There will be plenty of interest for SA racing fans at Sha Tin this morning when the Flower Alley gelding Mondial, a R120 000 BSA National Yearling Sale purchase, makes his first start in Hong Kong when lining up in the HK$13 million Classic Cup at 10h05.
The Idolhorse.com website reports that the Hong Kong Classic Cup will continue the re-emergence of South African horses in Hong Kong on a weekend when the South African Classic could contain some 2026 Hong Kong Derby contenders.

Mondial in action at Turffontein in 2023 (Pic – JC Photos)
The Classic Cup at Sha Tin features established four-year-olds, most sourced from Australia and New Zealand, but there is one horse who will be making his first start in Hong Kong. Mondial, a three-time winner in Johannesburg, will attempt to emulate Singapore Sling as a South African-bred to take out the second leg of the Four-Year-Old Classic Series.
He is one of a handful of South Africans stepping out in Hong Kong now that quarantine restrictions are far less stringent than they have been for the last 13 years.
The presence of the highly infectious African horse sickness saw countries around the world put difficult requirements for South African horses to travel abroad. At its peak, it required 180 days of quarantine – of which 90 days was spent in Mauritius – and horses were unable to be trained properly during their quarantine tenure.
Now, direct imports to the European Union are in place after a period of pre-export quarantine – similar to what is in place in Australia – while the time required to get to Hong Kong is down to 45 days from stable to stable.
A limited number of South African horses continued to import and race in Hong Kong during the tough requirements, but with the new protocols introduced last year, South African horses are again an attractive prospect for Hong Kong owners. Particularly so given the power of the Hong Kong dollar against the South African rand, which means buying a potential Four-Year-Old Classic Series starter requires significantly less money than acquiring a similar horse out of Australia or New Zealand.
Mondial has joined the stable of David Hayes for owners James Lau and Alice Woo, who also have another South African four-year-old, Mid Winter Wind. He was brilliant on debut last month for Mark Newnham but is being kept to sprint trips instead of taking the Classic Series route.
Lau and Woo were early adopters of South African bloodstock. Their best horse was Cerise Cherry, a Group 1-placed sprinter at home who led the chasing pack behind Lord Kanaloa when second in the 2012 Hong Kong Sprint.
A year ago, the Wilgerbosdrift and Mauritzfontein-bred Mondial finished seventh in the Gr1 South African Classic.
He is the first horse out of the South African Classic to come to Hong Kong since 2018 winner Lobo’s Legend; while Lobo’s Legend suffered a setback that ruled him out of the four-year-old races, he did figure in Class 2 for the majority of his time in Hong Kong.
Mondial raced out of the Azzie yard and was owned during his South African racing career by Trevelen Pillay, Kovilan Padayachee, Deven Govender, Brian Peerimal and the Power Of 5 Syndicate (Nom: Trevelen Pillay).
www.idolhorse.com – additional by SP editorial staff.