Queen Supreme’s Flat Run

'Not making excuses' - champion trainer

Mike de Kock has commented on his talented filly Queen Supreme’s disappointing run in Saturday’s Gr1 Bidvest Majorca Stakes over 1600m at Kenilworth.

She started 17-10 favourite following her excellent Paddock Stakes win on 11 January, but faded out to finish over 10 lengths behind Clouds Unfold.

Queen Supreme seen winning the Paddock Stakes (Pic – Chase Liebenberg)

De Kock said: “This was a flat run from her, below best as we’ve seen too from other runners raiding Cape Town from Johannesburg – those who raid, run, stay in the Cape for a few weeks and then race again. We’ve seen how these runners flatten out.

“This unfortunately is what we’ve had to deal with. Horses are taken out of their comfort zones and they have to train on tracks and in stables that are foreign to them and can become susceptible to bugs and strains they haven’t been exposed to before.

“They undergo physiological changes having to work on tracks they haven’t worked on before. We saw examples last weekend of horses that came out of quarantine in Johannesburg, out of their comfort zones, and ran well below their ability.

“We have been doing it on the back foot all the time from Johannesburg, and that is unfortunate. I don’t see any trainers out of Cape Town, racing in Gauteng, staying on and racing again three or four weeks later. I don’t see that ever happening and if it did, they’ll be subject to the same with their horses.

“I’m not trying to make excuses, but the African Horse Sickness issue and the quarantine regulations have made things very difficult for us, running out of quarantine in Johannesburg is very hard – the horses’ normal routines have to be changed two or three weeks before their runs and they are taken from their comfort zones.

“There is a human element involved too. When travelling with runners we have to move our staff between centres, take them away from their homes and families. Our time is divided as trainers and it’s an extremely costly exercise moving horses from one centre to another.”

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