Expect the best from Gold Standard
PUBLISHED: June 5, 2018
“He has been syndicated to go to stud and my instructions from the partners was to not run him unless he was really moving well…
Glen Kotzen said he expected a good performance by Gold Standard in Saturday’s Rising Sun Gold Challenge over 1600m at Greyville, although he felt he might still need the run.
He said about the four-year-old Trippi colt, “He has been syndicated to go to stud and my instructions from the partners was to not run him unless he was really moving well. The good news is he has never moved better his season. He has had three gallops at Greyville and the Trippi’s enjoy running fresh although I’m not sure whether he might just need it running against the best who will all be tuned up.”
However, Kotzen expected the race to bring Gold Standard to his peak for a tilt at the Vodacom Durban July. However, he said if Gold Standard did win the Gold Challenge he would probably skip the July and go for the Grade 1 Champions Cup.
He said, “It is important to land a Grade 1 for the stud syndicate, although all 50 of the shares have already been bought.”
Gold Standard will stand at Drakenstein Stud together with his father Trippi.
The big bay proved himself a top horse as a three-year-old. He finished a narrow second in the Grade 1 Cape Guineas with the rest of the field well beaten and followed that with an unlucky fourth in a vintage Sun Met field.
However, he did not race again that season due to a chip in the fetlock and has been a touch disappointing this season.
He finished fourth in the Grade 3 Matchem Stakes and eighth and ninth respectively in the L’Ormarin’s Queen’s Plate and Sun Met.
Meanwhile, Kotzen said Pack Leader was still on course for the July. On Saturday the Philanthropist colt finished sixth in the Grade 1 Daily News 2000 but was only beaten 3,5 lengths. However, Kotzen said he had suffered a rough race and might just have needed it. He said he had been knocked around “like a ping pong ball” at the top of the straight and had then moved up to win the race but then looked like he needed it as he found no extra late. He surmised the reason must have been the combined effect of the colic incident which had caused him to be scratched from the WSB 1900 and the fact he had missed that race, because he had felt before Saturday’s race he had him ready. However, he now expected him to be “spot on” for the July and as he escapes a merit rating raise his July weight will be “bang on” the one they had wanted for him.
By David Thiselton
Legislate, Oh Susanna and Surcharge out of the July
PUBLISHED: June 5, 2018
“Oh Susanna will stay in training and will definitely be racing in South Africa again, There are no plans to take her overseas…
The Drakenstein Stud-owned and Justin Snaith-trained pair Legislate and Oh Susanna will not take part in the 2018 Vodacom Durban July.
Kevin Sommerville, the racing manager for Drakenstein Stud said, “Oh Susanna will stay in training and will definitely be racing in South Africa again, There are no plans to take her overseas. The plan in Durban was always the Woolavington, although we would have loved to have been able to have a preparation run going in. If she had won stretching away very comfortably, we would have considered the July. But the weight conditions are just not in her favour. We will aim her again at the Paddock Stakes and Met. She seems very happy in herself.”
Oh Susanna’s win in Saturday’s Woolavington 2000 at Greyville was her first run since her wins in the Cartier Paddock Stakes and Sun Met in January. Those three successive Grade 1 victories have made her the favourite to be the first female Equus Horse Of The Year since Igugu in the 2010/2011 season. The Australian-bred daughter of Street Cry gave her supporters a few anxious moments on Saturday when over-racing as they reached the first turn. However, such is her class she still managed to keep Fiorella and Lady In Black at bay in the straight and her giant stride carried her to a half-a-length victory under Grant van Niekerk.
The Snaith yard sent out a press release to announce the July scratchings and said the seven-year-old Dynasty entire Legislate would take his place in the Grade 2 Post Merchants over 1200m at Greyville on January 15 with Bernard Fayd’Herbe up.
Sommerville said, “”Legislate is very well but just needs more mileage. The Post Merchants should do him a world of good and won’t do him any harm. It will be a learning curve and will tell us whether he is able to take part in another big race.”
Sommerville named the Grade 1 Champions Cup as a possibility.
Legislate won the 2014 July and was named Equus Horse Of The Year for that 2013/2014 season.
Legislate proved to have a below average fertility rate at stud due to a low sperm count. Sommerville said his rate of getting mares in foal per cover was about 32% and his rate based on three covers was 58%. The accepted rate for the latter is 60% and above.
Sommerville said, “Every season a mare misses is costly for the breeder and he might have lost support due to that risk so it was decided to see how he would go back in training.”
The Grade 1 Daily News 2000 winner Surcharge has been scratched from the Vodacom Durban July.
This was not a surprising decision by the connections of the Stuart Pettigrew-owned Gimmethegreenlight colt as he has had an ultra-tough season.
He was asked to overcome wide draws in the Emperor’s Palace Ready To Run Cup and in all three legs of the Triple Crown.
He still managed to finish second in all three legs of the Triple Crown and before that won both the Listed Secretariat Stakes and Grade 3 Tony Ruffel Stakes, both over 1400m, when giving weight all around.
On Saturday he finally landed a good draw and duly won the prestigious R2 million classic event under Gunther Wrogemann.
Surcharge was quoted at 9/1 in Betting World’s July market at the time of his scratching.
By David Thiselton
Van Niekerk not to appeal
PUBLISHED: June 5, 2018
The Fairview suspension was Van Niekerk’s first since January although he does face an inquiry as a result of the interference suffered by Made To Conquer…
Grant van Niekerk, given a 14-day suspension on Friday for an interference offence at Fairview on March 2, said yesterday that he will not appeal.
As the Review Board does not sit again until August 3, when the members can be expected to impose a ban that will have almost immediate effect, he will be free to take his big race mounts in much of the rest of the KZN season.
The Fairview suspension was Van Niekerk’s first since January although he does face an inquiry as a result of the interference suffered by Made To Conquer when Strathdon (Van Niekerk) came in on him in the closing stages of last Saturday’s Lonsdale Stirrup Cup.
Candice Bass-Robinson, who won the Cape Of Good Hope Nursery and the fillies equivalent with Dutch Philip and Magical Wonderland 12 months ago, again has a strong in the two features at Kenilworth on Saturday.
She runs half the field in the Kenilworth Fillies Nursery with Nous Voila (Aldo Domeyer), Mixed Signals and Santa Clara. Nous Voila was second in the Perfect Promise and the other two won last time out. In the Cape Nursery she and Domeyer rely on Clouds Unfold who has won two out of three and was immensely impressive last time.
Joey Ramsden, last successful with Kingvoldt four years ago, runs three in this six furlong test and all his three runners finished behind One World a week ago – Carnage who was beaten only a fifth of a length, Lucky Dancer (fifth) and Arabian Air who started favourite but finished fourth and was found to be not striding out.
By Michael Clower
RISING SUN GOLD CHALLENGE GRADE 1
PUBLISHED: June 5, 2018
Just three July contenders will compete in the Rising Sun Gold Challenge with the other seven running in the R300 000, Grade 3 Cup Trial over 1 800m…

A compact field of nine runners, including the exciting three-year-old filly Snowdance, will face the starter for the R1-million, Grade 1 Rising Sun Gold Challenge over 1 600m at Greyville on Saturday where a total of 10 Vodacom Durban July hopefuls will feature on the programme in a final bid for a place in the premier event on July 7.
Just three July contenders will compete in the Rising Sun Gold Challenge with the other seven running in the R300 000, Grade 3 Cup Trial over 1 800m which has a field of 12 that includes the favourite for Africa’s greatest race, African Night Sky.
Snowdance, the Justin Snaith-trained winner of the Cape Fillies Guineas and the Majorca Stakes before being upstaged in the Daisy Fillies Guineas at Greyville by Fiorella, is supported in the race by stable companion Copper Force but the pair face a formidable team of three from the Brett Crawford yard comprising Captain America, Sail South and Undercover Agent. None are July entries but all three are highly accomplished in their careers with the three-year-old just being touched off by Perovskia in the Independent On Saturday Drill Hall Stakes and the other two finishing within a length off Legal Eagle in the Grade 1 L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate.
Champion trainer Sean Tarry has two runners in the field including his Vodacom Durban July candidate Liege. The five-year-old Dynasty gelding has not raced since winning the Grade 1 Summer Cup in November and technically should not be allowed to race. However, discussions were taking place between Gold Circle and the National Horseracing Authority on the gelding’s participation.
The Cup Trial will be followed with great interest with July favourite African Night Sky in the field. The four-year-old Dynasty gelding was just touched off by Star Express in a Pinnacle Stakes race over 1 600m in his only local run this season but is highly rated on his exposed ability and as long as he gives a good account of himself on Saturday his July place is secure.
Among his opposition is the Russian Sage gelding Perovskia from the Harold Crawford stable that caused an upset when winning the Independent Of Saturday Drill Hall Stakes and the Querari gelding Head Honcho that has won his last three starts including the Sledgehammer.
By Richard McMillan.
Surcharge makes them pay
PUBLISHED: June 4, 2018
He said Surcharge had been unlucky in the three legs of the Triple Crown having had bad draws in all three…
If ever a horse deserved the honour of a Grade 1 victory it was the gutsy son of Gimmethegreenlight, the three-year-old Surcharge from the Stuart Pettigrew stable, that powered his way to victory in the R2-million Daily News 2000 at Greyville in Durban on Saturday.
Only once out of the first two in his previous 10 starts and runner-up in the three legs of the Highveld Triple Crown, the game and honest colt boosted even further the outstanding season his pilot Gunter Wrogemann is enjoying and saluted the talent and perseverance of his conditioner.
Surcharge, coming from behind in another below par paced event won by three-quarters of a length from the Paul Peter-trained Majestic Mambo whose stable companion Alssakhara had been sent out to ensure a good pace and made the running ahead of Pack Leader and Warrior’s Rest that disputed the second place for most of the race.
When they hit the home straight, favourite Do It Again made his winning bid down the inside while Wrogemann “got a split” further out at the top of the straight and stormed down the centre of the track to take the honours.
Having ridden his 100th winner of the season earlier in the week – and one of the best seasons of his long career – Wrogemann commented that he felt for jockey Piere Strydom who had partnered the colt in most of his races and was sidelined with injury, but he felt blessed in the way racing had treated him this season. He said Surcharge had been unlucky in the three legs of the Triple Crown having had bad draws in all three.
Pettigrew, a long-time trainer on the Highveld, managed to hold his emotions in check as he praised the colt and said Surcharge was the best horse he had ever trained and ever would train.
Like the slow pace of the R1-million, Grade 1 Woolavington 2000 that had been run a short while earlier, the Daily News 2000 had not been run at a strong place in spite of the Paul Peter pacemaker getting on with things from the outset with the winning time of 124.31 secs being considerably slower than the class average of 122.72 sec and that will have been a concern for many racing pundits looking for a real star among the three-year-olds.
The Woolavington 2000 was run at an even slower pace with the Daisy Fillies Guineas winner Fiorella deliberately doddeling along at the head of affairs with Lady In Black in second place along the rail and odds-on favourite Oh Susanna fighting for her head in the early stages and one off the rail in third place. In the home straight Grant van Niekerk got the favourite to the head of affairs but under strong attack from Fiorella on her inside with Lady In Black challenging and, at one stage, looking dangerous on her outside.
With this race having been run at a crawl in a time of 125.29 secs, it was definitely not a true reflection of the true capability of Oh Susanna but there could be a re-think of the star filly’s programme for the rest of the season when taken in the overall context of the three-year-old performances at the meeting.
The R300 000, Grade 3 Lonsdale Strirrup Cup had the racegoers on the edge of their seats as the Justin Snaith stable companions, favourite Made To Conquer and Strathdon, burst clear of the field together from off the pace at the top of the straight and fought it out to the line with Made To Conquer getting the decision by about a long head and third-placed Mr Winsome some seven lengths back.
News from the Snaith stable is that Made To Conquer, at present not featuring on the July Log, will be a July contender while Strathdon will be aimed at the eLAN Gold Cup on Super Saturday at the end of the season.
By Richard McMillan









