Devil’s Peak steps up
PUBLISHED: August 10, 2017
High draws could be the way to go to find your winner in today’s racemeeting at the Vaal Racecourse…
The Vaal Outside track tends to favour high draws and there could be one or two opportunities for punters in the eight race card today.
It is a low key meeting and three MR 72 Handicaps are the joint highest rated races.
The first of these is the fifth over 1600m and Plum British goes for a hattrick over the trip. This four-year-old gelding by Great Britain used his naturally decent cruising speed to go the front from a favourable standside draw over the course and distance last time out. His relaxed disposition together with his suitability to the trip was proven by the extra he found and in the end he won cosily by 2,5 lengths. He was given a five point raise but looks capable of further improvement and he has a draw of nine in the 14 horse field which will give him a chance of repeating the tactic. Nephrite won the last time he ran over this trip and has been staying on strongly in his last two starts, both over 1400m, so will relish the step back up to 1600m. He has a tricky draw by trends, but being capable of a strong finish can afford to be dropped out in a race which should be run at a fair gallop. Devil’s Peak is a full brother to Dancewiththedevil, who won multiple Gr 1s from 1600-2000m, and he should relish the step up in trip after winning his maiden in good style from a difficult draw over 1400m. The form of that race has been franked, but he enters handicaps off a tough 81 merit rating, which is never an easy mark to win off for a young three-year-old. Furthermore, he has another unfavourable draw. Blue Diamond Road was not disgraced in a MR 80 handicap over course and distance last time and a repeat will see him involved here. However, a low draw is against him. Rain Shadow was never in the latter mentioned race after having to be reloaded, but he has dropped to a mark just one point higher than his last win, which was in January over 1700m, and he has a plum draw so should be staying on strongly.
The seventh race, a MR 72 Handicap for fillies and mares over 1200m, looks to be the toughest race on the card, but fortunately there are only eight horses involved so it will be possible for punters to include the whole field in the exotics. The selection to win is the bottom weight Modjaji, who jumps from the plum standside draw and has a useful 1,5kg claimer in Mpumelelo Mjoka aboard. This horse has won his last two starts, both over 1000m on the Flamingo Park sand. However, his turf merit rating was unaffected, so he has obvious claims. He has won over the course and distance before so the trip will not be a problem. Embrasiatic looks course and distance suited and has a favourable draw. Claremorris ran on well to win going away over 1000m first time out the maidens, so should enjoy the step up in trip. Nitrogen is interesting with blinkers on as he has shown good ability on occasion. Bally Swiss is in good form and is likely to be prominent in the betting. However, all of Burundi Bush, Secret Vision and Waity Katie are capable of winning too.
The last race is an open MR 72 Handicap over 1000m and Tiger’s Legacy looks to be a possible banker. He has good cruising speed coupled with a kick and will likely relish the step down to 1000m after hitting the front over 1200m last time and being run out of it. In his previous race over this trip he ran on strongly and only just failed. Gun Fighter has a plum draw and is capable of a strong finish, so looks to be the chief threat. They could be enough to get punters through the exotics, although Roman Evening looks to be a horse who is capable of doing better than his form suggests and has Weichong Marwing up from a favourable draw.
The meeting opens with a workrider’s maiden over 1000m and one of the only horses with any kind of form, Royal Standard, is ridden by the Champion workrider Sam Mosia from a favourable draw, so he can get punters off to a good start.
The best bet of the meeting comes in the second, a Maiden for fillies and mares over 1200m. The Mike de Kock Dynasty filly Holiday Romance caught the eye showing good pace over 1160m before staying on well to finish 4,5 lengths behind the fair sort Twelve Oaks. She finished just half-a-length behind second placed Brave Mary, who went on to win the Grade 1 Allan Robertson. With expected improvement Holiday Romance will be hard to beat from a fair draw and coming from the De Kock yard should be fit enough after a 117 day layoff. The first-timer Tamarina is interesting from a good draw, being a full-sister to the Grade 1 winner Forest Indigo. The big filly Orinoco Rock has plenty of scope and showed pace in Cape Town, so from a good draw on her Highveld debut could finish in the money.
By David Thiselton
Onesie to stake her claim
PUBLISHED: August 8, 2017
Looking to land her third career win, Onesie is definitely track and trip suited and with jockey Brandon Lerena up she is in with a chance…
Onesie, just over three lengths back to Lady Of The House in the Gr1 Woolavington 2000, has a strong chance of landing the third win of her career for Gareth van Zyl when she lines up in the sixth on the Greyville poly tomorrow.
In the saddle will be Brandon Lerena, back from his Mauritian ordeal, where he, along with Raymond Danielson, were cleared of all charges and had their three-month riding ban lifted on appeal.
Onesie is a daughter of Ideal World, the stallion responsible for the first two past the post in the recent Gold Cup, is well tried over the distance and if the Speed Ratings in the Computaform hold any water where she is rated 20 points clear of her nearest rival, then she should finish well clear.
That’s the theory but Onesie also has the form to back her claims when running a cracking race in a Fillies Handicap at Scottsville last month where she was beaten less than a length by Silver Willow.
Warren Kennedy, who rode Onesie in her last four starts, will be aboard the confirmed poly specialist Seek The Summit who has recorded all five of her career victories on the synthetic surface. Of some concern is that she has not been further than a ‘mile’ this year but on the other hand has cracking form and now that she is older, the 2000m could be well within her compass.
Also rated lengths clear of his opposition is Ratso Rizzo in the opening leg of the Pick 6. His speed rating is 36 points clear of Epic Sword but it may not prove quite so straight forward as his speed figures could be misleading. He shows exceptional early pace but has been swallowed up late in all his starts. He had 2.5kg claiming apprentice Serino Moodley aboard at his last two and he has been replaced by the vastly experienced Anton Marcus. The drop to 1400m may also prove beneficial but most of the opposition should be fully aware of his front-running tactics and Marcus is unlikely to get away too easily.
Majestic Moon was the subject of an inspired gamble last time out. Stretched to 1600m for the first time, he was backed in from an opening call of 40-1 to 10-1. He made the expected improvement but not enough to master Winter Marchen who was some four lengths clear at the line.
But Paul Gadsby’s runner appears to have come to hand and could be the one mostly likely to be pressurising Ratso Rizzo come the final 100m.
By Andrew Harrison
‘Baron’ set for Newmarket
PUBLISHED: August 8, 2017
Winner of the Sun Met, Whisky Baron, is set to start his British racing career with his first race to be at Newmarket Racecourse…
Brett Crawford flies to England on Thursday to check over Whisky Baron before the Sun Met winner begins serious work in preparation for his British campaign.
Crawford said: “Whisky Baron works on grass at Newmarket next week for the first time since he arrived in England. He is doing very well and everything is fine with him. He will have his first British race at Newmarket either in the Shadwell Joel Stakes on 29 September or in a seven furlong race the following month.”
By Michael Clower
High action for Naidoo
PUBLISHED: August 8, 2017
Trainer Kumaran Naidoo has proved once again that he has an eye for the best suited sand horses when he raided Flamingo Park on Saturday…
Summerveld trainer Kumaran Naidoo has always had notable success when raiding sand race meetings on the Highveld and this trend continued when he sent out two feature race winners at the Flamingo Park Festival on Saturday. He had three winners in all at Kimberley’s biggest race day.
Naidoo put it down to simply identifying horses suited to sand and said, “The horses work on sand virtually every day and those with high actions are usually the ones who enjoy it.”
Naidoo once won the Listed Hampton Handicap over 1000m on the now defunct Vaal sand for three years in succession and that included a stable trifecta and a stable exacta respectively.
Nine of his horses were on a float which left Summerveld at three o’ clock last Friday morning and arrived in Kimberley 12 hours later.
The first of them to run was the formless four-year-old filly Show Me The Light. She raced in the first ever Workrider’s event at Flamingo, a Maiden over 1000m, and Kleinbooi Hlakabe, having his first race ride, got her up for second.
Sweet Vittoria then ran unplaced in a Maiden.
Northern Storm followed by finishing a narrow second in a MR 72 Handicap for fillies and mares over 1400m under Eric Saziso Ngwane.
Next up was Royal Zulu Guard, who had finished third when raiding Kimberley in March for a 1600m handicap. However, his best form is over a mile and this enigmatic sort finished unplaced in Saturday’s 1800m handicap.
However, there was plenty of confidence in Naidoo’s next runner, the Golden Sword four-year-old gelding Sabre Charge, who is owned by Alesh Naidoo. His two previous wins were both over 2400m and he was backed into 2/1 favourite for the R110,000 Non-Black Type The Department Of Economic Development and Tourism Diamond Stayers over 2200m. The out and out stayer loped along in relaxed fashion in the running and after improving position to within striking distance he stayed on strongly in the straight to win by 0,2 lengths under Lyle Hewitson.
Roy’s Magic, a disappointing type who had shown a return to form last time out off a much reduced merit rating, ran in the big one, the R200,000 RA Flamingo Mile, where he was 1kg under sufferance. He was not disgraced in sixth place.
Roy’s Marciano was next up in the R135,000 RA Sprint over 1000m. He went in with uninspiring form and duly started at 20/1. However, he has the high action Naidoo spoke about and this five-year-old Roy Moodley-owned Toreador gelding ran on strongly under Ngwane to win by 1,25 lengths.
Naidoo and Moodley then combined again to win a MR 66 Handicap over 1200m with the Argentinian-bred Tuscan, who was ridden by Hewitson.
A few hours earlier Naidoo and Moodley had combined to win a race at Greyville with Roy’s Yevahn.
Naidoo’s final runner at Flamingo Park was Roy’s Zaire, who finished unplaced in a MR 62 Handicap for fillies and mares over 1200m.
Naidoo’s outstanding start to the season, in which he has already sent out five winners, sees him the National Trainers log of the current one week old season.
By David Thiselton
Power Grid is no fluke
PUBLISHED: August 8, 2017
Power Grid looks like the horse to watch today at Kenilworth as hes out to prove that his win last time out was no fluke…
Kenilworth today sees seven fancied rides for Callan Murray, the first Dan Katz runners for Hassen Adams and, perhaps above all else, Power Grid out to prove that last time’s giant-killing performance was no fluke.
Three of the Murray rides are favourites and two more are second favourites. He has only limited experience of what can be a deceptively difficult course – such rare visitors tend to underestimate the impact of the head winds and go too fast or too early – but he had five rides on Lanzerac day last November and won the Kenilworth Cup on Smart Mart for Mike de Kock.
“He is a top jockey and I feel he is going to have a good day,” says Snaith who, pressed to name those he fancies most, singles out Dynamic Diana in race two – “She was unlucky first time and I think she will run a stormer.”
Unfortunately so do the bookmakers and World Sports Betting have her far shorter than any of the other Murray rides at 6-10. Lady Sutton at 7-2 is the only other in the field on offer at less than 10-1.
Murray should also win the first on 15-10 favourite Varside even though this one carries a red warning light after proving expensive to follow. He has finished second or third in all his last five runs and started either favourite on second favourite in the last four. Such horses tend to go on proving vulnerable.
Above Eleven (33-10) has sound claims in race four. She is rated 4.5kg better than 3-1 shot I Am Captain but is meeting what surely represents Katz’s best chance of the day on 5.5kg worse than weight for age. Know The Ropes is favourite at 28-10, wears blinkers for the first time and may beat them both.
The one race in which Murray does not have a ride is the 2 400m Tabonline Maiden and this looks good for Aldo Domeyer’s mount Rokatenda even though the 8-10 price is pretty miserly.
Power Grid, though, appears to be the bet of the day despite his famous flying fetlock. When he lowered the colours of Tevez and Silicone Valley in last month’s Pinnacle I calculate that he ran to a rating of 95 or 96. The handicappers were only allowed to put him up six points – which they did – and so in the Interbet.co.za Handicap he runs off a mark of 84.
In other words he has 5kg in hand. You don’t need me to remind you that plenty of such racing certainties get stuffed but Andries Steyn reports the horse in great form and the 11-2 on offer looks unbelievably – and uncharacteristically – generous.
By Michael Clower











