CHAPTER AND VERSE, with Anton Marcus up, wins the www.tabgold.co.za Maiden Plate for trainer Michael Roberts at Hollywoodbets Greyville today. Picture: Candiese Lenferna
Andrew
Harrison
ANTON
MARCUS has had a forest fire of smoke blown up his
rear over the years. Proven against the best on the international stage, there
is little doubt that he is a master of his trade.
To many of the uninitiated that follow the
sport, the simple task of a jockey is to stay on board and ride for the line as
hard as possible, win lose or draw.
But as in any sport, the best will always
triumph simply because they are more tactically aware.
Few will argue that the pace of a race will
make the world of difference to the result. But often, subtle tactics employed
by the top riders within a race are the difference between winning and losing.
Riders who can win races on mediocre
mounts, races that their horse should never have had a chance in given the
form, are the riders that trainers look for and support. Riders who are
tactically astute and aware of the capabilities of the opposition.
There are also trainers who expect more
from their charges than what they are capable of producing – the classic line
from a jockey when asked by a trainer why he did not follow instructions;
“unfortunately I had to bring the horse with me.”
But back to the second race at
Hollywoodbets Greyville yesterday. Marcus was aboard favourite Chapter And
Verse for trainer Michael Roberts, himself a former titan of the pigskin. The
money arrived late for Garth Puller’s charge Banzai Pipeline but Marcus will
have worked that out a long time before the race.
All went well for both runners, both
perfectly placed, Marcus up second tracked by Lyle Hewitson on Banzi Pipeline.
Shortly before entering the straight,
Marcus eased wide off the heels of pacemaker Luxemburg, headed for his
favourite ‘golden highway’ up the outside fence.
But with Bazai Pipline slipping through up
the inside fence, Marcus allowed his mount to shift in on some tiring horses in
the hope that they would force Hewitson to delay his challenge for a few
strides.
The ploy didn’t work, given that the horses
on Marcus’s inside were not intimidated, allowing Banzai
Pipeline a clear passage. But it was a clever piece of riding by Marcus who,
seeing that his ploy had failed, drifted out onto his ‘highway’ and kept the
favourite running to the line, proving just that fraction better than his
market rival.
The Michael Roberts-trained JACK’S BIRD runs in the Greyville Convention Centre Handicap at Hollywoodbets Greyville today. Picture: Candiese Lenferna
Andrew Harrison
THERE is little doubt that the introduction of the Merit Rating system of handicapping has had a profound effect on racing in this country. In its purest form it has its merits but I would argue that the local horse population is not big enough for the system to work effectively.
This is proven by the introduction of a
myriad of special dispensations for various categories of races, introduced in
reaction to try and plug frailties in the system. This, to a point where many
trainers and, more importantly the majority of punters, are left guessing.
Jack’s Bird, a winner of one race and two
placings from nine starts finds herself giving weight to all in the Greyville
Convention Centre Handicap that heads the card on the poly at Hollywoodbets
Greyville on Wednesday.
Michael Roberts’s filly has paid dearly for
finishing close-up in weak feature company. She was on her way down the ratings
from a high mark of 100 before the KZN Fillies Guineas where she finished 3,6
lengths behind Missisippi Burning. But her sixth place shunted her back up five
pounds from her 90-rating going into the Guineas without earning a cent.
In other jurisdictions that use the MR
system, horses capable of performing in Graded company seldom run in handicaps.
So, this race will be a test. After the
Guineas, Jack’s Bird was given a break where she finished nearly five lengths
back in a 1200m sprint. That should have brought her along nicely into this
1600m event and from a good draw, Roberts and her supporters will be hoping
that the handicappers have it right.
One of the major complaints of the current
MR system is that a horse like four-time winner Song Of The Forest, has earned
R200k more than Jack’s Bird but has a MR of 81. With Jabu Jacobs claiming his
2.5kg allowance on Brett Crawford’s filly, Jacks Bird will be conceding 8.5kg
to her rival that has been in cracking form of late.
In a leap of faith, Jack’s Bird is taken to
get the better of Song Of The Forest, but with no confidence.
The Mike de Kock-trained BARAK wins the Bettingworld.Bet Pinnacle Stakes at Turffontein on Saturday. Picture: JC PHOTOS
David Thiselton
THE MIKE DE KOCK-TRAINED Barak proved himself a promising stayer when fighting back to win a Pinnacle Stakes event over 2 600m at Turffontein Inside on Saturday under lightweight jockey Jarryd Penny. It was his third win on the trot meaning he is unbeaten since blinkers were donned.
This Master Of
My Fate gelding has a deep pedigree which includes Vodacom Durban July winner
Power King, Summer Cup winner Malteme, Grade 1 Woolavington 2000 winner
Wendywood, Grade 1 winner Exhilaration and others but he is a rangy, galloping
type with a big action.
Barak went
into the race 8kg under sufferance with former SA Derby winner Hero’s Honour
according to official merit ratings.
However, he
did only have to carry a featherweight 50kg.
Furthermore,
he had impressed as a progressive stayer in his previous start and duly started
15-4 favourite.
The race did
not pan out well for him, which adds merit to the win.
Penny decided
to drive him up into a handy position from the off and this might have been due
to the theory that light weighted horses should be up there over marathon trips
to ensure the top-weights are made to carry their welter burdens.
On this
occasion being handy early proved to be costly.
The big horse
took held of the bit but Penny did manage to have him covered in second place.
He maintained his rail position but by the time they had reached the final turn
he had been shuffled back into midfield. He then had to go around The Bosbok,
who had gone wrong.
Ultimately, he
turned for home right near the back of the eight horse field, meaning the early
exertions might well have been unnecessary.
He was now
going to have to prove himself some horse to find the necessary extra to make
up the leeway.
He did so but
then came under threat from the other bottom weight in the contest, Gold
Griffin, although the latter was carrying 1kg overweight under national
champion jockey Warren Kennedy.
Barak
responded magnificently to Penny’s urgings and saw off the challenge to win by
a quarter of a length.
It is not
unusual for South Africans stayers to build up a sequence before being found
out when they run in features, but Barak looks to have plenty of scope for
further improvement and De Kock must be thinking of races like the WSB Gold Cup
already.
Barak is out of
the Captain Al mare Bermuda Sloop, whose five wins were from 1500m to 2000m. He
was purchased for R360,000 at the National Yearling Sales by Jehan Malherbe’s
Form Bloodstock and is owned by De Kock together with Malherbe’s wife Noeline
and G Ragunan.
Besides Power
King and Malteme, who also won the Grade 2 Gold Circle Derby over 2400m, other
stamina horses in his pedigree include Power King’s half-brother Northern Land
(Badger Land), who won the Grade 3 Cape Summer Stayers over 2500m, Listed Oaks
Trial winner Bize and Sammy Jo, who won the Listed East Cape Oaks.
Those of you that have been in the game for any length of
time will know that in the months after Champions Season, one always has to
keep an eye on horses from Richmond-based trainer Doug Campbell.
He is not blessed with the big guns but makes do with what
he’s got and he came up trumps with a treble at a hot and windy Hollywoodbets
Scottsville yesterday.
The first winner was expected, the other two pleasant
surprises, but in this sport a winner is a winner no matter what.
The cleverly named Vunderbar came up trumps in the card
opener as Donovan Dillon got the best out of the gelding to beat the well
fancied favourite Calvino.
Harper’s Dream was next up for Campbell as his filly
out-duelled Nirvana Girl and Late Night Live, Harper’s Dream starting at 29-1
and paying R25 on the tote.
The big exotic bet bomb exploded in the fourth as Vitus
Beiring got up under replacement rider Muzi Yeni. As Campbell explained, he was
not keen to run the gelding on the Hollywoodbets Greyville poly and with
Scottsville in mothballs for its annual spring treatment for the next two
months, he had no option but to run from his wide gate.
With no form to recommend him, 66-1 and R75 a win on the
tote just about summed up his chances but Yeni was seen at his very best as he
got his mount’s nose down when it counted to hold off Lord Of The Manor.
Keagan de Melo on the second placed runner, took a chance
and objected against the winner, but it was more in hope.
Anton Marcus was back in lethal form as he booted home a
treble.
With the ‘best’ going seemingly up the inside rail, Marcus
somehow got his mount over from 16 draw in the second and My Lady put it all
together for Ashleigh Fortune and KZN’s leading owner Mario Ferreira.
Yukta’s Dance for Gareth van Zyl and the blinkered Pearl Of
Asia completed a satisfying afternoon’s work for Marcus.
To the uninitiated, riding racehorses looks like a fairly
innocuous profession but in many cases, it is more dangerous than say F1 motor
racing or Moto GP. Although those drivers and riders crash at high speed, F1
cars are so well designed that it takes a major crash for the drivers to be
injured. Moto GP sees riders hitting the tarmac and the dirt regularly, mostly
without serious consequence as their body armour is super strong.
A jockey has no more than a helmet and a body protector,
both mainly to shield them from flying hooves in case of a fall.
Falls are thankfully few and far between, but some like
Tristan Godden’s parting company with his mount in the second yesterday, look
spectacular. His mount clipped the heels of the horse in front of him,
catapulting Godden head-over-heels onto the turf, fortunately landing on his
back and not on his head.
Other falls, like the one that ended the career of former
champion jockey Anthony Delpech, appeared fairly innocuous. But Delpech landed
on his feet and the force of his landing caused career-ending spinal damage.
Thankfully Godden escaped with a bruised arm and limped off
the course with a sore knee.
The Ashley Fortune-trained AVENIR, with Anton Marcus up,wins the Super Six Maiden Plate at Hollywoodbets Greyville yesterday. Picture: Candiese Lenferna
David Thiselton
THE ASHLEY FORTUNE-TRAINED and Pippa Mickelburgh-bred Futura colt
Avenir was the horse to take out of yesterday’s meeting at Hollywoodbets
Greyville as he was backed into favourite for the Maiden Plate race over 1400m
on turf and got up despite enduring a rough passage.
In the end it
was the class and experience of Anton Marcus, helped by the physical strength
and resolve of the horse, which made the difference and the former would have
breathed a sigh of relief when the judge’s verdict went his way.
Marcus
expertly got him over from a draw of ten to find the rail in midfield.
As they turned
for home a gap opened down the middle and Marcus elected to go straight for
it.
However, the
horse in front of him drifted outward and Avenir was practically T-boned by two
horses who were holding their positions on the outside.
Avenir was
jostled a couple of times as Marcus attempted to get through the gap again and
later he was bumped when trying to shift outwards to get through another gap.
The big horse
finally had a clear run at the 300m mark and he started making up the leeway.
Marcus gave
him a couple of smacks but it was from the 100m onward that the presence of the
great jockey told.
He put the
stick away when less experienced jockeys would likely have been doing the
opposite. He must surely have analysed that this horse had courage in tenfolds
to still be trying after such a rough passage and did not require, or deserve,
any more punishment. He was able to keep the horse straight with encouragement
from the hands and the horse let himself down superbly in the final stages,
thus making full use of his lengthy stride. He won by the skin of his teeth
from the hard-knocking Jay’s Dancer. He did not beat a quality field but to
have come through that battering and still win on debut around the turn at
Hollywoodbets Greyville had said a lot.
It was the
first of a fine sequence for the Fortune yard as they recorded a hat-trick at
The Vaal today.
Marcus was
full of praise for Avenir’s courage after the race and humbly said he had
little to do with the victory.
This horse
should improve with age and as he goes further.
Pippa
Mickelburgh, stud manager of Avontuur Thoroughbred Farms, recalled, “There
was a competition for the best-looking foal by Futura with the prize being a
free service and I was confident he would win it. He didn’t but I said to the
winner, ‘Oh well then we will beat you on the racecourse!’.”
She continued,
“His dam Varsity Queen comes from an old Avontuur family which
includes the like of stakes winners Schiffer, My Kazzie, Mentor, Royal IQ and Wise King. We sold her
but later I bought her back as a one-time winner from trainer Bart Rice when he
departed for Korea.
She then produced a succession of magnificent looking foals and this is proven
by the first of them called Graduate by Oratorio selling for R3,2
million.”
Graduate was
later part of a dispersal and MIckelburgh continued, “I will always
remember trainer Dennis Bosch saying he thought he was a July horse but
unfortunately he went wrong (after four wins). Her second foal also by Oratorio
was the Paul Peter-trained filly Operetta who has won seven times.”
Avenir was
bought by Rathmor Stud on behalf of prolific owner Mario Ferreira for R500,000
at the Cape Thoroughbred Sales Premier Yearling Sale and if he remains sound
this could prove to be a bargain.
At this year’s
CTS Premier Yearling Sale Adam Marcus bough Varsity Queen’s Silvano colt for
R625,000.
There is also
a Gimmethegreenlight foal on the ground and she is currently in foal to Querari.
The Brett Webber-trained WRITTEN IN STONE. Picture: JC PHOTOS
David Thiselton
PIERE STRYDOM was in sublime form at Turffontein Inside on Saturday and rode the winner of the last three races to take his career tally to 5459.
Strydom has
reportedly said he would retire at the end of this season so will be going all
out to make it a memorable one.
The last of
the abovementioned winners, the Brett Webber-trained Written In Stone, has been
taken to a new level by Strydom and can carry on progressing considering the
way he won on Saturday.
This
five-year-old by Pathfork has had an interesting career.
He was bred by
Schalk and Clare Le Roux’s Goudini Stud and was bought by Webber for R50,000 at
the Cape Thoroughbred Sales’ March Yearling Sale of 2017.
Written In
Stone’s cleverly named dam Autograf, who is by Becker out of Sharp Ledge (Fine
Edge), won three times over 1200m at Turffontein, Newmarket and Bloemfontein,
and won once over 1400m at Bloemfontein.
At Stud
Autograf had previously produced three-time winning Var filly Lady Beatrix, a
one-time winner by Bankable and two one-time winners by Gitano Hernando.
Written In
Stone took eleven races to win his maiden. He converted 8/1 odds in a
Workrider’s Maiden Plate over 1160m at Turffontein in May last year under
Madimong Isaac Duba.
He was well
beaten in his first three runs out of the maidens and looked to have a bleak
future.
However, then
came his first transformation, brought on by a rest and gelding.
He came back
in a strong Pinnacle Stakes event over 1200m at the Vaal
where he finished a mere 6,50 lengths behind the winner Hawwaam and four
lengths behind Grade 1-winning sprinter Chimichuri Run.
The bookmakers
did not appear to notice that he had performed about 10kg above his 66 merit
rating on paper and priced him up at 16/1 for his next start over the same
course and distance. His odds had tumbled to 25/4 by the off and he finished a
one length second under the same pilot Keenan Steyn.
He went close
in his next three starts from 1160m to 1400m.
However, his
problem appeared to be a habit of running on too late.
He found 1600m
too far next time out and then at last recorded his second career win over
1450m on February 1 this year.
He then
finished unplaced in two more attempts at 1600m.
However,
dropped back in trip, he has not missed a cheque in nine subsequent starts.
Strydom rode
him in March for the first time but in July this year became Written In Stone’s
regular partner. The partnership has yielded two wins, two seconds and a third
in five starts.
Between Webber
and Strydom they have worked out how to get the best out of this strongly built
bay.
Rather than
being bottled up off the pace he appears to enjoy racing without cover close to
the pace and then finds plenty, suggesting he has more ability than his rating
reflects. Strydom had him facing the breeze in the front-line three runs ago
over 1200m at the Vaal and he ran away at the
end to win easing up by three lengths from Holy Man, who won next time out.
He used
similar tactics four days later over the same course and distance and was
probably only beaten by his low draw as he ran on strongly for third.
Then on
Saturday Strydom kept him wide initially in a 1200m event around the
turn and although he was happy to have him covered up approaching the
straight he switched him out for a run a full 700 metres from home. Written In
Stone once again found plenty at the business end and ran away to win by 2,50
lengths from another progressive sort, Putin’s Promise.
This is the
difference a truly great jockey can make. It is not just the riding skills
but the intuition which separates them from mere mortals and it will be most
interesting to see how much further this partnership can progress now that the
key to the horse’s ability has been found. Owners Fred and Linda Mindszenty and
B I d’Oliveira are sure to have a lot more fun with this horse. The latter 0wns
Written In Stone’s half-sister by Wylie Hall, the Webber-trained Signed And
Sealed, who finished second in the first race on Saturday under Hennie
Greyling.
The
handicappers showed Written In Stone a lot of respect by raising him seven
points for Saturday’s win to an 82.
In the first
of Strydom’s hattrick on Saturday he rode a patient race on Sell High, who
looked to have some other fancied horses held on paper.
The Dorrie
Sham-trained five-year-old Mambo In Seattle gelding weaved his way through in
the 1800m MR 88 Handicap event to win by a cosy 0,60 lengths from Category
Four.
The second of
his wins was on the Corne Spies-trained four-year-old Crusade filly Madame
Patrice. In this 1200m event it was interesting to see Strydom keeping the
filly quite wide around the turn in second place, probably to avoid the loose
ground which had been churned up by seven prior races. She kept on finding in
the straight to beat topweight Royal Lily by a quarter-of-a-length. The latter
was highly tried early in her career and should be followed as she ran on
strongly from the back.
The Gavin van Zyl-trained SO VAR runs in the SOCCER 6 MR 88 HANDICAP at Hollywoodbets Scottsville today. Picture: Candiese Lenferna
ANDREW HARRISON
CHRISTMAS is some months away but tis’ the season of favourites and bombs. With Champions Season behind us, lowly merit rated handicaps are not the easiest even on a good day.
So Var starts for his fortieth race and although only collecting five wins on the way. So Var has shown his best recent form on the poly but he is in good heart and should run a decent race at Hollywoodbets Scottsville tomorrow.
The diminutive
Winter Blues is a Louis Goosen stable favourite because he is all heart and
seldom gives less than his best. Tomorrow, he is over his best course and distance
and cannot be written off.
An interesting
runner is Gavin van Zyl’s runner Greenlighttoheaven. Van Zyl has three runners
in the race and one would normally assume that Dancing Feather, with stable
rider and reigning national champion Warren Kennedy in the saddle, is the
stable elect.
The filly may
still be the stable number one as she looks seriously talented, but her best
form has been over a mile and given the quality of this field, the 1000m-dash
could be on the sharp side.
That said, she
is loaded with class and cannot be written off lightly.
Stable companion
Greenlighttoheaven is lightly raced, but he won smoothly on debut before taking
on feature company at his next two. He was probably outclassed in both outings
and he’s in another tough one. But he does have a 4kg claimer up and if he can
reproduce his debut win, he could be the surprise package.
The Dennis Drier
yard is seldom quiet for long and it has been showing signs of returning to top
form after a quiet spell of late. But as Drier has said on many occasions, if
you don’t have the horses you are always going to struggle no matter how good a
trainer you are.
Drier is one of
the most respected trainers in the sport and as a result is seldom short of a
decent horse or three.
Maiden’s Prayer
has had two runs back since returning from the Cape so should strip at her peak
and could be good enough to put this field to bed in the seventh. But it is
another competitive handicap and if Maiden’s Prayer does not run up to
expectations then the que behind her is a long one. Arianos Shadow is over her
best distance and showed up well at her last two for Yogas Govender and the
Wendy Whitehead-trained Twice As Smart is useful and from a good draw should be
thereabouts again.
The regally bred
Sanskrift, full sister to champion sire Silvano, enhanced her paddock value
enormously by winning her last two over course and distance but it is debatable
that she can make it three, even though she only got a two-point raise in the
handicap.
This is her
first run for her new stable.
Those punters
looking to bolster their punting wallets before the exotics may look to Lord
Wylie in the card opener as he has improved with each outing and was close-up
behind the much-vaunted Hail Columbia last time out. However, there are plenty
of first timers in the race so one is never quite sure what you are up against
and it may prove prudent to hedge on the side of caution.
Hawker Typhoon, although nearly surprising on
debut when starting at long odds, could be the right one the second and a
repeat of her first effort should see her in the firing line again. Irish Belle
looks held by a number of her rivals given her debut form but she raced very
green on debut when jumping from a difficult draw. She is sure to have come on
from that effort and is one to watch in the market.
GOLD CIRCLE has agreed to host the
trial of a proposed new racing concept called Super
Six Racing.
Gold
Circle was approached by Super Six Racing Ltd., a UK-based company to trial the
concept which will in no way affect the Hollywoodbets Greyville meeting
scheduled for Wednesday, September 16, other than in six races in which riders
will be wearing designated colours of the team
sponsors and not the silks of the registered owners.
Other
than the colour changes – where affected owners will be financially compensated
– the meeting will be as normal, called
by the local commentator on duty and broadcast on Tellytrack.
The
aim of the exercise is to ‘test-drive’ the new concept ultimately aimed at the
emerging Chinese thoroughbred racing industry where gambling is prohibited.
The Super Six press
release reads: The Super Six product is aimed at taking the sport of horse
racing to consumers as a non-gambling proposition. Super Six Racing is in
negotiation with distributors to put our programme in front of a global
audience, particularly into territories where gambling is currently prohibited,
in particular mainland China.
The
purpose of the trial (at Hollywoodbets Greyville) is to produce a very
high-quality broadcast package of some 40-minute duration which will be used to
showcase the Super Six horse racing product to our potential sponsors and
partners.
The only difference
from a normal raceday would be that Super Six would require fields of exactly
twelve runners, with jockeys wearing the colours of our Super Six Racing teams,
rather than the owners own colours. We envisage our six races to be part of a
normal eight-race card so that there would be minimal disruption to the usual
racing product.
Subject to a
successful trial, Super Six Racing Ltd will look to enter into formal
agreements to stage its first full Super Six Live Racing Series.
Initial thoughts see
a series of six meetings, typically with four weeks space between them, which
would allow for five qualifying events and a grand Final. Our intention will be
to live stream and broadcast the Super Six series internationally and in
particular into mainland China.
This very low risk
proposition, with minimum disruption, offers the potential for substantial
long-term benefits to the South African horse racing industry, including:
Phase One:
• An enhanced broadcast product on Super Six Raceday,
showcasing South African racing to a new international audience.
• A partnership with Super Six Global League,
presenting a more approachable, inclusive and easy to understand horse racing
offer
• A transformational offer engaging with a sector of
the population, previously disinterested in horse racing, engaging,
entertaining and building a sustainable new audience for the sport.
Phase Two
• Super Six plans foresee the development of four
major new racetrack facilities in China over the next ten years. Each
new racetrack in China
will require upwards of 600 horses and regular re-supply
• South African racing would act as a feeder or
nursery for Super Six Racing in China,
with concomitant long-term benefits. Rather than waiting for racecourses to be
built over a period of years, staging Super Six in South Africa means that we can move
teams seamless to the new tracks as they open.
• This would
facilitate the strengthening of the South African breeding industry with a
secure long-term demand. Enabling
improvement of the breed with increased budgets for breeding stock acquisition
and collaboration in securing stallions to shuttle between the northern and
southern hemispheres.
Super Six is delighted to announce team sponsors for
this exciting and ground-breaking Inaugural Raceday and their colours as
follows:-
Team
Body Colour
First Cap
Second Cap
Autoimmune Warriors
Pink
Pink
Purple
Drakenstein Stud
Light Blue
Light Blue
White
Dromex
Yellow
Yellow
Black
Team G Racing
Red with Yellow Circles
Red
Yellow
Klawervlei Stud
White
Green Spots on White
White Spots on Green
Summerhill Equine
Red, White and Blue
Dark Blue
Grey
Following on from the
Inaugural Raceday, Super Six and Gold
Circle will work towards staging the first full
series of Super Six Racing.
Finally,
Super Six Racing would like to thank Gold
Circle and all team sponsors for their outstanding
support in such difficult and unprecedented times – without which this
Inaugural Raceday would not be possible.
The Garth Puller-trained CAPTAIN FONTANE, with Lyle Hewitson up, wins the Hollywoodbets Bright Future MR 78 Handicap at Hollywoodbets Greyville today. Picture: Candiese Lenferna
Andrew Harrison
CAPTAIN FONTANE had garnered a reputation before he even set foot on a racetrack and he gave credence to those views with a smashing victory in the last at Hollywoodbets Greyville today.
A comfortable winner on debut, that form
was rubber-stamped when runner up Hail Columbia hacked up at Hollywoodbets
Scottsville last Sunday.
Today’s performance was something out of
the top drawer as Garth Puller’s charge spread-eagled the opposition, putting
five lengths of daylight between them.
Missing the kick, Lyle Hewitson managed to
slot him in on the rail and hold his position. But once off the false rail,
Captain Fontane extended like a really good horse to win as he liked.
A pricey yearling purchase, Captain Fontane
is owned by Hong Kong-based trainer David Ferraris and his partner C.W. Hui.
With Hewitson having completed an extended if fruitless spell in Hong Kong, he
will be in a position to give Ferraris valuable feedback and the green light
for the Far East may well be flickering.
There are few riders that can get a horse out
of the gate quicker than the rest. Anton Marcus is a past master and anything
drawn wide that prefers to race handy and is on the rail before the opposition
has woken up to the fact that they are in a race.
The Ghan may have, in the end, have proven
to be a touch superior to his rivals as Marcus made plenty of early use of him,
giving him a breather up the hill before skating away to win the second.
The race was the second leg of a double for
the rider and Brett Crawford’s assistant Peter Muscutt as Marcus had employed
similar tactics in the card opener as he catapulted odds-on favourite Deep
Thought out of the gate and was never there for the catching.
That was two favourites home before the
wheels came off as far as many punters were concerned.
Aquae Sulis, second at her penultimate start but never sighted last time up, started the rot as she got home comfortably for Mike Miller with Ashton Arries breaking an extended drought.
Born To Perform was the next favourite to
bite the dust and was never in the hunt as Hexatonic and champion jockey Warren
Kennedy got the better Special Blend inside the last 50m.
Hexatonic and Aquae Sulis (R42 on the tote)
both returned 14-1 on the books.
One can count on one hand horses that have
made it past 100 visits to the track in the past two decades, but at nine years
old Putchini is still playing the right tune as he notched his 11th
success from 112 starts. Ivan van Wyk has never been shy to run his charge who
at times has run twice a month for six months in succession, testimony the
geldings iron constitution.
DAVID THISELTON ST. John Gray (pictured) and Sherman Brown both rattled off hattricks at Turffontein Inside yesterday and one leg of the double they had together was Dance Class, who has now won five in a row and is threatening to become the next black-type earner in a Gray-owned family whose star member was Dance Class’s close relative, Dancewiththedevil. The latter looked to the casual observer to be a useful handicapper halfway through her four-year-old season before beating a Grade 1 winner in a Graduation Plate and then proving that was no fluke by winning the Grade 3 Acacia Handicap, the Grade 1 HF Oppenheimer Horse Chestnut Stakes and the Grade 1 Laurie Jaffee Empress Club Stakes within a period of six weeks. She later won the Grade 1 Rising Sun Gold Challenge and the Grade 1 Sansui Summer Cup. Dance Class, who won over 2000m yesterday carrying 57,5kg off an 87 merit rating, has a long way to go to match those feats. However, being a late maturer is not the only similarity she has to Dancewiththedevil. Firstly, she is by the same sire, Modus Vivendi, and is out of the five-time winning Jam Alley mare Dance Alley, who is a half-sister to Dancewiththedevil. She is not quite as classy as Dancewiththedevil was but like her, she is not tall but is strong and has a tremendous turn of foot. She took a while to get going from a handy position yesterday but once she hit top gear she passed her full-sister Jive Express and then fetched the topweight Heartstwings to win by a comfortable 1,50 lengths. Gray said in the post-race interview that her acceleration indeed reminded him of her famous three-parts relative and he concluded by saying she was not far off Dancewiththedevil’s class and would also be especially effective on the Turffontein Standside track. Gray won the first two races at the meeting with the progeny of Bezrin. The first-timer colt After Hours, who is a half-brother to the three-time winner Grindelwald, started favourite in the first over 1200m and ran on well under Brown to win by 0,75 lengths. The filly Feather The Nest, who is out of three-time winning Announce mare Nesting Call, ran on well in the second over 1200m and just held on under S’Manga Khumalo to convert odds of 5-1, having been backed in from 13-1. Gray owns and bred all three of his winners. Brown’s other winner was the favourite for the third over 1200m, the Paul Peter-trained Var filly Way Of The World. Peter scored a treble for the second time in five days and both Khumalo and Piere Strydom rode doubles.
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