‘I’m Speechless’: Making Only His Fourth Career Start, Courage Mon Ami Wins Group 1 Gold Cup At Royal Ascot

Frankie Dettori sparked incredible scenes at Royal Ascot as he celebrated a ninth Gold Cup win on his final ride in the race with unexposed 4-year-old Courage Mon Ami (15/2). The John & Thady Gosden-trained winner defied convention by winning the blue-riband contest on just his fourth career start, having not even contested a Group race until today.

However, the unbeaten son of Frankel took the sharp rise in class in his stride by coming from well off the pace under Dettori to collar Coltrane and score by three-quarters of a length.

Dettori, whose first Gold Cup success came aboard Drum Taps in 1992, has now steered home the winner of the Gold Cup four times in the last six years, following three successive wins on Stradivarius.

The 11/4 favourite Coltrane posted a career-best in second, three and three-quarter lengths in front of long-time leader and 2021 victor Subjectivist, who battled on bravely after being headed early in the straight.

Dettori said: “I didn't expect it. The last five years I've had Stradivarius, so the pressure was on. This one I thought was a bit of a chancer coming from handicaps, but John was confident. I rode him cold and it just happened – I got the splits when I wanted to and he showed a turn of foot. The last half a furlong, I couldn't give in to Oisin, I thought: 'no, we've got this far, please keep going'.

“It's unbelievable, on my last year winning the Gold Cup. Myself, The King and Queen Camilla had a talk beforehand about his win and my relationship with his mother, Queen Elizabeth, then the next race I go on and win the Gold Cup and he presents the trophy. It's amazing, really amazing.

“I wanted to ride Courage Mon Ami to run well, because I really don't know the horse and I didn't know his capability or if he was able to stay. I knew there would be pace, I wanted to swing out wide but Stéphane [Pasquier] kept me in and actually won me the race, because I thought: 'I'll cut the corner and see what happens'. Then it happened!

“Nine Gold Cups, what can you say? Amazing. I'm speechless because I didn't expect it, to be honest with you.”

On receiving the Gold Cup from The King, he said: “It's my last year, so this is the only chance I had. It's pretty emotional. The King is a lovely man and Camilla is lovely. It is an honour to be able to ride for them in other races and to win the Gold Cup and be presented with the trophy by them.”

He added: “I didn't believe it, to go from a handicap to a Gold Cup. But John Gosden is a great trainer and he does things like that, sometimes if I don't believe it, I'll just go along with it!”

On taking his children up onto the podium with him, he said: “I said 'listen, we won the Gold Cup, we can go up there and shake hands with The King', so it's a great thrill for them. Now they are old enough to understand. For the last 18 years, they've just thought I was a guy on the TV, maybe like Peppa Pig or something! So they really know what I'm doing.”

John Gosden said: “You can't practise two and a half miles at home, but Frankie stayed cool and rode him cool in the dark down the inside, saving every inch. I saw he went to go outside turning into the straight and they said no, go back in, and luckily he managed to wriggle through and found a great run.

“Courage Mon Ami is a lovely horse who was bred by Mr [Anthony] Oppenheimer, who sold him. It costs a great deal of money for English breeders to keep their studs going. He's a gelding by Frankel, he's unbeaten, but he's gone from the all-weather to Goodwood to here, so full achievement to the horse.”

Asked to reflect upon the fact that it was Courage Mon Ami's fourth start, Gosden said: “I don't think I'll try it again. Richard Brown [bloodstock agent] has done a very clever job – he was asked to find horses to come to Royal Ascot [for the owners Wathnan Racing]. They are hard to buy but both horses he found, Gregory and Courage Mon Ami, were owner/breeder horses. The costs of keeping a stud going means owners have to sell, but Mr Oppenheimer is here and, of course, Mrs [Philippa] Cooper of Normandie Stud [who bred Gregory]. It's tough to run a stud and pay the stallion nominations and the whole deal, so they have to sell. They keep the fillies and sell the colts.

“A great ride for Frankie. It crowns his week – he's only good in long-distance races now! He's had a phenomenal career. Thirty years we've been working together on and off. We've had one argument in 30 years. How many marriages can say that? We patched that up after five days and were winning Group Ones in Deauville straight after that – we had a disagreement, that's fine, that's professional, and we kicked on after that. Look at the result today.”

He added: “Our office racing manager Peter Shoemark put Courage Mon Ami in the race. You don't know if they are going to stay two and a half miles. He looked quite mature at home but, look, he hasn't been easy to train. He didn't run at two, ran as a back-end three-year-old on the all-weather, and Mr Oppenheimer was very patient. He has the stud to run, which is very expensive, hence this horse is a gelding and he sold him. The form is solid with Coltrane, Subjectivist, and Emily Dickinson. It was a superb performance.”

Thady Gosden said: “Courage Mon Ami has always been a talented horse and he's very lightly raced; it's not very often you win the Gold Cup on your fourth start. He has improved with every run.

“It was a gutsy performance today and stepping up from handicap to Group One company, even though he was rated 106 before, is a pretty serious ask. He had a brilliant ride from Frankie – he looked as though he might be a touch unlucky for half a furlong there – but fortunately he got out of jail, and it was a very brave performance.

“He's always looked smart, but as you can tell by the size of him, he's taken plenty of time to mature. You'd like to think he's still maturing now and can still improve.”

Coltrane's rider Oisin Murphy said: “He relaxed great and travelled round super. I felt I could go and win the race. Frankie's come with me and it was a good battle, and Frankie came out on top.”

Charlie Johnston said of Subjectivist: “He's run a great race. I was sort of expecting he would win or we would be out with the washing! It's been a long road and just being here is pretty special. Let's hope he's OK and we can go again.”

The post ‘I’m Speechless’: Making Only His Fourth Career Start, Courage Mon Ami Wins Group 1 Gold Cup At Royal Ascot appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Emir of Qatar Revealed as Owner Behind Wathnan Racing 

Thursday at Royal Ascot saw winners for two heads of state, with King Charles III and Queen Camilla celebrating their first winner at the royal meeting, followed by the victory in the Gold Cup with Courage Mon Ami (GB) (Frankel {GB}) for Wathnan Racing, which it has been confirmed is owned by the Emir of Qatar, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani.

Various members of Qatar's ruling family are already well established as owner-breeders on the international racing scene. The Emir's brother Sheikh Joaan is head of Al Shaqab Racing and the owner of Haras de Bouquetot in Normandy. He is also behind the major sponsorship of France's Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe meeting among others. 

Their uncle Sheikh Abdullah bin Khalifa Al Thani is also a major owner-breeder, as is his son, Sheikh Fahad, the principal of Qatar Racing and sponsor, with his brothers, of the QIPCO British Champions Series. Sheikh Hamad bin Abdullah Al Thani was in the royal procession at Ascot on Thursday.

Wathnan Racing, representatives of which received the Gold Cup from the King and Queen at Ascot, has burst onto the British racing scene this week, winning the Gold Cup on the Thursday with the former Anthony Oppenheimer-owned Courage Mon Ami (GB) after taking the G2 Queen's Vase on Wednesday with another recent purchase, Gregory (GB). 

The Poule d'Essai des Poulains runner-up Isaac Shelby (Ire), who was bought after winning the G3 Greenham S. in April, finished fourth in the Wathnan Racing colours in Tuesday's G1 St James's Palace S.

Richard Brown of Blandford Bloodstock, who is responsible for buying the horses on behalf of Wathnan Racing, told TDN on Thursday, “I was asked to buy some proper horses who could go to the big meetings and compete in the big races, and this is as big as it gets.

“We haven't bought very many, we've been very selective, but there are a couple more to come out. The owners want to be under the radar slightly, though I think the last two days has just blown that apart, but they are private people. It was just a case of getting started with a few horses and this has been a dream start.”

The post Emir of Qatar Revealed as Owner Behind Wathnan Racing  appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Royal Ascot: Irish Kingpins Dominate The Features

Royal Ascot Friday sees the Irish contingent to the fore as TDN Rising Stars Tahiyra (Ire) (Siyouni {Fr}) and Little Big Bear (Ire) (No Nay Never) exercise iron grips on the feature G1 Coronation S. and G1 Commonwealth Cup respectively. While the former flashed her considerable talent just twice as a juvenile, Ballydoyle's champion of 2022 domineered his way through three important black-type tests before injury halted his momentum. Now the winner of the Irish 1000 Guineas, Tahiyra comfortably has the measure of chief rival Meditate (Ire) (No Nay Never) so far in her career but if there is one thing Dermot Weld will know about beating Ballydoyle is that you have to do it again and again and maintain your level.

Little Big Bear, who became the latest in a line of his stable's big guns to miss a beat in the 2000 Guineas, may actually get a mile in time but while he is so comfortable at these sprint trips and Paddington (GB) (Siyouni {Fr}) is around it is a case of back to basics. As he sauntered back to winning ways in the G2 Sandy Lane S., it was as if that dull day at Newmarket where his brilliance was diminished never happened. Intriguingly, it was an experience shared with his key opponent and fellow TDN Rising Star Sakheer (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}), who also struggled to cope with his speed edge bludgeoned by conditions on the Rowley Mile.

Sakheer's trainer Roger Varian was giving off all the right vibes on Thursday. “He looks like he could still be a high-class colt, we certainly believe he can be, and we're looking forward to Friday,” he said. “He had an easy time after the Guineas and we were always going to come to Ascot, but he's built up over the last few weeks into this race nicely, his work has been on point, he's been really well and we're hopeful.”

Newmarket woes also apply to the case of Lezoo (GB) (Zoustar {Aus}), who was among the backwash in the 1000 Guineas and now gravitates back to her comfort zone. She has to improve even off her G1 Cheveley Park S. win, which puts her on a virtual par with the now-retired Middle Park hero Blackbeard (Ire) (No Nay Never) who was always a few pounds adrift of Ballydoyle's champion last term. She and Sakheer are joined by the G2 Gimcrack S.-winning TDN Rising Star Noble Style (GB) (Kingman {GB}), so disappointing behind the revelation Shaquille (GB) (Charm Spirit {Ire}) in Newbury's Listed Carnarvon S. last time, in having a lot to find with an elite Little Big Bear but this is Royal Ascot where certainties have a way of unravelling.

The Gosdens showed on Wednesday and Thursday that they are never to be left out of the group 1 equation and despite her obvious experience deficit, Normandie Stud's TDN Rising Star Queen For You (Ire) (Kingman {GB}) goes into the Coronation which her dam Fallen For You (GB) (Dansili {GB}) won in 2012 as very much a live contender. It's not just about pedigree with her, however, as her performance when narrowly denied by Sounds Of Heaven (GB) (Kingman {GB}) with the run of the race favouring that Jessie Harrington raider in York's Listed Michael Seely Memorial S. confirmed her as a major talent.

“She is the least experienced in the field, but improved when upped in class at York and has taken that in her stride,” Thady said. “This is another major step up, but we feel she has every right to take her chance.” Kate Harrington added of Sounds Of Heaven, “She is lovely filly and a very underestimated filly who only does as much as she has to. She has a great mind and I think Ascot will really suit her. We're hopeful of a big, big run.”

In the opening G3 Albany S., the Crisfords' impressive Doncaster maiden winner Carla's Way (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}) will have an abundance of followers now that the time performance of that defeat of the subsequent 11-length-winning TDN Rising Star Star Of Mystery (GB) (Kodiac {GB}) is known. Lezoo's half-sister Navassa Island (Ire) (Territories {Ire}), now the property of Ecurie Ama Zingteam, also wowed with her sectionals despite going down to the re-opposing Porta Fortuna (Ire) (Caravaggio) on a spectacular debut in Naas's G3 Coolmore Stud Irish EBF Fillies Sprint S.

TDN Rising Stars Matrika (Ire) (No Nay Never) and Persian Dreamer (Calyx {GB}) are just two more in the mix in the Albany, which for the past three years has featured the following season's 1000 Guineas heroine in the beaten trio Mawj (Ire) (Exceed And Excel {Aus}), Cachet (Ire) (Aclaim {Ire}) and Mother Earth (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}). Interestingly, the Newmarket maiden taken by Mawj and Cachet prior to meeting their match here was won last month by Sheikh Ahmed Al Maktoum's Jabaara (Ire), another daughter of Exceed And Excel with big hopes attached. “She will like the fast ground if it stays that way and six furlongs looks her trip for the moment,” Varian said. “She's an exciting filly, I think.”

Amo Racing broke their duck at the Royal meeting on Thursday and the racing and operations manager Tom Pennington is excited about their representative here. “I haven't lost any faith in Persian Dreamer, she was very impressive on debut,” he said. “The sharp five furlongs on quick ground at York in the Marygate has probably played against her and she didn't let herself down. She's a big, strong filly and just didn't enjoy the ground.”

In the day's other pattern race, the presence of Amo Racing's Derby runner-up King Of Steel (Wootton Bassett {GB}) has ensured a small line-up, with a trio of Derby disappointments engaged headed by Juddmonte's Arrest (GB) (Frankel {GB}) and Jeff Smith's Artistic Star (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}). Roger Varian is keen to come back quickly from the Blue Riband, the form of which received a major boost with the win of Waipiro (Ire) (Australia {GB}) here on Thursday. “He has looked great from the day he got back from Epsom and is in good form,” he said. “He looked very good in defeat and that bodes well for this week, the rest of the season and beyond hopefully. These races are not easy to win, but he looks like a horse who will take us to the big spots and we look forward to Friday.”

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