Snaith's Powerful Trio For Cape Derby - Riders Booked
Andrew Fortune will be out to land a second Gr 1 win on Wish List as he rides the Cartier Paddock Stakes winner in the Lucky Fish Cape Derby (Picture: Wayne Marks)
The Gr 1 Lucky Fish Cape Derby first entries stage is only on Monday 16 February, but the Justin Snaith team have already revealed their contenders and jockey bookings.
The yard will have a strong hand with three classy runners, the Gr 1 Cartier Paddock Stakes winner Wish List (Legislate), the Gr 1 Hollywoodbets Cape Guineas runner up Happy Verse (Vercingetorix) and the highly promising twice-winning Futura gelding Note To Self.
Andrew Fortune will be aboard Wish List, Richard Fourie will be on Note To Self and Gavin Lerena will ride Happy Verse.
Fortune is the yard’s chief jockey at present.
He rode Wish List to victory in the Paddock Stakes and was also aboard Note To Self when he cantered to an ultra impressive victory on WSB Met day in a C Stakes event over 2000m. Fortune also rode Happy Verse in his first two career starts over 1200m and 1400m as a juvenile, both victories, and he rode him in his last start on WSB Met day, a 0,40 lengths second in the Gr 3 HKJC World Pool Politician Stakes over 1800m.
Jonathan Snaith said the veteran rider had been working very hard for the yard.
He is riding work seven days a week and as an example of his commitment he was at Futura Park as usual on Monday morning, but that afternoon was at Summerveld offloading a truck of Justin’s ten raiders.
Wish List will be attempting to become the ninth filly to win the Cape Derby.
Previous fillies to win it have been Desert Born (1925 – inaugural running), Decoration (1929), Windlass (1930), Anthea (1935), Fringilla (1936), Green Lass (1951), Taima Bluff (Arg) (1980) and Dog Wood (1999).
The last filly to run in the Cape Derby was the Candice Bass-trained Beach Bomb who finished second to Green With Envy two years ago.
Wish List relaxes well in the running and has a fine turn of foot. Being by July winner Legislate out of Silvano SA Oaks winner Wind Chill, she will relish the step up in trip.
Note To Self relaxed beautifully on Met day in the 2000m C Stakes event and turned it on effortlessly in the straight before using his huge stride to pull away from the opposition, winning by three lengths with Andrew Fortune pointing to the crowd. He is being nurtured slowly but could become a top horse.
Happy Verse has a fine turn of foot and will be particularly dangerous in a slow run race. He is by Vercingetorix out of a Giant’s Causeway mare who won second time out over 1700m and was subsequently placed over 2000m and 2400m in just seven career starts. Happy Verse should not have a problem seeing out the trip on pedigree.
Tarry On Fire At Turffontein
Trail Runner (Lancaster Bomber) clinches a four-timer for Sean Tarry and a double for Ryan Munger (JC Photos)
Sean Tarry scored a four-timer at Turffontein Inside’s eight race meeting on Thursday.
All of the wins were over a 1450m trip.
His winners were Ubermensch (Querari), who won by an easy 4,25 lengths under Chamu Mabaya in a Wokriders Maiden at odds of 11/10, Speedman (Vercingetorix), who made it three wins from four starts when winning a Graduation Plate by 0,90 lengths under Ryan Munger at odds of 5/2, Care Forgot (The United States), who won a MR 100 Handicap for fillies and mares by 2,30 lengths under Craig Zackey at odds of 6/1 and Trail Runner, who won a MR79 Handicap under Ryan Munger at odds of 25/2.
Munger, who has not been in as good form as he was at this time last year, was the only double scorer at the meeting.
Craig Zackey’s single winner took him to 147 wins for the season at a strike rate of 17.03% and he is now 29 wins clear of Richard Fourie.
Munger is on 8 wins at 10.96%.
Tarry is now on 58 wins at 13.71% and he has moved into second place on the national log.
See It Again’s Second Chance At The Gates
Picture: See It Again with the renowned “horse whisperer” Malan du Toit (Supplied)
On the last Saturday of last month, when Justin Snaith’s See It Again (Twice Over) strode to the start with purpose and won the WSB Cape Town Met with authority, the performance carried the fingerprints of a man who rarely seeks the spotlight. Horse behaviour consultant Malan du Toit was not responsible for specific exercise programmes, feed and heart rate monitoring, rather with understanding a horse that had lost his earlier composure, and teaching him how to cope again.
Malan had broken in See It Again as a yearling back in 2020, a task completed routinely and professionally. In December last year, he found himself working with the gelding again, this time at his most vulnerable. What followed was not a quick fix or a gimmick, but a painstaking return to first principles.
See It Again first crossed Malan’s path at Ridgemont Highlands, where owner Nic Jonsson had his yearlings stabled at the time. Here called: “See It Again was one of many yearlings I’d worked with in 2020. I remember him as a nice, well-behaved young horse with a good attitude. Over the years, however, he picked up some bad habits. While he never lost his gentle demeanour in the stable yard, his behaviour at the starting gates became uncontrollable.”
Road To Cheltenham - Is Il Etait Vulnerable To A Fast Early Tempo?
Il Etait Temps could give Hollywood Racing a first Cheltenham Festival Winner in the Gr 1 Queen Mother Chase and is generally a 7/1 shot, but the experts are questioning whether the real reason for his undoing in the Gr 1 Clarence House Chase at Ascot last time was the fast early tempo (Picture: Sky Sports Racing)
Road To Cheltenham: How Il Etait Temps came undone at Ascot
Lydia Hyslop
Never knowingly underbold.
“It was a Mickey Mouse race,” declared Barry Connell last Sunday, thus bookending the Clarence House with trash talk. “I can’t see any of those horses having a chance in the Champion Chase. I couldn’t see it before the race, and I can’t see it afterwards. I think if we jump a clear round, we win.”
You can understand his confidence. Marine Nationale is a dual Festival winner, proven at the ever-turning Old Course which places an emphasis on pace. Meanwhile, Il Etait Temps failed to translate the roughings-up he’d dispensed to Jonbonat Sandown when facing that same rival over the different test of Ascot.
Sparky front-runner Thistle Ask ensured it was very different. In that sense, the Clarence House tested the ability to cruise and jump accurately at a high tempo whilst retaining sufficient capacity to be effective at the business end. Jonbon alone passed that test and, whilst that doesn’t make him a Champion Chase threat, it’s a timely reminder of his enduring class and consistency.
The likeliest explanation for Il Etait Temps’ abject performance is something was ailing him. Yet in that scenario, to be a relevant Festival factor he’ll need to recover not only from that unexplained issue but also the tired fall he sustained at the second last, after which he lay on the cold, wet earth for a good ten minutes before thankfully getting to his feet.
Ross Doyle, racing manager for his owners Hollywood Racing and Barnane Stud, issued good news two days later. “The team at Ascot looked after him very well,” he said. “Paul [Townend, his rider] stayed with him the whole time . . . thankfully, he got up and they were very happy with him when they got him back into Closutton as he was straight into his feed, looking bright and alert.”
Townend’s own post-race analysis was characteristically succinct. “Just put a line through it,” he said. “It was too bad to read anything into it. He never travelled. We just need to find out why that happened, and hopefully he’ll recover in time for March.”
Doyle also asserted what happened was “nothing to do with the ground”. I’m not so sure. Il Etait Temps’ Clonmel and Aintree victories, over four and three furlongs further respectively, were registered on going comparably soft to Ascot – albeit, in the case of Clonmel, against lesser opposition.
However, Timeform, which employs time-based going assessments rather than relying on the vagaries of official going descriptions, suggests his very best efforts (4-6lb better) have thus far taken place on good-to-firm ground at Sandown last April and on good-to-soft at the same venue in December’s Tingle Creek.
Yet I’m not arguing ground as the primary determinant in his performance but rather as potentially an exacerbating factor. The crux of the matter is whether Townend is correct to lean towards diagnosing an underlying issue for his mount’s clunker or whether this race has starkly exposed an Achilles’ heel?
To apply this question to Ascot’s visuals: did Il Etait Temps need urging along after the first fence, his jumping increasingly lacking assuredness, because there was something wrong or was he unable comfortably to sustain that pace from the outset?
In this week’s Road To Cheltenham show, Ruby Walsh said he had tended towards the latter explanation whilst watching the race live but has since reassessed, having heard from his successor as Closutton stable jockey that Il Etait Temps was also lifeless in the preliminaries. You’ve got to take that testimony on board, clearly. Equally, we humans are prone to backfitting to suit our preferred narrative, especially – understandably – those closest to a horse.
The race got me thinking about whether the deposed Queen Mum market leader had ever been taken along that fast before, particularly to a first fence that comes up so quickly. Thistle Ask recorded an opening furlong of 11.39sec, in doing so outflanking Gidleigh Park and Jonbon for the lead after both had set out to jump upsides him at the first fence.
Harry Skelton was determined to maximise his progressive mount’s key assets of pace and accurate jumping, continuing in that vein until Jonbon – having bravely hung in there despite putting down when asked long by James Bowen at the eighth – was stamina-laden enough to stay on past, despite getting the slightly lesser jump at the last.
Meanwhile, Gidleigh Park’s jumping quickly unravelled – after diving precipitately at the fifth and sixth, Bryan Carver wisely drew stumps. It currently appears this horse is caught betwixt and between – not quite staying two-and-a-half miles but not good enough to operate in this company over shorter trips, at least not at this track
Yet Il Etait Temps struggled to jump cleanly, too. To repeat, it’s entirely possible he was just having an off-day but it looked an effort for him to negotiate obstacles whilst trying to keep up. By halfway, Townend was explicitly niggling him along, so it’s to his credit he worked his way determinedly into second. Yet he forfeited that almost immediately when reaching three out and then taking his tired fall at the next.
Thistle Ask followed up his rapid first furlong – quicker than Il Etait Temps has ever encountered before – with the next at 13.99sec. He would dip under 14 seconds twice more, with a 13.92sec fifth furlong and a 13.32sec sixth. From the Irish Arkle onwards, in the first mile of any contest, Il Etait Temps had only three times previously experienced sub-14sec pace and only for a single furlong in three different races.
When asked for a turn of speed at the end of a more steadily run race, it’s a totally different story, however. In those circumstances, Il Etait Temps is all over it. In races run to suit, when he’s accelerating late on to settle matters, he can string together sub-14sec furlongs and approach his obstacles at speeds of between 32 and 33mph. But the first half of those races were always slower.
Ruby was right to cite the Celebration Chase as a potential counter argument to the one I am floating here. Il Etait Temps’ RaceiQ entry speeds over the first three fences of that Sandown contest were broadly comparable, although on average the Clarence House was 0.4mph quicker.
Il Etaits Temps thumped Jonbon in the Celebration Chase but the tempo of the race, on faster ground, was different to the Clarence House
But, first, the Sandown race then slowed down for the next three fences whereas the Ascot race ratcheted up – on average, about 3mph quicker. Second, he achieved that speed at Sandown on good-to-firm ground. Here, he was asked to exceed it on soft ground. That’s got to take a lot more out of you if it’s not your natural flow. It might explain why he was knackered.
Only at the second last in the 2023 Supreme (34.83mph) has Il Etait Temps ever approached an obstacle quicker than the fourth fence in the Clarence House (34.62mph). Taking the average entry speed over the first eight obstacles of every race he’s run in the RaceiQ database – roughly the equivalent of when he began to tire at Ascot – he has never been so fast over such a sustained period.
Would he face a similarly exacting pace in the Queen Mum? Yes, is the answer, if we’re talking about something akin to last year’s edition – and why wouldn’t that be a reasonable measure given most of its main players are again due to turn up again?
At the fore, front-running Energumene’s average entry speed at his first three obstacles was 32.92mph. For pressing Quilixios, it was 32.85mph. For patiently ridden Marine Nationale, it was 32.58mph. The topographies are clearly different but Il Etait Temps, when looking sketchy in the Clarence House, averaged 31.18mph at the first three fences. In his Arkle, it was 29.41 mph.
This data doesn’t prove Il Etait Temps won’t be able to produce his best form in the Champion Chase because the Clarence House is only one piece of evidence in which different factors might have been at play. However, I do think it’s suggestive. A lot will depend on the ground at the Festival, too.
Most pertinently, I don’t expect Willie Mullins to change target based on a single item of evidence so switching up to the Ryanair seems unlikely, with or without Fact To File occupying that ground. So, hopefully, we might get to find out. (Albeit, racing being racing – a multi-factorial sport and utterly compelling for it – something else will probably happen. The Champion Chase has played the role of Queen Of The Upsets in recent years.)
Jonbon’s redemptive victory at Ascot, both for horse and rider, was a reminder to us racing fans not to write off a horse so soon. Only 12 months ago, we were broadly lauding this horse for his high-class consistency but the prevailing reception as he stepped up to defend his Clarence House title last Saturday was as if he were a busted flush. Instead, he turned up his Grade One tally to 11. One louder.
I’d even go so far as to say he’s over-priced for the Champion Chase at 18-1. We don’t need to discuss his Cheltenham record again – not least because Matt Tombs has already done that for us. In his column earlier this season, he hypothesised that Jonbon “struggles to get into a rhythm” due to there being much more jumping early on at Cheltenham.
At Cheltenham’s Old Course, its first fence comes up marginally quicker than Ascot’s but its second follows shortly afterwards, before a gallop of more than twice the distance to the third fence, followed very quickly by the fourth – and we’re not even half a mile into the contest – before another long gallop to the fifth.
At Ascot, there’s a long gallop around a bend to the second and relatively close third and then a very long gallop around a longer bend to the fourth, which comes up between five and six furlongs into the race. So, the patterning of the fences diverges between the two courses. It’s one of the key elements that make this sport so compelling – and some will play towards and against different horses and their preferences.
However, the fact is Jonbon fluffed the standing start last March and was always playing catch-up from that point. At Ascot – replete with the cheekpieces he’s only worn the last twice – he started promptly but was reined back into third by Bowen behind Thistle Ask’s frenetic pace after the first fence and perhaps benefits from that extra time to settle in before facing the next. It’s possible.
Even so, I don’t see him as having half the chance of L’Eau Du Sud – who’s half the price and beat him on their mutual seasonal debuts on heavy ground that serves the winner well and Jonbon dislikes. Nor do I see him as having a comparable chance to Thistle Ask, who’ll be taken on both for the lead and the who-can-jump-and-race-furthest-right contest by Solness.
Final thought on the two-mile chasing division: it was heartening to hear Darragh O’Keeffe being so confident about Quilixios’s return in this week’s Road, whilst expecting it to take place in the Champion Chase rather than next weekend’s Dublin Chase. He’d have been clear second-best last March and might even have bustled up the winner. He won’t be anything like 16-1 on the day.
Forever Young Out To Defend His Saudi Cup Crown
Forever Young pictured winning the 2024 Saudi Derby (Pic – Jockey Club of Saudi Arabia/Erika Rasmussen)
It hasn’t taken long for the Saudi Cup (5.40) to become a major fixture in the global racing calendar, and this year it’s also a Win-and-You’re-In race for the Breeders’ Cup Classic.
In 2025 the same horse won both the Saudi Cup and Breeders’ Cup Classic, and he’s back in action at Riyadh this Saturday: Forever Young.
He is favoured to repeat and may well do so, but let’s go through the field from the rail out first…
Engagement Through Experiences Is Vital - Asian Racing Conference
Picture: Terecina Kwong, Executive Director, Membership and Customer Excellence, The Hong Kong Jockey Club, speaks at the Asian Racing Conference (HKJC)
Engagement through experiences vital for success, Asian Racing Conference hears
The 41st Asian Racing Conference (ARC) continued on Wednesday (11 February) with a session titled ‘Transforming Customer Behaviours’ at the Crowne Plaza Riyadh RDC Hotel and Convention Centre in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, where experts discussed the importance of experience-driven offerings and enhanced digital assets in helping create memorable race days.
Terecina Kwong, Executive Director, Membership and Customer Excellence, The Hong Kong Jockey Club, said: “The reality is customers today are very much faced with lots of competing demand of their time and attention. In a world of abundant options and choices, the racing experience has to do more than just function. It is about how we get our customers and audience to feel educated and entertained, and that they want to not only stay but also return.
“The audience today is much more selective in terms of how they want to spend their time, and expectation is very much shared by the experience they get, which has to be easy to enter, personally rewarding, and is also worth sharing with their friends and family.”
Kwong highlighted recently renovated venues at Happy Valley Racecourse, which offer an immersive 360-degree experience as fans embark on their journey in horse racing.
“Spaces like ‘The Beat’ and ‘Vantage’ at Happy Valley bring an elevated social energy to a race day by combining live racing with an atmosphere, music and contemporary food and drinks, and for a younger audience – they want to feel that a night at the races is like a night out,” Kwong said.
“Digital is no longer just an extension; it is part of the race day – it is an experience layer. It has three main purposes. The first is how you enhance the live experience by adding context and connecting people on track, the second is that it gives them simplicity – speed, ease, and frictionless participation, and the third is learning and engaging content.
“We have created AI tools to translate racing information into a much more accessible format, helping people build confidence and participate without the need for deep prior knowledge.”
Kwong was joined by Mr William C. Carstanjen, Chief Executive Officer, Churchill Downs Incorporated, and Mr Gillon McLachlan, Managing Director & Chief Executive Officer, Tabcorp.
In a session titled ‘Integrity’, Mr Douglas Robinson, Director, IFHA Council on Anti-Illegal Betting and Related Crime Executive Manager – International Illegal Betting Research and Liaison, The Hong Kong Jockey Club, and Mr Jack Zuber, Senior Manager – Racing Integrity and Betting Analysis, The Hong Kong Jockey Club, discussed the evolving landscape of integrity and the crucial role technology plays.
Mr Zuber said computer models through machine learning are helping to monitor racing’s integrity and investigate suspicious betting trends, highlighting starting prices and a horse’s settling position as two key factors he prioritises when employing machine learning.
“Performance is a good indicator of both betting moves and actual performance, but from an integrity perspective, when the parity between either of these is broken, there may be an integrity risk present – which is exacerbated even further when the parity between the betting move and the performance on the day is upheld. To combat this, we have developed models to accurately predict the current performance of the horse,” he said.
“Starting price is a great indicator of actual performance, but surprisingly, settling position is also a great indicator as well. Since 2011 in Hong Kong, if you were to bet to collect the same amount on every single horse that settled within one length of the lead, you would be winning at 10% on turnover, and as such, these are two models that we have heavily developed.”
Mr Robinson said that cryptocurrencies are fuelling an out-of-control illegal betting market, which tops US$3.5 trillion dollars and causes serious harm to the industry. He cited a lack of regulation as a factor for the rapid growth of the illegal market and called on legislators to do more in the space.
“It (illegal betting) continues to grow faster than the legal markets. The primary reasons are due to better prices, better placement, better product and better promotion, and it is exploding.
“It causes criminality, sports corruption, and it increases the tax which legal operators pay – the cost of that is huge. Using crypto means the customer is essentially anonymous, not completely anonymous, but it’s not easy. We have rapid growth in the illegal space and in the legal space we have firms exiting. Crypto enabled illegal betting is even worse because it further supports corruption and there is an additional money laundering question.”
Aja Hall, Co-Director of Integrity, Regulation and Safeguarding, British Horseracing Authority; Mr Kim Kelly, Deputy Commissioner, Queensland Racing Integrity Commission and Chair IFHA International Harmonisation of Racing Rules Committee, and Mr Louis Weston, Barrister, Outer Temple Chambers.
Welsh Starlet To Prove Herself A Poly Star
Welsh Starlet has relished the step up to middle distances on the poly (Pauline Herman Photography)
Fairview Poly Friday Fromguides And Selections
R1 5 RULES OF CONDUCT first-timer by Buffalo Bill Cody out of Jet master mare and Fourie rides. 2 FYFIELD LEGEND good chance on first run in the East Cape having not been disgraced in Cape Town. 6 TRIGGER WARNING Erike The Rad first-timer. 1 FUTUROLOGIST can improve on moderate debut. (5-2-6-1)
R2 1 TERMINAL VELOCITY is a hard-knocking sort, who can go one better here. 6 MISSOURI FLAME’s last three runs have been far and she could earn here. 4 RED LHASA has show enough to be able to earn here. 2 AM STILL WINNING has shown some ablity and can earn. (1-6-4-2)
R3 4 HOERIKWAGGO is in good form and is the one to beat here. 3 AVERNIAN GODDESS has been in fine form since arriving in KZN from the Highveld and has a shout. 7 ONE DANCE has been in fine form and should be right there. 1 FAMILY POWER has ben knocking on the door and can go close from pole position with a 4kg claimer up. (4-3-7-5)
R4 1 PICK A POMODORO is in good form and is the one to beat. 6 FROM THE HIP has the form to earn in this line up. 4 WORLD CHOICE should be thereabouts if producing his best. 12 WARRIOR’S EDGE is capable of improvement and can’t be ignored. (1-6-4-12)
R5 8 HOLLANDIA BAKKERIJ is knocking hard and should be right there. 1 INGQWELE ran a cracker last time and can go close with a repeat. 3 THUNDER MASTER has the for to earn in this line up. 6 ACTION AMERICA ha shown ability and went close over course and distance last time. (8-1-3-6)
R6 7 WELSH STARLET is in cracking form and can win again. 1 OLIVE OYL is an honest sort and should be right there. 2 SPOIL YOURSELF has the form to earn in the line up. 5 GREENLIGHT DANCER should nt be far off and shouldn’t be ignored. (7-1-2-5)
R7 12 ROTOTO is in fine form and a repeat of his last start should see him right there. 7 GARDEN SUN should finish close to Rototo on form. 2 CURTISS CONDOR has ability and always looked like one who would need time and it is now his time to shine. 1 SILVANO’S SONG has been disappointing since arriving from Gauteng and should be able to bounce back from a plum draw. (12-7-2-1)
R8 2 NORTH STAR is knocking hard and should get it right here. 5 CHOCOLATE BOMB is unbeaten in two starts since arriving from KZN and should go close. 4 WAROFDYNAMITE is in good form and should be right there. 3 TAIL OF THE COMET is talented but problematic and can go close if bouncing back to his best. (2-5-4-3)
Today's Question
How did the popular Australian beer Carbine Stout, brewed from 1915 to 2008, get its name?
The picture is of the subject
FIELDS, Friday, 13 February
Fairview Poly
Today’s Question Answer
The beer was named after the famous New Zealand-bred racehorse Carbine, who became a legend in both New Zealand and Australia.
Carbine (1885–1914) was a champion New Zealand-bred Thoroughbred racehorse who won 30 principal races in New Zealand and Australia. He was very popular with racing fans, and sporting commentators of the day praised him for his gameness, versatility, stamina and weight-carrying ability, as well as for his speed. He was one of five inaugural inductees into both the New Zealand Racing Hall of Fame and the Australian Racing Hall of Fame.

