Tarry’s charges aim for Cup

PUBLISHED: 19 October 2017

Sean Tarry (Nkosi Hlophe)

Three-times national champion trainer Sean Tarry was happy with the runs of Liege and Samurai Blade on Saturday at Turffontein in preparation for the Sansui Summer Cup and also spoke of his other entries for Johannesburg’s biggest race.

Tarry said the free entries into the big race had been “a drawcard” as this allowed trainers to enter in numbers and then see how their preparations went.

Liege (Nkosi Hlophe)

Liege

Liege has shortened to 20/1 in Betting World’s Summer Cup book after Saturday’s eyecatching three length fifth in a Pinnacle Stakes over 1600m on the Inside track, where he was caught wide without cover the whole way but still managed to stay on well. It was the five-year-old son of Dynasty’s second run as a gelding and first outing since running in the Jubilee Handicap on June 11.

Samurai Blade finished a 4,25 length sixth in Saturday’s race. It was his first run since April and he only faded in the last bit after looking threatening.

Tarry said, “The distance was too short for them and the course doesn’t really suit them but I was pleased with their comeback runs and expect more from both of them on the Standside track over further.”

Tarry said Liege’s preparation for the Vodacom Durban July earlier this year had not gone according to plan and he had eventually pulled him out with a view to preparing him for the Summer Cup.

He continued, “I think the Victory Moon is the right race for him, although I may also consider the Charity Mile. The Victory Moon is four weeks after this last run, so will provide a nice build up. He should give a nice positive performance in his next race, but whichever race it is will be a preparation run for his target race, the Summer Cup.”

Samurai Blade also looks likely to use the Victory Moon as his final preparation run.

Matador Man is the shortest-priced of the Tarry Summer Cup entries at 16/1 with Betting World, but Tarry is not convinced.

Matador Man (Candiese Marnewick)

Matador Man (Candiese Marnewick)

He said, “He will have to carry a lot of weight and I am not sure he didn’t raise his game at Greyville. I am not sure he would enjoy 1800m or 2000m at Turffontein as much as he would at Greyville. But I was not too concerned about his first prep run the other day (in the Grade 2 Spring Challenge on Turffontein Inside over 1450m where he was beaten 7,1 lengths by his promising three-year-old stablemate Wonderwall). Before the race I would have been satisfied for him to finish three lengths back, but the track was heavy that day and they were not making up ground on the outside. He would prefer the track a bit firmer and we will now try further, but I will have to be convinced about his Summer Cup chances.”

Matador Man’s running on third in the Grade 1 Champions Cup over 1800m at Greyville suggests he will stay the Summer Cup trip, despite being by Toreador out of the Mogok 1400-1600m type Sahara. The Emperor’s Palace Charity Mile on November 4 looks his ideal next race, although he has drawn wide in 25 out of 35 entries.

French Navy is also likely to run in the Charity Mile as his Summer Cup preparation and Tarry said he would be happy for him to finish five or six lengths back.

Tilbury Fort is off a 97 merit rating and hasn’t run since the Vodacom Durban July, so Tarry said he would have to find a good preparation race for him and take it from there.

Tarry rates the unexposed 86 merit rated Social Order as good enough to run in big handicap races like the Charity Mile and Summer Cup, but added, “It will be difficult to qualify him for the Charity Mile and I am stuck between a rock and a hard place because the Inside Track might not suit him (he runs there on Saturday in a 1600m handicap). But off bottom weight in the Charity Mile and Summer Cup he won’t disgrace himself.”

Social Order, a four-year-old Count Dubois gelding, was the unluckiest horse in the Grand Heritage in just his fourth career start last time out. When he finally saw daylight he finished strongest of all for a 3,8 length fifth.

french navy wins london news

French Navy (JC Photographics)

Tarry said Bold Viking was improving but was not sure he was good enough. “He will be very lucky to qualify.”

He is considering taking Stonehenge to Cape Town as an alternative to the Summer Cup and said, “Older horses often do well down there.”

He said Hyaku’s run on the Greyville poly over 1900m on Gold Cup day had not panned out well, so he had done well to finish a close up fourth, and he was now hoping for a bug run in the Michaelmas from the 87 merit rated six-year-old.

Grade 2 Ipi Tombe Challenge winner Intergalactic is 96 merit rated and Tarry said, “She starts in a conditions Plate on Saturday and we will see how she goes.”

Witchcraft is also in that race and will then run in the Grade 3 Yellowwood Handicap on Charity Mile day.

Tarry pointed out 89 merit rated Tambalang had “run on very nicely” in her last start over 1800m and would also go for the Yellowwood. He added, “She is in a nice space and is having the right preparation races.”

Tarry has had a statistically slower start than in his last two championship-winning seasons, but said, “The game hasn’t started yet. Producing big horses through the season is what it is all about. I have been fortunate to win the last three championships, but the clock starts again on August 1 each season.”

By David Thiselton