Three-year-old's feature in this years Summer Six. Our three-year-old male and female ranks look to have genuine depth this season and any number could have made the cut. Once again the focus is not necessarily on the established pattern horses but rather on those who have signalled they can take the step to better company. Here is the select field and for those of you who like your ante post betting, many of these selections are currently at attractive odds for some of the cups and classics.
Green Supreme: Looks to have recaptured the form he showed here in the spring of his three-year-old year when he ran a fast finishing third to Eileen Dubh in the Group One Levin Classic. In fact he was well in the Derby market but departed for Hong Kong where he failed to show any form in two light campaigns. Yet to race further than 1600m but his fast finishing style looks suited to at least 2000m and the son of Oasis Dream is a genuine lightweight chance for the big cups if he can run the trip. For a out and out sprinter himself and being a son of Green Desert, Oasis Dream has been something of a revelation with the number of high class middle distance performers he has left. With Rainbow Quest as his dam sire, Green Supreme's pedigree is unlikely to stop him running a strong middle distance.
Nashville: Another promising type from the first crop of Darci Brahma. Backed up a win on debut at Riccarton during Cup week with a second to the promising Jerico at Trentham on Captain Cook Stakes Day. His Trentham run was full of merit: he got back and pulled due to the lack of early pace, then mounted a wide run from the 600m and despite running greenly in the home straight, was still finding the line strongly at the end of the 1400m event. Stable has a good record of producing quality runners from limited representation and they have knocked back big overseas offers for Nashville to chase races like the Derby.
Lady Kipling: Always a good looking type and more strongly made than many of the stock of her sire, she has come back at four looking even more robust and raced accordingly. To her credit she looked extremely talented last season but often spoilt her chances by being very tardy from the gates. Stable has obviously worked hard to rectify that problem and this season she is getting away on terms. The field she beat to win the Cal Isuzu was of genuine group two standard and the form from it should hold-up strongly over the summer. Had genuine excuses for three failures at 2000m last season and with her style of racing and maturity, looks well capable of playing a leading role in the weight for age 2000m races throughout the summer months.
Ocean Park: Boxing Day's Group Two Great Northern Guineas looks set to be a cracking contest, featuring many of the pretenders to the mantle of our leading three-year male, and while the lightly raced Ocean Park will give away experience to many of his fellow runners, don't be surprised to see the son of Thorn Park extremely competitive against the likes of Burgandy and co. Connections have indicated he may leave for Hong Kong before the Derby but the odds of 21 to 1 are still tempting.
Pero: Well related four-year-old son of Storming Home whose patient handling is starting to pay dividends. 1.35 is rarely broken for 1600m at New Plymouth yet Pero did it easily earlier this month at his first start since a successful Christchurch trip for the Cup Carnival. Although he has won well in good times at 1400 and 1600m, he has always raced as if staying would be his forte, galloping with a real stayers stride and a low head carriage. From a stable that trained the high class stayers Mr Brooker and Aerosmith, Pero has the right credentials to make into a very exciting staying prospect.
Silent Achiever: Has a similar profile to another O'Reilly filly Annie Higgins, who last season only started racing just prior to Xmas in rating races but who became highly competitive in stakes company by Xmas with her strong finishing style. Silent Achiever hinted she was well above average, when she stormed home to run second on debut at Te Aroha. That performance saw her start a very warm favourite for her latest start, a 1600m maiden contest at Ellerslie last week which she won on her ear. Just a medium sized filly, typical of many of the better O'Reilly females, Silent Achiever's ability to really sprint when asked will hold her in good stead for her step to age group racing.
Best of luck.
Friday, December 16, 2011
Monday, December 12, 2011
Ellerslie 7 December: Talent on The Track Too
Last Wednesday evenings Ellerslie meeting looks to have unearthed yet more three-year-old talent.
These twilight meetings have a habit of proving difficult for punters, and with rain around and the running rail out 12m, upsets again looked the order of the night, especially after Redemption saluted in the first at odds of nearly 20 to 1.
However strong winning performances from two well supported three-year-old fillies reinvigorated punters confidence and saw that a small parcel of the $200,000 Pick Six was struck.
Following her strong last start finish for third over 1400m to subsequent group one placed Randall, the step to 1600m looked ideal for the Towkay filly Chicharita. Allowed to settle back from a wide draw on Wednesday evening, she made a sustained run through the field from the 600m, eventually striking the front with 150m to go, before holding off the fast finishing Poste Restante more comfortably than the long neck margin suggests.
Chicharita is not overly typical of her sires stock and looks to have thrown more to her dam sire Sir Tristram. Tall and strongly made with good bone, the filly reminds me on type somewhat of the Towkay filly Sahara Flight who ran third in the 2005 New Zealand Oaks. Interstingly', like a number of Towkay's better performers, she has Fair Trail blood in her distaff.
Although nearly a second slower than Chicharita's winning time for the same distance, Silent Achiever, having just her second start, was every bit as impressive. The feature of the O'Reilly filly's debut performance for third was her fast closing 200m, and once again she displayed rare acceleration, sitting a little bit closer in the running than Chicharita, before picking up the leaders in a matter of strides with 150m to go, then coasting to the line.
Chicharita runs to the line strongly and will be suited in pattern company at 2000m and further, while Silent Achiever also has the class to be competitive in races like the Eight Carat Classic.
Saturday's Eulogy Stakes underlined the current depth of our three-year-old fillies. The return of Planet Rock and Annabandana to join the emerging talent of Xanadu and Silent Achiever will ensure a fascinating conclusion to the Filly of the Year title.
These twilight meetings have a habit of proving difficult for punters, and with rain around and the running rail out 12m, upsets again looked the order of the night, especially after Redemption saluted in the first at odds of nearly 20 to 1.
However strong winning performances from two well supported three-year-old fillies reinvigorated punters confidence and saw that a small parcel of the $200,000 Pick Six was struck.
Following her strong last start finish for third over 1400m to subsequent group one placed Randall, the step to 1600m looked ideal for the Towkay filly Chicharita. Allowed to settle back from a wide draw on Wednesday evening, she made a sustained run through the field from the 600m, eventually striking the front with 150m to go, before holding off the fast finishing Poste Restante more comfortably than the long neck margin suggests.
Chicharita is not overly typical of her sires stock and looks to have thrown more to her dam sire Sir Tristram. Tall and strongly made with good bone, the filly reminds me on type somewhat of the Towkay filly Sahara Flight who ran third in the 2005 New Zealand Oaks. Interstingly', like a number of Towkay's better performers, she has Fair Trail blood in her distaff.
Although nearly a second slower than Chicharita's winning time for the same distance, Silent Achiever, having just her second start, was every bit as impressive. The feature of the O'Reilly filly's debut performance for third was her fast closing 200m, and once again she displayed rare acceleration, sitting a little bit closer in the running than Chicharita, before picking up the leaders in a matter of strides with 150m to go, then coasting to the line.
Chicharita runs to the line strongly and will be suited in pattern company at 2000m and further, while Silent Achiever also has the class to be competitive in races like the Eight Carat Classic.
Saturday's Eulogy Stakes underlined the current depth of our three-year-old fillies. The return of Planet Rock and Annabandana to join the emerging talent of Xanadu and Silent Achiever will ensure a fascinating conclusion to the Filly of the Year title.
Saturday, December 3, 2011
Ellerslie 3 December: David and Miss Goliath
I headed to Ellerslie primarily to see Xanadu as I had not seen her since she was a foal at Little Avondale. The maiden race also had a number of first starters, quite a few of them well bred and with trials form.
Watching Xanadu parade was like looking at a high school first XV run onto the field, and there suddenly in the middle of the teenagers is Brad Thorn or Andy Haden. She is some physical specimen; tall and long but very athletic with the most fantastic gaskin. She had just the right amount of mental alertness, on toe, and keen to get on with it, but observant and confident.
Craig Gryll's knew he was on the best horse in the race and rode her accordingly. The stakesplaced Vincent Street got away with cheap sectionals in front but despite Xanadu finding the home turn tricky, as many visiting Ellerslie for the first time do, she outsprinted the Darci Brahma gelding more comfortably than the margin suggests.
Knights Tour paraded acting colty and it will take a good training effort to get him through to the Derby with his manhood intact.
The Maiden 1200m presented a totally different challenge. Apart from the O'Reilly colt Miami Provocateur and the Falkirk filly Springtime, the field lacked types. But as the saying goes, beauty's only skin deep and my eye kept coming back to the little Keeper gelding St Yazin Chris McNab was walking around beneath the trees in the parade ring.
His best supporters will tell you that he has had some very good males in Hong Kong but Keeper is one of those stallions whose fillies are distinctly superior to his colts. Often he can leave a a big type of colt and they can tend to be a bit one-paced. Keeper's only stakeswinner in Hong Kong, Special Days, is not a big horse.
Lucky to be 15.1 hands, St Yazin may have thrown to his damsire Montjeu - making a promising start as a broodmare stallion - for he was still a neat and well balanced type. But is was more his eye that I took a liking to, it looked at you and reeked of honesty and courage. Could he gallop?
He sure could. The Savabeel three-year-old gelding Have No Mercy - a good type for a Savabeel -showed high gate speed to get across early from a wide gate and then sprinted clear early in the straight. Little St Yazin had got back in the early rush and was having difficulty extracting himself from traffic with 300m to run, but once he did he really knuckled down and picked-up Have No Mercy, right on the line.
Xanadu will go onto better things than anything else on yesterdays card but between St Yazin and Have No Mercy, I think one of them will win a nice race one day.
Watching Xanadu parade was like looking at a high school first XV run onto the field, and there suddenly in the middle of the teenagers is Brad Thorn or Andy Haden. She is some physical specimen; tall and long but very athletic with the most fantastic gaskin. She had just the right amount of mental alertness, on toe, and keen to get on with it, but observant and confident.
Craig Gryll's knew he was on the best horse in the race and rode her accordingly. The stakesplaced Vincent Street got away with cheap sectionals in front but despite Xanadu finding the home turn tricky, as many visiting Ellerslie for the first time do, she outsprinted the Darci Brahma gelding more comfortably than the margin suggests.
Knights Tour paraded acting colty and it will take a good training effort to get him through to the Derby with his manhood intact.
The Maiden 1200m presented a totally different challenge. Apart from the O'Reilly colt Miami Provocateur and the Falkirk filly Springtime, the field lacked types. But as the saying goes, beauty's only skin deep and my eye kept coming back to the little Keeper gelding St Yazin Chris McNab was walking around beneath the trees in the parade ring.
His best supporters will tell you that he has had some very good males in Hong Kong but Keeper is one of those stallions whose fillies are distinctly superior to his colts. Often he can leave a a big type of colt and they can tend to be a bit one-paced. Keeper's only stakeswinner in Hong Kong, Special Days, is not a big horse.
Lucky to be 15.1 hands, St Yazin may have thrown to his damsire Montjeu - making a promising start as a broodmare stallion - for he was still a neat and well balanced type. But is was more his eye that I took a liking to, it looked at you and reeked of honesty and courage. Could he gallop?
He sure could. The Savabeel three-year-old gelding Have No Mercy - a good type for a Savabeel -showed high gate speed to get across early from a wide gate and then sprinted clear early in the straight. Little St Yazin had got back in the early rush and was having difficulty extracting himself from traffic with 300m to run, but once he did he really knuckled down and picked-up Have No Mercy, right on the line.
Xanadu will go onto better things than anything else on yesterdays card but between St Yazin and Have No Mercy, I think one of them will win a nice race one day.
Friday, December 2, 2011
Ocean Park: Derby Prospects
Outside Rock n Pop the first legitimate New Zealand Derby contender may have emerged in the form of Saturday's impressive Ellerslie winner Ocean Park. And the Gary Hennessy trained colt has the pedigree to suggest the Derby distance should hold no fears.
Following a dead heat debut win at Gisborne over 1400m earlier in the month, the Thorn Park colt was allowed to start at 16 to 1 for Saturday's 1500m contest but won like an odds on shot, sprinting impressively from last in the nine horse field of three-year-olds, picking up the hot favourite Joy's World with 100m to go, before drawing away from the Redoute's Choice filly to record a length and a half win.
Sayidda the dam of Ocean Park looked a filly of untapped potential in the early summer of 2003, although the fact she was by Zabeel, a smashing physical type and trained by Roger James, probably had more to do with her starting favourite for that seasons Avondale Guineas, than two consecutive wins in lower grade events leading into the group two contest. Sadly she badly fractured a cannon bone during the Guineas and initially there were grave fears for her survival let alone a broodmare career.
Nursed back to health by her breeders and owners Trelawney Stud, Sayidda's first mating was to the stud's own shuttle stallion Van Nistelrooy. The resulting filly foal was retained by her breeders and as Ruqqaya, she showed distinct promise in her first campaign as a summer three-year-old, beating Harris Tweed and The Phantom Storm over 2000m at Te Rapa in 2.02, and at one stage held nominations for the New Zealand Derby and Oaks.
Ruqqaya struggled to recapture the same form in two subsequent campaigns and has not started since running unplaced over ground at Rotorua last December. A generously proportioned but most attractive mare, she looks an outstanding broodmare prospect.
Ocean Park, Sayidda's next live foal after her filly the year earlier by Volksraad died, was part of Trelawney's 2010 Karaka Select Sale draft. Why he sold in the second-tier sale is strange, for while Thorn Park was not the force then as he has become, and Sayidda herself is without black-type, he was an outstanding type, fetching $150,000 - the second equal highest price of 29 Thorn Park progeny sold through the top two sessions that year.
Presumably there are tactics at play on behalf of the vendor in selling Sayidda's yearlings, as the mares next foal, a filly by Iffraaj, also found herself in the Select Sale at Karaka this year, selling to clients of her mothers former trainer for $290,000 ,the top price of that session.
The authors yearling catalogue notes on Hip no 675 at the Karaka last year read " lovely mid-sized colt, not heavy with a great head and barrel." My observations on seeing him at Ellerslie on Saturday were that he has developed in proportion but remained very athletic, is still at best medium sized, with the most notable difference being that he has grown a flowing gaskin that allows him marked elasticity with his hind leg stride.
Veyron capped a very good day for his sire Thorn Park when he won the feature race at Ellerslie on Saturday, the Group Three Eagle Technology Stakes at 1600m. The group one successes last season of his daughter The Party Stand at 2000m and his son Jimmy Choux in the New Zealand Derby, lifted the son of Spinning World into the top bracket of our stallion ranks, but significantly also reiterated the ability of an Australian bred sprinting profiled stallion to leave high class middle distance runners when crossed with the stouter local broodmare gene pool.
Sayidda's distaff was responsible for a number of high class performers throughout thr 1980's and 1990's, headed by the likes of Courtza, O'Reilly, Critic and Our Pompeii, however the years since have been rather lean for this old Waikato Stud family. Not for the first time, Zabeel looks to have re invigorated a branch of a once distinguished family.
Given the manner of Saturday's victory, and coming at just his second career start, the future looks very bright for Ocean Park. This author will not be writing a tongue in cheek article again about a son of Thorn Park needing a horse float to run the Derby distance.
Following a dead heat debut win at Gisborne over 1400m earlier in the month, the Thorn Park colt was allowed to start at 16 to 1 for Saturday's 1500m contest but won like an odds on shot, sprinting impressively from last in the nine horse field of three-year-olds, picking up the hot favourite Joy's World with 100m to go, before drawing away from the Redoute's Choice filly to record a length and a half win.
Sayidda the dam of Ocean Park looked a filly of untapped potential in the early summer of 2003, although the fact she was by Zabeel, a smashing physical type and trained by Roger James, probably had more to do with her starting favourite for that seasons Avondale Guineas, than two consecutive wins in lower grade events leading into the group two contest. Sadly she badly fractured a cannon bone during the Guineas and initially there were grave fears for her survival let alone a broodmare career.
Nursed back to health by her breeders and owners Trelawney Stud, Sayidda's first mating was to the stud's own shuttle stallion Van Nistelrooy. The resulting filly foal was retained by her breeders and as Ruqqaya, she showed distinct promise in her first campaign as a summer three-year-old, beating Harris Tweed and The Phantom Storm over 2000m at Te Rapa in 2.02, and at one stage held nominations for the New Zealand Derby and Oaks.
Ruqqaya struggled to recapture the same form in two subsequent campaigns and has not started since running unplaced over ground at Rotorua last December. A generously proportioned but most attractive mare, she looks an outstanding broodmare prospect.
Ocean Park, Sayidda's next live foal after her filly the year earlier by Volksraad died, was part of Trelawney's 2010 Karaka Select Sale draft. Why he sold in the second-tier sale is strange, for while Thorn Park was not the force then as he has become, and Sayidda herself is without black-type, he was an outstanding type, fetching $150,000 - the second equal highest price of 29 Thorn Park progeny sold through the top two sessions that year.
Presumably there are tactics at play on behalf of the vendor in selling Sayidda's yearlings, as the mares next foal, a filly by Iffraaj, also found herself in the Select Sale at Karaka this year, selling to clients of her mothers former trainer for $290,000 ,the top price of that session.
The authors yearling catalogue notes on Hip no 675 at the Karaka last year read " lovely mid-sized colt, not heavy with a great head and barrel." My observations on seeing him at Ellerslie on Saturday were that he has developed in proportion but remained very athletic, is still at best medium sized, with the most notable difference being that he has grown a flowing gaskin that allows him marked elasticity with his hind leg stride.
Veyron capped a very good day for his sire Thorn Park when he won the feature race at Ellerslie on Saturday, the Group Three Eagle Technology Stakes at 1600m. The group one successes last season of his daughter The Party Stand at 2000m and his son Jimmy Choux in the New Zealand Derby, lifted the son of Spinning World into the top bracket of our stallion ranks, but significantly also reiterated the ability of an Australian bred sprinting profiled stallion to leave high class middle distance runners when crossed with the stouter local broodmare gene pool.
Sayidda's distaff was responsible for a number of high class performers throughout thr 1980's and 1990's, headed by the likes of Courtza, O'Reilly, Critic and Our Pompeii, however the years since have been rather lean for this old Waikato Stud family. Not for the first time, Zabeel looks to have re invigorated a branch of a once distinguished family.
Given the manner of Saturday's victory, and coming at just his second career start, the future looks very bright for Ocean Park. This author will not be writing a tongue in cheek article again about a son of Thorn Park needing a horse float to run the Derby distance.
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