Tuesday, May 20, 2014
Kawasaki Capers
Had a wonderful morning at the Chiba Thoroughbred Sale yesterday, and then went on to Kawasaki to watch Kota Motohashi in action with Phosphorus. The big fella travels well and looked good in the paddock, all tightened up (7kg lighter) and in superb condition thanks to the magnificent team looking after him. When Kota came onto the track, the pair were still an excellent prospect for victory, despite being third favourites, and a false start by another horse did nothing to change that opinion thanks to a new technique at calming him down in the gates. When the gates finally did open, Kota found himself in the middle of the field, but he kept moving up nicely and an excellent passing manoeuvre on the inside of the third corner set him up nicely. The leading horse was ultimately too strong on the day, though, having had an easy run from start to finish, and we finished a gallant second. It was another really pleasing run, however, especially knowing that once again, Phosphorus hardly broke a sweat and was breathing easily within minutes of finishing - amazing things will come from this horse, mark my words. He's down to race at the next Funabashi meeting, which is in the middle of June. I'm already looking forward to it!
Kalliopeia
As noted in the last entry, I figured it was better to use those points up rather than prolong the Carrot Club agony beyond absolute necessity, so today Kalliopeia has joined the names at the foot of the page. I don't think she has any chance whatsoever, but she's beautiful and her cost was virtually covered by the points I'd built up along the way.
So who is Kalliopeia? Well, she's a filly by Meisho Samson, who we've written about in the Miracle Rouge profile, with Castalia as the dam. This means she's a Sadler's Wells cross, as Castalia boasts Sunday Silence as her father and Catalyst (a combination of Sadler's Wells and Welsh Love blood) as her mother. As you know, I love Sadler's Wells, and the Sunday Silence element brings in the Hail To Reason DNA that I treasure so much, too. Catalyst won first time out and did very little (except one third place) afterwards, but this horse is purely for fun - something to support simply because she's so pretty and the price was right. She is based at the Takashi Kanari stables within the Miho Training Centre.
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Courtesy Carrot Club |
Saturday, May 17, 2014
Just When You Think...
Just when you think it can't get any worse, it does! This time, Mistoffelees has let me down badly. And I mean badly. Last! And not only last, but miles off the pace (almost three seconds). I have some points in Carrot Club that I shall use on the last of this year's crop, as I can exit the bloody organization and JRA that much sooner if I don't wait until the next catalogue to use them up...
Today's Also-Rans
Once again, Carrot Club came up with a magnificent catalogue of failures. From four runners, only Irish Harp performed anywhere near its expected level, and despite mentions of a possible victory in the pre-race reports and starting third favourite, a fourth place (two lengths down) was the best she could pick up. At the end of a long day, though, that seemed like a wonderful achievement!
Belle Plage was tenth, and no-one knows why, which means that the typical Carrot downhill trend has started with that horse now - one of the few real hopes of the 2011 crop. At least until today, and now it's as good as finished, like all the others from that year.
With the four-year olds, it was even worse, and you wouldn't have thought that was possible. The first shock: Harmony Fair. Oh, hold on, her 12th place wasn't a shock really, because this horse hates dirt - a fact that was established early on in no uncertain terms, then confirmed. For a trainer to then try it again is pathetic. There may only be 1000m turf races available, and that may not suit her perfectly, but it's a lot better than making the horse hate going to a track before the gate even opens and entering it in a race you know with absolute certainty she'll flop in. Ultimately, not only does it defy logic, highlighting the lack of JRA races that I've mentioned in the past, and the general low level of JRA trainer ability, which I've also mentioned before. There should be no entry until the right race comes along, or you may as well retire the thing now as unsuitable and save Carrot Club members some money.
Poor Miracle Rouge was the next disaster. She hates long distance travel, and while Niigata may have been pegged as her limit, the last time she was there in August, she was a massive 22kg lighter! The start was OK, but the jockey dropped behind way too much, making the good start irrelevant, then held her back too long and left himself in a dreadful position even if there had been anything in the tank - it was his fault for putting the horse where he did, and then the crap really hit the fan as she cruised in in 11th. It was a total waste of an entry. Again. From what I saw, if she lost 10kg and raced in two weeks time with Uchida-san on her back, she might have a chance. Otherwise, please retire her, too, so I can invest in an enterprise more deserving of my support.
I notice Classic Curl has put some pennies in the coffers by retiring before racing, and let's hope Glint Moment does the same, because it's way too late in the season to start a campaign...
Belle Plage was tenth, and no-one knows why, which means that the typical Carrot downhill trend has started with that horse now - one of the few real hopes of the 2011 crop. At least until today, and now it's as good as finished, like all the others from that year.
With the four-year olds, it was even worse, and you wouldn't have thought that was possible. The first shock: Harmony Fair. Oh, hold on, her 12th place wasn't a shock really, because this horse hates dirt - a fact that was established early on in no uncertain terms, then confirmed. For a trainer to then try it again is pathetic. There may only be 1000m turf races available, and that may not suit her perfectly, but it's a lot better than making the horse hate going to a track before the gate even opens and entering it in a race you know with absolute certainty she'll flop in. Ultimately, not only does it defy logic, highlighting the lack of JRA races that I've mentioned in the past, and the general low level of JRA trainer ability, which I've also mentioned before. There should be no entry until the right race comes along, or you may as well retire the thing now as unsuitable and save Carrot Club members some money.
Poor Miracle Rouge was the next disaster. She hates long distance travel, and while Niigata may have been pegged as her limit, the last time she was there in August, she was a massive 22kg lighter! The start was OK, but the jockey dropped behind way too much, making the good start irrelevant, then held her back too long and left himself in a dreadful position even if there had been anything in the tank - it was his fault for putting the horse where he did, and then the crap really hit the fan as she cruised in in 11th. It was a total waste of an entry. Again. From what I saw, if she lost 10kg and raced in two weeks time with Uchida-san on her back, she might have a chance. Otherwise, please retire her, too, so I can invest in an enterprise more deserving of my support.
I notice Classic Curl has put some pennies in the coffers by retiring before racing, and let's hope Glint Moment does the same, because it's way too late in the season to start a campaign...
Thursday, May 15, 2014
Weekend Warriors
We've got five runners over the weekend: On the 17th, Irish Harp is in the opener at Kyoto (1400m dirt) with Yuichi Fukunaga in the saddle, and Belle Plage is in Tokyo with Yutaka Yoshida in the 4R, also 1400m over dirt. At Niigata, Harmony Fair tackles the 1200m dirt race before Miracle Rouge finishes off the meeting with Makoto Sugihara in the 1800m turf 12R. On the next day at Niigata, Mistoffelees is out with Yukito Ishikawa again, competing in the 9R and looking for revenge for that less than brilliant outing the last time they paired up.
Looking further ahead, Single Cask is being lined up for Niigata on the 24th in a 1200m dirt race for young jockeys only, and Dinner Bell should be out on the same day at the same venue. That run will almost certainly seal her fate - Mephisto Waltz has already been retired, and if Dinner Bell can't pick up the pace, she will doubtless be joining him. Not long after, on the 1st June, Divine Daughter will line up for the 1300m dirt race at Tokyo-Fuchu, but might tackle Niigata in the week before if she looks good.
On the NAR front, Phosphorus will run at Kawasaki on the 19th May in the 1500m 4R, while plans are afoot to get Monsoon Trough out and about as soon as possible. As things stand, a debut for the end of June or early July is being mooted.
Looking further ahead, Single Cask is being lined up for Niigata on the 24th in a 1200m dirt race for young jockeys only, and Dinner Bell should be out on the same day at the same venue. That run will almost certainly seal her fate - Mephisto Waltz has already been retired, and if Dinner Bell can't pick up the pace, she will doubtless be joining him. Not long after, on the 1st June, Divine Daughter will line up for the 1300m dirt race at Tokyo-Fuchu, but might tackle Niigata in the week before if she looks good.
On the NAR front, Phosphorus will run at Kawasaki on the 19th May in the 1500m 4R, while plans are afoot to get Monsoon Trough out and about as soon as possible. As things stand, a debut for the end of June or early July is being mooted.
Monday, May 12, 2014
River-Chan Second
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Courtesy Neil Stuart |
Sunday, May 11, 2014
Aussie Update
Raining Dollars had another trial race (jump out) last week, and everyone was happy with his run - he shows real potential, and is a willing horse eager to please. He's pulled a muscle during the race, reacting to a track crossing that made him jump a bit, but it's nothing serious by any means. However, being the caring trainer she is, Jo Hassett is giving him a week or so off to let things mend naturally, and then his training programme can be stepped up to get him race-ready. Fun times ahead...
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