Hartford House Special Offer

summerhill stud stallion film link

summerhill stud website link

Click here to visit our website
www.summerhill.co.za

Facebook

Entries in Elevation (4)

Thursday
Mar012012

SENTINEL : REMEMBERING THE IRON HORSE

Sentinel Racehorse

Sentinel
(Photo : Summerhill Stud Archives)

SENTINEL (SAF)
No Reprieve (USA) - Winter’s Eve (SAF)

The Sentinel Stakes, contested recently honours an extraordinary racehorse. The colt raced in an era when South Africa was blessed with dozens of exceptional thoroughbreds - and he emerged as the supreme sprinter-miler among them.

Mike Moon - The TimesMike Moon
The Tmes
They dubbed SentinelThe Iron Horse because he was the toughest and most enduring of characters.

The statistics tell the story of resilience, bravery and versatility. From 56 starts, he recorded 29 wins - with 12 Grade 1s and 21 places.

Racing from two to seven years of age between 1971 and 1975, he travelled throughout the country and won at eight different racecourses from 1000m to 1600m. There has been no other South African horse with a record like that at the top level.

“He was a real toughie, that’s what I remember most about him. A phenomenally strong horse,” says Michael (Muis) Roberts, the jockey who partnered Sentinel to many of his successes. “He was massive, at least 17 hands, and weighed about 600kg.”

Sentinel was bred by the Ellis family on their Mooi River farm, Hartford, which is now part of the estate of South African champion stud Summerhill. Ray Ellis had started breeding and racing horses in 1940 and moved quickly into the top rank of the South African turf with horses like Cape Heath, Panjandrum, Ajax, Magic Mirror and the great Mowgli.

Much of this success was built on the stallions, Sybil’s Nephew and Masham. Well-bred USA stallion No Reprieve was intended as Hartford’s next in line to these titans, but didn’t quite live up to expectations - though he did throw a handful of stakes winners and forged himself a special place in thoroughbred history, thanks to a bay son with a white blaze called Sentinel.

Sentinel’s mother was Winter’s Eve, a two-time winner by the Oppenheimers’ standout stallion Wilwyn and from the same crop as King Willow, Smash And Grab, Rarin To Go and Tragallian.

When Sentinel went into training as a two-year-old in 1970, he joined another beginner in the game, a tiny apprentice jockey nicknamed Muis. The latter remembers riding the horse in work for Joe Joseph, trainer to Ray Ellis and his son Graham.

“He showed huge promise right from the beginning,” recalls Roberts. “But his first race, in which he was ridden by George Davies, was very poor and he finished way back. I galloped him a few days later and couldn’t believe this horse hadn’t won by miles. But it was a different story in his second race, and for a few years after that!”

As a juvenile, the colt shed his maiden tag over 1000m at Clairwood, then won the 1400m Natal Breeders Stakes and the 1200m African Breeders Plate. He finished second in the Grade 2 Smirnoff Plate at Scottsville and fourth in the Grade 1 Champion Nursery.

Davies was in the irons for all the early wins, but Roberts increasingly got the nod from Joseph as the young rider’s talents emerged. “Maybe Uncle Joe thought I wasn’t strong enough to start with. He was such a massive horse, I must have looked like a pimple on him,” says Muis.

The future South African and British champion jockey’s big chance came in 1972 after Sentinel turned three. Muis particularly remembers the Christmas Handicap at Clairwood, a prelude to a planned Cape Town campaign. “He was completely unextended. I never moved a muscle on him and he cruised in.”

Sentinel is often mentioned in the same breath as In Full Flight, for theirs was an epic rivalry that stirred the blood of racegoers in the 1972-73 season.

Their first encounter came in the 1600m Bull Brand Jockeys International at Scottsville, a contest that boasted some cracking three-year-olds. In a quagmire, In Full Flight won from Elevation and Sentinel.

In Cape Town for the summer season, In Full Flight prevailed over Sentinel by a short head in the 1400m Swazi Spa Stakes, setting the scene for a showdown that is still talked about today in awed tones.

The publication “Thoroughbred News” described the 1972 Cape Guineas: “The sharp Milnerton 1600m was the mile that suited Sentinel. In Full Flight came for him, and Sentinel was ready. They turned for home even, and they stayed that way. First the blaze was in front, then In Full Flight held a narrow advantage. Whips flashed, sides heaved, heads nodded, and neither great horse gave an inch. At the line no-one could separate them and the judges put up a dead heat.”

One of the few people not bowled over by this momentous result was Muis, who reckons his horse actually won. “Sentinel’s white blaze cost him the race. The line on the photo finish picture covered the very tip of his nose, which was ahead. That’s what I believe anyway!” he laughs.

There’s a reference to this great race in “The South African Racehorse” of July 1972: “Sentinel… was ridden by little apprentice Roberts, to the great credit of Graham Ellis, who refused to replace the youngster with a stronger boy though he had the chance.”

Next up was the Queen’s Plate over the Kenilworth 1600m, a trip that was to prove to be at Sentinel’s limit. In Full Flight stayed better to take it.

Back in Durban, Sentinel gave weight and a beating to Elevation in the 1200m Rupert Ellis Brown Memorial.

The next instalment in the on-going thriller was the Grade 1 SA Guineas at Greyville, with the betting showing that an enthralled public favoured In Full Flight to triumph again. But the Greyville 1600m was right up Sentinel’s street and, with Bertie Hayden up, he left Elevation and In Full Flight trailing with a blistering turn of speed.

It had become clear that Sentinel was the supreme sprinter-miler and his two great adversaries were more in the miler-stayer mould - confirmed by In Full Flight winning the Durban July before his premature death and Elevation landing a Holiday Inns (Summer Cup) treble.

As for Sentinel, he went on to dominate the shorter features year after year, eventually becoming the country’s leading stakes earner with the princely sum of R207,390.

As a three-year-old he won eight times in 15 starts, at four it was another eight wins, at five two wins, at six three wins and at seven five wins. No sprint in the country was safe. The Cape Flying Championship, the Drill Hall Stakes, the Newbury, the Concord and the Woolavington Cup were some of the titles he accumulated.

An adventurous entry into the 2000m Champion Stakes at Greyville in 1973 had the gladiator drawing on his class to run second to Force Ten - over a distance way beyond his comfort zone.

On his first trip to the Highveld, in November 1972, he tackled the tough Turffontein 1600m to take the Grade 1 Hawaii Stakes. The following year there was another brilliant effort over the same course and distance to claim the Transvaal Champion Stakes.

Gosforth Park was the scene of a popular 1000m victory over Pyrmont and Elevation in the 1974 Joseph Dorfman, and a month later a powerhouse display to beat the formidable Sun Monarch in the Grade 1 National Sprint.

Every year there was a jaunt to Cape Town - though the Queen’s Plate remained elusive. A second runners-up spot as a six-year-old was the best he could muster.

Joseph and the Ellis’ weren’t averse to trekking to unfashionable Port Elizabeth to plunder more honours. The July 1974 “The South African Racehorse” reported: “Never in the 117-year history of racing at Fairview has a single horse attracted so much money and so many people as did Sentinel in the R10,000 Fairview Stakes over 1600m. A field of 13 took on the champion but they had as much chance of beating Sentinel as a drop of water had of surviving a bush fire.”

The Iron Horse was unbothered by the thousands of miles of travelling.

John Ellis, son of Graham and Moira Ellis and a schoolboy in the time of Sentinel, recalls his parents often commenting on how relaxed and easy-going the big fellow was.

“Before a race he used to lie down and take a nap in his box,” says John. “When my mother first saw this she was alarmed and thought he was sick. But he obviously wasn’t, because he just woke up, went out and won again.”

Muis also remembers the equine professionalism. “He was as tough as nails, but not at all aggressive. He knew what he had to do and got on with the job. There was no fancy footwork with Sentinel. He was a real soldier and put heart and soul into his work.”

It wasn’t his swansong victory, but the 1975 Jack Stubbs Memorial over 1000m at Milnerton was a cherry atop a fabulous career. On a perfect Cape summer day, seven-year-old Sentinel whipped talented speedster Harry Hotspur, with two other precocious youngsters way back in third and fourth - Archangel and Yataghan. The “Thoroughbred News” picture of this finish was captioned, “The result that says it all”.

Sentinel was retired to stud at Hartford, but proved to be low on fertility. Seven of his progeny made it to the racecourse and only one failed to register a win. The best was the filly, Protectress, who ran second in the 1979 SA Oaks.

The Iron Horse lived out his days as a galloping companion and lead horse for the Hartford foals. Could a young horse have had a better mentor?

Extract from The Times

Editor’s note: These are powerful words from Joe Joseph, about Cosmonaut. He was an extraordinarily talented stayer who won the Ellises a third Durban Gold Cup, in those days one of the nation’s most prestigious races. That he could sprint a mile (as Joe suggests) and stay two miles better than anything else in the land, says volumes for this horse, but to be rated better than Sentinel in Joe’s eyes, is a telling statement. Sentinel must be one of the all-time great milers of the land, as you can judge from the remarks of Bernard van Cutsem, one of England’s best trainers of his era. Joe struggled with Cosmonaut’s soundness however, and his was a career of unfulfilled promise. When you think of the other extraordinary horses who came off the old Hartford property, Cape Heath, Mowgli, Panjandrum, Magic Mirror, Alyssum and many other Derby, Oaks, Guineas, Gilbey’s, and Smirnoff winners, to name a few of the big ones, you begin to get an inkling of why Sir Mordaunt Milner included the Ellises of Hartford alongside the Lord Derby and the Aga Khan, Marcel Boussac and Federico Tesio, Calumet and Claiborne in America among the world’s greatest owner/breeders of their eras.

Thursday
Nov242011

SANSUI AND THE SIZZLING SUMMER CUP

Sansui Summer Cup

THE SANSUI SUMMER CUP (Grade 1)
Turffontein, Turf, 2000m
26 November 2011

Along with the Emperors Palace Ready To Run Cup, the Sansui Summer Cup is the joint third richest race on the South African calendar. It is topped only by the Vodacom Durban July and the J&B Met, and while these two might hold the upper hand in terms of value, neither is any richer when it comes to tradition. Contested in the heart of Africa’s biggest commercial city, Johannesburg, the Summer Cup was born out of history’s most famous gold rush, and it has spawned some of the greatest racers our sport has known. Its reputation as a legend-maker is matched only by it’s storied connection with some of the most stirring political events of our times, the most bizarre of which was the postponement of the infamous Jameson Raid by a week, to avoid that calamity clashing with the staging of the 1895 edition of the race. You see, the raid was inspired by the most powerful Randlords of their time, Cecil John Rhodes and Sir Alfred Beit (with Sir Abe Bailey and Henry Nourse in the wings), and most of them either had horses competing, or were stewards of the Johannesburg Turf Club. Here was an attempted coup d’etat aimed the military overthrow of Paul Kruger’s Transvaal Republic, and it’s argued by more than one student of the politics of the era, that the week’s delay occasioned the leaking of news of the intended raid, hence the fiasco it turned out to be.

Time was that when the Summer Cup (or Handicap, as it was in it’s earliest manifestation) overtook all sporting events in prestige and prize money, when it was contested under the guise of The Holiday Inns, worth R100,000. While there’ve been any number of fabled winners of the “Summer” since its first running in 1887, it’s arguable that among its most fabled sons included were the great Java, Home Guard and Elevation, who won it three times in a row under top weight, with the tragically talented Martin Schoeman in the irons. Elevation was to become one of the most successful South African-bred stallions of his era, eventually aspiring to the status of champion of the nation.

From a Summerhill perspective, we haven’t held a better hand in the event since Pick Six led home a farm exacta in 2008 from the enigmatic millionaire, Emperor Napoleon, under the unlikely name “Gomma Gomma, the race once more boasted the biggest purse of R3million. The class of the race in 2011 is undoubtedly rags-to-riches hero, Pierre Jourdan, who’s been set the unimaginable task of shouldering 60kgs (yes, 132 pounds or 9st 6lbs as they used to say in the old days), from draw 19, which is akin to starting in Loveday Street with the rest of the field lining up in Eloff Street. He’s in good shape though, and he’s unbeaten this term, following an inspiring effort in the Vodacom Durban July, where only Horse Of The Year, Igugu, was good enough to shade him.

Besides, his trainer seems to have something up his sleeve. As he did when PJ was plundering the Classics as a three-year-old, he looks to have a joyous premonition. As he did then, Gary Alexander wears a beatific smile, as though he knows something others don’t.

We have two other strings to our bow, though we’d have to admit to a suspicion that there must be something of a conspiracy up there among the gods who organised the draw. The runaway victor in last week’s Victory Moon Stakes, Smanjemanje, has not only ended up at draw 13, but he’s been penalised six pounds for his dominant effort in that outing. The question is, was the difference the cornel collar made to his breathing apparatus, such that it raised his game five or six lengths? If so, he’s a runner. He couldn’t be in better shape for this, the biggest assignment of his life, but coping with the additional impost and a draw beyond 10 might be decisive.

Finally, we come to Black Wing, who must be in with a proper shout if the form of the Daily News 2000 (Gr1) has anything to do with the outcome, particularly as he now goes to post in blinkers. The likely favourite for Saturday’s big event, The Apache, was the hero of that championship three-year-old contest, and here Black Wing is 3,5 kgs better off with that one for a beating of less than a length.

At the weights, that’s enough to turn the tables, but the question is, can he overcome his 14 draw, as well as his ride from sea level to 6000 feet, and still get the toughest 2000m in racing? The 800m Turffontein straight is murderous, and its victims include some of the best stayers of their generations. Yet there is something about distance, and what it demands of man and his horses, which separates it from the shorter stuff. It gives a fresh dimension to Geoffrey Blaney’s theory about the tyranny of distance. There is a charm involved. It allows you to hang on to your myths.

Whichever way you look at it, the farm holds a decent hand, and our runners are ready to play it.

At the human level, we still have to overcome the hurdle on Friday of a pre-race party at Mike and Diane de Kock’s Dainfern Estate, where the trimmings and the trappings of several seasons of high plunder in the desert sands of Dubai, are gloriously evident.

For more information, please visit :

www.sansuisummercup.co.za

Friday
Feb122010

MEGAN ROMEYN'S TOP 12 RACEHORSES OF THE PAST 50 YEARS

megan romeyn sea cottage

Megan Romeyn and Sea Cottage
(Photo : Summerhill Stud)

MEGAN ROMEYN : OUR RADIO DJ

Unlike their very visible television counterparts, radio DJ’s are the anonymous voices of the electronic media. Our anonymous voice is our shop window, the lady who answers the telephone. In Summerhill’s case, most of you know the mellifluous tones of Megan Romeyn, always cheerful, always polite, and never short of enthusiasm. Megan’s not only enthusiastic about life, she loves the horses and is passionate about the Summerhill story. She took the liberty this morning of naming her top twelve racehorses of the past fifty years. She didn’t pick them solely for their race records, but for their personalities and their hearts.

1. Sea Cottage. 20 wins from 24 races. Dead-heated with Jollify in 1966 Durban July.

2. Hawaii. Winner of fifteen races in South Africa and six in America including the Man O’War Handicap at Belmont. Son Henbit won 1980 Epsom Derby.

3. Colorado King. Winner of the Durban July and Cape Derby – both Group One races. He won a total of 10 races in South Africa before being exported to America. Won the Hollywood Gold Cup (Gr.1) in 1964 and equalled world record for nine furlongs.

4. Horse Chestnut. One of the greatest horses to come out of South Africa. His racing record speaks for itself.

5. Mowgli. Winner of six races of current Group One status in twelve weeks. A feat never to be repeated again in equine history.

6. Northern Guest. Greatest broodmare sire in South African history with a record eight titles to his name. Even though he was unraced, his progeny have distinguished themselves on the racetrack

7. Wolf Power. Winner of multiple Group One races including back-to-back Queen’s Plates (83/84). Horse of the Year. Sired 334 Graded Stakes winners from 500 starters in 16 crops.

8. In Full Flight.  Winner of four Group One races. Legendary duels with Sentinel whom he beat to win Queens Plate in 1971? 

9. Politician. Bred locally by Scott Bros. Winner of 11 Grade One and two Grade Two races most under top weight. Horse of the Year 1976-1980. 

10. Yataghan. Winner of Durban July (1973). Famous for his never say die attitude. Legendary duel with Elevation to win Champion Stakes. 

11. Elevation. Champion horseracer and equine sire. Remembered for hat-trick of wins in Holiday Inns Handicap (Gr.1) Winner of SA Derby and 2nd in Met.

12. Sentinel. Bred here at Hartford House. Winner of 29 races. A superb sprinter, he became famous for his dead heat with rival In Full Flight in the Cape Guineas in 1972. Known for his deadly burst of speed.

Wednesday
Nov252009

HISTORY OF THE SUMMER CUP

horse racing in early johannesburg

In pursuit of fortunes… Johannesburg, South Africa
(Photos : DVMinerals/ABDN/VinatgePC)

SANSUI SUMMER CUP

Saturday 28 November 2009 will witness the staging of Johannesburg’s most historical race, the Grade 1 R2,000,000 Sansui Summer Cup to be run over 2000m at Turffontein Racecourse.

The Summer Cup is almost as old as Johannesburg itself with the inaugural event taking place in 1887, a year after the dusty mining camp that would become Johannesburg sprang to life on a farm called Turffontein, following the discovery of gold on the Witwatersrand. It’s fitting then that the race is run at a venue that overlooks the city’s landmark mine dumps.

Nicci Garner writes on Tab Online that these dumps form an integral part of the Summer Cup history. Well into the 1880’s, news about the “discovery of gold” on the Witwatersrand resulted in an influx of fortune seekers who came from all walks of life in coaches and ox wagons, as well as on foot and horseback.

Johannesburg was then a bleak region dotted with the occasional marsh, but what the settlers had in common was that they were prepared to gamble their lives on the chance of making a quick fortune.

The first horserace in Joburg took place in December 1886 and the inaugural Summer Cup was run the following year as the Johannesburg Handicap. The race was won by outsider Haco, a five-year-old trained by Mr du Plessis and ridden by J Bundy, and no one could have imagined that from its humble beginnings, the Summer Cup would become one of South Africa’s most famous racing events.

In its heyday the Summer Cup was the highlight of the Johannesburg feature-race season and one of the city’s social events of the year, but following Cape challenger King’s Guard’s victory in 1971, the name of the race was changed to accommodate a new sponsor. As the years rolled by further changes were made to the event’s name, conditions and date which diminished the race’s glitter until it eventually became the Champion Stakes, run annually in April.

In 1999 horseracing and tote betting company Phumelela reintroduced the Summer Cup to the racing calendar in its traditional format.

Many famous horses have won through the years and they include Pamphlet (1917), Lenin (1940), Cuff Link (1963), Caradoc (1966) and Home Guard (1970).

One horse who really grabbed attention was the Jack Butler-trained four-year-old, Java, who pulled off a remarkable Summer Cup hat-trick from 1956 to 1958.

Elevation was to repeat those exploits almost 20 years later. Trained by the inimitable George Azzie, the chestnut landed his first victory in 1972 when the race was run as the Holiday Inns for the first time. He went on to score again in 1973 before completing a fantastic hat-trick under a big weight in 1974.

 

SUMMER CUP HONOURS ROLL 1999 - 2008

YEAR HORSE OWNERS TRAINER JOCKEY
1999 EL PICHA Messrs Brian B Roux, TM Millard, A Swersky Geoff Woodruff Robbie Hill
2000 DELTA FORM Mr & Mrs MA Airey, Messrs WI Geary, OV Leibrandt, RJ Simpson, BB Sinclair Mike de Kock Guillermo Figueroa
2001 INGLESIDE Mr B Kantor Mike de Kock Kevin Shea
2002 EVENTUAIL Mr & Mrs L Jaffee Geoff Woodruff Piere Strydom
2003 WOLF WHISTLE Mrs PM Sargent, MP Egan, HR Enderle, WW Fenner, PK Harris Mike de Kock Kevin Shea
2004 TYSON Messrs MK Naidoo & R Pancham Stuart Pettigrew Piere Strydom
2005 ILHA DA VITORIA Mrs M Slack Mike de Kock Weichong Marwing
2006 MALTEME MC Gerber, J Gerber, GL Blank, DI Catterall, MA Currie, GC Chamberlain & PG Joubert Alec Laird Brett Smith
2007 STRATEGIC NEWS Messrs CG Snyman, JJ Snyman, L Steyn, MG Gramenie, DL Cunha, LL Cunha Dylan Cunha Glyn Schofield
2008 RUDRA Messrs Tony Moodley, P Bayvel, MF De Kock, MC Gerber & F Ladeira Mike de Kock Kevin Shea
Blog Widget by LinkWithin