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Entries in Patrick Shaw (11)

Tuesday
Mar262013

THE RICHEST NIGHT IN RACING

Mike de Kock - Dubai World CupMike de Kock
(Image : HKJC/GBGC)

DUBAI WORLD CUP NIGHT
Meydan, Dubai
30 March 2013

There is an irony to religion, and I speak of the conventional form, not the kind racing fans tend to worship. For the Christian world, the coming weekend marks the observation of Easter, whilst some Muslim circles simultaneously celebrate one of the planet’s great pagan festivals at Meydan racecourse in Dubai. On Saturday, Sheikh Mohammed and his cohorts will distribute US$37.36 million (a staggering R355 million) in prize-money on the occasion of the 17th World Cup meeting, the biggest hand-out in racing.

For the past couple of seasons, South Africa has had at least three stables represented at this showpiece, Mike de Kock, Herman Brown Jnr and and Singapore-based Patrick Shaw. This year, the burden is more concentrated, though it has to be said, De Kock has ample shoulders and he won’t mind the fact that he’s our only flag-bearer. At this stage, the entries have a rich international flavour, covering 22 time zones from the United States to Japan, and the programme has a smack of an Olympiad to it, with contestants competing over distances from 1000 metres to 3000 metres. While we’ll be speaking to Mike de Kock and a few others during the course of the week and bringing you first-hand news of what you can expect, it’s eye opening to witness the banter, the horse-trading and the jostling that goes on ahead of the final gallops and Wednesday’s draw. It seems there is no end to what one rich man will pay not only to beat another one, but just to have a ticket in a race on the day.

Here are Mike’s runners on the night :

US$1 Million Godolphin Mile (Group 2)
All Weather, 1600m

# Horse Owner Jockey
8 MASTER OF HOUNDS (USA) Sheikh Mohammed bin Khalifa Al Maktoum Christophe Soumillon
9 REROUTED (USA) Chubby Chandler and Lee Westwood Weichong Marwing
13 SOFT FALLING RAIN (SAF) Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid Al Maktoum Paul Hanagan

US$1 Million Dubai Gold Cup (Group 3)
Turf, 3200m

# Horse Owner Jockey
10 STAR EMPIRE (SAF) Mohammed Khaleel Ahmed Christophe Soumillon

US$2 Million UAE Derby (Group 2)
All Waether, 1900m

# Horse Owner Jockey
6 EMOTIF (ARG) Sheikh Mohammed bin Khalifa Al Maktoum Patrick Cosgrave
8 ZAHEE (NZ) Sheikh Mohammed bin Khalifa Al Maktoum Christophe Soumillon

US1 Million Al Quoz Sprint (Group 1)
Turf, 1000m

# Horse Owner Jockey
7 SHEA SHEA (SAF) Brian Joffe, Myron Berzack et al Christophe Soumillon

US$2 Million Dubai Golden Shaheen (Group 1)
All Weather, 1200m

# Horse Owner Jockey
7 KAVANAGH (SAF) Wilgerbosdrift Pty Ltd (Nom: Mrs Mary Slack) Christophe Soumillon

US$5 Million Dubai Duty Free (Group 1)
Turf, 1800m

# Horse Owner Jockey
6 IGUGU (AUS) Sheikh Mohammed bin Khalifa Al Maktoum and Andre Macdonald Anthony Delpech
10 THE APACHE (SAF) Sheikh Mohammed bin Khalifa Al Maktoum and Winston CHow Christophe Soumillon
11 MUSHREQ (AUS) Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid Al Maktoum Paul Hanagan

US$5 Million Dubai Sheema Classic (Group 1)
Turf, 2410m

# Horse Owner Jockey
11 AWAIT THE DAWN (USA) Katrina Partridge, Mike de Kock, Chris Haynes et al Patrick Cosgrave

US$10 Million Dubai World Cup (Group 1)
Turf, 2000m

# Horse Owner Jockey
() TREASURE BEACH (GB) Fitri Hay, Derrick Smith, John Magnier and Michael Tabor Christophe Soumillon

For more information, please visit :

www.emiratesracing.com

Wednesday
Mar072012

ROCKET MAN ON TRACK FOR DUBAI GOLDEN SHAHEEN

Rocket Man wins the Kranji Stakes A
Rocket Man wins the Kranji Stakes A
(Photo : Singapore Turf Club)

KRANJI STAKES A
Kranji, Polytrack, 1200m

2011 Signapore Horse of the Year, Rocket Man, bounced back into the winner’s circle in sparkling fashion in on Sunday when he ran his rivals off their feet to score his 19th win in his first outing after a three-month spell.

The star sprinter had been rested after his unplaced effort in the Group 1 Cathay Pacific Hong Kong Sprint on 11 December and needed the run in the $125,000 Kranji Stakes A over 1200m on the Polytrack. It was the perfect finishing touch for Patrick Shaw’s charge before he embarks on his next overseas mission, the Group 1 Dubai Golden Shaheen over 1200m, which he won last year.

Rocket Man took a while to get back in shape after his Hong Kong quarantine, but with three winning barrier trials under the belt, he was fit and ready to put his best foot forward.

With Fred Crabbia, South African owner and Summerhill client, watching from the stands, Rocket Man jumped smartly to take up the running with Tuxedo Moon (John Powell up) in close attendance and the horse considered his only danger should he falter - Rapido Star (Joao Moreira up) - in fourth on the rails.

Rocket Man set a steady pace and, although Tuxedo Moon valiantly tried to make a race of it 400m out, the champion easily shook him off before drawing clear to score a soft win. Rapido Star ran on for second, 4.75 lengths back with Tuxedo Moon plugging on solidly for third.

“This was the perfect prep run for him. It should get him right for Dubai,” said Shaw. “Considering he hasn’t raced for a while and was giving weight to the others, it was a superb effort. He was also ridden hands and heels, which was perfect. I couldn’t be happier with that run.”

Jockey Barend Vorster also had every reason to give the thumbs-up ahead of Rocket Man’s departure to the UAE on 24 March, a week before his big date in the US$2million Meydan dash.

“He’s still not quite 100%, but he felt good,” said the former South African rider. “He wasn’t as quick as lightning out of the gates as he is older now. But when Johnny’s horse (Tuxedo Moon) came testing him in the back straight, he just held it together and kept bowling along in front. There is still a bit of work to be done with him but he is certainly going in the right direction.”

Extracts from Signapore Turf Club

Thursday
Dec082011

BRICS AND THE HONG KONG INTERNATIONAL RACES

Douglas Whyte, Julie Alexander, Mick Goss, Mrs Whyte and Derreck David

Dougie Whyte, Julie Alexander, Mick Goss, Dougie’s Mum and Derreck David
Summerhill Box, Greyville, Vodacom Durban July 2011
(Photo : Summerhill Stud)

CATHAY PACIFIC
HONG KONG INTERNATIONAL RACES
Sha Tin Racecourse, Hong Kong
11 December 2011

Just under a year ago, South Africa was admitted to the prestigious conglomerate of nations known as Brics (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa), and the 2011 staging of their international meeting by the local Jockey Club in the Chinese enclave of Hong Kong, is the first since our admission.

It is, of course, the season for international events, and especially jockey’s internationals, and these always invoke a measure of parochial interest. South African jockeys have dominated the Hong Kong championship (one of the most sought after titles in racing) for 18 of the last 19 years. The most successful of these is a man who might legitimately lay claim to the title of Best Jockey in the World”. He is the Durban-bred and raised Dougie Whyte, who just happens also to be the most successful rider in the history of the jockey’s challenge. Local fans will remember it was Dougie who piloted London News to his epic victory in the Queen Elizabeth II Cup (Gr1), heralding the return to the international fold of South African horses, and that it was he, aboard the Summerhill-bred Pierre Jourdan, who ran Igugu to three quarters of a length in this year’s Vodacom Durban July. You can bet your bottom dollar Dougie will be at the action end of things come Sunday’s Cathay Pacific Hong Kong International Races.

Rocket Man’s South African connection

Summerhill clients, Ronnie and Bev Napier, Jean Marc and Clothilde Ulcoq, are all in Hong Kong for this annual jamboree, as they have been for some years as guests of the Hong Kong Jockey Club following the initiation of their attendance in the days when Major General Guy Watkins was still the CEO. It is a sign of their loyalty and affection for racing in that jurisdiction, that they haven’t missed a meeting in close to twenty years, and you’d have to forgive them a measure of patriotic sentiment when it comes to the chances of the South African-connected Rocket Man in the Hong Kong Sprint (Gr1).

A victim of an irrepressible late surge from the South African-bred, JJ The Jet Plane (by Jet Master) in last year’s renewal, Rocket Man’s owned by local doyen, Fred Crabbia, trained by Pat Shaw and his regular rider is Felix Coetzee. He’s reported to have worked up a storm on Tuesday morning on the Sha Tin all-weather track.

“He’d have done more if we’d let him, but he’ll do a piece of work on the grass tomorrow over about 800 metres”, Trainer Shaw explained.

The six-year-old brings top credentials into the 1200 metre event, having won the Gr1 Dubai Golden Shaheen over the Meydan Tapeta in March and the Gr1 Krisflyer International Sprint on the turf at Kranji racecourse in May.

Friday
Oct212011

YEBO IGUGU... OR SO YOU THOUGHT

Igugu - The Superstar

Click above to watch Igugu - The Superstar
(An iKind Media Production 2011)

RACING’S NEW HOLY GRAIL

MELBOURNE - With more than 20 international horses - from England to France to Chile to Germany to the USA - in Melbourne for the 2011 spring carnival, the racing heart of the city certainly has a cosmopolitan feel.

You could argue it lacks just one thing - a horse from South Africa. And, of course, we’d love to have you here right now in the wake of the Rugby World Cup quarter final. Only kidding! It was a travesty of justice. How did you guys manage not to win that one?

Of course, the more-than severe quarantine restrictions imposed on horses leaving South Africa virtually rule out an Aussie assault, which is a shame given the links between the two countries. The immediate future doesn’t look bright according to Racing Victoria’s international recruiting agent Leigh Jordon, but he’s working on finding some end of tunnel light next year.

“We would love to see the South African horses competing on our shores but the situation has got worse recently and I’m not sure there’s a real solution in the foreseeable future. What I am working on is to get Dubai ticked off before March, so Mike de Kock and others could send a team straight to Australia from Dubai if they so chose. I think this could well be a better option than going to the UK,” Jordon said.

And this writer has little doubt that champion filly Igugu, prepared by De Kock (and Aussie bred, I hasten to add), might well have had this year’s Cox Plate at her mercy with a lack of depth this season among our middle-distance weight-for-age horses. At the time of writing, there’d been different winners of the five weight-for-age races run in Melbourne this spring.

Igugu, you could argue, has already been denied a victory in Australia. She was third behind Rocket Man in the Champion Australian-Bred International Award at the recent Horse Of The Year function in Melbourne.

Rocket Man polled 280 votes with Sacred Kingdom second on 100 and third was Igugu on 98. This result was absurdly skewed by most of these eligible to vote being simply more familiar with racing in Asia than in South Africa. I’m sure that most of them have not seen nor understood the quality of the Durban July but, trust me, I’m telling them all about it.

My compatriots also got it wrong with Black Caviar, as good and as unbeaten as she is, a runaway winner over So You Think in the Australian Horse Of The Year. The latter ought to have been given more credit… unbeaten in Australia for the season other than for the “shy at the stumps” in the Melbourne Cup.

Maybe it’s a spurious argument but I’m always inclined to look at these things as follows: could you imagine Igugu or So You Think giving Rocket Man and Black Caviar any sort of run at their pet distance of 1200m. My answer is yes - assuming a fair track and a decent pace. On the other hand, Rocket Man and Black Caviar would have no hope of beating the other two in their ideal distance range.

Of course, the award was not lost to South Africa with Rocket Man owned by Johannesburg businessman Fred Crabbia, trained by Singapore-based expat Patrick Shaw and ridden throughout his career by South African jockeys, his most recent partner being Felix Coetzee.

And maybe we could now argue there’s a new theory to finding racing’s Holy Grail. You simply get a horse bred in Australia and have it trained by a South African - after all, Igugu and Rocket Man each claimed their respective Horse Of The Year honours.

Another case in point is Australian-bred Hong Kong sprinter Bear Hero, who’s trained by David Ferraris - you got it, a South African. A winner three of four starts and champion griffin in Hong Kong, he’s the nearest thing to an South African Melbourne raider this year. He’s currently domiciled at the Werribee quarantine centre and is being prepared to take on Black Caviar in the Patinack Farm Classic at Flemington on 5 November.

Bear Hero went to Flemington on Friday morning to contest a jump-out (an unofficial trial) and he looked the part as he won the better-than-routine exercise test down the Flemington straight track.

The great mare, as you are no doubt aware, resumed at Caulfield on 8 October and stretched her unbeaten run to 14 wins. Just as importantly, she was single-handedly responsible for drawing an extra 10,000 fans through the gates.

I think she’s the best horse I’ve seen. I know memory plays tricks on you - and I’m not sure whether we can judge her against the great middle-distance and staying horses of the past - but she is freakish.

Her stride length is estimated at somewhere between one and two metres longer than the norm and she simply glides at high speed - having other very decent horses off the bit and struggling at the halfway mark of short races. Incredible! I’ve certainly never seen any other sprinting horse of her calibre.

I have no doubt she’d pick up and carry Rocket Man. I would rate her four to five lengths his superior. That, of course, is largely subjective, but, hey, as a mate of mine always reminds me, racing is all about opinions. And, he says, never overlook the possibility that you might be right.

Extract from Tab Online

Monday
Mar282011

THE SOUTH AFRICAN CONNECTION : DWC AND ALL THAT

Click above to watch Rocket Man winning the Golden Shaheen (Gr1)
(Footage : Dubai Racing)

DUBAI WORLD CUP
26 March 2011

The Dubai World Cup meeting featured two sprints, one on grass, the other on tapeta. Having shown his preference for the turf, (or rather, his dislike of the tapeta), it was Lucky Houdalakis’ decision to keep J J The Jet Plane on his best surface in the Al Quoz Sprint (Gr2) and he was vindicated when our local ace came sprinting out of the mist after twice being interfered with, to get over the line in the last stride of the 1000m trip, now arguably too short for him.

His ranking as the best male sprinter in the world remains intact, and was not eclipsed by Rocket Man’s gutsy win in the Golden Shaheen (Gr1) a few races later. The latter is a man who thoroughly deserved his victory, as he’d been narrowly denied last year in the same event, as well as by J J The Jet Plane in the Hong Kong Sprint (Gr1) a few months ago. Rocket Man may be Australian-bred, but he’s South African owned, South African-trained, and he was South African-ridden on Saturday evening, the protagonists being respectively one of the country’s biggest owners, Fred Crabbia, the veteran horseman, Patrick Shaw, and one of our most celebrated riders, Felix Coetzee.

As gallant as gallant gets, it was very nearly South Africa’s turn to grab the cash in the $5million Dubai Duty Free (Gr1) yet again, (no country has won it more often), when River Jetez claimed the lead 300m out, and just as she appeared to have the race at her mercy, the Luca Cumani-conditioned Presvis finally got his act together, (having had a couple of shots at the event before), for a half length victory. Now in her seventh year, River Jetez’s astonishing effort was as fine an advert for the class and durability of South African gallopers as any, and the Amms and Marsh Shirtliff can take some solace from the knowledge that she ran her guts out for “president and country”.

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