
Baroot Is Back Tonight
Mike de Kock has a trio of runners in this evening’s ninth and penultimate meeting of the 2018 Dubai World Cup Carnival at Meydan
Mike de Kock has a trio of runners in this evening’s ninth and penultimate meeting of the 2018 Dubai World Cup Carnival at Meydan
The Dubai World Cup Carnival got off to a good start on Thursday, 11 January 2018 with a promising showing from SA’s 2015 Cape Guineas winner, Noah From Goa
Trainer Mike de Kock has entered the home straight in the chase to his 3000 winner milestone
Sandown Stud’s resident sire Ashaawes had an eye catching winner in Dubai on Thursday, when the Oldlands Stud bred Sanshaawes won the District One Trophy Handicap over 2000m
Olivier Doleuze says “There’s no pressure on me or the horse. Nobody’s watching us. He will enjoy the little cut in the track and the distance is no problem so he might surprise a few people.”
Less than 2 hours till this year’s HK$14 million Audemars Piguet QEII Cup. The event has proved a profitable one for Mike de Kock who saddled two previous winners in Iridescence and Archipenko. He fields a strong double hander Vercingetorix and Sanshaawes. Will he lift the Cup a third time?
Injury sidelines Akeed Mofeed for the Audmars Piguet QEII Cup, the South African contingent settles in and ‘Mauritian Magician’ Karis Teetan gets a surprise call-up
Vercingrtorix and his stable mate Sanshaawes have arrived in Hong Kong, ahead of their participation in the $HK14-million Audemars Piquet QEII Cup over 2000m this Sunday, 27 April.
All the big names will line up in Hong Kong on Sunday April 27
2014 sees the 19th renewal of Dubai World Cup and the big day has finally arrived. Pat Cummings discusses the card and shares his thoughts and selections.
Trainers give us their thoughts for the 19th running of the Dubai World Cup
South African horseracing falls under the Asian Racing Federation and the Graded status of races is decided by the Asian Pattern Committee (APC)
Explained – the circumstances behind the decision by the connections of the dual Grade 1- winning sophomore One Stripe to ‘bypass’ the R1,5 million SplashOut Gr1 Cape Derby on 22 February in favour of a likely final run on South African soil in the non-black type Big Cap
With the Aga Khan’s breeding and racing programme very much geared towards the classics, it can be argued that South Africa, where speed, rather than stamina is the hallmark of its racing programme, has failed to capitalise on the excellence of especially its female families
Rob Haswell tells that he has had horses trained by Nathan Kotzen for more than twenty years and pulls us up for our Umthombothi Stakes ‘flop’