Bo Ncgobo will walk into Scottsville on Saturday carrying more than just a runner in the Gr 1 Gold Medallion. He will carry the weight of a milestone that every trainer dreams about — a first shot at the highest level of South African racing.
And standing beside him is a colt whose story already feels bigger than his price tag or his odds.
At 25-1, Better Never Ends is not the horse the market expects to win. But the Gold Medallion has a habit of exposing courage as much as class, and few juveniles in this year’s field arrive with a more interesting profile than the son of Declarationofpeace.
The colt has already shown he belongs in elite company.
His breakthrough came in the Gr 2 SA Nursery at Turffontein when he stunned heavily-backed favourite Gimme A Vodka, who started at odds-on 5-10. It was not a fortunate victory or a race that fell apart in front of him. Better Never Ends travelled like a serious horse and finished with the authority of one too.
He backed that effort up in the SA Sales Cup, finishing second behind the unbeaten Gimme Some Luck while also ending the aura surrounding Heath House, a colt who had bulldozed his way through three starts by a combined 17.75 lengths before meeting defeat for the first time.
That form line suddenly gives Saturday’s assignment far more substance than his outsider status suggests.
For Ncgobo, this is uncharted territory. A first Group 1 runner can often bring nerves and pressure, but it also represents validation — proof that a stable is moving forward and beginning to compete with the country’s established powerhouses. Trainers spend years chasing opportunities like this, and Better Never Ends has provided his conditioner with a genuine chance to test himself on the biggest stage.
“Thrilled for the owners and wonderful to be represented in this G1 race, my first”
The colt’s rise also reflects the long-term planning of his breeder, Clifton Stud owner Peter Blyth, whose mating decisions appear increasingly inspired. Peter Blyth takes up the story.
" 'Better Never Ends' is a phrase I came across during a visit to my alma mater, Hilton College, where I noticed it written on a dormitory wall as a message of motivation. The words stayed with me and ultimately became the name to be carried by this colt into one of the country’s premier juvenile contests"
Better Never Ends is out of the Australian-bred Hussonet mare Endearment, herself a four-time winner from a family stacked with black-type depth. Blyth paired her with Declarationofpeace, a son of War Front standing nearby, after the mating produced an ideal genetic match on the G1 Goldmine pedigree platform.
The ownership story adds another layer of intrigue.
Better Never Ends was purchased for R360,000 at the August 2025 Two-Year-Old Sale on behalf of the Dladla Family Trust, with the transaction signed off by the trust’s nominee, Johannes Manoko, who completed the sale ticket. The family’s footprint in Saturday’s feature does not end there either, with the Trust also represented by another runners in the Gold Medallion line-up, giving them a notable presence in a race of this stature.
That multiple presence in a Group 1 juvenile feature underlines just how seriously the Dladla Family Trust is engaging at the top end of the sport.
Even the horse's name now carries a deeper resonance, shaped by that simple phrase that followed Blyth out of Hilton College and into the bloodstock world.
There is still a significant question to answer on Saturday.
Scottsville’s Gold Medallion represents a sterner challenge than anything Better Never Ends has faced before. The field is deeper, the pressure sharper and the margin for error far smaller. But juveniles with tactical speed and proven high-level form are never easy to dismiss, especially when they have already shown they can absorb pressure against quality opposition.
Whether he wins or not, Better Never Ends has already altered the trajectory of the stable behind him. A strong performance would elevate both Ngcobo’s growing operation and the Clifton Stud breeding program that produced him.
And if the colt manages to outrun his odds once more, Scottsville could witness the beginning of something far larger than a Group 1 debut.
Image JC Photos (adapted)
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