Take a sip of Wine Festival

PUBLISHED: 07 August 2017

The new season may be only a week old but the rich Ready To Run races are seemingly already acting as an irresistible magnet – and one of the first things Joey Ramsden said after Wine Festival ran away with a 1 400m maiden at Kenilworth yesterday was that she is qualified for one of the best of them.

This filly, owned by a quartet that includes the trainer’s partner Steph Grentell, was backed down to odds-on and drew further and further away under Grant van Niekerk to score by more than five lengths.

Joey Ramsden (Nkosi Hlophe)

Joey Ramsden (Nkosi Hlophe)

Ramsden said: “I am not sure about the quality of the rest of the field but this is a lovely rangy filly.”

The start was delayed for ten minutes after some of the jockeys spotted what looked like a dangerous patch close to the inside rail. “It turned out to be just an old divot but felt we couldn’t take any chances,” explained senior stipe Nick Shearer.

A bigger problem for Ramsden was his left hand, bandaged after painfully making contact with a red hot hob when he was cooking some bacon. He ended up in hospital.

Seemingly Riaan van Reenen’s problems were more with the Almighty after running Janice’s Secret in totally unsuitable conditions a fortnight ago. “It was p***ing with rain that time, she hated it and I couldn’t sleep for days afterwards,” he related. “But I was blessed when they postponed the meeting after the rain came down again last Tuesday.”

Richard Fourie completed the benediction by bringing the 9-2 chance with a strong run to lead 50m out. Fourie had already scored on Tripple Explosion for Glen Kotzen – when 17-20 favourite Captain Ram flopped and was found to be not striding out. Kotzen also scored with Essenceoflife and he and Fourie completed trebles with Dragon Flame in the last.

But it was 26-year-old Mauritian Akshay Balloo who stole the riding honours – quite literally on the Glen Puller-trained Flying Ryan in the Tabonline.co.za Handicap. He pinched a five-length lead on the 61-10 chance and, despite dropping his whip inside the final furlong, the advantage he gained was enough to keep him in front to the line.

Two races later he doubled up, for the third time in his career, when getting up in the final stride of the 1 200m handicap on Storm Front. Maybe he was fortunate to find a gap big enough to drive a bus through but the acceleration he persuaded the Eric Sands runner to produce was more reminiscent of a Ferrari.

Vaughan Marshall scratched two horses with pharyngitis but there was nothing wrong with Captain Falcon (Van Niekerk) who made no mistake after being heavily backed in the first despite being “a big baby and still very green.”

BLOB The Gnostic Wholistic Festival packed the top two floors of the grandstand and the Psychic (at R60 a time) proved a big draw. Madam Irma had travelled from Pretoria and, according to her reports, she had no problem forecasting one winner after another.

By Michael Clower