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‘We Should Have Bought It’ – Robert Mauvis Reflects On Gold Circle's Biggest Missed Opportunity

When Gold Circle sold Clairwood Racecourse for a record R430 million, it presented KwaZulu-Natal racing with what many believed was a once-in-a-generation opportunity to reshape its future.

The proceeds from the sale were intended to do far more than strengthen the company's balance sheet. Senior leadership envisaged acquiring freehold land that would provide racing with a permanent home, replacing an increasingly expensive operating model built around leased racecourses and ageing infrastructure.

More than a decade later, former Gold Circle chairman Robert Mauvis believes abandoning that vision remains one of the greatest strategic mistakes in the organisation's history.

"We had the opportunity to future-proof racing. Instead, we let it slip away."

According to Mauvis, Gold Circle's board and executive management had identified an ideal property circa early 2012 on the KwaZulu-Natal North Coast near Ballito, where a purpose-built racing and training centre would have been developed.

The concept was ambitious. Daily racing and training would relocate to the new facility, complete with modern stabling and a polytrack, while Greyville would remain the home of championship racing and the province's premier race meetings.

At the same time, the industry's long-term reliance on Summerveld Training Centre would gradually diminish as land values inevitably increased.

"The board and management were united," Mauvis recalled. "We knew racing needed to own its future. Buying that land would have given us a permanent asset."

Looking back, however, Mauvis believes he made a crucial mistake by widening the consultation process.

"I wanted everyone to buy into the vision," he said. "Owners, breeders, veterinarians and influential members are all part of racing, and I believed that if everyone supported the project, the industry would be stronger and more united."

Instead, he says, the consultation derailed the proposal.

Key Reflection

"We allowed influential members to stop us from buying the property. In hindsight, that decision should have remained with the board."

Among the strongest objections came from sections of the veterinary profession, where concerns were raised over African Horse Sickness on the North Coast.

Mauvis remains critical of that opposition.

"I believe some people were protecting their own interests rather than looking at what was best for racing as a whole," he said. "Perhaps there were concerns about losing business if the industry moved north, but too few people looked at the bigger picture."

He believes history has shown those concerns to have been misplaced.

"African Horse Sickness exists throughout KwaZulu-Natal. Over the past 15 years there have been very few outbreaks of any real significance, and certainly nothing to suggest the North Coast posed a greater risk than areas around Summerveld."

Drawing on his own experience, Mauvis added:

"We kept five horses and a donkey on our farm outside Zimbali. Two died of old age and the others are still alive at more than 25 years of age. That reinforced my belief that many of the fears surrounding the area were overstated."

The proposal was ultimately abandoned.

Instead, Gold Circle invested in expanding the stabling complex at Summerveld and constructing the polytrack at Greyville.

While those projects addressed immediate operational needs, Mauvis believes they failed to secure the industry's long-term future.

"We should have owned that North Coast property. Greyville would have remained our premier racecourse while racing and training moved north. It would have secured the future of racing for generations."

Today, with developments such as Westown transforming the Upper Highway region and increasing pressure on land surrounding Summerveld, Mauvis believes the warnings he raised years ago have become reality.

"I always believed Summerveld would become too valuable to remain simply a training centre," he said. "That is exactly where we find ourselves today."

For Mauvis, the abandoned North Coast development remains one of the defining missed opportunities in modern South African racing.

"It wasn't simply about buying land. It was about creating a permanent home for racing and securing an asset that future generations could build upon."

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