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Altenburg turns up trumps in Bangalore Derby
BANGALORE
AT ABOUT the time Polar Falcon was flying the Indian flag at
Kranji in Singapore by winning a Class II sprint there in a smart
time of 1:11.1 seconds, the talk around the Big Stage set for the
Bagpiper Gold Bangalore Derby centred around the dearth of true
stayers. Ironically, that is precisely why the Winter Derby
itself had such a wide look this year. None in the field could be
singled out as a doughty stayer.
When everyone in the field carries a question mark of that sort
the test is all about who survives the final furlong more than
who conquers it. Altenburg turned up trumps in the nick of time
to wrench the race from the clutches of a ghastly outsider in Il
Diablo. The climax had a touch of theatre about it. If at all
there is a sob story it concerns Hello Brother who was dealt a
rather cruel blow by fate just when he had picked himself so very
well in the final stages. A tiring Chevalier came frightfully
close to Hello Brother who shied away. By the time Rakesh
recovered his poise and Hello Brother his momentum it was at
least two heads too late. This is one loss which may make the
connections shudder in disgust everytime the finish is discussed.
Those two heads separated the first three and none were prime
betting propositions which meant that the result was not so
palatable for followers of money which in huge measures was
thrust on Chevalier. The Placerville-Nauka gelding flopped,
unable to raise himself to the demands at crunch time. The
critics were quick to pounce on this no show to suggest that the
gelding was yet to win in Bangalore and all his previous wins had
come on the rather flat Mysore course and too much had been made
of them. Il Diablo was left so loose in the betting that he
returned a 100 to one on the Second Horse Pool and was vital in
ensuring the biggest Trinalla pay out in recent times.
Aslam Kader allowed his exuberance to show the moment he knew he
had nailed Il Diablo and Mark Gallagher in the last stride.
Little did he know at the time that a stride more Hello Brother
would have been all over him. What Aslam needed to reassure
himself that the deft touch of his is still with him was a
rousing finish of this nature. Having pulled the chestnut out of
the fire, he was obviously delighted more out of relief than the
weight of accomplishment. Aslam had reached a stage where
whatever he did appear to come under a microscope including his
choice of mounts. As a topline trainer put it Aslam had never
been under so much pressure to prove himself as he had been in
the last month or two. Altenburg and a day later Allaire have now
boosted Aslam's stocks again.
Those who had seen promise in Altenburg's last win stood to gain.
The Razeen-Try Kola gelding had come on nicely after this win
prompting the rider to privately claim that the Byramji trainee
would be right there in the reckoning. The betting line though
did not buy this theory and Altenburg hovered in the region of
sevens and eights. The victory by Altenburg is a flowing tribute
to the late Major P. K. Mehra who part-owned and bred this well
proportioned gelding. For the Deepak Khaitan silks the victory
meant a back-to-back success, Alchemy having won last year.
When Allocated was drafted in as a final entry at just over Rs 2
lakhs the game plan was obviously to let him set a pace that
would go well with his stable companion Chevalier, who it was
thought needed a truly fast run race. Allocated did his job to
the hilt only that Chevalier couldn't quite come round as Shroff
found to his chagrin when he pressed him for that crucial final
run. It was evident that the pace had gobbled quite a few in the
bunch by the time the field swung in and among the survivors, Il
Diablo looked the part to sustain that lead he had shot into.
Gallagher was making a grand job of it when Aslam smoothly
brought Altenburg. The duel worked out tremendous excitement
before a confident Aslam hauled his mount past Il Diablo and then
twirled his whip hand in celebration. In the melee Hello Brother
had got on to the act with all force and the three-way photo was
inevitable. It turned out to be a disappointing day for Dr.
M.A.M. Ramaswamy's camp. The Oaks winner Fantastic Belle was
undone by the pace and Sendawar failed to stay as well as the
connections wished him to. Stone Ridge and Torres suffered the
same malady imports here normally suffer.
The most weird happenings are when the card looks easy to solve.
A punting population lured by a Jackpot pool swollen to nearly
Rs. 30 lakhs was left high and dry when form horses were pushed
to the background by unbargained outsiders. The pool went
unclaimed.
It would have been beyond the intuitive brilliance of any sane
mind to get the order of Little Pleasure-Altenburg-Concur-Finest
Flare- Alluring Bay right. Of the five, Concur and Alluring Bay
had form support and Altenburg could be passed off as a fancied
outsider. What about Little Pleasure and more shockingly Finest
Flare who had run 11/11 in the last week of December.
On Saturday, Finest Flare performed as if he had been fitted with
a new set of springs in his legs. Like the mysteries of human
mind, it would be interesting to read the equine ones,
particularly of the Finest Flare variety. Since they are mute, we
make do with human translations. What is it that turns them
around. Are the punters not entitled to know how the
professionals explain away such violent (cruel for punters) form
swings. The stewards did well to summon both Irfan Ghatala and
Mrs. Silva Storai but little of substance has come out by way of
a convincing explanation. All that we know is that the Stewards
have accepted the trainer's stand. So that is that.
It in effect means that this is not a case punishable for either
inconsistent running or improved performance. Looking back over
some of the cases of either improved performances or inconsistent
running the Stewards have chosen to crack their whip on, it
defies logic as to why Finest Flare does not figure in that
category. It is gathered that the trainer's contention was that
the going did not suit his ward last time and that the horse was
fitted with a tounge strap this time. Interestingly there is not
much of a difference between the state of the going on December
30 when Finest Flare last ran or Saturday, if the penetrometer
reading is any guide. Is it that the Stewards have no faith in
their own penetrometer readings or is it that this French
acquisition an ornamental piece to show the world that Bangalore
has one too!. Or how else could this theory be bought. If seen in
isolation neither the presence of a tongue strap nor a slight
change in the state of the going can bring about such a
metamorphosis in a horse.
Somehow the hint of a topsy turvy meeting was dropped in the
opener when Darashah-trained Nairn sprinted out of reach to deal
public expectations a huge blow. Rich Crown had been sent out
odds on. This full brother to Running Flame, who is now training
in the United States, left no one in doubt that the distance was
too sharp for him. By the time Rich Crown and Hughes warmed up,
Nairn had stolen a healthy march. The quality of blood came to
the fore when Appu steered the second in demand to a comfortable
victory to signal an impending treble. With the first two
stretching clear the fight for crumbs was won by Tasman who
should live up to his dam's name and bustle along soon enough.
Arristo was looked upon as a good thing and there is no dearth of
good things beat in racing. Arristo was one such. Added to
Arristo running against tough opposition came Aslam's less
forthright approach. Dust On The Bottle travelled wide but well
in the hands of Appu who had the measure of Great Occasion whose
late rally was a notable feature of the race. Arristo may do well
over a slightly longer course.
The battle of two greys was won by Go Honey Go. At one stage it
looked as if Magic Stride would pull it off. Sriram Komandur-
trained Go Honey Go refused to budge as Appu's third leg of a
personal treble went up. The rest were outshone. Flaming Tower
who has a severe problem with his denture showed up a good third.
When two seven year olds, who are both Mysore based, finished
one-two in paradoxically the Mysore Race Club Trophy, the quality
of the Bangalore youngsters in the highest class was put in right
perspective. The draw to a great degree deterred Desert Gold's
bid even as Royal Satin and Arrakis failed miserably against
older opposition. Harish's happy tidings this season continued as
he coaxed Little Pleasure to the kind of victory that brings
graveyard silence to the stands. At little over 40 to one the
sight of the Abdullah trainee swamping the opposition was no
pleasurable one for followers of form. Sensational News made the
finish itself one such and the ignominy for the youngsters was
complete. D.Patel's handling of Silver Patriarch had an air of
aloofness about it.
Concur duly built on his last run promise though the connections
were rather lucky in extracting a price that looked too generous,
given the strength of the opposition. Given a free rein by
Dickie, the Abdullah- trainee powered clear of a laboured
Priceless Ally. Well fancied Almost Heaven was never a force.
Gush of money on Classic Liason knocked the Byramji trainee as a
prime fancy though the mare had no form to back up as such. A
race of several twists and turns was finally won by Alluring Bay
who withstood Guruprasad's extravagant use of the whip and a
sunny challenge by Forest Emperor who was shaping like Lynch's
first winner in Bangalore. The placings would have altered if Md.
Hesnain had alerted Sqeeze to the task of catching the front
runners up a bit early. Classic Liason finished in the ruck.
H. S. MANJUNATH
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