Racing Ahead – August 2019

(WallPaper) #1

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Stakes at Newmarket on June 29,
drawing clear inside the last furlong to
be by six lengths from URSULINA. Her
trainer Charlie Appleby said after the
race he will wait for a 7f race for
Summer Romance who has the poten-
tial to make an impact in Group
company next time.
STRIVE FOR GLORY, another to be
fourth at Royal Ascot, in the Norfolk
Stakes, also benefitted from dropping
to Listed company when he won the
Tipperary Stakes over 5f on July 4,
beating AIR FORCE JET by three quar-
ters of a length and provided Robert
Cowell with his biggest two-year-old
success since the 2016 Norfolk Stakes.


FESTIVALS IN THE NEXT
MONTH
Two of the year’s biggest Flat meet-
ings take place in the next few weeks,
the Qatar Goodwood Festival and
Yorkshire Ebor Festival at York. There is
something for everyone at both meet-
ings, plenty of Group races,
competitive handicaps and a number
of two-year-old races, with some of the
best prize money on offer.
Aidan O’Brien and Mark Johnston
have each trained three two-year-old
Group winners at the Qatar Goodwood
Festival in the last 10 years, while
favourites in the Group races have an
excellent record, of the 30 races, 15
were won by the favourite.
O’Brien & Johnston aren’t as suc-
cessful at the Yorkshire Ebor Festival,
with a win apiece in the Group and
Listed races, O’Brien from 18 runners
and Johnston from 21 runners (five sec-
onds). William Haggas with six winners
from 17 runners (two each in the
Acomb, Lowther and Gimcrack) and
Kevin Ryan with five from 22 runners
(three in the Gimcrack, one in the
Acomb and Roses) have the best
records. Charlie Hills with two wins in
the Acomb and one in the Gimcrack is
next on the most successful trainer list.
Favourites at this meeting aren’t as
successful as at Goodwood with the
favourite or joint favourite winning nine
of the 40 races.


MAIDEN/NOVICE RACES
Richard Hannon’s father dominated
the Qatar Goodwood Festival and
whilst his son has only had two Group


wins at the meeting since he took over
the licence in 2014, he looks to have a
good chance of adding to that with
MAN OF THE NIGHT who won impres-
sively on his debut at Newbury on July


  1. A strong good-looking colt by first
    season stallion Night Of Thunder, he
    was sent off the 4/6 favourite (only
    two horses from over 800 newcomers
    from the Hannon yard have gone off a
    shorter price). Racing in midfield he
    made progress with a couple of fur-
    longs to go, taking the lead a furlong
    from the finish and only had to be
    pushed out to beat ETHIC (looked in
    need of the run) from the William
    Haggas yard by a length and a quarter
    with DARK SILVER running well to be
    third. The time was nothing special,
    only 0.01 faster than the 6f novice fillies
    race SO SHARP had recorded when
    she made a winning debut for Archie
    Watson 35 minutes earlier beating
    DARK LADY and VIVIDLY who will
    both improve enough to figure next
    time.
    Both of Hannon’s Goodwood win-
    ners came in the Richmond Stakes and
    Man Of The Night will have strong
    claims of adding a third.
    Mark Johnston will have a good race
    in mind for THUNDEROUS following
    his impressive two and a quarter length
    debut success at Doncaster on June

  2. Making most of the running, he
    stayed on strongly to be previous
    winner DANCINGINTHEWOODS and
    looks a useful prospect.
    Whilst Johnston sends out plenty of
    debut winners, Ed Vaughan has only
    sent out eight from 72 runners (six
    since 2017) and he could have a useful
    prospect on his hands given the way
    ULTRA VIOLET ran away from her
    seven rivals at Newmarket also on June


28, winning by 10l. The time wasn’t
anything special and the third horse
AIRBRUSH has been beaten since, but
she impressed with how easily she
drew clear inside the last 150 yards.
Clive Cox trained Place In My Heart
to win a Listed race in 2013 and has
trained all three of her progeny, all fil-
lies, the latest of which to make the
racecourse, HAND ON MY HEART beat
four more experienced rivals at Wind-
sor on June 29 in a fillies conditions
race. A strong filly, she had good pace
to race prominently, leading at halfway
and running on well to beat SEPARATE
who finished strongly, by half a length.
She looks all speed and should be able
to hold her own in Listed company.
After a relatively slow start with his
juveniles, John Gosden’s team seem to
be gathering pace and had his first
debut winner of the year at Kempton
on July 3, when CRESSIDA beat her
stablemate WASAAYEF by a neck, the
pair five lengths clear of the third.
Wasaayef has more scope than Cressi-
da and wasn’t knocked about by Dane
O’Neill, she should have no trouble
going one better next time.
RIOT couldn’t add to the Gosden
tally at Sandown two days later, beaten
favourite for the second successive
race, in a 7f novice won by Saeed bin
Suroor’s newcomer LASER SHOW who
got up close home.
Hugo Palmer had a quiet year in 2018
with 18 two-year-old winners, his
lowest since 2014 and while there have
only been two winners for the yard so
far in 2019, the latest of them, HOT
TOUCH at Kempton on July 10, showed
a good attitude inside the last couple
of furlong to beat BREATH OF JOY
from the Amy Murphy yard by a length
and a quarter. CLEGANE who finished
sixth, was just about the pick of the
paddock, a strong filly by Iffraaj, she
kept on well inside the last furlong and
was only beaten four and a quarter
lengths. Given her yard, Ed Walker,
takes their time with two-year-olds
(15% second time out compared to 5%
first time) this was a very encouraging
debut.
The first nursery, handicap for two-
year-olds, took place at Chelmsford on
July 6, BETTYS HOPE getting the
better of odds-on favourite OH
PURPLE REIGN by a neck.

TALKING TWO-YEAR-OLDS


RACING AHEADISSUE 178

Wren

RA
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