Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Noel Callow beats 100 winners record in Singapore …

Wednesday, November 14th, 2007

Jason Hickson from Racing and Sports talks to Callow, who on Sunday created history when he rode his 100th winner of the season in Singapore on Royal Crown.

Listen to the interview here

http://www.racingandsports.com.au/racing/rsnewsart.asp?NID=116271

Screen shots of the winning chronology :

Home turn

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Overtaking the front runner
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History created ! - 100 winners.
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For race video, click here to visit Singapore Turf Club website :
RACE 5: GRADUATION - 1600M COURSE A (SC) (TURF TRACK)

Congratulations ! and well done.

Saimee hits 1,000th win in Malaysia

Tuesday, November 6th, 2007

Congratulations …..

Top jockey Saimee Jumaat reached a career 1,000-win milestone on Sunday in Kuala Lumpur when the well-backed Grisham crossed the line first in Race 5.

Saimee, who returned from a one-year disqualification in September, has been in rattling form on both sides of the Causeway. He has already notched up 16 wins at Kranji with his latest haul being a treble on Friday night.

After that meeting, the 35-year-old Singaporean headed up to Kuala Lumpur just three wins short of the tonne on the Malayan Racing Association (MRA) circuit. He bagged a winner (Toll The Bell) on Saturday, followed by a treble (he also scored on Medicine Man and Zhen Dao) on Sunday.

Source : Singapore Turf Club

Highest turnover in Horse Racing Industry

Monday, October 1st, 2007

Another interesting facts to share with you …

Do you know which country got the highest betting turnover in the horse racing industry ?

Here is the chart …

Country Turnover (Euros)
Japan 23,830,665,828
Great Britain 16,058,591,924
USA 12,847,355,325
France 7,771,104,627
Australia 6,378,023,080
Hong Kong 5,890,163,317
   

Source : IFHA

Do you know where Malaysia and Singapore stands … ?

It ranked #12 at 790,046,424 turnover.

I am not sure what’s the futher breakdown between 2 countries. Just suspect Singapore may contributes higher.

Selangor Meeting - 2007/06/23 and 2007/06/24

Thursday, June 28th, 2007

I hope you “survived” last week KL meeting …

It is an interesting outing for me.

Make some small coins but I am happy as long as I am on the positive side.

Here are some of the interesting stats I gathered.

Before that let me clarify some of my own terminology

Sprint Races are 1200, 1300, 1400
Outsiders, I just classify as payout > RM 40
Since this is Malaysia racing, I will use RM and if it is Singapore racing, I will use SG $.

Both days, there are 14 sprint races and 9 races over a mile.

In the sprint races, 6 out of 14 races are won by horses that pay over RM 40.

Combining first, second and third placing for the sprint races, 25 out of 42 ( 3 placing x 14 races ) on board are outsiders.

It is about 60%.

So, if you are betting on favourite like those paying less than RM 20 in sprint races, you are out of luck.

You will be on losing end.

The reason why this happen is very simple … my horse racing sifu from Singapore ( Mr G ) guided me on this during race day.

Told me, don’t look at those donkeys in Class 5. Look for the younger generation.

They are not proven and possibly steal the show.

and he is RIGHT !

For sprint races, here are the count of horses that are on board.

3yo = 13 ( 5 horses won )
4yo = 7 ( 2 horses won )
5yo = 13 ( 5 horses won )
6yo = 4 ( 1 horse won )
7yo = 4 ( 1 horse won )
9yo = 1

Now, you flip through your race card and look for sprint races.

Tell me, is it easier to pick a 3 year old or 5 year old ?

I guess you can easily count how many entries are there for 3 yo.

It is not much …

Feel free to comment and share your thoughts …

Global Racing 2007-06-04 by Gary Knight

Wednesday, June 6th, 2007

There is no other way to describe Viva Pataca’s absolute demolition of Vengeance Of Rain in today’s Gr 1 Champions and Chater Cup (2400 metres) at Shatin in Hong Kong bar simply amazing.

The Stanley Ho owned galloper was brilliant on his way to a crushing four lengths defeat of Dubai victor Vengeance Of Rain in a win that had all the pundits shaking their heads with disbelief.

Not that the win was unexpected - after all last year Viva Pataca captured both the Hong Kong Derby and the Champions and Chater Cup - and he did beat Vengeance Of Rain in the QEII Cup at his last outing.

It was the manner in which he did it and the time he ran which astonished all - even no doubts - his most ardent admirer, trainer, Australian John Moore.

The world saw what Vengeance Of Rain is capable of in Dubai. He is no slouch. Yet the train of thought was he was a little underdone after the trip from Dubai and that is why he succumbed to Viva Pataca in the QEII Cup and the Hong Kong punters rallied to him and sent him off a warm 1/2 favourite at the off. Viva Patace had always been a firm second favourite in what was regarded as a match race and he firmed late in the betting to jump at 6/4 second favourite.

But today Vengeance Of Rain was beaten fair and square by a horse who now deserves his chance on the international stage. The son of Marju was given a lovely run in fourth place off a hot speed set by Saturn. Champion Irish jockey Mick Kinnane followed Vengeance of Rain everywhere he went and Viva Pataca simply cruised past the odds on favourite and with Kinnane merely waving the whip at him in the final 200 metres he streaked clear to win by an ever widening margin.

Kinnane was probably thankful he did not have to work too hard as he spent all night on the plane after riding in yesterday’s English Derby to fly to Hong Kong to renew his association with Viva Pataca - and keep his record at 100% on the horse - three rides - all in Gr 1 races and three wins.

In winning Viva Pataca smashed the track record held by John Hammond’s smart British stayer Red Bishop - set at one of the first international race meetings in 1994.

Moore now plans to bring Viva Pataca to Australia to contest the Cox Plate - and if travels well and arrives in the same form he was in today - lookout - he will be right in the finish.

* * * *

The connections of Daiwa Major had $1.8m (AUD) reasons to celebrate after that galloper won the Gr 1 Yosuda Kinnen in Tokyo today - but I will bet they were also having a thought about what might have been.

The Yosuda Kinnen is the fourth leg of the Asian Mile Challenge - which incorporates the Hong Kong Mile, the Futurity Stakes at Caulfield in Australia and the Dubai Duty Free at the World Cup meeting and any horse that can win two of the four legs gets a $1m US bonus.

Daiwa Major was absolutely luckless in Dubai and should have been right in the mix and today he proved when the luck went his way that he is yet another serious racehorse to emerge from the Land Of The Rising Sun.

Unlike last year when Hong Kong’s Bullish Luck took out the Yosuda Kinnen and the bonus, the Hong Kong raiders today were outpointed and all four were disappointing.

* * * *

The Brett Prebble - Douglas Whyte show rolled on again at Shatin today with Whyte landing three winners to Prebble’s one and he has now increased his premiership lead to four.

Happy Valley will be packed to the rafters on Wednesday night as the two again go head to head with eight meetings of the season remaining.

* * * *

As one continues to watch the racing in Hong Kong both from having been there several times and from afar one can only wonder at just what the former British Colony has achieved in racing a very short space of time.

Don’t forget Hong Kong only began professional racing in 1970. Prior to that 25 meetings per year were conducted on an amateur basis.

In those days Happy Valley was the only racecourse and the thought of a world class set up like Shatin was merely a pipe dream. I can recall when Aussie jockeys like Peter Miers, Brian Foy, Billy Burnett and others were among the first intake of professionals into Hong Kong.

From those days it has progressed at such a rapid rate - only Singapore has made anywhere near the leaps in achievement that Hong Kong has - and it now has a product that is absolutely world class in all facets of its industry.

Racing in Hong Kong is theatre - every race is worth massive money and totalisator pools are huge by any standards anywhere in the world.

The stars in the game are exactly that - superstars.

Global Racing by Gary Knight : 29 April 2007

Wednesday, May 2nd, 2007

Well travelled international Australian jockey Aaron “Spicky” Spiteri is set to become one of the first noteworthy Australian jockeys for many years to head to India to ride.

Spiteri who has been a journeyman throughout his career - and a very capable jockey has interspersed his Australian career with regular stints in Asia - riding many feature race winners in both Singapore and Malaysia.

Spiteri has just finished his riding stint in Singapore where his did a lot of riding for successful trainers Laurie Laxon and John Meagher and he had been back in Australia for a couple of weeks when the opportunity arose for him to take up a position as stable jockey for one of India’s leading stables.

Many years ago Aussie jockeys such as brothers Bill and Reg Cook, Edgar Britt, Alf Smith were among the leading riders in India but the sub-continent has not attracted Australian riders for many years.

Irish jockey Niall McCullough is one who spends a great deal of the Irish off-season riding in India with good success and Spiteri will be a worthy competitor for the likes of Mallesh Narredu and Prakesh - India’s leading riders.

* * * *

The Aussies and Kiwis again had a good night at the fibresand meeting at Kranji in Singapore on Friday night.

Malaysian jockey Sivan took the riding honours with a winning treble and Aussie jockey Noel Callow landed a winning double while compatriot Ronnie Stewart landed a winner and Kiwi Andrew Calder also rode a winner.

Aussie trainers Brian Dean, Stephen Burridge, John Meagher and Don Baertschiger all trained winners on the nine race card and Kiwis Laurie Laxon and Bruce Marsh also had a winner each.

Singapore Turf Club … is down ?

Saturday, April 7th, 2007

Oops … no racing videos for me today.

I think their website down …

The time now is : 21:53 GMT +8

Hope they can up tomorrow, I want to watch how FONDA win the race.

Hmm, not able to upload pictures to my website. PERMISSION DENIED ?
I can’t show you the STC website.

Global Racing by Gary Knight - 31 March 2007

Wednesday, April 4th, 2007

Wow what a night of just sensational racing, great jockeys, terrific horses and very few hard luck stories.

There can be little doubt that the Dubai annual “splurge fest” can lay unfettered claim to the world’s most international meeting and this morning (our time) was no exception.

The win of Aseatic Boy for South African trainer Mike De Koeck and champion rider Weichong Marwing in the Gr 2 UAE Derby was devastating - as there can be little doubt that the Maktoum horses were going to find out if there was any chink in his armour the way they went out hard and kept him wide for most of the trip. Eu Tambem and Folk, the horses thought as the most likely dangers to Aseatic Boy went woefully and never looked likely to figure.

Racing three and four deep for the entire trip, Aseatic Boy just dropped into overdrive when Marwing asked him to extend and he simply blew them away with a devsastating turn of foot.

He is undoubtedly a star horse on dirt and now that De Koeck has announced he will be heading to Europe with the horse - it will be interesting to see if he can reproduce his dirt form on turf.

The Golden Shaheen was won by Kelly’s Landing - a monster of a horse from the USA trained by Eddie Kenneally and ridden by Frankie Dettori. It would not be a World Cup meet in Dubai without Frankie winning at least one feature and last night was surprisingly his first win in the sprint. Kenneally said prior to the race that the low draw and the straight track would suit Kelly’s Landing and that proved to be the case. Boom South African National Colour lost her footing at the start and was slow by two lengths and that was the end of the chances.

Hong Kong will still be trembling after the win of Vengeance Of Rain in the Golden Shaheen (2400 metres) at Gr 1 level. Bred in New Zealand the son of Zabeel from the former Paul Perry trained Danehill mare Danelagh, Vengeance Of Rain was sensational and was aiden by a superb ride by the Seychelles-born South African jockey Anthony Delpech.

Vengeance Of Rain was raced in Australia by leviathan owner Lloyd Williams (where he raced as Subscribe) before being sold to a syndicate in Hong Kong headed up by Winston Chow.

The win was the first for a Hong Kong trained horse at the World Cup meeting and South African trainer David Ferraris has done a wonderful job to get the horse back to his best form after a series of problems last year.

Vengeance Of Rain may now be headed to Australia for the Spring carnival here in Melbourne and that would add some real flavour to the big meetings. He is undoubtedly now up there with Fairy King Prawn, Indigenous, River Verdon and Silent Witness as Hong Kong’s best ever horses.

The win will be huge in Hong Kong. They have a racing product that is world class and to now they can stand up and be counted as an international racing country with horses of the highest standard - the result will mean so much to them.

The Japanese galloper Admire Moon was too good in the Gr 1 Dubai Duty Free Turf over 1770 metres. Ridden by Japanese superstar Yutaka Take he had a gun run in fourth and fifth throughout the race and let down very quickly when Take pressed the button 300 metres from home.

The Aussie rep, Pompeii Ruler raced very fresh and keen and was only fair in finishing eighth.

They say you can save the best for last and Invasor - wow - he was just great and it is easy to see why 19 year old Fernando Jara is called the “ice boy” and their win in the World Cup (Gr 1) 2000 metres - was just sensational.

In a race that urned out to be anything by the much hyped match between Invasor and Discreet Cat - Jara rode Invasor forward from the jump and settled outside Kent Desormeaux and Premium Tap who took up the running.

The two cleared away from the top of the Nad Al Sheba straight and Premium Tap was brave giving Invasor a real race till just inside the 200 metres mark when the outstanding Uruguayan started to draw clear.

Hong Kong’s Bullish Luck, trained by Tony Cruz and ridden by Brett Prebble, raced himself through the roof with his distant third at his first ever start on dirt.

Most thought there was something amiss with Discreet Cat with his inglorious last in the event but according to Saeed Bin Suroor (his trainer) the horse pulled up fine and will be brought back to races in Europe over a mile.

As the dust settled in the desert many would be wondering just how big this meeting can get in the future as on Friday Sheikh Mohammed outlined plans for the construction of a mew racing complex in Dubai - Meydan - which will be a city in itself with a 300 metres long grandstand and the World Cup will be staged at the new venue in 2010.

He also pledged that the prozemoney for the World Cup in 2010 will be “at least” 10m (US) and said that the prizemoney for all other races would be increased.

Regards,
Gary

Getting Lazier …

Monday, March 26th, 2007

I am just getting lazier to update this blog. Nothing really interesting in the racing scene lately.

Winners are easy to pick for Malaysia races. Just follow the market and the favourite will win.

Big owners got money to buy good young horse and race against “old horse” which not able to perform already. Maybe after giving the “lau beh” some tongkat ali can still steal a race or two.

Keep following those youngters and we will not be too far out.

GlobalRacing : 10 Jan 2007 by Gary Knight

Wednesday, January 10th, 2007

Aussie trainer John Meagher and his super-talented apprentice Adam Fiezan took the feature sprint at today’s Kranji meeting in Singapore, with smart galloper Arenti – who brought his winning tally to 9 wins from 12 starts with the win.

Meagher has had several top flight apprentices in his care in Australia including Brett Prebble (now hugely successful in Hong Kong) and Aaron Spiteri (who is riding in Singapore) but Fiezan is equal to any of them at a comparative stages of their careers and his ability is clearly evident by his master’s faith in putting him on Arenti in the feature race.

Despite being slowly away, Fiezan did not panic and gradually wound his way through the field on Arenti to have him within striking distance of the leaders on the final turn where he brought him to the outside to run down Zinly (Benny Woodworth) and Meagher’s other runner, Lim’s Passion (Terry Ong) to win decisively.

It was the second leg of a winning double for Meagher and Fiezan who had earlier scored with Spec Prince.

* * * *

Top flight Aussie jockey Noel Callow has hit the ground running in Singapore – winning today on Royal Smile for Kiwi trainer Laurie Laxon – the win being Callow’s third in as many meetings since his arrival in Singapore.

Callow and former star Australian apprentice, Japanese boy Joe Fuji, commenced riding in Singapore last Monday and both rode a winner on their opening meeting.

* * * *

Mark Ewe, as I predicted recently, has not taken long to get into stride in Singapore either – and the Malaysian boy who rode many winners in Perth in recent months before returning to ride in Singapore, rode a winner today at Kranji on board the Charles Leck trained Patience Reward.

Aussie jockey Ronnie Stewart also had a winning double at the meeting, scoring on Cheyenne Dancer for S. Gray and Welcome Change for fellow Aussie, trainer Len Treloar.

Victorian trainer Brian Dean also led in a double at today’s meeting Victory Star and Sunshine Touch, both ridden by Panamanian jockey and long term Asian resident, Oscar Chavez.

My favourite South East Asian jockey Benny Woodworth rounded out today’s card with a win in the last on Destiny’s Day.