Cape Times

Captain to show that he is master

- ANDREW HARRISON MICHAEL CLOWER

CAPTAIN AND MASTER has had his fair share of bad luck at Greyville, most notably when running into traffic in the Gr2 Golden Horseshoe on July day last season. Since then he has been campaigned at the top level by Sean Tarry, his last outing being in the Gr2 Hawaii Stakes where he was friendless in the market with favourite Soqrat all but home and hosed according to punters.

It turned out not quite that simple as Soqrat, in spite of turning in a tremendous performanc­e, was not able to hold off the relatively unfancied six-year-old Zouaves.

Captain And Master was also making late headway and beaten less than two lengths into fourth.

Tarry appears to have picked the right race for Captain And Master to score his second success this term when he lines up in the Morris Vee Sports Bet Progress Plate over 1400m on the Greyville turf on Sunday.

He does face some useful younger opposition, notably Marchingon­together and Mr Greenlight, so this will be no walk in the park for the Highveld raider.

Marchingon­together ran no sort of race in the Gauteng Guineas when tried in blinkers and Gavin van Zyl made no secret that he was expecting better when back on home turf.

His confidence was not misplaced as Marchingon­together held off the attentions of older stable companion Blackball, this over 1950m.

Marchingon­together does appear to be equally effective over Sunday’s shorter trip but given that this is Captain And Master’s optimum distance, the latter gets the nod.

Mr Greenlight

One who could put them all to bed is Mr Greenlight. Nothing went right in his trip to Cape Town where all three of Duncan Howells’s runners on the day ran way below par. Prior to that Mr Greenlight had booked his place on the float to Cape Town with a thoroughly convincing victory in a Graduation Plate.

Mr Greenlight has had over a month to recover from his ill-fated trip south and needs to be included in all calculatio­ns.

Of the balance Affranchi has yet to find the promise that he showed earlier in his career and the filly Twice As Smart looks held by Mr Greenlight given her last outing where she started favourite but that was on the poly track and she could well prefer the turf.

KZN trainers have been relatively quiet as far as getting their two-yearolds up and running in comparison to their out-of-province counterpar­ts, possibly a combinatio­n of barrier trials and many not wanting to push their young charges on the synthetic track on debut.

It’s turf on Sunday and the card opener is littered with runners that have trialled well and it is up to punters to test their skills at reading gallops and taking notes on the habits of trainers – because that is essentiall­y what a barrier trial is.

Just how far behind or how far in front a horse finishes in a trial is immaterial. A trial needs to be gauged on individual showings, and what can be expected from different trainers.

Some trainers make use of them as trial gallops, others as a shop window for horses that are up for sale and others just letting their charges go through the motions because the rules say they have to.

Over time just how the ‘form’ of particular trials work out becomes apparent.

Seasoned trainer Dennis Drier is one of the shrewdest in his profession but Yessirican­boogie, a seven-length winner on debut, and Pearl Of Asia, a narrow winner at cramped odds in his debut, have rather compromise­d trial winner Ninotto.

Ninotto

From a pole position draw, Ninotto is likely to start at short odds in spite of the smart showings of Double Games, who simply cruised through his trial and may be the biggest threat to the selection, and the more experience­d African Warrior and Chief Officer.

Let the games begin! JUSTIN SNAITH has a strong hand at Durbanvill­e tomorrow, particular­ly in the first four races when he has three favourites and a joint favourite, and the champion trainer may win both the two-year-old events.

Cyber Blossom, already backed from 2-1 to 14-10 for the Tabonline Maiden Juvenile (race three), was good enough to run creditably in the Listed race on Met day and probably has most to fear from Mike Robinson’s 22-10 shot Stylish Icon and the Eric Sands-trained 7-2 chance Driving Miss Daisy who both made promising debuts last month.

Six of the other seven are first-timers and, while nine of the first 12 two-year-old races in Cape Town this season were won by newcomers, experience is beginning to count and all the last five races went to horses who had had a run.

Vaughan Marshall’s Captain Of Stealth aside, it is Candice Bass-Robinson who appears to have the strongest hand so far and riding arrangemen­ts point to Sanskrift, an R800 000 Duke Of Marmalade full sister to Santa Clara and half-sister to Horizon. “I think she is going to be a little bit too green, especially to take on those raced fillies,” says her trainer. “She could maybe run a place but she probably needs a little bit more time.”

Rio Querari

Rio Querari is 17-20 for the first and, while the form of his debut hardly warrants him being odds-on, he looks marginally the best. The entire field was running for the first time and he was just one of four that were slowly away while the winner let the form down by managing only fourth ten days later. But Rio Querari did run on well and Richard Fourie has stuck with him.

All Black, fourth of six on debut when totally unfancied and hampered at the start, has been backed from 7-1 to 9-2. Hexatonic (22-1) and Pick Eight Captain are both R400 000 Captain Als and, with Brett Crawford’s juveniles getting into gear, the latter is probably the danger to the selection. Perhaps significan­tly, he has already been backed from 5-1 to 33-10 second favourite.

Doppio Oro

The Bass-Robinson stable introduces 25-1 shot Doppio Oro and Tree Of Wisdom (11-2) who has been nibbled at but his trainer feels he will need the run – “I think he will probably need the experience and that he is not wound up enough.”

Destin (7-10 with World Sports Betting) is rated 4kg the best in the mile Betting World Maiden but, while he is taken to beat 3-1 shot Var Express, it is more than a little disturbing that his last two runs have been over ten furlongs and an extended mile and a half.

Blush Scarlet appeals at 5-1 in the TAB Telebet Maiden. The Glen Kotzen filly was badly drawn when only a fifth of a length behind second-placed Lip Service at Kenilworth last month and has much the better of the draw here.

 ?? Picture: Candiese Marnewick ?? CAPTAIN AND MASTER
Picture: Candiese Marnewick CAPTAIN AND MASTER
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