Arrogate still world’s number one
PUBLISHED: November 14, 2017
Arrogate has been named the Longines World’s Best Racehorse with a top racing of 134 and Australian mare Winx remains number two…
Arrogate retained his top position on the Longines World’s Best Racehorse rankings released last Thursday with a rating of 134. Australian mare Winx remains number two, rated 132. Cracksman, on the strength of his victory in the Qipco Champion Stakes, is rated 130, up from 122, edging Gun Runner, whose Breeders’ Cup Classic victory bumped his rating from 127 to 129. The top five is rounded out by super filly Enable, at 128.
Arrogate retains the top spot despite three straight losses because the standings are based on each horse’s top performance during the year. For Arrogate, that was the Dubai World Cup, where he came from last, passed Gun Runner in the stretch with total ease and won going away.
After the Longines handicapping panel sorts things out during its December meeting in Hong Kong, the final year-end rankings for 2017 will be revealed during the Longines World’s Best Racehorse Ceremony in January. The top rung is unlikely to feature Arrogate.
No question who’s atop the Churchill Downs all-time training list. Dale Romans is the guy, breaking out of a tie with Bill Mott as he sent out Storm Runner to win Sunday’s sixth race. Romans, the quintessential south side Louisvillian, now has 703 wins under the Twin Spires, leaving Mott second with 702. Mott had held the record for more than 31 years and said, “That’s long enough. That’s long enough for anybody to hold a record.”
Romans said, “It is truly an honour to stand here as the all-time leading trainer at Churchill Downs. With everything I’ve done in my career at Churchill Downs, and around the country, nothing beats this moment right now.” He heaped praise on his staff and life partner Tammy Fox.
“Everybody knows there’s one goal left out there – one major goal – and that one takes a lot of luck to get to it,” Romans said. “That would be to win a Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs. Every 2-year-old in the barn is a Derby horse until they prove they’re not.”
Romans trained Shackleford to a fourth-place finish in the 2011 Run for the Roses.
– thoroughbrednews.com.au
Hermoso Mundo brings the “woer-woer”
PUBLISHED: November 14, 2017
When you hear the name Sean Singleton it is synonymous with the passion of racing and his expected “Woer Woer Masjien” warcry…
Passionate racing man Sean Singleton made a big impact last season as the owner of history-making stayer Hermoso Mundo and his colourful “Woer Woer Masjien” warcry has become so keenly anticipated he is now expected to deliver it whenever stepping up on to the winner’s podium.
Singleton now finds himself in dreamland once again as Hermoso Mundo has shot to the top of the Sansui Summer Cup boards and is quoted by Betting World at 8/1.
The five-year-old Ideal World gelding made his seasonal reappearance earlier this month in the Emperor’s Palace Charity Mile.
He appeared to run a bit of a flat race at first sight when finishing a 9,25 length 14th .
The run hardly seemed to justify him becoming Summer Cup favourite.
Singleton said he had also initially been disappointed with the run, but soon had a different view.
He said, “He was running over a distance short of his best and if you watch the replay he accelerated superbly at the 300m mark. Weichong (Marwing) was beaming from ear to ear when he returned to the parade ring. He will be cherry ripe for the Summer Cup and I am sure he will bring his ‘woer-woer’ when it counts at his home course over a more suitable trip (2000m).
Hermoso Mundo became the first horse to win the “gold” triple crown, consisting of the Gold Bowl (3200m), the Gold Vase (3000m) and the Gold Cup (3200m).
He is obviously at his best over two miles, but another key is his turnaround in form since joining the Weiho Marwing yard. His record for the yard is three victories in four starts and he has gone from a 73 merit rating to 100.
He has a beautiful, long-striding action, so is perfectly suited to the galloping Turffontein Standside track with its long straight.
Hermoso Mundo will carry a featherweight of 52kg in the Summer Cup as things stand, but that will depend on whether 115 merit rated Deo Juvente stands his ground.
The big bay is sure to be staying on strongly on November 25 and racing fans will be looking forward to that warcry if the bookmakers are proven to have it right.
By David Thiselton
African Night Sky does it for Snaith
PUBLISHED: November 14, 2017
Cape Town trainer Justin Snaith was happy with African Night Sky’s run at Kenilworth last Saturday…
Justin Snaith was very happy with winter triple crown hero African Night Sky’s seasonal reappearance in a Pinnacle Stakes race over 1400m at Kenilworth on Saturday and Black Arthur’s poor run has been explained as he pulled up a bit sore on his off hind.
The yard are also looking forward to good runs in big races this Saturday with a trio of three-year-olds, the unbeaten Twice Over gelding Do It Again, the Choisir gelding Sir Frenchie and the well-bred Trippi filly Miss Katalin.
Snaith said about four-year-old Dynasty gelding African Night Sky’s 1,75 length fifth place on Saturday behind three Grade 1 winners, Edict Of Nantes, Sail South and Captain America, and the progressive Black Cat Back, “It was a very good comeback run. He was still big in the parade ring and will strip fitter next time.”
He said the Green Point Stake would come too soon for African Night Sky and he was targeting another race instead.
Black Arthur finished a disappointing last in Saturday’s Pinnacle.
Snaith said the five-year-old Silvano gelding’s Black Arthur’s problem was not serious and it would just require a lot of hard work from the yard to have him ready for the Cape Summer Of Champions Season’s big races. He was not sure yet of the timeline for his return to form.
Do It Again runs in Saturday’s Grade 2 Selangor Cup over 1600m. The big galloper stayed on strongly to win over 1200m on debut and followed up with a comfortable win over Saturday’s course and distance.
Snaith said, “He is a nice horse who needs further. He is drawn wide and we will have to drop him in and see how he goes.”
Snaith was impressed by Sir Frenchie last race in the Grade 3 Cape Classic over 1400m. He stayed on strongly from way back in the running for a 3,55 length fourth to Tap O’ Noth.
Snaith said, “That was a prep run so there will be improvement and he could be in the money. He is drawn alright so we will tuck him in and he should run on nicely, but the track is running very quick and it’s not easy for the horses coming from behind.”
The race will still be run on the Winter Course, with its short straight, and this makes it even tougher for horses coming from off the pace.
Miss Katalin, who is out of a Grade 1-winning Jet Master mare Little Miss Magic, was a bit keen in her last run in the Grade 2 WCF Championship over 1400m so was not disgraced in sixth place, 8,15 length behind runaway winner, her stablemate Snowdance.
Snaith said, “She has a soft mouth and does settle, she just needed that last run, it was a prep for this race. She will run okay and this race always produces upsets.”
Miss Katalin is drawn nine out of the 23 entries and Sir Frenchie is drawn 14.
Meanwhile, Snowdance is doing well and her next run will be in the Grade 1 WSB Cape Fillies Guineas on December 2.
By David Thiselton
Be bold with Crawford
PUBLISHED: November 14, 2017
Sean Tarry has a quarter of the 16-strong field in Saturday’s Lanzerac Ready To Run Stakes in his bid to win the Kenilworth R2.5 million prize…
The champion trainer’s quartet include three of the four highest-rated with S’Manga Khumalo’s mount Wonderwall 3.5kg clear of the next best. This is Bold Respect who beat Wonderwall to win a R1 million sales race on Met day. However the Brett Crawford runner is badly drawn at 14.
Candice Bass-Robinson, successful with Live Life in the $500 000 CTS Sprint in January, runs three with stable jockey Aldo Domeyer on Virtue who is drawn widest of all.
Premiers Champion winner Eyes Wide Open has to give 2kg to the rest of the field in the Selangor Cup. He represents the Glen Kotzen-Richard Fourie combination that won last year’s race with Gold Standard.Last month’s Woolavington winner Strathdon misses the Kenilworth Cup as Justin Snaith is keeping him for the Cape Summer Stayers Handicap on 16 December. Instead the stable runs top weight Master’s Eye (Bernard Fayd’Herbe).
Saturday’s scheduled first two-year-old race of the Cape season has been scrapped after attracting only four runners. Paul Reeves supplied two while Kotzen and Paddy Kruyer declared one each. Normally there is no juvenile race at Kenilworth until December.
Snaith reports Western Cape Fillies Championship winner Snowdance in good shape, saying: “She came out of the race very well and at the moment she is in cruise control for the Fillies Guineas (2 December).”
Dean Kannemeyer plans to make haste slowly with Sugar Girl, the R2.5 million National Yearling Sale-topper who made such a big impression when winning first time out at Kenilworth last Thursday.
He said: “Sugar Girl has lots of potential, she won exceptionally well and she will get better as she matures. I would have been happy if she had finished in the first three but Grant Behr told me that, when he asked her, she simply dropped the gears and went.
“But you have got to have patience with a filly like this. I took her to Durban but didn’t run her and it was only two months ago that she began to turn the corner.”
By Michael Clower
Snaith can make music again
PUBLISHED: November 14, 2017
Township Melody can bring Justin Snaith’s uncharacteristic Cape Town losing run to an end in the opening maiden at Kenilworth tomorrow…
Township Melody can bring Justin Snaith’s uncharacteristic Cape Town losing run to an end in the opening maiden at Kenilworth tomorrow.
The former champion trainer turns out winners more consistently than almost anyone else in the business, certainly in the Western Cape, and he has already had 47 this season – more than any of his rivals.
Yet, he has not had a Kenilworth winner since Sergeant Hardy’s all-the-way Pinnacle success at the end of last month. In the three meetings at the course since he has sent out 35 consecutive losers including six beaten favourites. Only Razed In Black at Fairview last Friday got on the score sheet.
But Bernard Fayd’Herbe’s mount has the form to resume the stable’s normal service, running well to take three successive seconds in big fields, each time beaten on average only three-quarters of a length. The one negative is that she has not raced for 11 weeks.
“I haven’t galloped her but I don’t think she needs it – she is a light filly,” says her trainer. “She is doing exceptionally well at home and she is my best of the day.”
She opened favourite at 22-10 with World Sports Betting yesterday. The firm makes Glen Kotzen’s Var newcomer Royal Sensation next best at 7-1 with Madame De Guava (a first-timer trained by Paul Lafferty) on 8-1 along with the Brett Crawford-trained Love Dove. Bendy Bullet (good form until Durbanville last time) is next on 9-1.
William The Brave and Pacific Chestnut stand out in the Tabonline.co.za Maiden. There was less than a length between them over 2 000m here a fortnight ago and on adjusted ratings there is only half a kilo in it. A lot will depend on which appreciates the extra 400m the most.
Pacific Chestnut has the more scope for improvement – he has only raced four times while the Ramsden runner has had twice as many outings – and so he may reverse the placings. Louis Burke is a good value for his claim and, even though he is up against a world class rider, 4kg is a huge advantage. His mount opened at 15-10 with William The Brave fractionally odds-on at 9-10.
Red Eight, second in his last four, looked certain to win halfway up the straight at Durbanville last time but Akshay Balloo did one of his front-running specials on a 50-1 stable companion and beat him a length.
MJ Byleveld’s mount is 16-10 favourite to finally get his head in front in the Betting World Maiden but he may again have to give second best, this time to 19-10 shot Final Chance who was a length adrift when the pair met at the end of September. The Crawford horse lost quite a bit of ground when hampered leaving the pens and in the straight he had to wait for a gap.
Streetfighting Man kept on well to show significant improvement when upped to a mile a fortnight ago and at 28-10 looks a second Snaith winner in the Interbet.co.za Maiden. Saltoro Ridge heads the market at 22-10 with Photocopy next on 5-2.
Hopefully there will be no snakes in the grass this time. At last Thursday’s meeting a particularly big one was spotted on the course and the start of race seven was delayed while cautious efforts were made to encourage it to get out of the way of the runners.
By Michael Clower







![Bold Respect [Liesl King]](https://www.goldcircle.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Bold-Respect-1-Lk-300x211.jpg)
![Bold Respect [Liesl King]](http://www.goldcircle.co.za/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/Bold-Respect-1-Lk-300x211.jpg)

