Horses
| On 3 months ago

Stalingrad strategy is working for Litigation

By Mike Moon

Litigation might be a barrel of laughs in the Zuma household, but not in most. So why name a lovely looking thoroughbred foal Litigation?

His father is bay stallion Greys Inn, so the name is apparently a wobbly rendition of Gray’s Inn, a London barristers’ hang-out; with possibly a grey ancestor somewhere along the line.

Despite the gloomy moniker, things are looking bright for Litigation the horse.

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Owned by the Wernars family, Harry Willson and Pippa Mickleburgh and trained by Sean Tarry, the five-year-old has come into eye-catching form ahead of the KwaZulu-Natal winter season.

After recent back-to-back victories – in the Listed Richard Maponya Handicap and the Grade 3 London News Stakes, both over the Turffontein 1800m – Litigation has sparked more-than-usual interest in the august pages of Sporting Post and Turf Talk. Notably, he is spoken of as a “July horse”.

Durban July

The official handicappers have also taken note of the strapping fellow’s form, shoving up his merit rating from 111 to 115 following his start-to-finish in the London News on Saturday.

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Will this be enough to get him into the 2024 Hollywoodbets Durban July on 7 July?

Some long-range punters think so. Since pre-nomination July betting opened last week, Litigation’s odds with Hollywoodbets have halved from 66-1 to 33-1. Betway and WSB have him even shorter.

The odds will fall further if Gavin Lerena is booked to ride: he has won on him in six of his eight victories.

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Tarry identified Litigation as a July hopeful in the then colt’s three-year-old year, but he didn’t make the field – nor did he the following year, 2023, when again on the fringes with six wins in 20-something starts.

Then they did make the cut – as in the connections opted for gelding. It took the horse a few months to get used to more breeze in the nether regions; then it became plain sailing.

Co-owner Pippa Mickleburgh bred Litigation at Avontuur Stud and was so enamoured of the newborn leggy foal that she sent Tarry a photo of him, adding, “Here’s your new Legal Eagle”, referencing the trainer’s top horse at the time.

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Legal Eagle, twice an Equus Horse of the Year, was also by Greys Inn – who, of course, won the 2004 Durban July. Is this a case of legal precedent, m’lud?

It may have taken Litigation a bit of time to realise his potential but, as with any good Stalingrad strategy, you’ve gotta keep plugging away.

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