Ryan Moore has an international schedule as extensive and
wide-ranging as an airline pilot in the days leading up to his first experience
of Kenilworth in Saturday’s Sun Met.
On Saturday he was in Florida to partner the Aidan
O’Brien-trained Magic Wand in the Pegasus World Cup Turf International Stakes
(he was second) and today he rides More Than This in the Classic Mile at the
big Chinese New Year meeting in Hong Kong, replacing Karis Teetan who had won
all his three rides on the horse.
Ryan Moore
From there he goes to Saudi Arabia to ride work on horses
entered for the world’s richest horse race, the $20 million Saudi Cup on
February 29. Only after that can he set his sights on the Met.
“I hope he will get a chance to sit on Rainbow Bridge before
Saturday but, if not, he is a professional and he knows what to do,” says Eric
Sands who seems likely to show him extracts from Garth Puller’s fascinating
interview with David Thiselton on the challenges facing Moore in the Met. This
appeared in the Daily News last week and former champion jockey Puller,
who won the Met three times, is Sands’ former brother-in-law.
Puller made specific reference to the interference problems
caused by all the jostling for position in the early stages. “The reason is
because jockeys want to find cover from the South-Easterly wind. They have that
in mind from the jump and, with everybody trying to hide from it, the field takes
some time to sort itself out.”
Indeed the South-Easter is the reason why most Cape Town
trainers regard ‘Thou shalt not go three wide’ as the 11th of the
Ten Commandments (and more important than most of the others!) whereas in many
parts of the world covering a bit of extra ground is often regarded as
preferable to getting boxed in, or using up valuable energy by having to check
and ease back in order to get a run.
Puller has no doubt that Moore will listen to what Sands has
to say and adapt accordingly. “I have watched Ryan ride and he is definitely
one of the best five jockeys in the world. No new track or horse will make any
difference to him. Also he is not the sort of jockey who is going to ride the
horse blind. He will watch the re-runs and probably give the horse a blow-out
beforehand.”
The Paul Peter-trained Rebel’s Champ took a while
to hit top gear in yesterday’s Non-Black Type Marula Sprint over 1200m at
Hollywoodbets Scottsville but when he did he stormed home to convert 12/10
favouritism under Warren Kennedy.
The five-year-old Rebel King gelding carried
topweight but looked hard to beat under the conditions of the race. He was
2,5kg well in with the second best weighted horse, Tribal Fusion, according to
official merit ratings.
Rebel’s Champ was a touch slowly away as Cumulus
set the fractions on the inside. Kennedy positioned the 12/10 favourite behind
the third favourite Celebration Rock who was prominent in the centre. Towards the
inside the second favourite Ishnana had started slowly and then pulled his
way alongside Celebration Rock. At the 400m mark Rebel’s Champ had a wall of
horses in front of him but Kennedy was able to switch him towards the outside
for a clear run. He was looking a touch laboured until Kennedy changed the whip
to his left hand and the horse then changed legs to a left lead and took off.
Kennedy had to change whip hands again as the horse began hanging inward but
his momentum carried him past Cumulus in the shadow of the post to win by a
quarter of a length. The Drunken Sailor ran on well on the outside for a
half-a-length third and it was then two lengths back to Goliath Heron and
Waywood who were separated by a head.
Rebel’s Champ (Candiese Lenferna)
The win clinched a double for Peter and Kennedy
as they had won the third over 1400m with the five-year-old Pathfork mare
Promise, who has now won six times from just 17 starts.
Garth Puller and Luke Ferraris also scored a
double together.
Puller consequently reached 30 winners for the
season, which gives him a lead of eight in the KZN Championships from
second-placed Gavin van Zyl.
Puller’s three-year-old Philanthropist gelding
Rasputin’s Remedy came from last under Ferraris in the fifth race, a Maiden
over 2400m, to catch the favourite Jet Lignite and win by half-a-length at odds
of 41/10.
In the next race, an apprentice handicap over
1200m, Ferraris extracted a powerful finish from Puller’s four-year-old
Oratorio gelding Krishnie’s Jet to catch the rank outsider Maa Nonu and win by
half-a-length.
Anton Marcus also scored a double, winning the
fourth over 1600m on the hard-knocking Johan Janse van Vuuren-trained
four-year-old Twice Over filly On The Double, and the last race on the
improving Mike Miller-trained Ideal World filly Basetsana, who can go on to win
more as she was still green in first-time blinkers.
Louis Goosen’s three-year-old Captain Of All
gelding Elementary was backed in the first and got home by a quarter of a
length under Craig Zackey.
The next over 1400m saw a win for Nathan Kotzen
and Kabelo Matsunyane with the three-year-old gelding Walton Hall, who is by
the promising sire Wylie Hall.
Puller had many runners on the day and roared
into the lead on the Hollywoodbets Sizzling Summer Challenge trainers’ table.
He started the day five points behind leader Paul Lafferty and after gathering
104 points to Lafferty’s 47 he is now 52 points ahead of the latter.
Marcus started the day two points clear of Warren Kennedy on the jockeys’ table and finished the day nine points ahead of him.
Equus Horse Of The Year Do It Again improved
enough in well-being this week for trainer Justin Snaith to have kept the big
bay’s Sun Met aspirations alive.
Do It Again was among the 14 horses announced in
the big race’s final field yesterday.
Snaith had expressed doubts about the
five-year-old Twice Over gelding lining up in the Met after his below par
L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate run.
Do It Again (Liesl King)
He had expressed concern about Do It Again’s
lacklustre demeanour.
However, the big horse appears to have turned
the corner and Snaith said, “Horses can’t talk unfortunately, but I can
see a change and am happy with him. He is looking a lot more upbeat and has
been freshing. There has been a lot of thinking, a lot of hard work and a few
sleepless nights.”
Snaith also has the Dynasty gelding Bunker Hunt
in the race.
This four-year-old has almost certainly not
shown his best yet as his three-year-old campaign was interrupted after a superb
running-on third in in the Grade 2 KRA Guineas.
In his last start, his second of the season, he
finished a 2,25 length second to Hawwaam in the Grade 2 Premier Trophy over
1800m, although he was receiving 2kg from the latter.
Snaith said, “He is doing very well. He is the dark horse of the race. He
needed that last run, it was a prep for this race, and I think he will be in
the first four.”
Snaith said the yard would be
saving the Grade 2 Peninsula Handicap winner Belgarion for a tilt at the
Vodacom Durban July.
Snaith’s Equus Champion
Sprinter Kasimir will be defending his Grade 1 Cape Flying Championship crown
on Met day.
He said, “He is very well.
He needed his last outing and is flying. I think the only one he has to beat is
Run Fox Run, who is unbeaten but this is her first real test.”
Snaith also has three runners
in the Grade 1 Majorca Stakes, Sleeping Single, Miyabi Gold and Silvano’s
Pride, but he said this trio were more suited to 2000m so would have to run big
races to be involved. He rated the Sean Tarry-trained Celtic Sea as a top horse
and believed she would give the current race favourite, the Mike de
Kock-trained Queen Supreme, “a good go.”
Hawwaam has
a seven-year hoodoo on favourites, as well as 13 rivals, to overcome if he is
to give Mike de Kock and Anton Marcus their fourth Sun Met victories at
Kenilworth on Saturday week.
Ever since
the eight-time champion trainer last won South Africa’s most valuable
conditions race with the odds-on Australian-bred filly Igugu in 2012 the
favourite has been beaten – and three of them didn’t even make the frame.
Hawwaam (JC Photographics)
Hawwaam,
despite managing only fifth in the L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate, is rock solid at
around 17-10 and not even the presence of the man who is the most successful
big race jockey in the world at the moment on last year’s winner Rainbow Bridge
has convinced the bookmakers that they need to lengthen the favourite.
The Eric
Sands runner remains third best at 9-2 with Queen’s Plate winner Vardy (28-10)
considered a bigger danger. Ten different stables are represented and only
Brett Crawford (with just 45-1 outsider Undercover Agent) can match De Kock’s
three Met winners. Vaughan Marshall (One World) has won it twice, Justin Snaith
(Do It Again and Bunker Hunt) once while Eric Sands’ victory 12 months ago was
also his first in the great race.
Bernard
Fayd’Herbe (Bunker Hunt) equals Marcus with three Mets to his name but Piere
Strydom ( Head Honcho), Greg Cheyne (More Magic) and Aldo Domeyer (Twist Of
Fate) are the only others in the line-up to have won the race before.
Bunker Hunt
is a 33-1 chance but his trainer’s observations suggest he could be each way
value at that price. “I rate him the dark horse of the race,” says Snaith who
was pleased with the way the gelding went when ridden by Fayd’Herbe in a gallop
with Wild Coast on the course last Saturday. “His second to Hawwaam in the
Premiers was a prep and, by not running in the Queen’s Plate, he comes into
this feeling good.”
It was at
this meeting four years ago that Snaith equalled the eight-winner world record
for the number of races won on the same card and this time he again has the
most runners with 36. Glen Kotzen has 17, Brett Crawford 15 and Candice
Bass-Robinson 14.
Richard
Fourie will be the only jockey riding in all 12 races but Cheyne, Fayd’Herbe
and Morne Winnaar each have 11 mounts. Interestingly Ryan Moore, who has never
ridden at Kenilworth before, will get the chance to assess the course on mounts
for Sean Tarry in the two R5 million CTS sales races. He also rides the
part-Coolmore owned Dynasty’s Blossom for Crawford in the Western Cape Stayers.
Candice
Bass-Robinson and Domeyer hope to repeat last year’s Bidvest Majorca win with
Clouds Unfold but seemingly Front And Centre will prove a major threat despite
managing only fifth when odds-on for the Cartier Paddock Stakes last time.
“I think she didn’t stay the nine furlongs that day,” said Crawford. “She is unbeaten over seven and she won a Group 1 over a mile. At Greyville she got away with it because of the short straight.”
Garth Puller still finds himself out in front in
the KZN Trainer’s Championship approaching the mid-point of the season but he
does not believe he will have the firepower to hang on to this lead or to hold
on to his lofty position in the Hollywoodbets Sizzling Summer Challenge
trainers’ table.
Puller has had 28 winners in KZN this season,
six clear of second-placed Gavin van Zyl and eight clear of the joint
third-placed trainers, Dennis Drier, Dennis Bosch and Dean Kannemeyer. Johan
Janse van Vuuren and Gareth van Zyl are ten winners behind in joint sixth
place.
Garth Puller
Puller lies in second place in the Hollywoodbets
Sizzling Summer Challenge trainers’ table, five points behind leader Paul
Lafferty. The latter is on 485.5 points, Puller is on 480.5 points and they are
followed by Alyson Wright on 414 points, Duncan Howells on 352.5 points and
Gareth van Zyl on 341 points. The competition finishes at the end of February,
so Puller and Lafferty still have eleven meetings to negotiate.
Puller is in fact the 2.86/1 favourite with
Hollywoodbets to win the Challenge with Lafferty on 3.03/1 and Wright on
5/1.
However, Puller said, “Neither the
Championship or the Challenge are foremost on my mind. I don’t want to be
influenced into running horses for the sake of running them. My main aim is to
keep the horses happy and fresh so I can keep them racing, or in other words
keep them good enough to run often enough without hurting them. I started the
season well and have been in front ever since. But this is a relatively weak
time of the year and I don’t think I will have the firepower in the SA
Champions Season. I have been told I am five points behind in the Challenge
table but I might run out of horses as I have a lot of two-year-old unraced
horses but not many older horses.”
Two of Puller’s best horses Brooklyn and Bay
Tibbs will shortly be going in to quarantine on their long journey to join
David Ferraris’ stable in Hong Kong.
The Vaal nine race
meeting is competitive and those who do their homework can hope for some
healthy dividends in the exotics.
In the first race
Jackpot Jewel moved up well over 1600m last time out before plugging on for
second and the step down to 1400m here could be the answer. Warren Kennedy has
kept the ride. Latest Craze was drawn in pole over this trip on the Turffontein
Inside track last time and he ran on well from a handy position to finish a
decent 1,30 length second to the promising Cornish Pomodoro. Curious and Semper
Fi both stayed on well last time over this course and distance for places. The
former could reverse form from a more favourable draw by trends. Twice The
Surge stayed on well over 1200m in a workriders maiden and should improve over
this trip so has a big chance. Gold Rock stayed on for fourth over this trip
last time from a handy position and he should be thereabouts again.
Return Flight (Candiese Lenferna)
In the second race
over 1400m Peaceontherocks is a progressive sort who just failed to catch the
winner Midnight Top last time over course and distance. The connections will be
hoping there is no draw bias as she is drawn two. Theatre Of Dreams has not run
since last August but being by Ideal World she might well have benefited from
the rest. Franklin caught the eye running on well from way back in the Million
Maiden over 1160m and should relish the step up in trip. Maculate had to be
eased at one stage over 1600m last time when staying on but the step down in
trip is not sure to suit. Ella Bean stayed on quite well over course and
distance last time and could earn.
In the third over
1400m Emerald Crest caught the eye flying up late over this trip last time and
she looks to be a scopey sort. Cotopaxi stayed on well over this trip and
if Peaceontherocks wins the second the form will have been franked. Both the
first two choices have potentially unfavourable low draws, Pavlova Project
tended to oevrreace a bit over 1600m before a layoff so should run well fresh
over this trip. Loralei was not disgraced on debut and could improve. Anatura
should enjoy the step up in trip.
In the fourth race
over 1600m Dual At Dawn looks to be a decent sort and won her maiden well last
time over 1400m. He is by Vodacom Durban July winner Pomodoro, although his dam
was speedy which creates a slight concern. Whipping Boy was a revelation last
time with first time blinkers on and despite running past the field on what
appeared to be the unfavourable inside he stormed through to win easily. He now
has high flying Craig Zackey aboard, although he does have to give Dual At Dawn
1,5kg. Stone Judgement beat Dual At Dawn when winning his maiden over 1400m by
1,75 lengths and is now only 1kg worse off, although the latter has
improved. He is by Judpot which gives him a chance of enjoying the step up in
trip, although he is also out of quite a speedy mare. Trapiche is up against
the boys but has fine form over this trip. August Rain looks to have plenty of
scope so is another must include.
The fifth over
1100m provides a good opportunity for in-form Candice Dawson to pick up another
winner with the relatively unexposed but seemingly decent Illusion. Warren
Kennedy stays aboard which is a bonus. Oden has flawless recent sprint form and
should make another bold bid despite being five points higher for his last win.
Prince Of Venice has always struck as one with some class and should also be in
the mix.
In the next race over
1800m could Flichity By Farr proved last time she had acclimatised to the
Highveld. David Nieuwenhuizen keeps them in form well and the filly, who has a
resolute, enjoys middle distances on courses with long straights. Jet Star is
capable of a strong finish too and is also distance suited. Return Flight is a
dual Grade 1 winner and will go close if able to dictate in front, although
Seville Orange might challenge her for the lead. The latter is not out of it
and Pretty Border can’t be ignored either.
In the seventh
Shabba Ranks is chosen as the best bet on a tricky card despite a wide draw as
he stayed on well last time in a good field over 1600m with the blinkers back
on and he should relish the step back up in trip. He should be coming into his
own being by Jackson and is two points lower in the merit ratings. Royal Honour
stayed on well over 2000m last time and is in consistent form. Christopher
Robin is not sure to stay the trip being out of a speedy mare but his sire
Damage Is Done won over 2000m which gives him hope and he is in fine form.
Others to consider are Kurt’s Approval, At Hand, who gets a good draw for a
change, and Therevada.
The eighth is an
interesting event over 1400m and the question is whether Scent Of Evening can
repeat her fine effort last time when beating a good field in a Pinnacle Stakes
race. She has always had talent but has issues. Preference is for Flying High
who should be coming into her own. Gallic Princess is in good form and should
make a bold bid and Too Phat To Fly and Rockin Russian have the class to
contest it.
In the last over
1400m Ex’s N Ohs comes back from a deserved break and being by Jackson should
be coming into her own so should be right there. Kapama looks to be the main
danger. Oceania, Midnight Top and Tahitian Orana should also be considered.
For years
it has been a one-way street between Australia and South Africa when it came to
buying thoroughbred yearlings. South African owners heading Down Under annually
to snap up potential stars, yet Australian buyers stayed at home, citing
impossible quarantine requirements and arduous long-distance travel.
Lot 120 by Avontuur Stud (Liesl King)
That was
until New Zealand-based bloodstock agent Ric Wylie created history at the CTS
Premier Sale recently held in the Cape Town International Convention Centre,
when purchasing two fillies specifically to race in Australia. The sales
topping filly, the Trippi (USA) daughter of Champion Sprinter Val De Ra, was
consigned as Lot 120 by Avontuur Stud. The outstanding filly was snapped up by
Wylie, on behalf of an undisclosed Australian client. Wylie, who was part of
the CTS Premier Yearling Sale inspection team, was so impressed with what he
saw at Avontuur last September, that he was prepared to go to R1.65 million to
secure the bay filly, named All That Jazz.
He also purchased Lot 104, a Visionaire (USA) filly out of Strawberry
Lane, consigned by Lammerskraal Stud, for R600,000.
“After the inspections last year, I was really impressed with
some of the types – and that was without pedigrees. So I went to some of the
top studs in Australia and New Zealand and said, I can buy the best-bred filly
in South Africa for 20 cents in the dollar. One client was very interested, and
they have got involved. Both of my buys come from great families, Group 1 families,”
he said. “Lot 104, the Strawberry Lane filly, comes from a great Australian
family too – her second dam is the Centaine mare Taineberry (AUS), that’s the
family of one of my purchases a while ago in Galaxy Fair (AUS), also Barkada
(AUS) and Best Western (AUS). You can’t access a filly with a page like that
for that sort of price elsewhere.”
According
to Wylie the two yearlings will go into quarantine shortly in order to travel
to Australia. The fillies will spend three months in Mauritius, before heading
to the UK for another six months of residency. “They will spend the summer in
the UK. I have the nicest trainers in Lambourn. They’ll have a quiet English
summer with the sun on their backs and they’ll be broken in up the Lambourn
gallops. Then when they arrive in Australia, they will be ready to go into
training with whichever trainer my client decides to put them with”, Wylie added.
The
salestopper, Lot 99, an outstanding son of Champion sire Silvano (GER), was consigned
by Drakenstein Stud. A spirited bidding war saw the price quickly slip over the
R1 million barrier, with the colt out of the Giants Causeway(USA) mare Song Of
Happiness eventually knocked down for R3 million to Nic Jonsson. Jonsson, part owner of the 2018 and 2019 Vodacom
Durban July winner Do It again, explained that he had in fact bought the colt
in partnership with Bjorn Nielsen, owner of the well-known star stayer
Stradivarius (IRE). “He just ticked all the boxes, for me he was the buy of the
sale”, said Jonsson. “He has a great conformation, an incredible walk and a beautiful
temperament.” The colt, named I Want It All, will be trained by Justin Snaith.
International
bloodstock agent Amanda Skiffington also acquired two of the top lots, when the
hammer came down at R975,000 for Lot 51, a Silvano colt consigned by Maine
Chance Farms and at R2.2 million for Lot 145 a Rafeef(AUS) colt consigned by
Ridgemont Highlands Stud. EL Bloodstock was responsible for the second R2.2
million colt when the hammer fell in their favour for Lot 174, a
Gimmethegreenlight (AUS) colt out of the Jet Master mare Cupid, consigned by
Klawervlei Stud as agent.
Despite a significant drop in prices at what was considered a very tough sale, CTS CEO Wehann Smith pointed out that the Australian involvement, together with a number of new international buyers is exactly what was needed, especially with the likelihood that regular exports could resume later this year. “As an industry, I think it’s something that we in South Africa should be really excited about. It’s an arduous and costly trip at this point from South Africa to Australia, so to have the support of Ric and his clients is exciting”, he said. “I know the vision for the sale from the outset was that this would be the gateway from South Africa to the international market. In one sense, this sale was subsidised by the belief that one day, we’d get exports open again. Hopefully, this is another step in that direction and by the time we return here in 2021, there may be further confidence from the international market.”
By Liesl King
Image: The sales topping filly, the Trippi (USA) daughter of Champion Sprinter Val De Ra, was consigned as Lot 120 by Avontuur Stud. Picture: Liesl King
Do It Again, described by Justin Snaith a week ago as no
better than 50:50 to make the Sun Met, has made remarkable improvement and now
looks like running in Saturday week’s Kenilworth highlight.
But this piece of good news has been almost totally
overshadowed by the decision to jock off Gavin Lerena from last year’s winner
Rainbow Bridge and fly in superstar Ryan Moore. When this broke on Saturday
afternoon it was widely assumed that the horse’s owner Mike Rattray had been
responsible for switching jockeys.
But Rattray explained yesterday: “I didn’t do anything. I employ my trainer to train my horses and he must make the decisions. Ryan Moore was his recommendation and I told him ‘Whatever you decide – it’s your business.’“
Do It Again (Candiese Lenferna)
Sadly Rattray, whose life’s mission is to win the Durban
July, does not expect to make the Met. The 87-year-old is having problems with
his spine and is under doctor’s orders to take it easy.
Former champion Lerena was first booked for Rainbow Bridge
when Anton Marcus, who had won the Met on him, preferred to ride Hawwaam in the
Vodacom Durban July. Lerena was beaten less than half a length by Do It Again
in the big one. This season Lerena has ridden the five-year-old to finish third
in both the WSB Green Point and the L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate.
Eric Sands, explaining the background to the recommendation
to replace Lerena, said yesterday that he had not been entirely happy with the
way his horse had been ridden in his two races this season.
The decision to get a new jockey was a hard one to take,
particularly as he has known Gavin and his father for decades – “But at the end
of the day it was about making the right decision for the horse and so I told
Gavin that I had decided to make a change. He was more understanding than I
expected.”
With the doubt about Do It Again’s participation Sands spoke
to Justin Snaith and Richard Fourie who rode Rainbow Bridge to win the horse’s
first three races as well as last season’s Champions Cup. But the dual July
winner’s recovery put paid to that.
When Sands spoke to Rattray the owner suggested Frankie
Dettori – “But we couldn’t get hold of him. However I knew Jehan Malherbe had a
link to Ryan Moore who is, if not the best jockey in the world, certainly one
of the top four. So I spoke to Jehan about getting him.”
Lerena said yesterday: “The Met was Rainbow Bridge’s mission
and to be jocked off when the horse is going over his right trip is a bitter
pill to swallow. I believe he goes very well for me. He doesn’t over-race and
he runs as straight as an arrow whereas he hangs with some of the other jockeys
who have ridden him. All the best to Ryan – he is one of the greatest – but he
doesn’t know Rainbow Bridge.”
Moore, 36, first jockey to Aidan O’Brien’s all-conquering Ballydoyle operation, has won big races all over the world including the Derby (twice), Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe (twice), Melbourne Cup, Japan Cup and nine Breeders’ Cup races – but so far nothing in South Africa.Do It Again’s poor recovery from his Queen’s Plate run may have been because he is a carrier of biliary, the equine version of tick fever.
Tick fever
Snaith explained: “A lot of horses in South Africa become biliary carriers after getting bitten by a tick and we now think there is a small chance that Do It Again was carrying it in when he ran in the Queen’s Plate.
“Also he is not a good doer – he just eats as much as he
needs – and this is why we don’t run him a lot. But there has definitely been
improvement [in the last few days] and he is now looking better than he did
before the Queen’s Plate.”
BLOB Wednesday’s meeting at Kenilworth has been abandoned
after there were only 46 acceptors for the eight races. National Racing Bureau
staff rang the trainers but could not come up with enough extra runners. In
truth, the writing was on the wall when there were only 74 entered.
Justin Snaith will train last Thursday’s R3 million Cape
Premier Yearling Sale top price, the Silvano colt I Want It All who was purchased
by Nic Jonsson and Bjorn Neilsen. Snaith trained the grandam Captain’s Lover
and her half-sister Ebony Flyer to win the Cape Fillies Guineas in 2007 and
2010. This is also the family of Vardy.
However the price was R1 million less than last year’s top
and only half the R6 million paid for Charles at this sale in 2017 and for the
little-remembered Silver Coin the previous year.
Justin Snaith
Indeed the figures for last Thursday’s event are
frightening, or at least they are at first glance. The R326 531 average
was down by 25% – it has fallen in each of the last three years and is less
than half what it was in 2017. Turnover has also fallen consistently over the
same period and the R56.4 million aggregate was down by almost a third this
time.
The fall was accentuated by pre-sale expectation. Sales boss
Wehann Smith had said: “I’m quite positive. The news about a pending solution
in the export side is firm enough to make an impact.”
That was also a view held by many people and some translated
it into a 10% increase. “That was over-optimistic,” said Bryn Ressell’s racing
manager Mark van Deventer. “People have heard this [re the exports] so often
that they have become a bit cynical. They want to see it become reality.”
Brett Crawford, who trains Charles, said: “Don’t forget,
three years ago we had Markus Jooste and he brought some big players with him.
It was a buyer’s market last week and there were some nice horses to be had at
good value.”
John Freeman listed the economy as well as the Jooste factor
but he also mentioned more technical issues. “Three years ago there were
yearlings by five top stallions whereas this time the market was out of kilter
as far as the new rising stars are concerned. I bought horses well below their
value.”
Fellow bloodstock agent Jehan Malherbe added: “The market is
struggling. It’s because of the economy and the situation that racing is in
with stakes coming down and expenses going up. It’s going to be a tough year
for breeders”
Opinions vary about the effect of the loss of the two CTS R5
million sales races (Van Deventer: “Having a big incentive like that does
attract buyers”) but Peter de Beyer believes the whole market is shrinking and
that people have to adjust.
The owner-breeder is also an actuary, a former deputy managing
director of Old Mutual and still on the board. “The number of foals registered
each year has gone from 3 000 to 1 600 in recent years,” he said. “I
worked out that 75% of horses sold at auction last year were sold at a loss.”
As he says himself: “Sometimes it’s depressing to be good at numbers!”
The Brett Crawford-trained G G’s Dynasty carried
topweight to a cosy victory in yesterday’s Listed Michael Roberts Handicap over
1800m on the Hollywoodbets Greyville poly in a meeting which was characterised
by the thrilling tussle between Paul Lafferty and Garth Puller and Anton Marcus
and Warren Kennedy at the top of the respective trainers’ and jockeys’
Hollywoodbets Sizzling Summer Challenge tables.
The meeting was moved to the Greyville poly from
Scottsville due to heavy rain at the latter venue overnight and a forecast of
more rain yesterday and through the rest of this week.
GG’s Dynasty (Candiese Lenferna)
G G’s Dynasty, who started 49/20 favourite, sat
on the rail from midfield under Anton Marcus. He moved up smoothly in the
straight and repelled the challenge of Tristful to win by half-a-length.
Third-placed Born To Perform, who was second favourite at 53/20, lost some
ground at the start before running on strongly in the straight. Blackball was
next best and was also a touch unlucky as he was squeezed out in the straight
before running on well. The Dazzler was next best.
Lafferty started the meeting 18 points clear of
Puller on the Hollywoodbets Sizzling Summer Challenge trainer’s table, whilst
Marcus and Kennedy were joint-top of the Jockey’s table.
In the first race Puller gained a point on
Lafferty when Sereno Moodley kept Miss Charlotte going after taking her around
horses to the front. She held on by a short-head from the Lafferty-trained
favourite Lady Of Lutetia.
In the next the Puller and Lafferty pair
Explosive Beauty and Blush Of Dawn fought out a thrilling dead-head under Anton
Marcus and Ant Mgudlwa respectively.
Louis Goosen sent out the one-two in the next, a
MR 89 handicap over 1000m, with Di Mazzio and Winter Blues ridden by Billy
Jacobson and Craig Zackey respectively.
The fourth saw another victory for Anton Marcus
on the Kom Naidoo-trained Arizona Sunset.
However in the next Marcus was narrowly beaten
on the favourite Baby Shooz by the Gareth van Zyl-trained longshot Skollie,
ridden by Zackey.
The sixth saw a treble for Puller as 4kg claimer
Thabiso Gumede kept Georgina Rose going from the front to beat the
Kennedy-ridden Petra by 0,75 lengths with Marcus next best on Marsanne.
In the last race Wendy Whitehead’s Royal View
found a lot of support and never looked in danger of defeat under Zackey, beating
the Puller-trained closer Brunilda by 1,75 lengths.
Puller earned 51,5 points in the day to close
the gap on Lafferty to five points.
Marcus’ good day would have seen him forging
clear in the Jockeys table.
At the top of the horse table Explosive Beauty is now only 5.5 points behind her Lafferty-trained stable companion Bint El Malak.
By David Thiselton
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