Dillon looking forward to Gold Cup day

PUBLISHED: 19 August 2020

VIHAAN'S PIE - Candiese Lenferna
The Kumaran Naidoo-trained VIHAAN’S PIE. Picture: Candiese Lenferna

DAVID THISELTON

DONOVAN Dillon was at Hollywoodbets Greyville well before today’s meeting to ride the Kumaran Naidoo-trained Grade 1 Thekwini contender Vihaan’s Pie in a gallop on the poly.

He will have some other good rides on Gold Cup day including the Vodacom Durban July-trained Golden Ducat in the Grade 1 Champions Cup and he spoke at length about the potential of this Eric Sands-trained stalwart.

Vihaan’s Pie put up a good workout and Dillon said she was a lot better than the form of her last run suggested.

In that race, the Grade 2 Zulu Kingdom Explorer Golden Slipper over 1400m, she was caught wide early from a high draw and although she did eventually find cover her finishing effort was not strong enough and she passed the line in ninth place, 5,35 lengths behind the winner. 

The good looking chestnut is by Futura and is a half-sister to the Grade 1 Cape Guineas third-placed MacThief (Time Thief), so should enjoy this trip. Her mother, Yellow Card by Trippi, only had seven starts and won two of the first four of them over distances of 1200m and 1400m respectively.

Vihaan’s Pie is drawn ten out of 18 entries and is rated a 36-1 shot by Track And Ball. The field will be cut down to a maximum of 14 at the declaration stage tomorrow and this race will undoubtedly have one of the strongest fields on the day. 

Meanwhile, Golden Ducat has drawn nine out of eleven entries in the Champions Cup and Track And Ball have him as the 10-1 fourth favourite.

Dillon said this Philanthropist half-brother to Hawwaam and Rainbow Bridge did not yet know how good he was and reckoned he would win next year’s July.

Golden Ducat’s performance in the July this year was incredible considering he raced handy behind a blistering pace and had no cover virtually the whole way around and yet still managed to stay on for a 1,90 length fourth. 

Dillon said the strong pace had suited the big galloper as he was a horse who liked to use his action. 

Golden Ducat’s July run suggests he has oodles of stamina and Dillon agreed he would have been a big runner in the Gold Cup, a race he might be aimed at in time to come. However, Sands is wisely sticking to the classic distance Grade 1 races at present considering he has been showing enough speed to be a contender and is improving all the time. The Cape Derby winner did not handle Hollywoodbets Greyville in his first two starts this season but the fitting of a new noseband did the trick for the July.

Dillon’s successful effort in slimming down to 53kg to make the weight for Golden Ducat in the July did not receive the accolades it deserved. Although his official riding weight is 56,5kg the tall youngster had been walking around at 59kg in some stages of this season. He said he had taken advice from experienced jockeys and formulated a three meal a day routine with a limited number of calories and the pounds had come off. He said he had not felt any weaker for it but had fallen ill a couple of weeks after the July, so his body had obviously felt the effects. Today’s meeting was his first since August 5.

Dillon felt Golden Ducat had a tough task at the weights in the Champions Cup against the like of Rainbow Bridge and Do It Again but he was confident this horse would have a fine season and he was obviously hoping to keep the ride for his Cape campaign.