The Citizen (KZN)

Joey gets July Greenlight

TRAINER: STRING OF 32 THOROUGHBR­EDS IN STABLE ‘TAKE ME FOR A RIDE’

- Mike Moon

‘Horse has got a good turn of foot – which you need at Greyville.’

There can’t be many people who love horses and horseracin­g as much as Joey Soma. “All horses are special, even the maidens. To me it’s a privilege to be in their company,” said the popular Highveld trainer after a stirring win at the weekend with Got The Greenlight in the Daily News 2000 – one of South Africa’s most-prized threeyear-old contests.

“I don’t train them so much as they take me for a ride,” jokes Soma about the string of 32 horses in his stables at Turffontei­n.

Who would begrudge such an enthusiast success in the country’s biggest race, the Vodacom Durban July, which takes place at Greyville towards the end of this month?

He has a very credible chance of scaling the pinnacle with Got The Greenlight, a progressiv­e three-year-old he shares ownership with Dayalan Chinsammy and Hassen Adams.

“I think we have a nice shot at the July. That win in the Daily News was impressive and he is clearly something special. It’s a good July field this year, but our horse has got a good turn of foot – which you need at Greyville – plus he’ll only be carrying 53kg.”

Current champion jockey Lyle Hewitson has been booked for the big race as Bernard Fayd’Herbe, who piloted the gelding on Sunday, cannot get down to that weight.

The latest victory was Got The Greenlight’s sixth from his 12 starts and his second Grade 1 title after the SA Classic before lockdown in early March. The handicappe­rs have shoved his merit rating up from 116 to 118.

Commenting on the colt’s career to date, Soma says he has always had valid excuses when not winning – looking for more ground, returning after a rest or having bad luck in running.

An excursion to Cape Town for a richly endowed sales race involved a quarantine with 20-hours-a-day confinemen­t in an enclosed space, which would have tested the most chilled creature – yet he still got to within four-lengths of the local winner.

And speaking of temperamen­t, when Got The Greenlight burst through the gates before the off on Sunday, many a backer’s heart sank. Horses up to such antics seldom win.

“He stayed calm, unlike many horses who get stirred up when that happens. He knew it wasn’t the end of the world; he’s a very, very intelligen­t customer,” says the trainer.

When they eventually got underway from the 2 000m start, 28-10 chance Got The Greenlight sat just off pacemaker Padre Pio before accelerati­ng in the straight and scoring easily by 1.5 lengths.

He’ll only be carrying 53kg

The 15-10 favourite, Golden Ducat, just failed to catch Padre Pio and had to settle for third place.

Both these adversarie­s are likely to bump heads again with Soma’s charge in the July.

Got The Greenlight was floated to Durban just before Sunday’s meeting and made the trip back north shortly after. “We will prepare him here at Turffontei­n and repeat the procedure for the July.”

Asked if he has any condition to take off his star, Soma chuckles: “I’m always amused when people say a horse is only 90% fit when they win a big race. How can you be 90% and win a Grade 1?

“I will say that he came out of the SA Derby [immediatel­y after the racing shutdown on 6 June] very well; he was a fitter horse for that race – in which he was a bit unlucky, by the way, but still finished a close-up third.

“The July will be his third run after a rest, which tends to be the best lead-in to a target.”

How does Got The Greenlight compare to Soma’s other good horses down the years?

“I never compare. They’re all special in their own eras. I love all my horses equally.”

 ?? Picture: EPA-EFE ?? Hungarian watermelon farmer Robert Pap displays two of his dice-shaped melons grown for experiment­al purposes in Hodmezovas­arhely, Hungary. The growing fruit is placed in a cubeshaped box for three weeks, during which the melon takes its desired shape.
Picture: EPA-EFE Hungarian watermelon farmer Robert Pap displays two of his dice-shaped melons grown for experiment­al purposes in Hodmezovas­arhely, Hungary. The growing fruit is placed in a cubeshaped box for three weeks, during which the melon takes its desired shape.

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