Cape Argus

‘Captain’ to don blinkers

- DAVID THISELTON

DUNCAN Howells has had blinkers in mind for Secret Captain for a while and this talented grey has his first run in the headgear in the Grade 1 Daily News 2000 on Saturday.

The combinatio­n of Secret Captain’s form and his style of racing has Howells baffled and he is still not sure what his best trip is. He pointed on the one hand to the Captain Al colt’s good sprint form, in which he has always displayed a good turn of foot, and then added, “When you watch this horse galloping he looks to be a horse who needs ten furlongs and he is also a half-brother to Bela-Bela, but he seems to battle to quicken in races over further.”

Another confusing aspect is that in his races over a mile and beyond, he stays on late after that initial flat-footedness.

Howells is thus hoping the blinkers will help him quicken.

He reckoned Secret Captain’s last run on the poly over 1 800m could be ignored. He said, “He ran way below his handicap mark and I don’t think it had anything to with the surface, rather it was the sharp corner and the short straight which didn’t suit him.”

That race was a case in point of the long-striding horse not quickening effectivel­y, but then staying on late. He was beaten 2,35 lengths by Daily News second favourite Edict Of Nantes and now has to face him on 9kg worse terms.

However, the run must have been all wrong because in his previous start he had stayed on resolutely for a decent 1,75 length second in the Gr 2 Daisy Guineas on the Greyville turf, beating the like of prominent Daily News contenders Zodiac Ruler, Copper Force, Horizon and Africa Rising. He will face all of those horses on the same terms on Saturday.

Howells concluded, “He definitely has the ability, otherwise I would not be running him here. He has been showing exceptiona­lly good work and if he stays he will give a very good account of himself.”

Secret Captain has been priced up at about 25-2 and stable jockey Keagan de Melo is up from a pole position draw.

Gingerbrea­d Man

Howells also runs the Querari gelding Gingerbrea­d Man, who was beaten 6,8 lengths into eighth in the Daisy Guineas. However, a closer look at the race shows him to have a big action and he was staying on in eye-catching style from last.

Howells said there were no other races for Gingerbrea­d Man off his 90 merit rating.

He added, “I think he was a bit too far back in the Guineas.”

Howells said this gelding had always shown good track work. He believed he would stay on pedigree. He is out of a Fort Wood mare, Ginger Tree, who won over 1 800m and who is a full-sister to Rhizome, who won six times from 1 600m to 3000m. Further down his female line there is plenty of stamina as well as class and his fourth dam, Nagaika, produced three horses who went on to be sires, including Connaught, who finished second to Sir Ivor in the Epsom Derby. Howells hoped Gingerbrea­d Man could earn a share of the R2 million stake money.

Howells rates the Gimmethegr­eenlight filly Girl In Gold, who runs in the first race over 1 600m, and she certainly caught the eye on debut over 1 400m at Greyville when caught very wide and running on strongly for fourth. He will target her at the Gr 1 Thekwini depending on how she fares on Saturday.

Meanwhile, he will target the Gr 1 Allan Robertson third-placed Neptune’s Rain at the Gr 2 Golden Slipper on Vodacom Durban July day. He believed she was unlucky to have had a low draw last Saturday, which forced her to be handy while her best form had been when coming from off the pace.

Howells’ Betting World 1900 winner Ten Gun Salute will go straight into the July. The back issue he had is almost completely clear now and the fact he had it might have turned out to be a blessing in disguise.

He was hardly blowing after his exceptiona­l 1900 victory, so the yard have learnt he does not have to be given a lot of work to be at his peak.

 ??  ?? EDICT OF NANTES Picture: Liesl King
EDICT OF NANTES Picture: Liesl King

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