Agreement To Allow HKJC To Host Racing at Conghua

An agreement executed Friday by the Hong Kong Jockey Club (HKJC) with the Guangzhou Municipal Government is set to strengthen the Club's foothold on the Chinese Mainland, with the prospect of staging “international-standard' racing at Conghua Racecourse (CRC), heretofore known as the Conghua Training Centre (CTC).

Located about 200 kilometres and approximately a three-hour car trip (four hours by horse float) from Hong Kong, Conghua was opened to great fanfare in 2018. Built on 150 hectares on a site that hosted the equestrian events at the 2010 Asian Games, the state-of-the-art facility presented an opportunity to ship horses away from the rugged, concrete environment of Sha Tin Racecourse into a more serene and remote location, with stabling for over 600 horses, training tracks and accommodations for staff. Horses routinely return from a spell at Conghua refreshed and revived.

The HKJC successfully staged five exhibition races (non pari-mutuel) at Conghua in March 2019, the first time Hong Kong horses had raced competitively on the Mainland. The HKJC reported that some 1,700 Mainland residents were on hand. A similar event was scheduled to take place in 2020, but those plans were scuppered by the coronavirus outbreak.

The agreement signed Friday allow for the HKJC to conduct racing at CTC “under the Club's racing rules and regulations based on international best practices.” A regular racing programme could commence as soon as 2025.

The Club also announced plans to upgrade the infrastructure at CTC, including the construction of a “new and iconic grandstand” in addition to extra stabling, training facilities and expanded staff accommodations. The municipal government has agreed to build an additional access road to the facility.

A third key component of the agreement is the development of an “equine value chain,” including an international equine quarantine facility and other equine-related initiatives, such as veterinary professional development and the exploration of a Thoroughbred trading centre and the promotion of equestrian sports in Guangzhou.

“Building on our respective strengths, this Agreement will substantially deepen the Club's strategic cooperative partnership with the Guangzhou Municipal Government with the aim of achieving our shared vision of the Guangzhou-Hong Kong Racing Economic Cluster,” said HKJC CEO Winfried Engelbrecht-Bresges. “Since its opening in 2018, CRC has become an integral part of Hong Kong's world-class racing. We will fully leverage CRC's world-class facilities and talent within the Club to implement this exciting, but challenging initiative.”

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‘Rising Stars’ Set To Do Battle in Soaring Softly

Arguably the most interesting graded event being held this weekend not named the Preakness, Saturday's seven-furlong GIII Soaring Softly S. has attracted an evenly matched group of 11 sophomore fillies headed by a pair of 'TDN Rising Stars.'

Tobys Heart (Jack Milton) got the 'Rising Star' nod off a spectacular debut over 5 1/2 furlongs of the Matt Winn turf course at Churchill just shy of a year ago, overcoming a slow break to score by the better part of seven lengths. An easy winner of Saratoga's Bolton Landing S. in August, she was forced to miss the Breeders' Cup via injury and was sixth trying two turns for the first time in the Feb. 27 GIII Hercomesthebride S. at Gulfstream. The dark bay was back to her best in her latest, a rallying, half-length success in the TVG Limestone Turf Sprint S. at Keeneland Apr. 9, for which she earned a career-best 88 Beyer Speed Figure. Saturday's trip should hit her right between the eyes.

Star Devine (Ire) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}) has the right to excel over further, but takes this next logical step off a 'Rising Star' debut at Aqueduct Apr. 8 in which she spotted her rivals a handful of lengths at the break, but sprinted hard in the final furlong and a half to win going away.

Contrarians could easily land on Hit The Woah (Vancouver {Aus}). The daughter of a precocious G1 Golden Slipper winner, the bay broke her maiden at second asking in a rained-off event at Aqueduct last November, defeating no fewer than five next-out winners in the process. Fourth at odds-on in the Jan. 2 Glitter Woman S. over the Gulfstream main track, the $150,000 KEESEP purchase came with a late run to be third, beaten a half-length, in the one-mile Sanibel Island S. in Hallandale Mar. 27. The slight cutback in trip could be to her advantage.

Invincible Gal (GB) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) broke her maiden on debut over a turf sprint trip last August and makes her first appearance since finishing second in the Tepin S. over a mile and a sixteenth at the Big A in late November.

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Can Johnny Be Good For Fairy Story?

Ed Dunlop is among an elite group of five current trainers to have saddled two Oaks winners. His first, Ouija Board (GB) (Cape Cross {Ire}), has already gone on to produce the Derby winner Australia (GB), a son of Galileo (Ire), and the baton could potentially pass now to Snow Fairy (Ire) (Intikhab) to follow suit with John Leeper (Ire), by Galileo's son Frankel (GB).

Whether it's at Epsom or a later big-race target, to have a blue-blooded colt in the stable who has shown some early promise is naturally special, but John Leeper holds extra poignancy for Dunlop as he was named by Cristina Patino in honour of the trainer's late father. The depth of the owner/breeder's loyalty to the Dunlop family is illustrated by the fact that John Leeper Dunlop trained his namesake's third and fourth dams, the former being Fantasy Girl (Ire) (Marju {Ire}), who is also the dam of another Dunlop/Patino pattern winner Big Bad Bob (Ire) (Bob Back).

“She's an incredibly loyal owner. She had horses with my father for over 30 years and  totally as a result of that that I ended up training for her,” Dunlop acknowledges. “Snow Fairy came along as a sort of not particularly exciting pedigree but obviously she then went and did what she did.”

What she did, after being put through the ring as a yearling at Tattersalls Ireland and returning to her vendor at €1,800, was win six Group 1 races in Britain, Ireland, Hong Kong and Japan from 21 starts across four seasons. A rather unprepossessing sort physically, she nevertheless had talent welded to tenacity, along with a liberal dash of temperament. 

“When she came to us from Ireland, she used to lie down in anger coming down Warren Hill. She was very naughty,” recalls her trainer. “She got better with age, but she was feisty. [John Leeper] can get on his hind legs occasionally but he has a very nice temperament in the box. He will do what you want to do with him. He doesn't worry.”

A good omen then ahead of potentially heady days to come, as spectators return to the racecourses and John Leeper is primed for major meetings. Whether one of those is the Cazoo Derby Festival remains to be seen. Twice raced to date, and the earner of a TDN Rising Star for his four-length maiden victory at Newcastle on his sole start this year, the next test comes on Saturday at his home course of Newmarket. He is currently the short-priced favourite for the listed Fairway S., having side-stepped a potential run in a hot-looking Dante S.

 

 

As the long-legged Dunlop sprawls across a bench in the sunshine at his La Grange Stables and considers the imminent possibilities for the horse stabled just behind where he sits, the trainer appears to be as relaxed about life as the trio of whippets lounging about on the grass before him. But surely training a colt with such a pedigree and such a name, whose stable is in the row named after his own spectacular mother, brings with it a modicum of pressure?

“He's bred to be a good horse, but we've seen many well-bred horses that were not very good,” he says in his measured way. “The instructions I gave Hollie [Doyle] at Newcastle, where he was drawn on the outside, was to just to drop him in and ride him like a good horse, not to hit him unless she had to. Obviously, he won very impressively. Okay, it was a maiden, and it's very early days to be going further forward than that. There has been some hype about him for obvious reasons, with his pedigree, and the way he won. Hopefully it's going to be right.”

Dunlop does, however, admit that there is a certain aura attached to the colt referred to by his adoring rider Fletcher Yarham simply as 'Johnny'.

“He will always be different,” he says. “He's named after my father. He's by a world champion out of a world champion, so it doesn't get much better than that. We don't get horses like that, you know. We trainers all whinge that none of us really get a horse that's capable of running in a Derby, let alone winning it. This horse does have that chance. So far, the chance is still occurring. It might go out of the window shortly but, yes, it's special.”

It is no surprise that the sleek, dark brown John Leeper is already turning heads on Newmarket Heath, leading the Dunlop string, just as Frankel used to do for Sir Henry Cecil's team.

“People are noticing him now,” the trainer adds. “It's that time of year. We've seen it many times. The hype of the Derby horses. This horse is getting a few admirers on the Heath and, you know, he may not for very much longer if things don't go the right way. He's a fine, imposing horse that leads the string because, he's the only colt we have in the yard as a 3-year-old. The rest of them are sadly already geldings.”

Whether John Leeper runs in the Derby naturally depends on his forthcoming performance on the Rowley Mile, but Dunlop already has an eye on the longer term, and is blessed to train for a breeder whose loyalty goes hand in hand with patience.

“Mrs P. has all her homebreds broken in by Dick Brabazon on the Curragh. The vibes were good from Dick and he arrived with me in February or March last year. He was always an imposing horse, but he was immature for obvious reasons. So we weren't expecting to see a great deal to start with,” he recalls.

“Anyone who rode him liked him. He was a very good-moving horse, good temperament, good brain and a very well-balanced horse. He had one run at Doncaster, he ran well and I wanted to run him again, but he had a very tiny setback, so we decided to put him away. Mrs P. doesn't like her horses running very much as a 2-year olds, unless they're obvious 2-year-old types. So we were under instructions not to do a great deal with him. He looked quite leggy and a bit long over the winter but my team did a great job and he just got stronger and stronger. As you'd expect with his pedigree, he should get better with age.”

He continues, “We'll find that out in the next six months. Mrs. P. likes to keep them in training. She enjoys her racing and she loves this horse. No disrespect to her other horses, but this is her favourite horse in training, obviously. So, you know, as long as he stays fit and well, and we don't have any injuries with him or whatever, hopefully he'll be seen around for a while.”

Eleven years have already passed since Snow Fairy's Classic season. Her name is etched multiple times on La Grange's slate roll of Group 1 winners, which includes the luckless Derby faller Hethersett, who went on to win the St Leger for Dick Hern during his time training in Newmarket. Time will tell whether John Leeper can add his name to the list of eight Classic winners written on the wall, but for now, Dunlop is entitled to dream a little.

He says, “Ouija Board was quite a long time before [Snow Fairy]. So probably at that age one took it a little bit for granted. We certainly didn't take Snow Fairy for granted. She changed our lives in many ways. To be honest—of course she won two Classics—but I'm most proud of what she did in Japan, you know, for  an international horse to win two Group 1s in Japan. I don't know if it's been done since. It's quite a hard thing to do and she made us very proud. The frightening thing is there's still a chance for the next six weeks that both Ouija Board and Snow Fairy could sire a Derby winner.”

He adds, “He has a chance, but so do a lot of others. I said to Mrs P., 'It's a good job that you chose a good horse for my father's name, but you put quite a lot of pressure on him', and she just said, 'I always knew he was going to be a good horse'.”

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‘Brown’ Can Spoil The ‘Party’ at Old Hilltop

Making the second start of his current form cycle and drawn perfectly to make best use of his primary asset, Somelikeithotbrown (Big Brown)–whose sire stormed home to win the 2008 GI Preakness S. by better than five lengths–can play the role of upsetter in Saturday's GII Dinner Party S. at Pimlico.

The New York-bred toyed with his rivals from the front to upset last year's GII Bernard Baruch S. at Saratoga, but was ridden from off the pace when this event was contested last October and settled for second. The coast-to-coast winner of the state-bred restricted Mohawk S. at Belmont three weeks later, he never attempted to lead in the GII Fort Lauderdale S. at Gulfstream Dec. 12 en route to beating just one rival home. In his lone start this term, he was narrowly in front in the GI Maker's Mark Mile after attending a sharp early tempo and weakened to finish seventh. Jose Ortiz should hit the gas early from gate one Saturday.

Chad Brown won his only Dinner Party in 2016 with Takeover Target (Harlan's Holiday), and will send out 7-5 morning-line choice Sacred Life (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}) as well as the progressive Kuramata (Ire) (Australia {GB}). A Group 3 winner in France at two and runner-up to the mighty Ghaiyyath (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) at that level the following season, Sacred Life has two wins from eight starts in the U.S., his biggest success coming when overwhelming his rivals in last year's Oceanport S. at Monnmouth Aug. 9. A well-beaten fourth as the favorite in the GI Turf Classic at Churchill Sept. 5, he was suited by the strong pace of the Maker's Mark and ran on mildly from the back for third.

Kuramata, a homebred for Peter Brant, was third over the Kempton all-weather in a single European appearance in 2019, but broke his maiden by 3/4 of a length when making his stateside debut at Tampa Feb. 21 and was the smooth 2 1/2-length winner of an Apr. 2 first-level allowance over the Aqueduct turf to earn himself a crack at graded company.

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