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Entries in Anthony Delpech (77)

Wednesday
May152013

LADIES' LOVE

Vercingetorix - KRA GuineasWatch Vercingetorix winning the KRA Guineas (Grade 2)
(Image : Gold Circle - Footage : Tellytrack)

KRA GUINEAS (Grade 2)
Greyville, South Africa

I know it’s a week and a bit since the KRA Guineas, but class has no age limit. This race (previously known as the South African Guineas) has a roll call to envy: Sea Cottage, Politician, Bold Tropic, Royal Chalice, Ilustrador, Right Prerogative and Dynasty; a history of stars rivalling any other horse race on the continent. And I’m willing to bet that Saturday’s renewal was as good as any of them, a contest between a pair of young gladiators of the highest order in the hands of two of the world’s finest jockeys. His 1/7 odds told us everything about the public’s perception of Capetown Noir, whose dominance of his contemporaries looked complete, yet the money kept flowing for the as yet unbeaten but as yet untested Vercingetorix. Karl Neisius has been at the top of this game for decades now, and it’s an open secret that he rates Capetown Noir with the best he’s thrown a leg over. Anthony Delpech on the other hand, journeyman supreme himself, was known to harbour the deepest respect for the up-and-coming de Kock trainee, and while he wasn’t yet ready to call him an Igugu or a Bold Silvano, only the race was going to tell us how good he really is.

Who knows whether it was the run of the race or a lack of respect for the rest of the field, but Capetown Noir found himself further back than Neisius would have wanted him, and while it is so that Vercingetorix got a run on him turning for home, we should remember it was only the latter’s third visit to the races. Whatever, it was a battle for the ages, two fine three-year-olds in the hands of two masters, stride for stride, head for head, nose-up, nose-down, and then the impossible. Nobody in their heart of hearts really believed Capetown Noir could go down, but soon the numbers were up, and the number one box was somebody else’s. You may well argue that if you ran this race ten times again at the same stage in their lives, most times the result would  favour Capetown Noir, but that doesn’t get away from the fact that in Vercingetorix, Mike de Kock has found another star. Frighteningly, he’s that good that by the time the season is out, he might well have broken Summerhill’s eight year reign at the head of the Breeders Premiership.

But that’s a matter for another day; this is about two fine horses and two great riders, and what a treat it is to be a bystander on such an occasion. When there is so little between two competitors, it matters, no, it really matters, who the driver is, and in this case, neither horse had an advantage. South Africa is many things, and we’ve produced some great sportsmen and some world-class companies, but none of these disciplines has been any more prolific in the production of stars than racing. It’s an unheralded fact that the most sought-after jockeys’ title in racing is Hong Kong’s, and that for 21 of the past 22 years, it’s been in the hands of a South African. Pofessionals of the calibre of Dougie Whyte, Basil Marcus, Felix Coetzee, Bartie Leischer and Weichong Marwing, have dominated this championship with unerring distinction for decades in the racing world’s richest jurisdiction. Yet they’d be the first to concede that men of the ilk of Jeffrey Lloyd, Michael Roberts, Piere Strydom, Anton Marcus, Delpech, Neisius and Kevin Shea, were all capable of riding the jockeys of other nations to sleep at the height of their powers.

Of course, we’re not alone in the art of jockeyship - the histories of nations were written on the backs of horses, and other countries have been turning out top men of the profession for three-and-a-half centuries now. But a good deal of dross is talked about jockeys. Take the row about the length of stirrup leathers, which has been dragging on for years. Of itself, it isn’t worth a fig. People forget that Lester Piggott, whom history would probably judge as master of all, won his first three Epsom Derbies with his leathers about the conventional length. He won his next six with his knees more or less tucked up under his chin. Lester won all of his Derbies because of his good hands.

The question should not be whether this or that jockey rides too short or too long, as though there can be mathematical certitude to all this. Rather, the question should go something like this: does the jockey have balance? Does he avoid bumping the poor beast with his backside, or screwing off to the side as he uses the whip? Does he stay ahead of the horse’s centre of gravity? And perhaps, above all things, does the jockey have hands?

A polo player can use his legs; a good horseman, by imperceptibly shifting his weight, can make a horse do anything. Great jockeys of the past, the Tiger Wrights and the Charlie Barendses, rode on longer stirrups and could use their legs, but the modern jockey, invariably perched up there with his feet on the dashboard, really has only his hands. Andrew Fortune has hands, the way Mercury, messenger of the gods, had legs. His horses travel on gossamer threads. This man is an essay in horsemanship.

All of these men, Wright and Barends excepted, were graduates of our little jockey’s academy at Summerveld. I say “little” in inverted commas, because it’s home to about 50 students, yet it continues to churn out Olympic class athletes with regular success, to a point of out-performing all known academies of any sporting variety, pound-for-pound, on the planet. I guess this “little” school, is no little school at all.

Reverting for a moment to Capetown Noir. In saying this, I mean no offence to Vercingetorix, who is still somewhat spare, somewhat of a work-in-progress, and could in the end become the real and the only thing. Meanwhile, Capetown Noir is made for Hollywood. Women race-goers drool over him. He is big, I would think approaching 16.1hh, and black with a white blaze that broadens as it splashes out over his muzzle. He has four jet black legs that leave the impression of invisibility at his quickest, and a big generous eye. He has lots of rein, a prominent wither and massive hindquarters. When he canters to the start, he hardly raises his knees; he knows he’s the leading man, and the others are extras and clapper-loaders.

The Bible tells us that God made man and the earth in seven days. Man has fashioned the thoroughbred over 350 years, and Capetown Noir is the point of perfection this God-given creature has reached in that time. He and Vercingetorix will be facing off again on Daily News day on the first weekend in June. The horns will be out, and so will the fans. Savour it - this is what racing was made for.

Saturday
Apr272013

IGUGU SET FOR SOLID QEII CUP PERFORMANCE

Igugu - Audemars Piguet QEII CupIgugu (SAF)
(Photo : Hong Kong Jockey Club)

AUDEMARS PIGUET QUEEN ELIZABETH II CUP (Group 1)
Sha Tin, Turf, 2000m
28 April 2013

Igugu is expected to put up a good performance in Sunday’s HK$14Million Audemars Piguet QEII Cup over 2000m at Sha Tin Racecourse in Hong Kong, in which Mike de Kock also sends out Treasure Beach.

Mike believes the Summerhill Ready To Run graduate is just about back to her best and commented: “Both our runners travelled well from Dubai and Igugu is the fittest we’ve had her in quite a while. She’s got better and better. She is getting back to what we all know she is capable of. Things didn’t go her way in Dubai during the Carnival. But I think things have turned for her and we’re expecting a big run.”

Anthony Delpech has made the trip to Hong Kong to ride Igugu, while Irish jockey Colm O’Donoghue will partner Treasure Beach, of whom Mike said: “He’s a smart horse and you can ignore his Dubai World Cup run, which came a bit soon. We didn’t have enough time to get him ready.”

Mike’s pair have drawn wide, but he’s never been one to give up before a race because of unfavourable stall positions. The stable won the 2006 QEII Cup with Irridescence and the 2008 renewal with Archipenko.

The last four races from Sha Tin will be screened live on Tellytrack from 9.30 on Sunday morning.

Extract from Mike de Kock Racing

Friday
Mar082013

"IGUGU FEELS VERY GOOD" - DELPECH

Anthony DelpechAnthony Delpech
(Image : E.Cassar)

JEBEL HATTA (Group 1)
Meydan, Turf, 1800m
9 March 2013

Jockey Anthony Delpech rode Igugu in work at Meydan yesterday morning in preparation for tomorrow’s Group 1 Jebel Hatta over 1800m on turf, one of the highlights of the Dubai World Cup Carnival’s “Super Saturday.

Delpech, in an interview with Newzpoint Media, said that the 2011 South African Triple Tiara winner felt “very good” in her preparation gallop, running easily over 1200m with her pace stepped up over the last 400m.

Delpech, who last rode in Dubai in 2007, winning the Sheema Classic for David Ferraris on Vengeance Of Rain, said he was looking foward to the Jebel Hatta.

“It’s great to be back. I haven’t ridden on the new track at Meydan and I’m excited about it. Igugu is a star, we’re all hoping she makes good improvement on Saturday. I don’t know much about the opposition, Mike de Kock will be briefing me before Saturday.”

Delpech said that he would be flying back to South Africa on Sunday and that a return on World Cup night would depend entirely on how Igugu shapes up in tomorrow’s $US300,000 event.

Extract from Mike de Kock Racing

Tuesday
Mar052013

ANTHONY DELPECH TO PILOT IGUGU IN DUBAI

Anthony Delpech aboard Igugu - J&B Met 2012Anthony Delpech acknowledges the crowd following Igugu’s incredible victory in the 2012 J&B Met
(Photo : Action Racing Online)

JEBEL HATTA (Group 1)
Meydan, Turf, 1800m
9 March 2013

Top jockey Anthony Delpech will ride champion mare Igugu at work in Dubai on Thursday morning on the eve of this weekend’s Super Saturday meeting at Meydan. The 2012 J&B Met winner will run in the Group 1 Jebel Hatta over 1800m on Saturday.

An elated Delpech was thrilled to get the call up from the De Kock yard to ride his beloved champion after the mare finished third in the 1800m Group 2 Balanchine a fortnight ago. In her first run in 13 months, she was beaten 4.25 lengths in the hands of Christophe Soumillon by Godolphin’s smart filly Sajjhaaa.

Igugu’s failure to win after all the hype around her was a great disappointment to some of her followers, but De Kock did advise pre-race that she was short of her peak and that victory on her international debut would be no foregone conclusion.

For the stable, this was a more than satisfactory return for the mare, who had not seen a racetrack since winning the Grade 1 J&B Met in January last year and had to travel halfway around the world to reach her destination in the UAE.

Igugu’s part-owner Andre Macdonald flew to Dubai for the Balanchine to support the mare he races in partnership with Sheikh Mohammed bin Khalifa Al Maktoum.

De Kock said after the race: “Mr Mac is a real sport and took it on the chin. It was nice to have him here. He understands racing. Horses can’t go on winning and winning and Igugu faced a hard task on her return.”

Delpech jets out of South Africa on Wednesday evening and returns to the scene of some of his greatest triumphs. In what he termed a ‘special moment in my career’, he said that his wife Candice would be there to share it with him as his children had school commitments.

For some seasons the first choice rider for the De Kock yard in South Africa, he rode for former South African trainer Nick Robb in Dubai in 2000 and 2001 and won the joint richest turf race in the world, the Sheema Classic in 2007 for David Ferraris on one of his favourite horses, Vengeance Of Rain, while based in Hong Kong.

Vengeance Of Rain earned total stakes of over $7.9 million, which rated him in the top ten equine earners in the world. The Hong Kong Jockey Club made a website for Vengeance of Rain on 13 April 2007 and also published the special edition octopus card on 30 May 2007. The octopus card was used to celebrate Vengeance of Rain winning the Dubai Sheema Classic on 31 March 2007 and he was crowned the 2006-2007 Hong Kong Horse of the Year on 2 July 2007. Vengeance Of Rain broke the all-time Hong Kong prize money record set by Silent Witness.

Delpech, who has four rides on Super Saturday, brings plenty of international experience to the table and beyond Hong Kong and Dubai, has also ridden in Japan, Singapore and Mauritius. As a family man, he has settled in South Africa and generally does not travel with three young children in the house.

“I will be riding work on Thursday morning and I am due back in South Africa on Sunday afternoon. I am very excited and it is no secret that I have wanted to ride for Mike in Dubai for so long and it has finally come together,” he said with pride.

When taxed on how he felt, he said that he was obviously nervous:

“One wouldn’t be human not to feel nervous about the occasion. But I am also very excited. I know that the whole of SA will be watching and expecting Igugu to set the record straight. So that is a lot of pressure and expectation but she has shown how good she is and I know how good she is. She will be a fitter horse this time, and I just hope that everything goes well for us in the race.”

The 1800m race is one of two Group 1 races on the Super Saturday card, and a final stepping stone into the Dubai World Cup at end of March.

Mike de Kock won the Jebel Hatta last year in the same silks with the former Aiden O’Brien-trained Master Of Hounds, who led from start to finish to win the $300,000 event.

Extract from Sporting Post

Friday
Feb012013

J&B MET 130

J&B Met - Made To Fly

J&B MET (Grade 1)
Kenilworth, Turf, 2000m
2 February 2013

Mike MoonMike Moon
The Times
The J&B Met is much more than a horse race. Raced in the dreamy Cape just as summer comes off its peak, it has come to symbolise the glamour of the racing game in South Africa.

If the Vodacom Durban July is all about power and glory - with the prestige of the country’s premier race, alcohol-fuelled corporate show-offs and big money wagering - the Met provides a more elegant, romantic interlude.

Met Day is like a huge garden party with equine entertainments. At Cape Town’s foremost social bash, being seen in the exclusive enclosures in eye-catching finery is, for many, at least as important as what passes the winning post first.

As such, the poshest do in racing is rather more than just the second-biggest race day in the land. A party with cavorting celebrities, outré outfits, sunshine and wine will always attract that extra bit of attention.

It’s small wonder whisky maker J&B has continued to pump money into staging the event since 1978, becoming horse racing’s longest-standing sponsor. J&B might already be an upmarket brand, but it still picks up priceless cache and glitzy publicity from the Met.

This is not to say the racing itself ain’t important. For racing folk, it’s right up there in quality, and for those of us who cannot be at glorious Kenilworth tomorrow, it is racing form rather than haute couture and haute cuisine that must be our focus.

Speaking of which, tomorrow’s 130th renewal looks a competitive affair - at least among the well-backed horses.

Handicap conditions for the Met are intended to ensure that the most talented horses do well. They’re not heavily penalised with weight in the saddle for their past successes and can show their true worth, all else being equal. This year the classiest contenders are also the ones with the most compelling recent form, theoretically narrowing down our choice of most likely winner. Top jockey Anthony Delpech, who hasn’t landed a choice booking for the Met, says he can see the winner coming from only “four or five” horses and hasn’t bothered to scratch around for a mount on an apparent no-hoper.

That seems a fair assessment.

Topping the betting boards at 18/10 is four-year-old colt Jackson, who is obviously a top racehorse and does well on this course. But many pundits and punters haven’t shaken off the bruising they took when he failed to meet a previous big challenge, in the 2012 Vodacom Durban July.

July winner Pomodoro has had a brilliant lead-up to the Met, with little having been in his favour. He has a good barrier draw, has had time to acclimatise to Cape Town and has the peerless services of Piere Strydom in the irons. Feisty mare Beach Beauty is consistent and is almost guaranteed to have a say in the finish.

J&B MET BETTING:

18/10 Jackson, 7/2 Pomodoro, 11/2 Beach Beauty, 10/1 Slumdogmillionaire, 12/1 King Of Pain, 14/1 Master Plan, 15/1 Bravura, 20/1 Run For It, 22/1 Hill Fifty Four, 40/1 Martial Eagle, 50/1 Tribal Dance, 66/1 Bulsara, Black Wing, 80/1 Ice Machine, In Writing, 100/1 Fabiani.

J&B MET SELECTION:

J&B MET (KENILWORTH RACE 8): 2 Pomodoro, 15 Beach Beauty, 4 Master Plan, 1 Jackson

For more information, please visit :

www.jbmet.co.za

Extract from The Times

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