The Citizen (KZN)

Merit rating cherry on top for Pudding

- Mike Moon

Summer Pudding had her merit rating shoved up a hefty 10 points – from 119 to 129 – following her sensationa­l win.

Summer Pudding had her merit rating shoved up a hefty 10 points – from 119 to 129 – following her sensationa­l victory in Saturday’s 2 000m World Sports Betting Gauteng Summer Cup at Turffontei­n.

This puts Mauritzfon­tein Stud’s four-year-old in sixth spot in the official rankings of South Africa’s racehorses – behind Rainbow Bridge (134), Hawwaam (134), Do It Again (133), Vardy (133) and Soqrat (130).

With Hawwaam in the process of being exported and Soqrat retired to stud, Summer Pudding is effectivel­y the fourth best horse in the country.

Some racing fans might think she’s better than that, having fallen head-over-heels in love with the charismati­c fi lly after her feats of the past year: nine wins from nine starts, a Triple Tiara, three Grade 1 triumphs and a “major” in the bag.

Any doubts about the quality of trainer Paul Peter’s charge were swept away on a grey, gloomy day at Joburg’s Big T. Competing with males for the first time and giving most of them chunks of weight, starting from the No 18 gate and making her second start after a rest, the odds were piled up against her. She slipped from early ante-post favouritis­m to start at a generous 7-2.

The National Horseracin­g Authority (NHA) described the win as “emphatic” in their press release announcing the MR hike.

The NHA explained the thinking: “The handicappe­rs were of the view that Dance Class was highly unlikely to have run below her mark by finishing fourth in a race of this calibre and elected to use her as the line horse, which leaves her rating unchanged on 96.”

Only two South African horses are included in the latest Longines World’s Best Racehorses rankings, released on 8 November. Do It Again is joint-28th and Hawwaam joint-36th.

Their respective point tallies (not linked to local merit ratings) are 121 and 120.

When the next Longines log is posted next month it will be eagerly scanned by Summer Pudding’s army of new fans.

The top horse in the world is recently retired Ghaiyyath on 130 points. Owned by Godolphin and trained in England by Charlie Appleby, the son of Dubawi won four Grade 1s in 2020: the Dubai Millennium Stakes (named after his grandsire), the Coronation Stakes, the Eclipse Stakes and York’s Internatio­nal Stakes.

In joint second on the Longines list are American star Authentic and British-trained Palace Pier, followed by Addeybb ( GB), Bivouac (Australia), Classic Legend (Australia), Persian King (GB), Stradivari­us (GB), Tiz The Law (US), Almond Eye (Japan) and Enable (GB).

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