Stakes target for progressive Nereus
Savabeel’s exciting son Nereus produced a flawless dress rehearsal performance at Trentham on Saturday afternoon for an upcoming black-type assignment.
The four-year-old had been freshened since finishing runner-up in the Remutaka Classic over 2100 metres on the track in January and successfully dropped back to a mile on his return under 60kg.
“He’s a pretty serious horse this guy and he’s got the pedigree, the temperament and just does enough to win,” co-trainer Shaune Ritchie said.
“He’ll get in the Hawke’s Bay Cup (Listed, 2200m) with a light weight, that’s in four weeks’ time so he’ll go straight into it.”
Bred and raced by Waikato Stud, Nereus dropped to the back of the field and came with a powerful finish in the run home to post his fourth win from seven starts and gave the runner-up 6kg in the process.
“He’s a lovely horse and has got a very good amount of ability,” rider Michael McNab said.
“I had a lot of confidence in him, he switched off and when I brought him to the outside he was really good.”
Nereus is a brother to the two-time Group 1 winner Savvy Coup with their dam the Pins mare Eudora, who is in foal to Super Seth.
She is a sister to the Group winners Legless Veuve and Tootsie, dam of the three-time Group 2 winner and sire Ocean Emperor and the mother of Waikato Stud’s G1 Flight Stakes winner Never Been Kissed.
The other star member of this family is the four-time elite level winner Probabeel.
The corner with Garry Chittick
It is said “One door closes another opens“, the demise of racing in Singapore appears to have injected more enthusiasm in Malaysia. The time I have been in the industry covers many ebbs and flows, …
Read MoreFarm yarns: Mark Chittick
There are under ten left to foal and we’re looking forward to the end of that after kicking off in August.
The breeding shed is starting to get a bit patchy now as we come towards the end of the breeding season down here. That has gone extremely well throughout the whole season and we’re well and truly past the 600 individual mares now, and the stallions have gone extremely well as have the team there.
Read More