Super Fluke has started his 2017 – 2018 Hong Kong campaign with two wins in a row at Sha Tin Racecourse, which means it will be very tough for him to make it three straight when he takes his talents to Happy Valley Racecourse on Wednesday night. Super Fluke is one of 12 entrants in the main body of race 7, the penultimate race among eight Wednesday at Happy Valley, and one of three Class 3 handicaps, each offering a purse of more than $167,000. Super Fluke at this moment of his career seems aptly named: He failed to win any of his first 15 Hong Kong starts, was victorious once last season, and entered his current campaign with a 1-21 Hong Kong record before reeling off the two Sha Tin wins. Super Fluke has been a Class 3 handicapper since his first race in Hong Kong, but now he sits at the very top of the ratings scale for this race, 80, and thus must carry 133 pounds in Wednesday’s race. Super Fluke has done all right before at Happy Valley, but it’s fair to be skeptical that his career-best Sha Tin form will carry through this start. The opposition includes two Hong Kong newcomers, Simply Brilliant and Power Man, while Star of Joy rates a long look. Star of Joy, a 4-year-old Australian-bred, failed to win in six starts last season, but he was a solid fourth in a race like Wednesday’s on Sept. 27, his first start after a layoff, and the mere 119 pounds he carries includes the Magic Man, jockey Joao Moreira. Moreira rides another Australian-bred 4-year-old, Relentless Me, in the nightcap, a Class 3 over 1650 meters, about one circuit around the iconic Happy Valley track. Relentless Me began his Hong Kong career in April and has room to improve his third time out this season. Go Beauty Go, the 133-pound highweight, probably hit his peak Nov. 8 in a race like Wednesday’s. At the top of the weights in race 7, another Class 3 over 1200 meters, sits Storm Signal, a John Moore-trained Aussie-bred who just had his Hong Kong debut on Nov. 5. Storm Signal finished seventh in that straight-course 1000-meter race at Sha Tin, but can reasonably be expected to improve Wednesday. First post for the card is 6:15 a.m. Eastern. Watch and wager on all Hong Kong races at DRF Bets.com.