Zinedine hard to oppose

PUBLISHED: 19 February 2018

Richard Fourie (Nkosi Hlophe)

Zinedine stirred the blood like no other two-year-old in Cape Town so far this season when annihilating the opposition in sensational style at Kenilworth on Saturday.

The 11-10 newcomer led from the gate and stretched whenever anything threatened to come near her. When M.J. Byleveld looked round inside the final furlong he could have done with a pair of binoculars. As it was he passed the post five lengths clear in a time only a tenth of a second outside Big Mistake’s class record.

Vaughan Marshall said: “It’s very exciting to have a horse like this and the nice part is that he will go a mile. We have high hopes for him.”

Richard Fourie (Nkosi Hlophe)

Richard Fourie

In the Gold Medallion at Scottsville? “We haven’t really thought about anything like that,” Marshall answered. “We will go slowly, slowly – it’s early days yet.”

 

But seemingly Ken Truter, Mike Fullard and James Drew have richer fish to fry because the first-named explained that they put the colt through the CTS ring 13 months ago to qualify for the R5 million races.

The trio bought the dam in Australia in 2011 but she was bitten by a snake after winning first time out and was never the same again. Seemingly the snake venom affected her heart. They sent her to Var but the foaling took so much out of her that she had to be rested for a year and an attack of colic then killed her.  But her legacy lives on and, as Truter said: “A horse like Zinedine is what we are all in this game for.”

Elle Va, all the rage for the second juvenile race, was backed from 9-2 to 15-10 favourite but trailed in with only one behind her. The course vet reported her abnormally fatigued but Grant Behr said she was not striding freely in the final two furlongs.

The race was won by Richard Fourie on Carioca for Joey Ramsden who was particularly taken with the performance of third-placed newcomer Yolta, saying: “She looks as if she will be a cut above the rest when she goes a trip.”

Ramsden had his left arm in a sling to help his recent shoulder operation but he was lucky not to be back in hospital. He went to the course early that morning to watch a horse being worked. When he put his foot on one of the seats in the stands it gave way and pitched him down several concrete steps. He landed on his head and on the damaged shoulder, twisting his ankle for good measure – “It was the worst accident like that that I’d ever had.”

Greg Cheyne had a tough day too. On Eternal Night in the Betting World Maiden (won by Sihle Cele for Mike Robinson on Team Valor’s Tally-Ho) he found himself travelling like a winner behind a wall of four and every time a gap looked like opening the door promptly slammed in his face.

He had some compensation when the Glen Kotzen-trained Luna Child won the next but 40 minutes later supposed bet-of-the-day Marion Belle found nothing in the closing stages and managed only fourth behind Wings Of Honor for the Kotzen-Fourie combination. “I expected a lot more from her than that – it was a very disappointing run,’ said her rider who had no excuses.

To add further insult he was then unshipped from Pata Pata on his way out onto the course and his mount was scratched. Corne Orffer was left to enjoy an armchair ride on hotpot Pacific Trader while Fourie completed a treble on the Piet Steyn-trained King Of Aces in the last.

Andre Nel had some respite from his virus problems when Robert Khathi led a furlong out on Selailai in the Tabonline Maiden. Khathi is now devoting a lot of his work-riding time to Plattner Racing and is being rewarded with more opportunities.

By Michael Clower