
Charles Dickens wins the Grade 1 Hollywoodbets Cape Guineas (Chase Liebenberg)
Charles Dickens Won’t Run In July
Candice Bass-Robinson said about the crack Trippi colt today, “He won’t run in the July.”
The Hollywoodbets Cape Guineas winner was priced up as the 7/2 favourite when betting first opened for the Hollywoodbets Durban July, but he drifted out to 10/1 after being defeated in the Grade 1 SplashOut Cape Derby.
Talking about his Cape Derby run Candice said, “”I don’t think it is that he doesn’t stay, he still ran a very good race, but he is probably not at his best over 2000m at this stage.”



See It Again wins the Grade 1 SplashOut Cape Derby (Wayne Marks).
See It Again Might Be Hoping To See Al Muthana In July
The three-year-old versus older horse question is always an intriguing debate before the Hollywoodbets Durban July and it might take on special significance this year for the chances of the Grade 1 SplashOut Cape Derby winner See It Again.
An intriguing fact for the weight structure, as things stand, is that with Al Muthana in the weights See It Again will in most instances be better off with his three-year-old contemporaries than without Al Muthana.
However, his relative weight with the older horses will in most instances be better without Al Muthana in the weights than they would be with him.
Using See It Again plus three three-year-old and three older horses as examples, these are how the weights will look for See It Again:
With Al Multhana:


Twice Over Deserves More Respect
The South African Stud book has been starved of Gr1 winning entires from the Northern Hemisphere that retire to stud here straight out of training. Horses of this calibre usually arrive “second-hand” after having failed to reach desired heights at stud overseas.
We have however been lucky enough to have benefited from the like of Fort Wood and Drum Beat as direct-from-racing Gr1 winners.
And so it was exciting for South African Breeders to make acquaintance with (joint 2009 UK and Eu Champion) four time Gr1 winner Twice Over. A rarity.
The charming Twice Over was no oil painting but why would that disqualify him from making a sire?
Not if Northern Dancer, Mr. Prospector, Danzig, Sunday Silence and Danehill were the yardstick. All of them were far from perfect conformationally. What are the odds that they would have not found much traction at our fussy yearling sales and then have made the grade as they did at stud?
Twice Over is a big scopey horse with lots of leg and a plainish head. Planted in that masculine head are magnificent eyes. Looking into them is like looking into a clear pool in a mountain stream. He is a also a big horse with a short quarter. Which clearly didn’t hinder him. A lot of very good horses had a rear view of those quarters in important races. Those aesthetic drawbacks aside, Twice Over has a fantastically large perfectly angled shoulder and a massive bottomless girth – and he throws these in his progeny.
His stud career started like he did, as winner of the Zetland Stakes, with success as a 2 year-old. From his first crop he sired Champion 2 year-old sprinter, Sand and Sea. He has bookended this with a win in the recent Gr1 Cape Derby with See It Again from his most recent crop to race, beating an outstanding horse in Charles Dickens.
The Cape Derby is an American Derby distance of 2000m. I would estimate if it were 2400m or even a 2200 July distance, we would have witnessed an 8 length affair, as he had only started his engine late in the race and was flying.
Twice Over raced at the highest level in the UK, France and in the Breeders Cup in the USA. He won all the major middle distant races in the UK after starting his career as a two time unbeaten 2 year old and carrying that form to not only beat his peers, but beat four other crops as well.
A durable warrior, who overcame a pair of front hooves that had to have been a hindrance. This was a sign of possibly why he reached the heights he did; a courageous horse like those football and rugby greats who run through the pain barrier. I think he would have run through a brick wall for Sir Henry, who called him his friend.
He shared his time in Sir Henry’s yard with the great Frankel and raced in an era in which numerous horses would have been rated great had they not been contemporaries of Frankel.
Luck plays a huge part in racing, and being a Juddmonte homebred, he never went to a yearling sale. He would probably not have been a physical standout on any sale. Without detracting from them, he would probably have found his way into a lesser yard than Sir Henry Cecil. Certainly those feet would have taken a lot of looking after at the hands of the maestro.
He is a member of a small select group of active Sires in South Africa who have been able to sire a Met or July winner. Twice Over, Trippi, Elusive Fort and Ideal World. Isn’t that what we should be striving to achieve?
Twice Over currently has a lock on the Cape Classics as he sired the winner of the 2022 Guineas and 2023 Derby, both for Nick Jonsson, who has been a supporter from the beginning, being owner or part owner in most of his Grade 1 winners.
The current Derby triumph is quite remarkable as Twice Over’s progeny made up forty percent of the entire field, only seen by the likes of Northern Dancer, Galileo, Urban Sea and Frankel at Epsom.
His stud career, apart from the one blip that his fillies are not of the class of his colts, should not detract from his legacy. The ‘great one’ Northern Dancer’s fillies were also not his strength.
Twice Over’s stud career has been all encompassing, siring a Gr1 Champion 2 year old, two G1 Julys, a G1 Queens Plate, a Gr1 Guineas and a G1 Derby with many Gr2s and G3s.
His son Do It Again is not only a Horse of The Year and Equus Champion 3 year old, he is the most celebrated Durban July runner in the rich and proud history of South Africa’s most famous race. This is an amazing resume for a currently active Sire.
Special mention must be made of Twice Over’s special achievements. Nick Jonsson stated on the rostrum that it was his intention to buy every Twice Over that took his fancy. He stuck to his guns and was owner or part owner of 3 of his Gr1 winners. A fourth generation horse lover from a family steeped in the world of the horse.
This unique stallion is deserving of far more credit and respect than he currently receives!
Quad Erat Demonstrandum
The Futureisbright is Gold Cup Bound
Today’s Listed Durbanville Cup winner, the Justin Sniath-trained Thefutureisbright, struck as a useful stayer in the making when winning over 2400m at Hollywoodbets Kenilworth on November 23.

Backworth House Is The Talk Of The Town
The former boutique thoroughbred breeding operation Backworth Stud has been converted into a Boutique Guesthouse which could be a suitable venue for racegoers to stay when visiting KZN for a SA Champions Season meeting or two.
It is situated near Eston in the Southern Drakensberg and is about 40 minutes from both Hollywoodbets Scottsville and Summerveld and about an hour from Hollywoodbets Greyville.
Backworth House is owned by John and Janette Bescoby and Keith Russon and Ian Todd.
In the late 1990s it was used as a weekend retreat before being put under pasture and stables and developed into a boutique thoroughbred stud.
Backworth bred the like of Grade 1 Allan Robertson winner Chocolicious and Grade 2 winners First Again and Colour of Courage, plus a host of multiple winners including the new Avontuur-based sire Talk of The Town.
The property is still an ideal retreat away from the hustle and bustle of city life.
The Guest House facility has five pristine rooms for couples, many welcoming spaces, a bar, a tennis court, swimming pool and all this complimented by an in-house Chef.
The property extends over 26 hectares (65 acres) with paddocks under Kikuyu pasture with post and rail fencing and shade is provided by magnificent plane, liquid amber and oak trees.
Backworth House opened its doors recently and guests have been impressed by the natural silence and beauty of the surrounds.
The rooms are cosy and it would be an ideal place to recharge the batteries, whilst enjoying the food which is excellent in both taste and presentation.
The rate is inclusive of dinner, bed and breakfast with a lunch menu available.

Cheltenham Festival Best Bets And Tips
Suggestions for horse racing showpiece including Champion Hurdle, Ryanair Chase, Gold Cup and more
Now rated 175, there doesn’t look a better favourite at odds against throughout the entirety of the festival.

Snaith Treble, Kotzen And De Melo Doubles
Justin Snaith scored a treble at Hollywoodbets Durbanville today, while Glen Kozen and Keagen de Melo both scored doubles.
Snaith is on 89 wins this season and has done it at a strike rate of 12.66%.
He is more than R4,4 million clear of second-placed Sean Tarry in the national trainers’ championship.
De Melo is now on 187 wins for the season at a strike rate of 21.01%.
He is 61 wins clear of second-placed Richard Fourie.
Kotzen is on 33 wins at 8.80%.




Battleship (picture: wikipedia)
Today’s Question
What was remarkable about the 1938 Grand National winner, Battleship.
Answer at the bottom of the newsletter.

Battleship with Bruce Hobbs up (BloodHorse)











