Renate du Plessis has her first Durbanville runners today when the country courses stages the first of its 11 consecutive meetings.
Two of her three runners are drawn in the bush but the interesting one is Oh So Modus with Karl Neisius (Pictured) up who sprang a 20-1 shock for Paul Reeves here last October and then completely lost his form. Mrs du Plessis has since rejuvenated the horse who has won his last two, the most recent by five lengths.
There is often a suspicion – not to put it more strongly – that Port Elizabeth winners are moved up the ratings too quickly and so have little chance in other centres.
Oh So Modus, to be ridden by Karl Neisius for the first time in the 2 400m handicap, was raised 2.5kg for his first Fairview win and a further 4kg for his second. He is now on a mark of 72, much the same as when he started to lose his form after that maiden win.
Mrs du Plessis races mainly in PE, although she trains at Stilbaai which is nearer Cape Town. “There are a lot of polytrack meetings in PE and I have horses which I would like to run on grass,” she says, explaining this trip to Durbanville. “The horses travel on the morning of the race and it will take about three hours.
“I am really enjoying training Oh So Modus who is another reason why I am coming. He is ever-improving and so progressive on the poly, and I now want to give him a go on grass.”
Logic suggests he has it all to do and that punters would be well advised to go for 13-10 favourite Arezzo who is also a course winner and who’s 79 mark is unchanged despite last time’s good Kenilworth run. However an improving horse is always worth following and so the visitor, attractively priced at 4-1 when Betting World posted up the odds yesterday, gets a tentative vote to justify his 230k journey.
Twenty Four Carat was officially reported to be hanging out when joint favourite in a Kenilworth sprint last time and a repeat of that would be disastrous on this left-handed course. “In fact he wasn’t hanging out, he was hanging in,” says Vaughan Marshall and that puts a different complexion on his chance in the opening Gold Circle Maiden. However fellow 18-10 chance Glanto is marginally preferred as his most recent run reads better.
Exclusive Night is the form horse and 22-10 second favourite for race two (also called the Gold Circle Maiden as is race four!) but he was the one who finished second to Oh So Modus 11 months ago and he still hasn’t won. He will do so one day, maybe even today, but so far he has proved to be one of those expensive sorts who always appears to have a good chance but never quite does it. This is his 29th attempt and in the circumstances Baksteen at 18-10 looks a more sensible bet.
However don’t ignore 33-10 shot Charlie Strong. “He has been disappointing in that he has taken a long time to win,” admits Adam Marcus. “But he is fit and well and he has run well over this distance here.”
The proven race fitness of 22-10 favourite Bella’s Empire should give her the edge over Mamselle Al (5-2) and Pixelate (28-10) in race four.
By Michael Clower
Picture: Karl Neisius (Liesl King)

