The Citizen (KZN)

Double Superlativ­e delivers a 33/1 Met shock

- Mike Moon

Double Superlativ­e was the 33/1 shock winner of the 2024 WSB Cape Town Met at Kenilworth on Saturday. Cape Town trainer Justin Snaith performed a phenomenal feat to get the colt back to the pinnacle of racing following a career-threatenin­g injury in 2022.

Visiting British jockey Daniel Muscutt carried the cyclamen and green silks of owner Nick Jonsson to victory – ironically the same colours that the vast majority of punters around the country had been hoping to see winning with red-hot 4/10 favourite See It Again.

The latter, the highest-rated horse in South Africa and trained by Michael Roberts, did not run to his best ability, and only managing fourth place in the Grade 1 R2 million contest over 2 000m.

The runner-up, Vaughan Marshall-trained Rascallion (12/1), made a brave bid to steal the race from the front under Bernard Fayd’Herbe – leading for most of the journey but going down to Double Superlativ­e by 0.40 lengths in the last gasp of a thrilling finish.

In third place, running on steadily from midfield under SA’s sole female jockey Rachel Venniker, was yet another Jonsson horse in pink and green, Without Question (50/1). Jonsson therefore collected prize money for three of the first four finishers.

That haul, however, paled compared to the R5 million he pocketed in the previous race on the day when his Snaith-trained threeyear-old gelding Rapidash won the Cape Racing Gold Rush.

Jonsson paid fulsome tribute to the Snaith team for perseverin­g with Double Superlativ­e “when everyone else said he was finished and would never run again”.

The two main supporting features on Met day went the way of raiders from the Highveld.

The Grade 1 City of Cape Town Majorca Stakes put to rest all debate about the identity of the best female galloper in SA. Six-yearold Princess Calla, reigning Equus Horse of the Year, dispatched a strong field with almost contemptuo­us ease over the 1 600m.

Shrugging off criticism about his tactics on Princess Calla three weeks ago in the Paddock Stakes, when the Sean Tarry-trained mare finished runner-up to three-year-old Beach Bomb, title-chasing jockey Richard Fourie delivered a masterclas­s.

He positioned the mare comfortabl­y in midfield – with plenty of runners ahead of him to take aim in the straight. She tracked to the outside rail to win by 3.25 lengths easing up. Dyce (5/2), from Lucky Houdalakis’ Vaal training yard, laid down a claim to be the nation’s supreme sprinter by streaking away in the 1 000m Grade 1 Cape Flying Championsh­ip. The 18/10 favourite Thunderstr­uck simply couldn’t match Dyce’s big stride at the death.

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