Coontail
lands on feet, other Cat out
By Chris Gay
Staff Writer
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Glade Knight scored 216 on Scramble Dox
to lead the 5/6 Year-Old Non-Pro Division
with a combined score of 433 at the Augusta
Futurity.
Special |
Scott Ferguson's patience paid off with Coontail
Cat.
After a rough start to 2005 with the mare,
Ferguson watched the horse finally mature last
summer. Just before the pair won the NCHA Derby
in July, he could tell his horse had grown up.
"When we got to the Derby it was like night
and day," he said. "She was like I'd
rather do my job than fight you all the time."
Coontail Cat did her job again Wednesday.
She and Ferguson marked 216 in the second go-round
of the Classic Non-Pro and advanced to the finals
with an aggregate score of 431.
Glade Knight and Scramble Dox posted 216 to
advance to the finals with the top combined
total of 433. Danny Miller and CD Stars had
the top score of the go-round at 218 to also
move on to the championship round.
Tommy Manion and Daintys Cat will not be there.
After marking the top score in the first go-round,
they added a disappointing 203 in the second
go to miss the finals by 6.5 points.
The top 20 horses with combined totals of 428
or better advanced to the finals, which begin
at 6 p.m. tonight at Augusta-Richmond County
Civic Center.
Ferguson of Hempstead, Texas and Coontail
Cat, a 5-year-old horse by High Brow Cat out
of DC Monkeyote, rode first in the final bunch.
Ferguson knew the cattle was tough, and he wanted
to put together a run good enough for the finals.
"I was a little nervous," he said.
"It's Augusta. Being first down there,
you never know what's going to happen."
Knight, who owns two Slate River Ranch facilities
in Virginia and Texas, is trying to add his
third Augusta Futurity title.
In 2001, he won the $50,000 Amateur for 5/6-year-olds
and the $50,000 Amateur for 4-year-olds.
As an owner, he watched three of his horses
make the finals last month at the NCHA World
Championship Futurity in Fort Worth, Texas.
Those three finalists earned $153,000.
Last year, he watched his trainer Michelle
Hall win the Augusta Futurity open finals with
Play Stocks.
"I'm an owner-rider," he said. "It's
exciting to have other people ride your horses.
But I'm in it because I love to ride.
"You get excited and happy when your
horses do well and other people are on them.
But there's nothing like riding."
Knight said he likes his chances with Scramble
Dox, a 5-year-old mare by Playdox out of Clarks
Poco Lil.
"It's wide open," Knight said. "All
of the horses that are there are good horses.
Whatever happens, happens."
Reach Chris Gay at (706) 823-3645 or chris.gay@augustachronicle.com.
--From the Thurssday, January 26, 2006
printed edition of the Augusta Chronicle
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