth in the Cape Classic over this 1400m trip. From a draw of three he is the one to beat.

Sand And Sea (Nkosi Hlophe)

Sand And Sea

Justin Snaith has been waiting a long time to run Kasimir over his correct trip of 1400-1600m so this CTS 1200 runner up should make a bold bid, although his draw of nine will make it tough.

Sand And Sea, who finished fourth in the CTS 1200, is also likely looking for this sort of trip and from a good draw this long-striding sort should also be in the shake up.

White River would prefer further but having finished strongly for second in the Cape Guineas his class should pull him through after he has likely been dropped out from a wide draw.

Woljayrine has won well over this trip before and should give a good account of himself.

Varallo has always struck as a classy sort and having won his second start after gelding over this trip on the poly he might now begin fulfilling his potential.

Sniper Shot won going away over this trip last time and could be on the up but will need luck from his high draw.

Steel Rose would prefer further but could make a bold bid if able to get to the front.

The Umzimkhulu is an intriguing contest and Lady In Black should go close from a fair draw of six. This Dynasty filly proved her class when finishing within 1,5 lengths of Oh Susanna in the Grade 1 Paddock Stakes over 1800m. This trip should be ideal for her running fresh. Elusive Heart romped home in the Grade 3 Prix du Cap over this trip at Kenilworth last time against some good horses and she will go close, although her wide draw makes it tough. Dynamic Diana will enjoy this trip on form evidence. She is a classy sort and as a daughter of Dynasty will be improving all the time and will enjoy the tight Greyville track, although she does have a tricky draw. Fish River has plenty of class and will be dangerous if Delpech is able to find the front or a handy position as she has a good kick.

Desert Rhythm won the Grade 2 Gold Slipper over course and distance and can bounce back from a below par campaign in Cape Town, where she didn’t appear to be herself. She’s A Dream has plenty of zip and looked well in a recent barrier trial. She should stay this trip on pedigree and has a chance.

By David Thiselton

Fiorella (Candiese Marnewick)

Surcharge can reel them in

The Classic meeting at Turffontein tomorrow features three Grade 1s, four Grade 3s and a Listed race and is a meeting not to be missed.

Surcharge’s shocking luck with draws has continued into the R2 million Grade 1 SA Classic over 1800m, but he can be easily switched on and off so Piere Strydom will have a chance of finding a good position and in the straight the horse can then use his big action to reel the others in.

Fiorella (Candiese Marewick)

Fiorella (Candiese Marewick)

Roy’s Had Enough is coming off two strong-finishing wins over 1600m on the Greyville turf and like Surcharge is relaxed in the running and has a big action. His grandam won the Australian Oaks so he should stay the trip.

Noble Secret is a big, rangy sort who will be improving all the time and from a good draw will be dangerous,

Another big runner is the Paul Peter-trained Majestic Mambo, who can afford to be dropped out as he has an exceptional turn of foot. He is unbeaten in three starts over this trip and appeared to hate the fast ground in the Gauteng Guineas, so can bounce back on probable more forgiving ground.

Royal Crusade will enjoy the trip and being by Silvano will be improving.

Those are the five most fancied runners.

Mike de Kock holds the aces in the Grade 1 Wilgerbosdrift SA Fillies Classic over 1800m.

Silver Thursday is crying out for this trip and further. This Silvano filly has drawn ten and Anthony Delpech will be looking to find a position from which she can use her sustained run in. Takingthepeace is a long-striding sort who produced a strong finish from well back in the GFG. On running style she looks likely to get the trip, although on pedigree there is a slight doubt.

The KZN raider Roy’s Riviera stays on well and this well-bred sort has strengthened, so she is the dark horse.

Folk Dance has a fine action but as her tendency to race a bit strongly has cost her from wide draws over 1600m, she will need luck from draw nine over this step up in trip.

Secret Potion is a long-striding sort who takes a while to unwind in the straight. However, when she finds her feet she finishes strongly and is still improving, so she could be the best value outsider from a plum draw of three as she will likely relish the faster pace of a Grade 1 event.

Fiorella’s last run can be ignored as a virus had laid her yard low at the time. The KZN Captain Al filly has shown good speed over 1400m and has stayed on well twice over 1600m behind the top class Hashtagyolo. Her dam won the Caradoc Gold Cup, so she is an interesting contender.

Flichity By Farr usually starts slowly and finishes strongly but overcoming a high draw here will be tough, although the Alyson Wright yard are positive based on her homework at caretaker Geoff Woodruff’s yard.

Those are the preferred choices, but Sean Tarry’s runners should also be considered considering the yard has hit a purple patch.

Legal Eagle should clinch his sixth career weight for age Grade 1 in the HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut Stakes from a plum draw of three. The two fillies Orchid Island and Nother Russia have class and should give some cheek.

By David Thiselton

De Kock with a strong hand in the Classic

Mike de Kock holds the aces in the Grade 1 Wilgerbosdrift SA Fillies Classic over 1800m on Saturday, a race he is bidding to win for the fifth time, but it won’t be all plain sailing.

He runs Takingthepeace and Silver Thursday, who finished first and second respectively in the Wilgerbosdrift Gauteng Fillies Guineas (GFG).

Mike de Kock

Mike de Kock

Takingthepeace is a long-striding sort who produced a strong finish from well back in the GFG. On running style she looks likely to get the trip, but on pedigree there is some doubt. Her sire Visionaire won from 1300-1700m and his best progeny have been sprinters, milers or sprint-milers. His daughter Heaps Of Fun also won the Gauteng Fillies Guineas and later finished a decent fourth in the Grade 1 Woolavington 2000 at Greyville, but was found wanting in the final stages. Takingthepeace’s dam by Rambo Dancer, Lisa Anne, won three times from 1200-1450m, but did finish third in two separate Grade 3s over 1800m, albeit well beaten thirds

Takingthepeace will likely have to overtake many in the straight again from a wide draw of 14.

Silver Thursday, on the other hand, is crying out for this trip and further. This Silvano filly has drawn ten and Anthony Delpech will be looking to find a position from which she can use her sustained run in.

Betting World have them at 9/2 joint favourites together with Folk Dance.

Folk Dance has a fine action but as her tendency to race a bit strongly has cost her from wide draws over 1600m, she will need luck from draw nine over this step up in trip.

Fiorella’s last run can be ignored as a virus had laid her yard low at the time. The KZN Captain Al filly has shown good speed over 1400m and has stayed on well twice over 1600m behind the top class Hashtagyolo. Her dam won the Caradoc Gold Cup, so she is an interesting contender.

The KZN raider Roy’s Riviera also stays on well and this well-bred sort has strengthened, so she is the dark horse.

Flichity By Farr usually starts slowly and finishes strongly but overcoming a high draw here will be tough, although the Alyson Wright yard are positive based on her homework at caretaker Geoff Woodruff’s yard.

Wodruff horses can never be ignored at this time of the year and his own charge Secret Potion is a long-striding sort who takes a while to unwind in the straight. However, when she finds her feet she finishes strongly and is still improving, so she could be the best value outsider from a plum draw of three as she will likely relish the faster pace of a Grade 1 event.

Cashel Palace is another with scope for improvement although she finished severely distressed in the GFG, which is a concern.

Aurelia Cotta has been a touch disappointing after the good start to her career but with the Tarry yard in fine form she can’t be ignored. Her stablemates Rockin’ Russian, Forest Express and London Secret must also be considered.

Radiant Splendour has a big reputation and Piere Strydom is an eye catching booking. Inexperienced stablemate Saragon looks the part too, being by Ideal World, despite her current low merit rating.

Green Top stayed on for a surprise third in the GFG and Mar Del Seur is improving but has a tough draw.

It looks as wide open as the betting suggests.

By David Thiselton

Eyes Wide Open (Candiese Marnewick)

Change of plans for Eyes Wide Open

Eyes Wide Open, 6-1 favourite for the Vodacom Durban July with those firms already betting on the country’s most famous race, is no longer under consideration for the Greyville showpiece.

After the colt won the Investec Cape Derby Glen Kotzen immediately started thinking in terms of the July, so following in the footsteps of Big City Life with whom he completed the double in 2009, but further reflection has caused him to change plans.

Eyes Wide Open (Candiese Marnewick)

Eyes Wide Open (Candiese Marnewick)

Kotzen explained: “He won’t now be running in the July because of the weights – he is almost the top-weighted three-year-old in the country. He leaves for Durban in about two weeks but I am not sure yet when he will start. I will see how he goes and then decide.”

Talented stable companion Gold Standard – second in last season’s Cape Guineas and fourth in the Met – is already in Durban.

Kotzen said: “He was just not completely firing so we sent him back to Drakenstein for a nice break. He will probably go straight for the Rising Sun Gold Challenge on June 9.”

Kasimir, beaten only by Dutch Philip in the CTS 1200 after three wins off the reel, steps up to 1 400m for the first time in the Byerley Turk at Greyville on Sunday and connections expect him to appreciate the extra.

Jonathan Snaith said: “We kept him to 1 000m and 1 200m because we always had the CTS race in mind for him but his correct trip is 1 400m to a mile.”

By Michael Clower

Roy Had Enough (Candiese Marnewick)

Roy Had Enough eyes the Classic

Summerveld trainer Frank Robinson’s two stable stars, Roy Had Enough and Roy’s Riviera, have enjoyed a fine preparation.

“I have left no stone unturned,” he said.

They will travel up in a big float on Friday night and Roy Had Enough’s next door neighbour, the unraced two-year-old gelding World Cruise, will go with them and make his debut in a Maiden.

Robinson said, “He gets on well with World Cruise and it will be good also to have a gelding between the colt and the filly. The race is only at 16:35 on Saturday and being a colt Roy Had Enough can play up at the course while waiting, so it is nice they provide you with a stable at Turffontein, so he should be fine.”

The Australian-bred son of Piero is the joint-highest rated horse in the race on 110 having turned the corner since the blinkers were removed and Betting World quote him as 6th favourite at 8/1.

Roy Had Enough (Candiese Marnewick)

Roy Had Enough (Candiese Marnewick)

Robinson has no doubt he will stay the 1800m trip of the Grade 1 R2 million SA Classic and pointed out his grandam had won the Australian Oaks. He has a plum draw of five and considering how well he has been relaxing in the running coupled with his resolute finish, he will relish the galloping nature of Turffontein and its long straight.

Robinson is bullish about the chances of Roy’s Riviera, an Australian-bred daughter of All Too Hard, in the Grade 1 R1 million Wilgerbosdrift SA Fillies Classic also over 1800m. He pointed out how well she had run on in the Flamboyant Stakes over 1600m from a wide draw and said she had strengthened into a “tank” of a filly. She is drawn eight in a race which can’t be called a vintage renewal and is quoted at12/1 with Betting World.

Warren Kennedy rides both of Robinson’s horses.

The three other KZN fillies in the SA Fillies Classic, the Duncan Howells-trained Fiorella, the Alyson Wright-trained Flichity By Farr and the Gavin van Zyl-trained Mar Del Seur, are quoted at 9/1, 12/1 and 40/1 respectively.

Howells said Fiorella had not run too her rating in her last start over 1600m at Scottsville in February due to the virus which had struck the yard at the time. Ideally she would have run in the Gauteng Fillies Guineas before Saturday’s race, but was forced to miss it. However, he added, “She is very well and I am optimistic she will give a good account of herself as I have given her the best possible preparation I have been able to. Her mother won the Caradoc Gold Cup so I can’t see a problem with the 1800m trip and she has been showing extremely good work, although the altitude is against us. She is a typical Captain Al in that she has a mind of her own and can play up at the races so I have taken her up today (Wednesday) so she can get used to the surrounds.” Anton Marcus rides from draw eleven.

Wright said Flichity By Farr had originally been aimed only at the SA Oaks, but after her good win last time over Saturday’s course and distance they had decided to take their chances in the Fillies Classic. “She has been in Johannesburg for a while with Geoff Woordruff and they are very positive. She has been working very well.”

Wright said the filly had been getting better and better as one would expect from a daughter of Go Deputy. However, her wide draw of 15 was a problem and considering her lack of gatespeed dropping her out would be the only option for Marco van Rensburg. She does pack a strong finish though, so is not without a chance.

Van Zyl also lamented the wide draw of 16 for What A Winter filly Mar Del Seur. However, he added, “She is fit and well and is on the up. She has a lot of stamina on her damside, her mother Pacific Dynasty was a decent stayer.”

Van Zyl’s unbeaten two-year-old colt Bold Eagle will be using the Grade 3 Protea Stakes as a springboard into the Grade 1 Nursery. “He has improved since his last run. His is a super horse.” Anthony Delpech remains aboard and significantly takes the ride on the Van Zyl-trained Cloud Break in the Grade 3 Pretty Polly Stakes too. Van Zyl said, “She was against colts last time and back with fillies has an outside winning chance.”

Delpech also rides the well-bred and improved Van Zyl-trained Just Cruised in later in the meeting.

Stable jockey Warren Kennedy rides Vicomte, who has a tough task at the weights in the Man O’ War Stakes, and the decent filly Always A Lady in the last, a fillies and mares 1400m handicap.

By David Thiselton