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Entries in Justin Snaith (27)

Monday
May282012

J.C. SUPERSTAR

Ebony Flyer Horse

Ebony Flyer - South African Fillies Sprint (Grade 1)…
(Photo : Gold Circle)
 

Scottville’s Festival of Speed 26 May 2012

There were plenty of first-time racegoers at Scottville’s Festival of Speed, witnessing a feast of four Group One sprints. The sponsors, the Golden Horse Casino, which shares the racecourse complex, must’ve been delirious with the outcome, and there’ll be more than a few in the crowd who’ll be back for sure. Racing is meant to be fun, and it was.

But for the connoisseur, this isn’t how it’s meant to be. Track biases are sometimes figments of the mind, yet on an occasion which celebrates more Group One sprints down a straight 1200 metres on one day than any other in the world, it’s a pity one side of the course can sometimes be so much quicker than the other. Not a single outside (standside) drawn horse came home (in five 1200 events all told), despite the fact that in three of the five events all carried level (sex and age-adjusted) weights, and several of the best-credentialed runners occupied outside post positions. Nothing beyond the 11 slot even made the frame on the day, and as a result, we saw a hotch-potch of outcomes.

The two Juvenile divisions have been in disarray all season, and after the weekend, we’re no less confused. The “big one” of the day, the Golden Horse Sprint, is a handicap which by its nature, is designed to upset from time to time. While the victor, Delago Deluxe, is an obvious talent and already a Group One winner in the Juvenile colt’s race at the same meeting last year, he was nonetheless lightly treated at the weights with a modest 54 kgs on his back. What he certainly is though, is thoroughly happy back in the yard of former Champion trainer, Charles Laird. His form prior to his departure for the Cape last summer as well as this season, was in marked contrast to his sojourn in the Winelands. You can chalk this one down as a definite “Shark”, as opposed to the Western Cape’s local rugby franchise, the Stormers, who bit the dust against the Sharks in Durban the same evening.

One event on the card though, which lived up to every inch of its billing, was the South African Fillies Sprint, featuring two distaff superstars and one, Welwitchia, who had hinted at stardom when her trainer, Mike de Kock, suddenly relented to her being the sprinter her pedigree suggested she had to be. One of de Kock’s most disarming attributes is his candour when he gets things wrong, (yes, he does very occasionally) and he volunteered in the lead-up that he’d tried to make Welwitchia “stay” for too long. Those who saw her destruction of a quality field of colts on Champions Day a month back, were not only quickly converted to de Kock’s new-found faith, but most of us were fully expecting her to settle the superstars here as well.

For the record, the “glamour girls” in the line-up were the much-exalted Ebony Flyer (who counts a smashing victory over Horse of The Year, Igugu, among many highlights in a remarkable career thus far,) and the sensational Princess Victoria, queen of the Three Year Old division, whose only defeat in her past 8 visits to the races, came at the hands of Joey Ramsden’s Variety Club, one of the brightest milers we’ve seen in decades.

Both these deities enjoy cult status among the sports’ fans, and this was a day to savour. Princess Victoria’s well-being was advertised only a week ago, when Beach Beauty, among her vanquished last outing, produced the season’s most stirring “July” trial in the Astrapak 1900 (Gr.2). But “the Princess” was drawn 10 this time,  and that sadly tells the tale of a race in which she never threatened, even for a stride. So it was down to Mary Slack’s Welwitchia, whose sustained run from the rear looked to have it stitched up entering the final furlong, and Ebony Flyer, starting at (for her) the generous odds of 6/1. Yet, as good as Welwitchia absolutely is, she was mown down in a matter of strides by this Amazon of racing, flashing up this time in the emerald and red of Team Valor and Anant Singh, and adding another string to the bow of the already formidable band of females under the command of Gaynor Rupert’s Drakenstein Stud.

But hey, listen, this was no ordinary training feat. Justin Snaith has always said this filly was not just extraordinary, he claims she’s a freak, a statement Glen Kotzen has always reserved for Princess Victoria, too. She’d been off since winning the Gr.1 Majorca Stakes in January, she’d been under the knife, and this was supposed to be a “prep” for things to come. It wasn’t the script we’d have penned beforehand, but it went something like this:

Her jockey, Bernard Fayd’Herbe, isn’t exactly a born-again Christian, but his Mauritian ancestory guarantees he’s a good Catholic boy, with a sound reverence for his creator. As he entered that hallowed piece of turf they call the Winner’s Circle (on big days, on the track in front of the grandstand at Scottsville,)  Fayd’Herbe cast his head heavenwards as most god-fearing sports people do these days, and as he’d been taught at his Catechism classes, he looked to “cross” himself in acknowledgment. Good natured cat-calls echoed from the boisterous throng pressing on the running rail. No one was doubting the power of the Lord, but it seemed that just about everyone in the crowd knew of another eternal truth. When it comes to racehorses, and especially Ebony Flyer, the initials to look for are J.S, not “J.C.”. 

Best back that up in case we’re accused of a new form of blasphemy, such was Justin Snaith’s faith in this filly, whose “roaring” wind affliction is as well known at the Phillipi work track as stopwatches are, that he’d ordered a second wind “op” just a few months back. This performance must’ve been the “second coming”. But just to prove the Snaiths are as human as any of us, as the filly returned to scale, Justin and his brother Jonathan quickly flipped the switches to vaudeville. The winter sun played on their faces, and there were some who thought they’d seen a bit of moisture in their youthful eyes. 

Editor: Ebony Flyer’s sire, Jet Master is arguably the best South African stallion of all time. Certainly, he has been the dominant stallion among what has undoubtedly been the most formidable assembly of stallions in living memory. Yet he was afflicted by “wind” issues so severely that his racing career (encompassing 8 Group One victories) was limited to races of 1600m or less. That he is known to share this problem with a good proportion of his progeny, tells us that with modern technology, when they’re good enough, “wind” is no longer a reason to decry an otherwise outstanding sire prospect.

Thursday
Mar152012

URBANE EVANS

Denis and Gael Evans
Denis and Gael Evans
(Photo : Summerhill Stud)

“DENIS AND GAEL EVANS”

There are many facets to racing which differentiate it as a sport. Because it’s not a science, it’s embroiled in mystery and intrigue, and in some respects, it belongs to the insiders, those that sit on the horses, those that train them and those that groom them. These guys have an obvious advantage. They know those that quicken and those that don’t, those with heart and those without, those that fret and those that don’t. And of course, they have a line on the galloping companion.

Then there are the people. The fans, the owners, those that lay on the show, the punters in the stands and the millions in the totes, as well as the professionals, the breeders, the trainers and the jockeys. It’s a jigsaw of nations, a tapestry of professions, and a mosaic of colour. The rich and the not-so-rich, the patricians and the plebs. All can play, all can win.

Some weeks back, we ran a few articles on some of our longer serving customers. This is a profile of an urbane gentleman, a quiet man, a businessman, a man with an enduring love of the game. Denis Evans first came to racing some years ago; he volunteers, it wasn’t a great experience. He blames no-one, but he says this time he’s doing it properly. In a sense, he’s worked things out, and while he remains a considerable force in South African racing, he’s also identified the benefits of buying stock locally (the best value in the world), and travelling those with the gifts, to plunder the prizes in Singapore.

Racing came late to Denis Evans: he wasn’t born into it. He was an entrepreneur in the best old-fashioned sense of the word, and he was good at it. While he maintains a modest silence about his achievements, he is unable to escape the public knowledge of his generous funding of the extraordinary movie, Spud. His local trainers are Justin Snaith and Gavin Smith, while Pat Shaw does the job abroad. They’ve never been away from racecourses or horses, all are fully paid up members of what one observer called The Closed Society”, the racing fraternity that gathers each morning on the tracks when normal people are in bed, a fellowship with its own language and humour, and an unwritten code of rules. These men have never known any other world, but they know theirs as well as anyone. Dinner table conversations in their homes when they were small boys, were all about horses. Photographs of horses look down on the family from the walls. Open the back door, and you smell soiled straw and fresh hay. They practiced their riding skills at 10 on the backs of sweet-natured ponies.

Evans has an engineer’s sense of precision, a mind that gravitates towards the objective and the rational. He likes finding out how things work, and then trying to make them work better. He likes to bring order and reason to complex matters, he’s a thorough man. He’s charming and quick to smile, but careful and guarded in his speech, as if he weighs every word, which he does. He’s pretty much what he seems to be. His trainers aren’t. They are rational and pragmatic too, but they hide those traits well, and in any case, they can only take you so far in racing; the inner man is hardly ever on show. Evans is scientific; his trainers have more than a touch of the artistic and the mystic, which is right enough, because they’re in the racehorse business, and racing isn’t scientific.

Denis Evans has had his share of luck at the races, and for the money he’s put down, he’s entitled to it. In some respects, his ambitions remain a little unfulfilled, particularly in the case of the multi-talented Run For It, whose promised so much but is yet to deliver the killer blow. On the other hand, in less than two seasons, Evans has tasted the mountain air in Singapore, and has emerged their top owner by number of winners. As the season closed, he counted 26 of them, and that was enough to edge his compatriot, Fred Crabbia, from the winner’s podium.

He’s had his moments of glory, and his horses run as if they know they owe. The adulation that follows a victory is not entirely Evans’ cup of tea. As always, when a big one comes home, the owner is engulfed. People shake his hands, pump his back, squeeze his elbows. He smiles and produces a white handkerchief; he’s a shy man. He briefly lifts his hands above his head, like winners are supposed to, but the gesture doesn’t come easily. It’s as though he’s embarrassed to be so lucky.

There are not enough Denis Evanses in this game, and he’s lucky to have Gael to share these moments with the same dignity, and an equal dollop of grace. We’re lucky to have them, too.

summerhill stud, south africa

www.summerhill.co.za

Friday
Feb032012

TAKE-OFF FOR TRIPPI

Agra by Trippi wins the Summer Juvenile Stakes

Click above to watch Agra winning the Summer Juvenile Stakes (L)…
(Image : Gold Circle - Footage : UpInClass)

TRIPPI (USA)
End Sweep (USA) - Jealous Appeal (USA)

david thiseltonDavid Thiselton
Gold Circle
Trippi, who finished 23rd on the General Sires List in the USA last year having finished 20th the year before, has made a big impact during his short stay in South Africa to date, although this was not unexpected.

On J&B Met day his first South African runner, the Justin Snaith-trained Agra, who had won on debut, became his first stakes winner in South Africa when easily winning the Listed Summer Juvenile Stakes and maintaining her unbeaten record, while at the Cape Premier Yearling Sale, Trippi finished third on aggregate behind Jet Master and Captain Al and second on average behind Jet Master at R566,667 per yearling of the 21 sold.

Charles Faull of Form Bloodstock recommended the son of End Sweep to Drakenstein Stud’s Gaynor Rupert on his racing record (he won a Grade 1 and two Grade 2s over 1400m at Belmont) and his pedigree, while his progeny had made a good start, he was throwing nice looking foals and, not least, on his “beauty”.

Rupert and her stud manager Ross Fuller went to see Trippi in the USA and were equally impressed.

The decision to purchase him in 2008 paid almost immediate dividends as Trippi was Florida’s leading sire by the end of the season, a title he would have won every year since had he still been standing there, and the following year he had a Royal Ascot winner in Jealous Again, who won the Grade 2 Queen Mary Stakes over 1000m.

To date Trippi has bred 33 American Stakes horses, including a champion, three Graded stakes winners, track record holders and a Breeders Cup place getter.

A few hours after Agra had won at Kenilworth on Saturday, Trippi’s four-year-old son Soaring Stocks collected US$90,000 for his connections when winning the Sunshine Millions Sprint Stakes over 1200m on dirt at Gulfstream Park in the USA.

Agra looks a splitting image of her father, so it would appear Trippi stamps his foals.

Justin Snaith said he would rest Agra now and would not be taking her to Durban for the Champions Season.

Trippi received an outstanding book of 120 mares last year and this season Ross Fuller will drop him down to 100 mares although his fee of R30,000 nomination fee plus R70,000 for live foal might rise.

Trippi’s stallion companion at Drakenstein Stud is the legendary Horse Chestnut

Horse Chestnut, regarded by many as the greatest racehorse South Africa has ever produced, received poor support during his spell in the USA and had dropped down to half a handful of mares by the time he was brought back home.

He had gained a reputation for being infertile, but Fuller revealed that this was a false impression created by a condition he has which does not manifest if he is kept busy.

Horse Chestnut, who is an absolute gentleman in terms of temperament, was kept busy last season with over 100 mares. Another reason he didn’t get good mares in the USA is that his only start there yielded a Grade 3 win and he was probably viewed as only a Grade 3 winner, but in South Africa his famous eight length J&B Met win and his facile wins on the road to Triple Crown glory still live strong in the memory.

Even without the support he deserved, Horse Chestnut sired 141 individual winners in the USA at a rate of 61% winners to runners, while he sired 28 stakes horses and 13% stakes horses to runners.

Extract from www.goldcircle.co.za

Sunday
Jan082012

GIMMETHEGREENLIGHT WINS L'ORMARINS QUEEN'S PLATE

Gimmethegreenlight wins L'Ormarins Queen's Plate 2012

Click above to watch the 2012 L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate (Grade 1)…
(Photo : Gold Circle - Footage : Tellytrack)

L’ORMARINS QUEEN’S PLATE (Grade 1)
Kenilworth, Turf, 1600m
7 January 2012

The Breeders’ Cup beckons for Gimmethegreenlight (AUS) (More Than Ready (USA) - Yes She Can Cancan (AUS)) who got up in the last 20 meters to beat home 5-2 favourite Variety Club (SAF) (Var (USA) - La Massine (SAF)) and a charging Tales Of Bravery (SAF) (Kahal (GB) - Emperor’s Warning (SAF)) giving trainer Justin Snaith his first L’Ormarins Queen’s Plate win.

This year’s Queen’s Plate carries an automatic free Breeders’ Cup entry for the winner and, although there is a current ban on South African horse exports - due to a percieved African Horse Sickness threat - this comes to an end on 3 May 2012. Opposition from other countries is expected, but owner Hassan Adams has received assurances from the South African government that it will push hard to open the markets.

Snaith said: “Our priority is now to be able to accept that Breeders’ Cup invitation. It’s fantastic to think that the Americans want to see our horses race over there. Gimmethegreenlight has always had the class to win a Grade 1 but he was repeatedly slow out of the gates. That normally means a back problem so we worked on it and that made the difference.”

Jockey Piere Strydom, who returned from a broken jaw two weeks early to take the ride on the 13-1 chance, said: “There was a mad scramble for position early and I got squeezed out. But just under two furlongs out they were coming back to me and I thought I would get close. My worry was that I would get to Variety Club but not pass him but close to home he had no more.”

Extract from Racing Post

RACE RESULTS

# LBH Horse Kg MR Dr Jockey Trainer
1 0.00 GIMMETHEGREENLIGHT (AUS) 55.0 108 6 P Strydom Justin Snaith
2 0.40 VARIETY CLUB 55.0 118 10 A Marcus Joey Ramsden
3 1.40 TALES OF BRAVERY 60.0 112 7 M Byleveld Vaughan Marshall
4 1.80 BRAVURA 60.0 113 11 G Hatt Joey Ramsden
5 5.80 CHESALON 60.0 110 1 K Neisius Mike Bass
6 5.90 EBONY FLYER 57.5 107 9 F Coetzee Justin Snaith
7 6.20 KISS AGAIN 60.0 108 5 A Domeyer Mike Bass
8 8.45 GIBRALTAR BLUE (IRE) 57.5 109 3 A Delpech Mike de Kock
9 10.45 LION IN WINTER 60.0 110 4 B Fayd’Herbe Joey Ramsden
10 12.95 FABIANI 60.0 107 8 S Cormack Glen Kotzen
11 16.45 LINK MAN 60.0 111 2 W Marwing Mike de Kock

www.lqp.co.za

Wednesday
Aug102011

EQUUS AWARDS 2011 : NOMINATIONS

Igugu - Vodacom Durban July
Igugu - Vodacom Durban July (Grade 1)
(Photo : John Lewis)

EQUUS AWARDS
11 August 2011

If Igugu does not get the Horse Of The Year Award when the Equus Awards for the 2010/2011 racing season are handed out on Thursday this week, racing fans will probably demand a recount, writes Nicci Garner for TabOnline.

Igugu, who had not seen a racecourse at the start of the campaign, ended the season as the joint highest-rated horse in the country. A credit to the skill of her trainer, Mike de Kock (who retained his Champion Trainer status), she raced at all three major racing centres - something even the legendary Terrance Millard avoided!

After the game daughter of Galileo put her age and sex to route in the Triple Tiara, becoming the first filly in history to win all three of the races in that series, the Grade 1 SA Fillies Classic, Grade 2 SA Oaks and Grade 2 Gauteng Fillies Guineas, and then went on to trounce the best of her age and sex in the country in the Grade 1 Woolavington 2000, some pundits believed she would have her limitations exposed in the country’s toughest race, the Vodacom Durban July. They ended up eating crow as Igugu took command at the top of the straight and then found another gear when Pierre Jourdan moved up to challenge, winning more easily than the one-length verdict.

Little wonder, then, that she is nominated for two of the nine other awards to honour great equine achievement; Three-Year-Old Filly and Middle-Distance Horse.

Her rival for Champion Three-Year-Old Filly, Ebony Flyer, beat De Kock’s “Jewel” in the Cape Fillies Guineas back in December, but has only been seen on a racecourse once this year. There is little doubt that Igugu’s contribution to the season far exceeded that of Justin Snaith’s charge.

Her competition in the Champion Middle-Distance Horse category is stiffer because she comes up against Dancewiththedevil, the only other horse in the country to have won three G1 races, as well as her former stablemate Mother Russia (won the Queen’s Plate), J&B Met hero Past Master and fellow three-year-old, The Apache, who capped a great season in winning the Daily News 2000 and the Champions Cup, with a fourth in the July sandwiched between those runs. The nominees for Equus Awards are :

NOMINATIONS

Two-Year-Old Filly

Amanee, Hidden Beauty, Princess Victoria, Trinity House

Two-Year-Old Colt/Gelding

Delago Deluxe, Fighting Warrior, Potala Palace

Three-Year-Old Filly

Ebony Flyer, Igugu

Three-Year-Old Colt / Gelding

English Garden, Shea Shea, Solo Traveller, The Apache, What a Winter

Older Filly / Mare (four+)

Dancewiththedevil , Mother Russia, Val de Ra

Older Male (four+)

Past Master, Happy Landing

Sprinter (1000m - 1200m)

August Rush, Shea Shea, Val de Ra, What a Winter

Middle-Distance Horse (1400m - 2200m)

Dancewiththedevil, Igugu, Mother Russia, Past Master, The Apache

Stayer (2400m+)

Aslan, Grey Cossack, Ilsanpietro, Sangria Girl, Seal, Vertical Take-off

Other Awards

Other accolades that will be given include awards for the leading work riders (Gauteng and Cape Town), apprentice, jockey, trainer and owner, plus a special achievement award. Six breeders’ awards will also be presented.

Extract from Tab Online

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