Fish River can swim the mile
PUBLISHED: February 27, 2018
In her favour on Saturday is her good gatespeed, but the unknown is how well she will settle over this step up in trip from a tricky draw of nine…
The Grade 2 Wilgerbosdrift Gauteng Fillies Guineas is the first leg of the Triple Tiara and the two chief protagonists, Fish River and Folk Dance, both look to be milers so should be going all out on Saturday.
Fish River by Canford Cliffs has stamina limitations on pedigree but Mike de Kock said after her 2,1 length victory in the Grade 3 Three Troikas Stakes over 1400m, in which she found another gear late to win easing up, “On this run she will see out a mile … I think the mile will be her limit though.” De Kock sent her to owners’ Mauritzfontein Stud’s paddocks for a while last year and she came back strengthened and improved. Her penultimate start, when beating older fillies and mares in a handicap over 1400m off an 86 merit rating, was just as impressive as her Three Troikas effort.
In her favour on Saturday is her good gatespeed, but the unknown is how well she will settle over this step up in trip from a tricky draw of nine. She did take a keen hold from draw seven in her penultimate start, but last time out responded well when asked to switch off.
Folk Dance is by Tiger Ridge, who has sired a Triple Tiara winner before in Cherry On The Top, but he imparts plenty of speed too and Folk Dance’s female line is also full of speed. Folk Dance is proven over a mile, but she clearly over raced in the early stages of the Grade 3 Fillies Mile from a fair draw of four, before settling upon finding cover and winning easily. She now has a wide draw of eleven and races fresh, so Gavin Lerena might not have an easy task settling her.
Radiant Splendour has been backed so must be highly regarded. She will easily stay this trip on pedigree. She is unbeaten in two starts and second time out when stepped up to 1400m in a handicap she came from last and doddled it. However, she was only racing off a 77 merit rating, so still has a lot to prove. Her good draw will help.
Silver Thursday has a shout from a plum draw. In the Starling Stakes over 1400m last October she came from some way back to run Folk Dance to half-a-length. She was receiving 2kg and Folk Dance was widely drawn, but that trip was too sharp. In the Cape Fillies Guineas she was caught wide throughout from a wide draw. Next time out in the Victress Stakes over 1800m she stayed on strongly from pole position for a decent fifth to some top fillies. The 1800m might be her better trip, but she will love the Turffontein galloping track with its long straight and she will be improving being by Silvano.
Cashel Palace made a bold bid from the front from a wide draw in the Fillies Mile. She hasn’t raced since but is by Fort Wood, so should have strengthened and improved, but she now has the widest draw of all to overcome.
Aurelia Cotta had the run of the race in the Fillies Mile and ran on to pip Cashel Palace for second. She was too far back last time from a wide draw in the CTS Mile but could earn here from a fair draw under Piere Strydom.
Takingthepeace and Green Top are both decent sorts who were running on in the Three Troikas for fourth and fifth respectively. Takingthepeace has a long stride and should relish the step up in trip. Green Top is by Gimmethegreenlight out of a SA Fillies Classic winner so should also love the trip, despite her half-brother by Captain Al, Doosra, appearing to prefer shorter than a mile.
Pearl Of Bahrain is an imposing daughter of Western Winter out of the decent staying mare Arabian Pearl and she won her maiden easily second time out after stepping up to 1500m. This is a big step up but she could be anything and she has a fair draw of seven.
Awfaa ran on well after a slow start to win a handicap last time over this trip off a 78 merit rating. She is a classy looking daughter of Silvano so will be improving and is a dark horse, although she has a tricky draw.
Pale Lilac is a big galloping sort who won from start to finish last time over this trip at the Vaal last time so has an ideal pole position draw if this tactic is to be repeated. However, she was running off just a 76 merit rating in that three-year-old fillies handicap so this will be a lot tougher.
Dame Kelly gave Fish River some cheek from a handy position in the Three Troikas but was a well beaten third in the end so has a bit to find.
Rockin Russian will have a point to prove having been left out of the CTS Mile despite running second in the Grade 1 Thekwini over this trip last year. The horse she finished third to in her penultimate start in a Progress Plate over 1400m, Elusive Heart, came out and won the Grade 3 Prix du Cap easily and her second last place in the Majorca was against a top class field, so she should not be written off.
By David Thiselton
Peter holds a pair of aces
PUBLISHED: February 27, 2018
There is little doubt unbeaten Majestic Mambo is a Triple Crown contender, especially as he has won all three of his races over 1800m…
Trainer Paul Peter has a strong hand in both the R1-million Gauteng Guineas and the R500,000 Wilgerbosdrift Gauteng Fillies Guineas with Majestic Mambo and Folk Dance respectively. But both will have to overcome wide draws.
Both Gr 2 races will be run over 1600m on the Turffontein Standside track on Saturday. The Guineas is also the first leg of the R2-million SA Triple Crown while the Fillies Guineas is the opening leg of the R1-million Wilgerbosdrift Triple Tiara. The other races concerned are the R2-million SA Classic and R1-million Wilgerbosdrift SA Fillies Classic, both Grade 1 races over 1800m on April 7, with the final legs – the R2-million SA Derby and R1-million Wilgerbosdrift SA Oaks – run over 2400m on Saturday, May 5.
There is little doubt unbeaten Majestic Mambo is a Triple Crown contender, especially as he has won all three of his races over 1800m. He has been unextended so far and has done nothing wrong. However, he could battle winning the Guineas from 11 draw. It could be on the sharp side and the field has just 200m to cover before they hit the bend.
Nevertheless, he has been priced up as the 22-10 favourite with Betting World with Surcharge, who is drawn even wider at 14, second favourite at 4-1. Both horses will have top jockeys in the irons with Gunter Wrogemann aboard Majestic Mambo, who cost just R40,000, and Piere Strydom on Surcharge who looks way above average.
Dingaans winner Monks Hood will not have too much work to do early on as he is drawn 7. Anthony Delpech, who has ridden Majestic Mambo in his last two starts, stays with Monks Hood for the Guineas as he has to honour his retainer. Alistair Gordon’s charge looked good in his comeback run at Scottsville two weeks ago and along with Surcharge are the top-rated runners. He is on offer at 6-1.
Sean Tarry has three runners but unfortunately his best performed pair of Big Bear and Wonderwall are drawn widest of all at 15 and 16 respectively. As a result they are on offer at 14-1 and 16-1.
The other two horses in single figures are the impressive Greek Fire from the Mike and Adam Azzie yard and Mike de Kock-trained Royal Crusade who is drawn 1 and has Anton Marcus up.
Betting World have opened Folk Dance and Fish River as joint 5-2 favourites. However, just like Majestic Mambo, Folk Dance is drawn 11. In her favour is that she is ideally distance suited. Gavin Lerena is back in the irons.
Fish River is only slightly better off at 9 but the Mike de Kock-trained filly is in good form right now and has Delpech up.
Unbeaten Radiant Splendour is the “unknown quantity” in this race as she has been impressive in her two wins and is drawn well at 5. Marcus has the ride on Gary Alexander’s charge.
Opening betting:
Gauteng Guineas: 22-10 Majestic Mambo; 4-1 Surcharge; 6-1 Monks Hood; 13-2 Greek Fire; 8-1 Royal Crusade; 14-1 Ideal Secret, Noble Secret; 14-1 Big Bear; 16-1 Wonderwall; 20-1 Vacquero, Puget Sound; 25-1 Cash Time; 40-1 Pietro Mascagni, Silver God; 50-1 State Trooper; 66-1 Alssakhra.
Wilgerbosdrift Gauteng Fillies Guineas: 5-2 Folk Dance, Fish River; 11-2 Radiant Splendour; 8-1 Silver Thursday; 10-1 Cashel Palace; 12-1 Awfaa; 14-1 Aurelia Cotta, Takingthepeace; 16-1 Dame Kelly; 20-1 Green Top, Pale Lilac; 25-1 Rockin Russian, Pearl Of Bahrain.
– TABnews
High expectations put to the test
PUBLISHED: February 27, 2018
No less than 19 of the 26 runners are newcomers and, if the winners come from this group, it would fit the pattern of the Cape Town juvenile scene so far this season…
The excitement starts early at Kenilworth today when high expectations and high prices get their first real test in the first two races.
No less than 19 of the 26 runners are newcomers and, if the winners come from this group, it would fit the pattern of the Cape Town juvenile scene so far this season. There have been 13 two-year-old races and ten of them have gone to first-timers.
The highest-priced of today’s debutants is Frank Lloyd Wright who made R3.25 million at last year’s Cape Premier Yearling Sale. He was sold by Drakenstein and now races in the colours of Qatar Racing in partnership with Drakenstein. By Captain Al, he is out of a seven-time winner and opened 3-1 favourite for the Itsarush.co.za Maiden when World Sports Betting posted its prices on Saturday.
“He is the type we could see in the R5 million races next January,” says Jonathan Snaith who is wary of predicting victory as he points out that the stable has not won a two-year-old race this season. “This colt is inexperienced but he should run into the money and we will be disappointed if he doesn’t.”
But seemingly he will have to go to beat Quick Star who was backed down to 4-1 second favourite when fourth on debut in the Kuda Sprint on Met day. Admittedly he was beaten over seven lengths but seemingly the money for him had a solid foundation.
“He is a serious horse and we thought he had a big chance that day,” recalls Glen Kotzen who predicts: “He should be hard to beat.”
He has been backed from 4-1 to 22-10 joint favourite with the Vaughan Marshall-trained Var colt Deepston. Marshall has won four juvenile races this term and all four scored first time out. This one has been backed from an opening 9-2.
Candice Bass-Robinson won with a number of first-timers last season and her two juvenile winners this term were both newcomers. She runs the What A Winter colt Sacred Arrow, a R250 000 buy. “He is ready to run but I am not expecting him to win first time,” is her verdict on the 10-1 chance.
Joey Ramsden has won four juvenile races but only two were newcomers. The Var colt Carnage showed enough first time to suggest he could get into the shake-up but he has drifted from 9-1 to 14-1.
Sailor Sam (10-1) is the most experienced and was only beaten a neck last time. “”He is well and he should again run well,” says Greg Ennion.
Quick Star gets the vote and in the TAB Telebet Maiden Juvenile half an hour later the Marshall runner Canukeepitsecret looks the pick. She comes from the prolific-scoring Mystic Spring family and is a Captain Al filly out of the Sceptre and Southern Cross winner Secret Of Victoria, already the dam of All Is Secret and The Secret Is Out. “She is on the list for Durban,” says Marshall. She opened favourite at 16-10 and was 14-10 yesterday.
European Roller (4-1) has finished closest but Kotzen’s Princess Elsa (backed from 3-1 to 16-10) ran in the Listed race on Met day and, judging by the money for her, she is expected to go close.
Mrs Robinson runs four newcomers with stable jockey Aldo Domeyer on the 6-1 Judpot filly Nous Voila – “She should have run earlier but she was coughing. She is very nice and I think she will run well,” says her trainer.
Corne Orffer can bounce back from last Saturday’s sickness to win the Tabonline.co.za Maiden on 12-10 favourite Miss Smarty Pants although stable companion Capital Q is joint second favourite at 5-1 with Blue Flower.
Chatuchak has gone close in his last two and is understandably favourite at 22-10 for race four but slight preference is for Sark at 28-10.
Silver Coin, last in the Cape Derby, heads the market at 3-1 for the Play Soccer Handicap but he could be hard pressed to beat top weight Bobby Dazzler who might well have won at Durbanville last time had he got away on terms.
By Michael Clower
Whisky Baron, Noah From Goa renew rivalry
PUBLISHED: February 26, 2018
“Whisky Baron has come out of the race great and the plan is next the Jebel Hatta and then, if all goes well in that, we could aim him at something on World Cup night.”…
Last year’s Sun Met winner Whisky Baron will renew rivalry with the Mike de Kock-trained Noah From Goa in the Group 1 Jebel Hatta over 1 800m at Meydan on Saturday week after running so well in the Zabeel Mile last Thursday when he finished fourth to Janoobi with Noah From Goa third.
Brett Crawford said yesterday: “I was over the moon with the way he ran and Colm O’Donghue was very excited with the horse. We knew he was going to need the run and I thought Janoobi was the horse to beat because he had been working exceptionally well.
“Whisky Baron has come out of the race great and the plan is next the Jebel Hatta and then, if all goes well in that, we could aim him at something on World Cup night.”
Corne Orffer, Crawford’s stable jockey in South Africa, is confident he will be fit for Kenilworth tomorrow after being taken ill on Saturday morning, being sick and suffering from diarrhoea.
He said yesterday: “I woke up 100% but I started feeling ill at work and I took myself to hospital where I was put on a drip to put back the electrodes. It was just a 24-hour bug – apparently it can take over within seconds – but I feel a lot better today and I will be fine for Tuesday.”
The very much in-form Richard Fourie will be out of action for seven days from Wednesday after being given a week’s interference suspension for his riding of runner-up Ladysmith at Kenilworth on 17 February.
By Michael Clower
Draw concerns for Surcharge
PUBLISHED: February 26, 2018
He said, “He does not have a lot of speed and doesn’t jump too well. If he is slowly away, where is he going to be from that draw?…
Top jockey Piere Strydom regards his Grade 2 Betting World Gauteng Guineas mount Surcharge as a “special” horse, but is concerned about his wide draw.
The classy Gimmethegreenlight colt has a strong finish and has won the Listed Secretariat Stakes and the Grade 3 Tony Ruffel Stakes, both over the Turffontein Standside track, in impressive fashion in his last two starts.
Strydom said, “The way he runs he will be better over a mile.”
However, he lamented landing a draw of 14 out of 16.
He said, “He does not have a lot of speed and doesn’t jump too well. If he is slowly away, where is he going to be from that draw? He will either be caught wide or have to give them ten lengths start in the straight. It takes a special horse to do that. So the draw is not going to help.”
However, Strydom reiterated that he is indeed a special horse and added, “At the moment he is lacking gatespeed, but is still winning. He has a such a long, big stride. He is just talented and is only starting to know what he’s doing now, so has a lot of scope.”
If Surcharge is able to make up the ground, he will not be hitting the front too soon, because Strydom said the good looking bay’s acceleration was “gradual” rather than instantaneous.
He mentioned the Investec Dingaans winner Monks Hood among the opposition.
He said, “He has a fair draw and the jockey (Anthony Delpech) will be able to place him.” The Alistair Gordon-trained KZN raider had a tricky draw of nine out of 16 bin the Dingaans, but found a good position near the back. However, he only saw daylight in front of him throughout the 700m of the straight so did well to win. He also looks to be a special horse and might be handier this time from a draw of seven.
Strydom was most disappointed about the scratching of his original mount for the Grade 2 Wilgerbosdrift Gauteng Fillies Guineas, the unbeaten Dean Kannemeyer-trained Hashtagyolo, although it was obviously the right decision as he confirmed the virus she had contracted had made her ill.
However, he has landed another ride, on the Sean Tarry-trained Aurelia Cotta. She is midway down the betting board at 14/1 with Betting World.
This Ashaawes filly is undoubtedly one of the dark horses of the race. The champion yard have endured a largely frustrating season, finding themselves in second place on the national log having been dominant throughout the 2016/2017 term. However, they have at last hit form and Tarry clinched a four-timer on Saturday and ran one-two-three in the highest class race of the day, a Pinnacle Stakes event over 1160m.
In her last start in the US$500,000 CTS Mile, Aurelia Cotta was too far back from a wide draw of 15 out of 16 on fast ground. However, her Turffontein Standside form makes good reading. On Sansui Summer Cup day she finished a three length second in the Grade 3 Fillies Mile to the Gauteng Fillies Guineas joint-favourite Folk Dance. She had the run of the race that day and ran on well. In her favour is that Folk Dance over raced a bit early in the Fillies Mile, but from a good draw of four was soon able to find cover. She has not raced since and is now drawn eleven out of 13, so Gavin Lerena might not have an easy task settling her. Aurelia Cotta on the other hand has drawn in the middle in eight and usually settles well. In her penultimate start she jumped from a wide draw of nine out of 11 in the Listed Sea Cottage Stakes over 1800m against the boys. She ran on well again for a far from disgraced 3,15 length fourth to the Gauteng Guineas favourite Majestic Mambo, from whom she received the weight for age allowance of 2,5kg.
Strydom rides the Gary Alexander-trained Kangaroo Jack in the Grade 2 Hawaii Stakes over 1400m. The five-year-old Querari gelding has won over the course and distance before. However, he has drawn wide on Saturday and Strydom said once again this would leave him with a tough task against top horses. In last year’s race Kangaroo Jack was drawn nine out of nine and Andrew Fortune took him to the front where he sat on the flank of the leader New Predator. He stayed on well but found no extra late in the yielding conditions and finished a 1,85 length fourth. This horse usually settles well and has an exceptional turn of foot, so will be interesting with more conservative tactics employed in a race where there should be a good pace.
By David Thiselton










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