The clouds part for Kotzen

PUBLISHED: 04 September 2017

Cumulus (Candiese Marnewick)

It was first time for the trio and “about time’, said a relived Nathan Kotzen after his colt Cumulus made a winning debut for Rob Haswell who was absent to lead in his first winner as an owner at Scottsville yesterday.

Kotzen, a long-time lieutenant of Mike de Kock in KwaZulu-Natal, decided to go on his own after De Kock shut up his Summerveld shop. That was some months back and as Kotzen said, it was about time that he had his first winner.

Cumulus (Candiese Marnewick)

Cumulus (Candiese Marnewick)

Haswell, former municipal manager of Msunduzi (Pietermaritzburg) hence the Alderman title before his name, is visiting family in the United States so missed out on his first winner although good friend Des McDonald was on hand to help out along with breeder Anton Proctor.

Dennis Bosch is never one to hold back when stirred and was vocal about the current racing programme – mostly unprintable.

But with stable companion Chantyman out with a virus, Billy Silver made short work of his three rivals in the Govender’s Garage Novice Plate and is on track for his immediate target, the Lanzerac Ready To Run to be run at Kenilworth early next month.

Gary Rich has more than served his apprenticeship in the racing game. Father Dessie was a legend in his time, winning the July Handicap with Lightening Shot in 1977. Rich has been assistant, trainer, Jockey Academy riding master, private trainer and is now back on his own at Ashburton.

Connect Me is not the easiest customer in the mornings, the filly making her debut in pacifiers, and there was always a risk of her boiling over on the course. “Her temperament is a worry,” said Rich after winning the card opener.

However, Billy Jacobson lists adrenalin sports as one of his hobbies and is often a ‘go-to’ jockey on difficult horses that scare the pants off many of his weighing room colleagues.

However, Connect Me was perfectly behaved yesterday and put it all together.

Duncan Howells was officially crown KZN Champion Trainer at an awards ceremony last Tuesday evening and behind much of his success is prolific owner Dave Maclean who has invested heavily in some top bloodstock.

MacLean’s dayglo orange and black silks are now a familiar sight in the winner’s enclosure and Edge Of The Sun added another victory in a hard-fought win in the Derby Meats Maiden Plate. Not one to exert himself in the mornings, the gelding races in blinkers and Keagan de Melo earned his riding fee as he was hard at work from the jump to get home narrowly from a fast-finishing Amritsar.

If that was close, De Melo was asked to work even harder on the MacLean-owned Howells-trained Wild Wicket. In receipt of 10kg, apprentice Ashton Arries was on his bike from the top of the straight on Saint Marco. De Melo, on the hot-pot favourite, was wise to the tactic but it was an agonising few seconds for Wild Wicket supporters as he slowly reeled in the runaway leader to snaffled him in the last jump.

Louis Goosen, settled in to Ashburton this month, had his first winner from his new yard with the giant Haddington. Given a smart ride by champion apprentice Eric Ngwane, Haddington took command early and kept up a relentless gallop all the way to the wire.

By Andrew Harrison