
We’re Jamming To Prove Himself A Top Sprinter
The Justin Snaith-trained We’re Jamming is officially 1kg under sufferance in the Grade 2 Cape Merchants over 1200m at Kenilworth on Sunday, but the form of his last race points to him being the one to beat carrying just 52kg under Grant van Niekerk.
He beat 7th-placed Captain Bombshell in the Listed Sophomore Sprint by 4,35 lengths when giving the latter 2kg over this same course and distance last time out.
The latter then came out and won a MR 93 Handicap by a length over this same course and distance on Wednesday running off a 95 merit rating.
The handicappers raised Captain Bomshell to a 100.
If he is a proper 100 merit rating, then it follows that We’re Jammin’ should be a 113.
However, taking the 1kg he is under sufferance into account, We’re Jamming is effectively running off a 108 on Sunday, so could be seen to be 2,5kg well in.
The equation does not favour him as much if looking at another horse he beat in the Sophomore called Quandary, although it does still point to him being underrated.




Grand Runs Forecast For Crawford Duo
Jack Milner (4Racing)
The World Sports Betting Grand Heritage over 1475m at the Vaal on Saturday is really a unique event in South African racing.
This R500,000 Non-Black Type affair is the only race in the country that contains more than 20 runners and is run over a distinctive distance.
With a full field of 28 runners the Grand Heritage cavalry charge looks as competitive as always, but James Crawford believes the stable’s two runners on Saturday both have excellent chances. James, 23, who runs the satellite yard on the Highveld for father Brett, will saddle Irish Tractor and Gallic Tribe.
Gallic Tribe is currently quoted at 16-1 and Crawford believes that price is good value. “He’s a horse who has his little niggles. He can sweat up a bit at track and more so with racing, but he’s been a different horse on the Highveld.
“He won his debut run comfortably, without pressure. Last time, when he finished fourth, he raced three wide up the hill at Turffontein so I wouldn’t look at his last start as any indication of his true ability.
“He is a natural front-running galloper, he will be up with the speed and I believe he will run a cracker. He has to be respected and with 53kg on his back I expect him to be in the first four,” said Crawford.
There is, however, perhaps a slight preference for Irish Tractor, who finished a five-length sixth in the Grade 2 Allied Steelrode Onamission Charity Mile at Turffontein last time from draw No 15 of 16 runners.
“If he had a draw, I think he wins the race,” said Crawford. “I haven’t had him in a better race. He likes the fight, likes it when he has a horse who keeps challenging him.
“His final gallop going into the race was top class and when Kabelo (Matsunyane) was given the option of the two he took Irish Tractor without hesitation.
“But while I probably prefer him of the two the fact Irish Tractor gives 5.5kg to Gallic Tribe perhaps levels the playing field a little.”
Irish Tractor is currently quoted at 8-1.

Sophomore Stats A Conundrum For Punters
Danie Toerien (4Racing)
Statistically speaking, the World Sports Betting Sophomore 1000 (Race 6) should be the easiest race in which to find the winner, as only eight runners are carded to go to post in this event at the Vaal tomorrow.
But as Mark Twain wrote in Chapters from My Autobiography, “There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.”
Problem is, Twain attributes this now popular saying to British prime minister Benjamin Disraeli, but without any record thereof, even the most famous quote regarding statistics seems rather suspect.
With that said, it is rather interesting to study some of the statistics of the eight contenders in the World Sports Betting Sophomore 1000.
First off, a look at their early success compared to their current strike rate, tells a very interesting story. As juveniles, the eight runners ran a combined total of 40 races, recording 12 victories for a win strike rate of 30%.
However, since turning three, their combined runs total 25, with only a solitary victory between them for a win strike rate of just 4%.
That solitary win was scored by Now I Got You, who is one of only two runners not to have tasted success as a juvenile – the other being Mighty Goddess, who is still a maiden.
Trained by Corrie Lensley, Now I Got You is the highest rated and best weighted runner in the Sophomore field – a statistic which carries weight no matter from which angle it is perceived.
As far as place finishes are concerned since the start of the season, the statistics show that it is indeed the maiden, Mighty Goddess, who leads the pack. Billy Ruiters’ charge has finished in the top three on four of five occasions, which includes a hat-trick of runner-up finishes in her last three outings.
Considering that Mighty Goddess has run with merit in the company of Grade 2 winners Maharanee and Gobsmacked, as well as Grade 1 winner Sweet Pepper, she shouldn’t be left out of any equation when exotic bets are permuted.
Another interesting statistic which warrants attention is that the Fanie Bronkhorst-trained Strike A Match and jockey Chase Maujean is the only jockey-horse combination in the field to have scored a victory when pairing up – and they did it twice from four runs.
Unfortunately for Strike A Match, she is also the runner with the worst record when it comes to combined lengths beaten in the last two runs. She trudged home a combined 18.50-lengths behind the leaders in her last two outings – and both times Maujean was in the saddle too.
Bettors interested in more statistics must note that the Computaform form guide is available for free online at https://www.tab4racing.com. It contains a wealth of information and statistics to help bettors make the best-informed decisions.
The betting offered by World Sports Betting yesterday is: 3-1 Karangetang, Set To Go; 15-4 Taikonaut; 4-1 Now I Got You; 10-1 River Queraress; 13-1 Mover And Shaker; 14-1 Mighty Goddess; 20-1 Strike A Match.

Vaal Saturday Formguides And Selections
www.attheraces.com
1 12H10 – WSB Welcomes You Maiden Plate
Watch out for: WINTER GREETING (5)

Worth Backing Two Horses In The Annual Grand Heritage Stampede
Dyce and Irish Tractor are worth a punt in the Vaal race on Saturday
Happily, there is no law against supporting two horses in a race and the advice is to back both Dyce and Irish Tractor.
In the Grand National in the UK which has a similar number of runners, bookmakers often bet six places and it will be interesting to see if the sponsors — and the tote — make it attractive to back their fancies each way.
It was in December 2010 that Lucky Houdalakis had the greatest day of his career to date with JJ The Jet Plane winning the Hong Kong Sprint under one of Piere Strydom’s best rides. The celebrations went on long into the night.
The prize on Saturday is so much less but R312,500 is not to be sneezed at and — in Dyce — Houdalakis has a horse with ability and few miles on the clock.
David Shawe is a guy who knows the ropes of racing and — after an injury setback — his instruction will have been not to run the son of William Longsword until his trainer was fully happy with his recovery.
The long wait paid off when S’manga Khumalo partnered the colt to an emphatic victory at Turffontein 17 days ago. The mystery is why the same jockey hasn’t retained the ride — instead he is on Gavin Smith’s badly drawn raider, Safari Blue.
Muzi Yeni now rides Dyce and he will be pleased his mount has a reasonably high draw which has been an advantage in recent sprint races at the Free State track. The one worry is whether the colt will stay 1,475m, but he is out of a dam by Galileo.
Irish Tractor is this column’s second punt and Grant Knowles — nominee of the Diesel Syndicate — must be delighted with how the Vercingetorix gelding has fared during his time on the highveld.
The five-year-old ran well from a shocking draw in the Charity Mile and — as Kabelo Matsuinyane knows him well — must be fancied to take a hand in the finish.
The sponsors have Prophet as favourite at 5-1 and he has been competing in top races such as Graham Beck Stakes and Dingaans. However, he is the only three-year-old in the field and also has a low draw.
This race invariably produces a big quartet dividend and three runners worth considering in perms are Indlamu, Whafeef and Team Gold. The first-named, who races in the colours of bookmaker Lance Michael, hinted a sixth win was close at hand when second behind Forever Mine last time out.
Rachel Venniker has ridden two seconds on the son of Pomodoro and is sure to fancy her chances of taking a hand in the finish.
The final selection is Dyce to beat Irish Tractor, Indlamu and Whafeef.
The supporting feature — the WSB Sophomore 1000 — gives visiting Cape jockey, Grant van Niekerk a chance of victory on Janse van Vuuren’s talented three-year-old, Karangetang. Last season’s Protea and Storm Bird Stakes winner probably needed his recent race when finishing third behind Constable.
However, Karangetang may not find it easy conceding 2kg to Roy Magner’s runner, Taikonaut. The colt has been costly to follow in his last three outings, but runs his best races at the Free State track.
Karangetang is a son of Erupt and a strong case can also be made for another of that stallion’s progeny, Set To Go. This sprint might produce the best finish of the meeting.
SELECTIONS
1st Race: (16) Wind Water (11) Dontshootthebarman (1) Fiddleronthecliffs (3) Stella Et Clavis
2nd Race: No Selection
3rd Race: (9) Tambavati River (10) After Hours (5) Pinch Hit (4) Second Breath
4th Race: (8) Follow My Path (10) Timeforthat (1) High Roller (2) High Moon
5th Race: (7) Big Burn (1) Bohica (3) Bartholdi (8) Vaseem
6th Race: (3) Taikonaut (1) Karangetang (4) Set To Go (5) Now I Got You
7th Race: (7) Dyce (4) Irish Tractor (11) Indlamu (16) Whafeef
8th Race: (1) Forever Mine (7) Captain Hindsight (12) Clarkson (6) Nordic Rebel
9th Race: (5) Winter Greeting (4) Show Time (2) Ginmealight (7) Mamaquera


Thoroughly! A Fascinating Tale Of A Racing Legend
Alec Hogg, founder of Moneyweb and Biznews, was a good friend of Ormond Ferraris and wrote the introduction to Ferraris’s recently published autobiography ‘Thoroughly! Seven decades in the sport of Kings & Clowns’ written in collaboration with Charl Pretorius.
As Hogg alludes to in his introduction carried below, this is a book that belongs on the bookshelf of everyone even remotely interested in thoroughbred horseracing.
The arrival of my pre-publication copy of Thoroughly sparked a degree of trepidation.
For four decades, reading has been at the core of my personal and professional existence. Far too many books, probably 90% of those published, are a waste of time. This worthless quotient rises still further with autobiographies – the author’s own life story.
More than a few relationships have been destroyed by honest feedback to authors. And as Ormond Ferraris would expect nothing less that brutal honesty, I feared the worst.
Overlay this with the subject being a very private man, one who has always counted his words before releasing them. And this project was unlikely material for a page-turner.
I need not have worried.
With the expert assistance of talented wordsmith Charl Pretorius, the end-product is a gem. From how to pick a yearling through to Distinctly’s July, from the reason he was forced to abandon the Cape to why he tossed it all in, there is much to savour.
Admitted, I struggled to do so, racing through the pages like a Ferraris runner at the business end of the Oaks. Then again, the real judge of any book is the number of times it is revisited. Which in my case will be many.
Thoroughly opens a long-closed window to extraordinary life. For those of us who know and love the man, it is classic Ormond Ferraris, offered without apology or embellishment. Because that’s his way. He has always told it as he sees it. Most often correctly.
There is much in the pages which follow that paints an accurate picture of this unparalleled horseman whose love for the thoroughbred, whose principles and integrity, will live long after he has left us.
His track record proves him to have been an excellent judge of horseflesh, among the best to set foot in one of SA’s sales rings. Not as evident, though, is an unerring ability to judge human beings.
Bear that in mind as you absorb the stories and insights that follow. To illustrate, indulge me with one of my own stories.
For years, whether joining his first string for pre-dawn work, a coffee in his Turffontein office or on memorable trips to breeding farms, Ormond and I fenced over differing opinions about the SA racing industry’s dominant owner, Steinhoff CEO Markus Jooste.
Ormond derogatively referred to the man as “Joostie”, dismissing propaganda that claimed he was the country’s most successful business-builder. To him, the celebrated entrepreneur was purely and simply “a rubbish”. A man he had seen to be without without honour. One who pursued his own narrow interests and to hell with the way it affected the horses.
He remained deeply suspicious of Jooste’s acclaimed business prowess which transformed his small company into a global giant – and its CEO into the dominant South African owner and house guest at the most prestigious racing establishments, including Ireland’s fabled Coolmore.
Ormond wasn’t swayed in this conviction, even though the world’s biggest banks, the most respected investment analysts, the clutch of accounting experts on Steinhoff’s directorate and even Big Four auditor firm Deloitte publicly backed the billionaire.
At his peak, such was Jooste’s grip on SA racing that pretty much every trainer had a set of black green and gold silks hanging in their cupboards. These well known colours almost made it into the Turffontein mancave. But not quite.
After much nagging from my side, Ormond eventually relented and agreed to train a horse for him, provided I race it in partnership with Jooste.
When the poor beast arrived, its chosen trainer was apoplectic, sending the float straight back to where it came from. The incident gets a brief mention in this book.
The story which hasn’t been told is how Ormond saw the arrival of this “deformed” animal as confirmation of everything he believed about “Joostie”. In the months and years since, he spared no opportunity of reminding me of it. Repeating his warning that this man was not to be trusted.
It was an unerringly accurate insight, as the rest of humanity only discovered much later when, in December 2017, Jooste was unmasked as the engineer of South Africa’s biggest ever corporate fraud. A con job that cost investors hundreds of billions of rand.
Then again, in a long and colourful career, Ormond knows better than most that racing is an enterprise which has always attracted society’s princes and knaves. The best and the worst of humanity.
Determining who fits where, is not always easy. Once again, OA Ferraris is an exception. For anyone who has met the man, there can be no doubt into which category he falls. Ever.
The cover of the book is displayed below.



Picture: The horse in question broke the previous record of R5.2 million which was paid for the above colt, Track Attack (Candiese Lenferna).
Today’s Question
What was the highest price ever paid at auction in South Africa for a yearling?
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Picture: Al Zaraqaan (Candiese Lenferna Photography).
The Hong Kong Jockey Club’s Mark Richards was the underbidder in the battle for supremacy which ended with the hammer falling at R9 million in favour of Shadwell SA.
Masaki, who was renamed Al Zaraqaan, was a full-brother to the Grade 1 winner Nightingale.
He got his starting stall certificate on 30 December, 2020.
However, he was destined to never race.
He apparently stands today as a teaser stallion for his breeder Wilgerbosdrift Stud.
The yearling whose record he broke, a Varsfontein Stud-bred Dynasty colt called Track Attack, fared marginally better.
The half-brother to three-time Grade 1 winner Yorker was knocked down for R5.2 million at the BSA National Yearling Sale of 2018 to Form Bloodstock.
He won his tenth start over 2400m at Scottsville and followed up with a win over 2000m on the Greyville poly, but failed to win again.
















