
Work is all done, Starlight Glimmer is now ready to shine
Hence, the training track at Sungai Besi on the morning of Aug 13 did not resemble a speedway.
Indeed, cantering and some trotting seemed to be the order of the day.
However, there were exceptions and early morning risers at trackside were treated to some fast work by a handful of runners.
They were admittedly not lung-busting sprints down the 600m of the Selangor Turf Club's turf track.
But Starlight Glimmer, Prince Lonhro, Red Sky and Written Towin provided trackwatchers with plenty to toss about when having their morning coffee.
Of the quartet, Starlight Glimmer was the swiftest of the lot.
Down to contest the sixth race at Kuala Lumpur on Aug 17, he ran the short and sharp trip in 38sec.
From the stables of Siva Kumar, the Zacinto five-year-old gets into the action on the back of grand effort on Aug 2 when, as the third pick in that 1,020m contest, he was beaten into second spot by Smart One.
Had the places been switched, Starlight Glimmer would have notched up his fifth win.
Alas, it was not to be.
But there is still loads of racing left in those legs of his and Siva will be hoping all things fall into place at the assignment coming up.
Siva seems to have found a good race for his runner in the Class 4B (1,150m) slated as Race 6.
Track and trip should suit and, having drawn the inside barrier No. 2, Starlight Glimmer should be off and running - leaving the others to do the catching.
The next horse to catch the eye was Prince Lonhro who tossed in a 600m gallop in 38.2sec.
Set to take on Class 4 rivals in Race 7, he beat just one home in that last start on Aug 3.
On that day, when sent off as the third pick in that 12-horse affair, the Lonhro six-year-old was obliged to race wide throughout the race and, to compound matters, he was "inconvenienced" by another runner at the 950m mark.
It took the wind out of his sails and cost him any chance of finishing in the money. He deserves another chance.
We know Prince Lonhro is not without ability. After all, he has won twice for Nick Selvan - and it could have been a third on July 12.
However, it was not to be.
He was beaten into second spot by Super Posh.
Again, he did not have the smoothest of runs and just when he was fashioning a hit on the leader at the 300m mark, he was carried out and lost some ground.
So, keep the faith. Prince Lonhro can deliver.
As for Red Sky, he ran the 600m in an easy 40.8sec after a spot of cantering. The unraced gelding looks to be in a good place right now.
However, in that Restricted Maiden race (Race 4), he comes up against some really nippy newcomers who will be out there wanting to prove a thing or two.
One, in particular, stands out, Mega Skye.
He has so far been awesome at the trials - winning his last two hit-outs rather impressively.
However, Red Sky - who is trained by Ooi Chin Chin - will have first-hand knowledge of what and who he is up against.
He did stumble into Mega Skye at the trials on Aug 5, but did his best work late to finish a gallant second.
A three-year-old Australian-bred by Capitalist, Red Sky has, to date, had two trials but the job coming up on Aug 17 will be the acid test.
Ooi has entered a squad of just four runners for the meeting coming up and Red Sky could be the one to brighten his day.
Then, from the training track, we had Written Towin.
He ran the 600m in 41sec, as his last finishing touch to his next start in Race 2, a Class 5A over 1,275m.
The Written By five-year-old has scored only once in 20 starts, back on Oct 28, 2023 when under the tutorship of Shane Baertschiger at Kranji.
He had his first start for Selvan on Dec 28 and, since then, the best he could produce were two second-place finishes in 10 starts, all at Sungai Besi.
Come Aug 17, he will be having his third start in Class 5. Written Towin has kept slipping down the handicaps and that category may well be where he regains his will to win again.
brian@sph.com.sg

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New Paper
a day ago
- New Paper
Work is all done, Starlight Glimmer is now ready to shine
With 12 races coming up on Aug 17, the majority of the runners should have completed their preparation and would need just light work to keep them on their toes. Hence, the training track at Sungai Besi on the morning of Aug 13 did not resemble a speedway. Indeed, cantering and some trotting seemed to be the order of the day. However, there were exceptions and early morning risers at trackside were treated to some fast work by a handful of runners. They were admittedly not lung-busting sprints down the 600m of the Selangor Turf Club's turf track. But Starlight Glimmer, Prince Lonhro, Red Sky and Written Towin provided trackwatchers with plenty to toss about when having their morning coffee. Of the quartet, Starlight Glimmer was the swiftest of the lot. Down to contest the sixth race at Kuala Lumpur on Aug 17, he ran the short and sharp trip in 38sec. From the stables of Siva Kumar, the Zacinto five-year-old gets into the action on the back of grand effort on Aug 2 when, as the third pick in that 1,020m contest, he was beaten into second spot by Smart One. Had the places been switched, Starlight Glimmer would have notched up his fifth win. Alas, it was not to be. But there is still loads of racing left in those legs of his and Siva will be hoping all things fall into place at the assignment coming up. Siva seems to have found a good race for his runner in the Class 4B (1,150m) slated as Race 6. Track and trip should suit and, having drawn the inside barrier No. 2, Starlight Glimmer should be off and running - leaving the others to do the catching. The next horse to catch the eye was Prince Lonhro who tossed in a 600m gallop in 38.2sec. Set to take on Class 4 rivals in Race 7, he beat just one home in that last start on Aug 3. On that day, when sent off as the third pick in that 12-horse affair, the Lonhro six-year-old was obliged to race wide throughout the race and, to compound matters, he was "inconvenienced" by another runner at the 950m mark. It took the wind out of his sails and cost him any chance of finishing in the money. He deserves another chance. We know Prince Lonhro is not without ability. After all, he has won twice for Nick Selvan - and it could have been a third on July 12. However, it was not to be. He was beaten into second spot by Super Posh. Again, he did not have the smoothest of runs and just when he was fashioning a hit on the leader at the 300m mark, he was carried out and lost some ground. So, keep the faith. Prince Lonhro can deliver. As for Red Sky, he ran the 600m in an easy 40.8sec after a spot of cantering. The unraced gelding looks to be in a good place right now. However, in that Restricted Maiden race (Race 4), he comes up against some really nippy newcomers who will be out there wanting to prove a thing or two. One, in particular, stands out, Mega Skye. He has so far been awesome at the trials - winning his last two hit-outs rather impressively. However, Red Sky - who is trained by Ooi Chin Chin - will have first-hand knowledge of what and who he is up against. He did stumble into Mega Skye at the trials on Aug 5, but did his best work late to finish a gallant second. A three-year-old Australian-bred by Capitalist, Red Sky has, to date, had two trials but the job coming up on Aug 17 will be the acid test. Ooi has entered a squad of just four runners for the meeting coming up and Red Sky could be the one to brighten his day. Then, from the training track, we had Written Towin. He ran the 600m in 41sec, as his last finishing touch to his next start in Race 2, a Class 5A over 1,275m. The Written By five-year-old has scored only once in 20 starts, back on Oct 28, 2023 when under the tutorship of Shane Baertschiger at Kranji. He had his first start for Selvan on Dec 28 and, since then, the best he could produce were two second-place finishes in 10 starts, all at Sungai Besi. Come Aug 17, he will be having his third start in Class 5. Written Towin has kept slipping down the handicaps and that category may well be where he regains his will to win again. brian@


New Paper
3 days ago
- New Paper
Heritage Sixty-One can get off the mark in Malaysia
The name "Abdullah Aboo Bakker" is not one that racegoers drop into their conversations when "talking horse" over their morning coffee. He is what one would call a "battling trainer". The Singaporean handler has saddled just four winners for the season. But, with four more months to go in the 2025 season, he could probably surpass his tally of four wins in 2024, albeit it could be a tougher ask to outdo his record of 30 winners in 2023. On Aug 9, we saw him pull one out of the hat when Show All Sixty-One beat a Class 4A field over the 1,200m course at Sungai Besi. That was after his stablemate Buuraq Sixty-One finished second to the talented Bold Runner in an earlier race. Abdullah has entered a team of five, including emergency acceptor King Of Sixty-One, for the Aug 17 meeting. Among them, Heritage Sixty-One is ready to open his account. The three-year-old colt, who races in the colours of the AJ'S Stable, tossed in a smart gallop on the morning of Aug 12 when running the 600m in 39.2sec. An English-bred by Ardad, Heritage Sixty-One has had two runs for Abdullah, and he would have been pleased with that last-start effort on July 13. That day, when ridden by Wong Kam Chong and asked to tackle the Restricted Maiden event over 1,100m at Ipoh, Heritage Sixty-One ran a terrific race. He attempted to make every post a winning one, but in what was a rough run which saw him bumped by another runner, Heritage Sixty-One had to settle for the runner-up spot - just a length behind Speedy Samurai, who had the services of leading jockey Andre da Silva. That is now water under the bridge. Heritage Sixty-One would have rested well and his work on the training track does suggest that he could be ready to break his maiden status in the Restricted Maiden race (1,200m) on Aug 17, which will bring on the cheers in Abdullah's yard. In that same Restricted Maiden contest, Northam Beach also tossed in a good workout when running the 600m in 37.8sec. Trained by Frank Maynard for the Virgo Bay Racing Stable, the Darci Brahma three-year-old colt has yet to face the starter, but he will kick off his career on the back of two decent trials. He was third in his last trial on Aug 5. It was a tight finish, and the winner was his stablemate Mega Skye, who has put together two wins in three trials. Do not dismiss Northam Beach. He could fill in the blanks when you are working out the route for those tierce and quartet bets. Another one worth some attention is Richard Mule. Contrary to what the "mule" in his name seems to suggest, this eight-year-old veteran is still capable of raising a good gallop. The son of Iffraaj did it in his morning workout when running the 600m in a flashy 37sec. A winner of three races from 24 starts, Richard Mule last made the board when he took third spot in a Class 4A contest over 1,300m at Ipoh on May 11. Trainer Winson Cheng has found a pretty neat race for the New Zealand-bred. It is a Class 4B sprint over the 1,150m, and it should suit Richard Mule's preferred style of racing - which is to lead. Come Aug 17, Cheng can also produce another good one in Northern Star. The seven-year-old grey gelding will be lining up in another Class 4B race (1,150m), and he is not without a chance. Northern Star was out on the training track where he tossed in a 600m workout in 39sec. While his last few runs seem to suggest that he is a runner who prefers to come from behind, the 1,150m he has to cover on Aug 17 is not out of his depth. Though the son of Written Tycoon did not succeed at Kranji when he was trained by Jason Ong, Northern Star has gone on to win five races in Malaysia, and across all three tracks at Selangor Turf Club, Perak Turf Club and the now-defunct Penang Turf Club. Rolling back to his last win on May 3 when he had da Silva in the saddle, Northern Star came from a spot in midfield at the turn to beat the Ong-trained Outfit by a neck. That was in a Class 4B event over the sharp 1,020m. If anything, he will relish the upcoming 1,150m race. brian@


New Paper
27-07-2025
- New Paper
Veteran Big Hearted has not lost the spark
KUALA LUMPUR - Former Group 1 Singapore Gold Cup (2,000m) winner Big Hearted has finally landed his first win in Malaysia, coming from a long way back in the running to take out the RM53,000 (S$16,000) Stayer Stakes A race (1,800m) at Sungai Besi on July 27. The Hallowed Crown son enjoyed a phenomenal rise when trained by Michael Clements at Kranji. He won on debut in Restricted Maiden company in 2019, and kept raising the bar, until he claimed the Singapore Gold Cup at his 12th start on Nov 21, 2020. Big Hearted picked up one win in 2021 but struggled with fitness - and was lightly raced - in the next two years, until his comeback win in a Class 2 race (1,600m) on Jan 20, 2024, which was also his eighth and last win when under the care of James Peters. He was sidelined for eight months, and had two more starts at Kranji, including his last Kranji race in the Singapore Gold Cup on Oct 5, 2024, when he ran unplaced to Smart Star. Big Hearted was transferred to Frank Maynard, but struggled to find his form in four runs for the 2006 Malaysian champion trainer. The Australian-bred was sold to the Team Cheval Stable and placed in the care of two-time Singapore champion trainer Jason Ong. The rising nine-year-old began to show glimpses of his former self with two seconds in three starts. Now, 18 months after his last triumph, Big Hearted showed that he still has what it takes to win. After being caught wide from his outside barrier 9, Big Hearted was dropped back to second last by Jerlyn Seow, who has also ridden him in his last three runs. Up front, Imperial Sabre (Khaw Choon Kit) led by a huge margin, while 2024 Singapore Gold Cup winner Smart Star (Clyde Leck) trailed behind in second. Turning for home, Big Hearted ($21) was switched to the outside by Seow and began looming large. Under a well judged ride from the two-time Singapore champion apprentice, Big Hearted raced past Imperial Sabre with 100m to go. The Lim Shung You-trained galloper held on for second, 1¼ lengths away, beating Haleeda (Mohd Zaki) into third. The winning time was 1min 50.8sec for the 1,800m on the long course. "He (Big Hearted) lived up to his name," said Ong's apprentice. "The horse has a big heart, ran well in the last few starts and improved this week to win well." Seow went on to land a race-to-race double with the David Kok-trained Pacific Rainbow ($36), who broke through for his first win in the penultimate RM38,000 Class 5 race (1,700m) at his 22nd start. SELANGOR TURF CLUB/TURFONLINE