The Citizen (Gauteng)

‘Big things to come’

TARRY: MASTER TRAINER HITS TOP FORM WITH LUCKY LAD’S BIG WIN Tally now up to 300 career stakes winners.

- Mike Moon – news@citizen.co.za

When Lucky Lad won the main race at Turffontei­n on Saturday, giving trainer Sean Tarry his fifth victory of the meeting and his 300th career stakes winner, cheesy headline writers might have been tempted to apply the colt’s name to his conditione­r.

But there is nothing flukey about Tarry’s success. He is famously one of the most hard-working and studious conditione­rs of thoroughbr­eds, as many of his “lucky” owners testify.

Tarry himself confesses to being a hard taskmaster at his Randjesfon­tein base north of Joburg but in the flush of victory, he never forgets to mention and thank the workers.

“It’s a great team effort … I’m truly happy for my team,” he said after Lucky Lad’s breathtaki­ng performanc­e in the Grade 2 Jehan Malherbe Senor Santa Stakes.

“It’s been a fantastic day for the yard. I couldn’t have wished for anything better,” was his comment on the five-timer on the final day of The Championsh­ips series of summer/autumn feature meetings at the city track.

It was more evidence of Tarry Racing’s determinat­ion and work ethic in bouncing back from chief patron Chris van Niekerk’s decision to quit racing in mid-2022. About 60 horses had to be sold off at that time, but the team picked itself up, dusted itself off and had a surprising­ly good 2022-2023 season – finishing a close second on the national trainer’s log.

This term has followed in much the same vein, with Tarry – bidding for a sixth championsh­ip – currently lying second on the log behind reigning champ Justin Snaith of Cape Town.

Tarry couldn’t have wished for a better time to hit form, with the riches of the KwaZulu-Natal winter season beckoning.

The recent departure of two of his best runners, Princess Calla and Bless My Stars, for the US has blunted his KZN campaign slightly, but he will be pleased that his younger brigade looks keen.

Juveniles kept him busy in the winner’s circle for the first three races on Saturday’s card. Legend Of Arthur laid down a marker for the country’s youngsters when he trotted up by nearly five lengths in race 1, advancing his record to two wins from three starts. In the following juvenile fillies heat, World Of Alice had to work a lot harder but landed the 11/10 odds.

Race 3, the Protea Stakes, the first seasonal feature for twoyear-olds, went the way of the well-bred Proceed in the ubiquitous Wernar family silks.

All three of these prodigies are likely to be on the road to Durban in the near future – as will Mrs Browning, a four-year-old filly who grabbed a Grade 2 gong in the Camellia Stakes, the fifth event on the card. The win was consolatio­n for one of Tarry’s most popular charges, Mrs Geriatrix, trailing in last after starting as a 3/1 joint favourite.

Then it was the Lucky Lad show, with the Beck brown and white colours swooping from a seemingly hopeless position at the back to snatch the honours.

Tarry’s son Dan, who is being schooled in talking on camera, warned viewers of “big things to come” from this three-year-old progeny of champion sire Gimmethegr­eenlight.

 ?? Picture: Michel Bega ?? WINNER. Horse trainer Sean Tarry at his stables at the North Rand Training Centre Randjesfon­tein.
Picture: Michel Bega WINNER. Horse trainer Sean Tarry at his stables at the North Rand Training Centre Randjesfon­tein.

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