Oh Susanna back in action
PUBLISHED: May 8, 2018
…With some horses I might have taken a chance but not with this one. She is only three and she has a hell of a future ahead of her.”…
Sun Met winner Oh Susanna has already made a complete recovery from the bruised heel that caused her to miss last Friday’s clash with the colts in the Daisy Guineas.
Justin Snaith said yesterday: “I had to change the off-fore shoe as it was uncomfortable but she is fine again now. With some horses I might have taken a chance but not with this one. She is only three and she has a hell of a future ahead of her.”
She will now make her KZN debut in the Woolavington on June 2 and this means, that if she is to go on to the Vodacom Durban July, the great race will – ominously – be her second run after a rest. Does Snaith believe in this red warning signal?
“It doesn’t really bother me and certainly I am not going to let it do so,” he answered. “Sometimes the second run is a horse’s worst but sometimes it’s the best. And, don’t forget, I never really planned to run her in the Guineas but she was doing so well that I thought we would let her have a go at it.”
Snaith blames the unaccustomed floodlights for Snowdance’s shock defeat at 1-4 in the Daisy Fillies Guineas and said: “As soon as she came into the parade ring I could see there were problems and in the race itself she wasn’t as settled as she normally is. Had it been run during the day I believe she would have won. Hopefully she has learned and will be more settled next time.”
Bernard Fayd’Herbe added: “She got revved up in the parade ring and, as she is a big-striding horse, I let her go on. In the straight I thought she would quicken but she didn’t.”
But apparently the benefits of the race are already beginning to show as Snaith said: “She has come on a lot since Friday and she already looks a lot fitter.”
He is now looking for a suitable prep before the Garden Province on July day. Do It Again’s win the Daisy Guineas, though, has convinced him that all is on course with his 2018 KZN ambitions. “I am happy where my horses are – we said we would come in quietly – and we are in a happy place with them all.”
The fact that Sean Tarry was able to peg back less than a third of Snaith’s R3.1million trainers’ log lead on Champions Day at Turffontein also played a part in boosting the feeling of well-being!
By Michael Clower
Twist Of Fate books ticket to Scottsville
PUBLISHED: May 7, 2018
“Jesus, this is a good horse,” the Milnerton trainer insisted. “And he had the worst preparation – only ten days to get over his first run – and that’s very hard for a two-year-old.”…
Twist Of Fate booked his Scottsville ticket – and Bernard Fayd’Herbe’s place on his back -by giving weight all round in the Somerset 1200 at Kenilworth yesterday.
But apparently it’s runner-up Arabian Air who should go into the notebooks. Rarely have I heard Joey Ramsden raving about a horse as he did this one.
“Jesus, this is a good horse,” the Milnerton trainer insisted. “And he had the worst preparation – only ten days to get over his first run – and that’s very hard for a two-year-old.”
Almost needless to say, he promptly confirmed that the Silvano colt is a Guineas prospect but it is Twist Of Fate, owned by the Mauritius-based River Palace Racing Syndicate, whose name goes into the record books as Ramsden’s fifth Somerset winner in six seasons.
Fayde’Herbe made for the faster ground on the stands side on the 6-1 son of Master Of My Fate, led a furlong out and held Arabian Air’s renewed challenge by a hard-fought fifth of a length.
Ramsden said: “This is one of the toughest two-year-olds I have ever trained. He also runs straight and true, and he is such a hard-knocking horse that it would be ridiculous not to have a look at the Gold Medallion.”
If Ramsden has some of the top juvenile colts it is Candice Bass-Robinson who has the dominant hand among the fillies and her two runners totally dominated the Perfect Promise Sprint. Unfortunately for punters the wrong one won.
They plunged on Nous Voila, backing her from 2-1 to 8-10, and allowed Lesedi La Rona to drift from 18-10 to 9-2. It was only in the last few strides that they found they had got it wrong.
Grant van Niekerk somehow conjured some hidden reserves from the supposed second string and, despite his mount drifting left towards the other horse, he snatched a head verdict with the next closest a full four lengths back.
Van Niekerk said: “I know Aldo was very bullish about Nous Voila but I rate mine highly and I think she is a filly worth following.”
Gaynor Rupert named her Trippi homebred shortly after the third-largest diamond ever found was discovered is Lesotho. It was subsequently sold for R704 million (“About what our filly is now worth,” quipped Drakenstein racing manager Kevin Sommerville).
Domeyer, though, remains loyal to Nous Voila, saying: “I was always going well and when she quickened I thought I would win. It will always be close between them but I do think mine will prove the better.”
Their trainer added that both are likely to go for the Kenilworth Fillies Nursery on June 9 rather than travel to Durban – “they have too much of a career ahead of them for that”- and that both are Fillies Guineas prospects. “And, don’t forget, there is also Santa Clara and Clouds Unfold.”
By Michael Clower
Snaith does it again
PUBLISHED: May 7, 2018
The Justin Snaith winner Do It Again was shortened to 8-1 from 14-1 joint second favourite for the Vodacom Durban July…
Do It Again was yesterday cut from 14-1 to 8-1 joint second favourite for the Vodacom Durban July following his last-to-first Daisy Guineas win on Friday evening. Stable companion African Night Sky still heads the market with Betting World but has been eased from 6-1 to 15-2.
Sun Met winner Oh Susanna, yet another of Justin Snaith’s aces, remains on 8-1 despite being forced to miss the Daisy Guineas because of a bruised heel.
Coral Fever is 16-1 (from 25-1) after his Premier’s Champions Challenge triumph while Perovskia has been slashed from 125-1 but is still among the 50-1 shots despite winning the Independent On Saturday Drill Hall- surprising perhaps in view of the Drill Hall’s recognised place in the July build up. Marinaresco won in last year!
Undercover Agent, beaten a head in the Drill Hall, will give both the Daily News and the July a miss and instead will accompany Sail South – who was three lengths back fourth – into the Rising Sun Gold Challenge at Greyville on June 9.
Brett Crawford explained: “Maybe the July next year for Undercover Agent but at the moment he won’t get beyond a mile. Sail South will come on from his Drill Hall run. He needed it and ran well up to a point but the ground was very firm.”
Joey Ramsden is toying with the idea of running Saturday’s Computaform Sprint winner Attenborough in the Tsogo Sun Sprint at Scottsville on May 26 even though the Grade 1 is a handicap and the four-year-old is likely to be hiked above his present 110 mark when the handicappers convene by video link today.
Plans are fluid for stable companion Speedpoint, who was beaten just over two lengths into third. But he is apparently even better than the Turffontein run would suggest because Ramsden said: “I have always though that he is a genuine Group 1 horse. He has tons of little niggles and one day he is going to get over them all.”
By Michael Clower
Cup Trial on the cards for Perovskia
PUBLISHED: May 7, 2018
“I was always sure that I was going to get there,” said Murray. “I was only worried about what was behind me.”…
Harold Crawford is a doyen of Western Cape racing and a rare visitor to KZN but his decision to send Perovskia for Champions Season paid dividends first up at Greyville on Friday night and there may still be more to come.
Perovskia has a reputation of being a difficult horse to pass as favourite Undercover Agent found to his detriment in the Gr2 Independent On Saturday Drill Hall Stakes as Callan Murray kept his mount hard to his task and the gelding lived up to his reputation.
“I was always sure that I was going to get there,” said Murray. “I was only worried about what was behind me.”
From a small yard, Crawford does not have the luxury of spending big at the sales and must live off what’s on offer at the bottom end of the market. Russian Sage, a smart galloper in his time, did not make it as a commercial stallion. The aptly named Perovskia is probably the best of his progeny and Perovskia being the proper name for a flowering plant commonly called Russian sage.
Crawford gave all the kudos to his daughter Michelle Rix. “She’s done all the work with this horse. She’s been here a month. She must take all the glory.”
“We’ll go for the Cup Trial next and see how he goes there, then maybe the July. I don’t know at this stage.”
Perovskia has not been further then 1800m, second to Kampala Campari at Durbanville at his penultimate start, but Crawford has no doubts that he will stay the trip.
“Richard Fourie rode him before he even raced and came back and said he would win the stayers race on Met day or the Gold Cup.”
“But he makes a bit of a noise,” said Crawford, pointing to his throat. “I’ve had him scoped but they found noting. Still I have been scared to go too far with him. If we don’t go for the July, maybe the Gold Cup.”
By Andrew Harrison
Nother Russia to challenge
PUBLISHED: May 4, 2018
Nother Russia challenged Legal Eagle strongly over 1600m last time and they meet on weight for age terms again, but she is drawn outside of him, unlike last year…
Tomorrow’s Champions Day at Turffontein is the richest meeting in South Africa and Legal Eagle could cement his chances of landing a third Equus Horse Of The Year title.
Legal Eagle is unbeaten over a mile but his effectiveness over the 2000m trip of tomorrow’s Premier’s Champions Challenge is illustrated in his course and distance record which reads two wins and a neck second in three starts. Things did not pan out well for him in the Met or in this race last year, but now from a good draw he will be hard to beat. Nother Russia challenged Legal Eagle strongly over 1600m last time and they meet on weight for age terms again, but she is drawn outside of him, unlike last year. Coral Fever has proven over and over this season that he is a horse to be reckoned with. He is better draw here in seven than he was in the Summer Cup where he finished third. He did carry only 52kg in the latter race, and this is now a weight for age event, but he looks up to it.
Abashiri will likely have come on from his last start when a touch laboured in the finish and at his peak this long-striding Triple Crown winner will be a threat. Glider Pilot is also long-striding sort and is still improving. Tyrone Zackey is a fine big race conditioner and this horse has a chance. Orchid Island has disappointed in her last two starts in the Horse Chestnut and the Empress Club, but will relish the step up in trip and is drawn in pole position. Dawn Assault is a progressive sort who is well drawn over an ideal course and distance. Silvan Star appears to be thriving on the Highveld and stays this trip. She only has 1,7 lengths to make up on Nother Russia from the Empress Club but has a wide draw.
Fort Ember can be a touch headstrong and thus went to the front last time from a wide draw and might have to do the same here which will make it tough. Safe Harbor is drawn well and has the top jockey Lyle Hewitson up so if bouncing back to the form of last season could surprise. Deo Juvente showed his class last year when winning this race but his three runs since then have been below par. Brazuca finished third behind Legal Eagle in this race two years ago and was only 4,5 lengths back last year, but his recent form has been uninspiring and he has a tough draw. French Navy has become disappointing and also has a tough draw.
The Grade 1 SA Derby could see Majestic Mambo making up for the bad luck he had in the SA Classic when nearly brought down. He was slicing through the field like a hot knife through butter at the time. He should stay this trip being out of a mare who won over 2400m and his exceptional turn of foot could carry him close after being dropped out to his usual last place. Surcharge was probably used up a bit much to overcome a wide draw in the SA Classic last time and it proved costly. He is likely to be dropped out and will go close as a relaxed type with a big action. Like A Panther has always struck as Derby type and being trained by Mike de Kock will go close.
The Computaform Sprint has attracted a weaker field than usual and is the hardest race on the card, especially considering the low draws are sometimes difficult to win from on the big days. Rocky Valley is given the vote as he won with a bit in hand last time over course and distance, so he can defy the handicapper. Sergeant Hardy should go close despite a low draw due to his exceptional cruising speed and the ability to stay on.
In the SA Oaks Takingthepeace goes for the Triple Tiara and despite having a stamina doubt in pedigree can do it due to her relaxed style of running coupled with her good turn of foot and resolute finish.
Bold Eagle is the one to beat in the SA Nursery but Hit The Green impressed last time and could be a threat.
By David Thiselton










