Caspar Fownes tightened his grip on the trainers’ championship and Douglas Whyte ended his barren spell on a rain-affected night of action at Happy Valley on Wednesday (4 March).
Luke Ferraris and Zac Purton shared riding honours with three wins each.
Fownes and Ferraris combined as Toronado gelding Verbier (121lb) made the most of a well-timed ride by the South African, and drove through a gap between the leading pair to claim the Class 5 Intercontinental Limousine Handicap (1200m) by half a length.
Super Sicario (129lb) netted his first win since the opening Happy Valley meeting of the season under Hugh Bowman in the Class 5 Kwoon Chung Motors Handicap (1800m) for trainers’ championship leader Fownes, who moved to 39 wins for the season.
“We gave him a nice break away and prepared him well for this,” Fownes said of Super Sicario. “Hugh handled him well, and he’s won nicely. He started off a bit intractable, but once the race started to progress, he was good. Once he passed the second bend, I was very confident.”
Whyte put a firm end to a frustrating run, which had stretched to 62 days, with an emphatic quickfire double. First, Brazilian-bred Gameplayer Elite (116lb) finished strongly to claim a first Hong Kong win partnered by Harry Bentley in the Class 4 KC Smart Mobility Handicap (1200m), before Purton bagged a brace for the handler when he prevailed aboard Hong Kong International Sale graduate Giant Ballon (125lb) in the Class 4 Kwoon Chung Macau Limousine Rental Services Handicap (1200m).
“He’s been running consistently in his last two starts,” Whyte said of Gameplayer Elite. “It’s been a bit of a frustrating run of things with him. Tonight, the draw and the tempo played into his hands, and he ran a nice race. I think he’s just a healthy horse and his rating, the draw and the ground played a big part.
“It’s taken a long time to turn things around, but the horses have been running very consistently. Two of the horses put their A game together tonight and both won very well,” he added.





