‘Best Sprinting Filly In Europe’: Highfield Princess Could Point To Breeders’ Cup

Top-class sprinter Highfield Princess opened her account for the season in style by blitzing her way to victory in the G2 King George Qatar Stakes on Friday at Goodwood. Sent off the 4/9 favorite, the three-time G1 winner had the five-furlong contest under control from a long way out as she travelled powerfully under Jason Hart.

Once asked, John Quinn's stable star quickened away to score by three lengths and now looks primed to defend her G1 Nunthorpe Stakes crown at York later this month.

Last year's G1 Prix de l'Abbaye runner-up White Lavender (28/1) finished second, while Raasel (22/1) stayed on from off the pace to take third.

The success takes Highland Princess through the £1.5 million prize money barrier and provides both her trainer and jockey with a third winner of this year's Qatar Goodwood Festival.

Quinn said: “Highfield Princess ran really well in the Duke Of York and maybe got a bit tired. At Royal Ascot, she was beaten just a length in the King's Stand and then four days later in the Jubilee, she ran another fantastic race.

“We decided to give her a break, which we did last summer, and we were pleased with her at home. She is a six-year-old mare and fair dues to her, she has bounced back well.

“She is a top-class filly and we are delighted to have her. She was a backward filly at two but very likeable. All she has done is improve for racing and gone from being a top-class handicapper to being the best sprinting filly in Europe, if not the world.

“I was very keen for her to get her head in front for herself and today will have done her a lot of good. Group Two races are so hard to win as well, but she had run her two years ago in the Oak Tree Stakes and handled the track lovely, so we thought we'd handle the track. We thought maybe, just maybe, this might be easier than, for instance, the Maurice de Gheest which we decided to miss.

“Last year she won the seven-furlong all-weather final at Newcastle. Then we ran her in the Duke Of York and she won that well, then we ran her in the Prix Maurice de Gheest over six and a half furlongs – it was a very hot race with horses like Minzaal – and she danced up.

“We had her in the Nunthorpe, and she came back from France and we were really pleased with her. And I said to John [Fairley – owner] that this filly has got a lot of speed and they go very quick in the Nunthorpe, and we saw what she did.

“The plan is to go back for the Nunthorpe in our back yard. She really loves The Curragh – the Nunthorpe and then back to Ireland and we will see after that.

“I had thought about going to Australia but I am a little bit cooler on that now. Travel, different seasons into different seasons, a lot of people have tried it so I thought we will stay in Europe and then possibly the Breeders' Cup. She is a very good filly to travel, the lads always say you wouldn't know she was in the horse box, which is very good.”

On the form of the yard, he said: “I was struggling a bit. We had a period or three weeks when I did not run much as we weren't really happy with them. I was really pleased with these horses coming here and to see how Lord Riddiford ran on Tuesday – if you come to a big meeting and the first fella gets wiped out then it can be a long week!

“If you are lucky enough, every racehorse trainer, owner, yard deserves a top class racehorse – you don't always get them. I am not an old man but have been training a long time, so need a good horse!”

Hart said: “Highfield Princess was her usual self. She jumped well, travelled great, and was much the best. The Czech [horse, Ponntos] gave me a lead and I was kind of hoping he would give me a lead a bit further. I had to commit a furlong and a half down and, on that dead ground, I thought it might blunt her turn of foot, but she has won well.

“I was keen to give her a race without really getting stuck in. I don't know what the boss has said but I presume she has some nice targets later on in the year. It was nice to get a win next to her name.

“She absolutely ran her heart out in those two races at Royal Ascot and it was nice to see her bounce back and get her head back in front and win by a bit of distance. She has always improved throughout the years and has got better with her racing.

“I have not been into John's as much lately as I have been down the country, but I rode her out two weekends ago and I was doing her girth and she tried to bite me! I thought then, 'You've got your sass back!'

“I knew she was bouncing coming into this. She got her very own way about things. She has got a character about her, and I am very grateful to be associated with her.

“For my career, I was never a Group 1 winner until her, and for her to come along last year and win three Group 1s, it took my career to a new level.”

Of being the week's leading rider, he added: “It would be nice, but we have got the main winner we came down for so I am happy with that.”

Clifford Lee said of White Lavender: “I am delighted with the run. She travelled really well throughout the race. She picked up nicely going for the two-furlong pole and we were beaten by a very good horse.”

Asked whether the plan is to go for the Prix de l'Abbaye again, he said: “She was second in it last year giving a lot of weight away. She would definitely go close in that sort of race. She's very consistent and she tries very hard.”

Raasel's trainer Mick Appleby said: “He has run a blinder. I think in a way we probably wish we didn't run on Tuesday, but we still wouldn't have beaten the winner – we might have got second, possibly. He has shown that he has still got it. The draw made a big difference – he was drawn in the middle and needs loads of cover. The other day he was drawn on the wing and he just does too much when he's got daylight.

“I am not sure yet where we are going to go next. We will probably give him a bit of a break now, freshen him up – obviously he's had a hard week this week. We will give him a few weeks and then look to see where we go from there.”

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Maiden Maltese Falcon May Rate Edge Over La Jolla Handicap Rivals

The La Jolla Handicap, a Grade 3 test that is the second of three grass challenges that Del Mar puts forth each year for the 3-year-old set, will be up for grabs Sunday as the featured attraction on an 11-race card that starts at 2 p.m. PT.

This 82nd edition of the La Jolla carries a purse of $150,000 and has drawn eight runners for its 1 1/16-mile presentation. It will be Race 10 on the San Diego county seaside track's afternoon program with a likely post time of 6:30 p.m.

There are no standouts in the lineup, leaving all sorts of possibilities for the last major prep to the track's showcase 3-year-old offering, the Grade 2, $300,000 Caesars Sportsbook Del Mar Derby, which goes on Sunday, Sept. 3.

It doesn't happen often, but there's a legitimate chance that the maiden Maltese Falcon might be the apple of more than a few eyes in the La Jolla. The Irish-bred gelding by the Scat Daddy sire Caravaggio is owned by Red Barons Barn or Rancho Temescal and has been knocking on the door in his five U.S. starts, including a good second in the Cinema Stakes at Santa Anita on June 11.

His connections plead his case further: he's handled by the rising conditioner Leonard Powell and gets the saddle services of the top rider Juan Hernandez. They break from Post 3 in the field.

Here's the complete crew for the La Jolla from the rail out with riders:

C R K Stable's Smart Mo (Joe Bravo in the tack); Muir Hut Stables' Agency (Ramon Vazquez); Maltese Falcon; Lamarock Stable's Justin's Legacy (Hector Berrios); Hronis Racing's Panic Alarm (Umberto Rispoli); CYBT, Nentwig or Pell's Kid Azteca (Asa Espinoza); The Del Mar Group's Henry Q (Antonio Fresu), and Madaket Stables and Convergence Stable's Zalamo (Mike Smith).

Henry Q makes his Del Mar debut in the feature. The Blame colt was most recently in the east running third in Belmont Park's Peter Pan in May, then fifth in Thistledown's Ohio Derby in June – both of them Grade 3 events on dirt. He was a minor stakes winner at Sunland Park in New Mexico earlier this year, winning the Mine That Bird Derby by 14 3/4 lengths. This will be his first race on turf, but he's had two breezes over the Del Mar grass course.

Panic Alarm will be making his U.S. bow on Sunday. The Irish-bred and raced gelding has been in the John Sadler barn since early July and shows a pair of victories from his 2-year-old season and four starts this year, the most recent coming on June 22.

In the race prior to the La Jolla, the 70th running of the California Thoroughbred Breeders Association Stakes will unfold. The dash for Cal-bred 2-year-old fillies has lured eight lassies out of their barns for a run of 5 1/2 furlongs and a $125,000 purse.

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Weekend Lineup Presented By HIWU: Cody’s Wish Stretches Out In Whitney

Cody's Wish brings a six-race win streak into Saturday's Grade 1, $1 million Whitney, the highlight of this weekend's graded stakes action across North America. He'll face a field of five rivals as he seeks his first victory at a distance greater than a mile as well as a berth in the Breeders' Cup Classic.

With five stakes consisting of purses in excess of $2.53 million, Whitney Day features two other Grade 1 events: the $600,000 Saratoga Derby Invitational and the $500,000 Test. The Derby features nine entrants, including both the winners of the Belmont Derby and Belmont Oaks, while the Test features Kentucky Oaks winner Pretty Mischievous. Also featured on the card is Caravel's start in the Grade 3, $300,000 Troy, as well as the $135,000 Fasig-Tipton Lure.

The other Grade 1 on the weekend is the Clement L. Hirsch at Del Mar, which offers a berth in the Breeders' Cup Distaff. Five entrants have signed on for the 1 1/16-mile contest.

Ellis Park in Henderson, Ky., is staging three turf stakes Saturday and four on Sunday, all positioned to be stepping stones to the big-money races at Kentucky Downs' all-grass late-summer meet. The winners of the Ellis stakes receive a guaranteed fees-paid berth in the corresponding race at Kentucky Downs. Five of the stakes are worth $200,000, and another is worth $250,000; each has drawn a field of at least 10 starters.

The one stakes this weekend that doesn't carry Kentucky Downs Preview in its name is Sunday's Grade 3 Pucker Up, a stakes for 3-year-old fillies that Ellis Park inherited from Arlington Park. The $300,000 Pucker Up is the richest race of the Ellis Park meet; its winner receives a fees-paid spot in the $1 million Dueling Grounds Oaks at Kentucky Downs.

Also on Sunday: the G3 Adirondack at Saratoga features juvenile fillies, including opening-day G3 Schuylerville winner Becky's Joker; the $500,000 West Virginia Derby (G3) card at Mountaineer Park; and the G3 La Jolla at Del Mar.

Saturday

4:26 p.m. – Grade 1 Test Stakes at Saratoga

Pretty Mischievous vies for sovereignty atop the sophomore filly division while cutting back in distance in Saturday's seven-furlong Test. She enters the Test on the heels of back-to-back Grade 1 scores for conditioner Brendan Walsh, beginning with a tenacious win in the nine-furlong Grade 1 Kentucky Oaks on May 5 at Churchill Downs. The daughter of Into Mischief was last seen posting a nearly identical performance to the Oaks in the Grade 1 Acorn on June 9 at Belmont Park, a 1 1/16-mile test conducted around one turn.

The Test will be Pretty Mischievous' first start at a sprint distance since scoring her first triumph against winners in a seven-furlong optional claiming contest in October at Churchill. Walsh said he looks forward to the pace scenario his filly is likely to get in an extended sprint and that the Test's timing proved favorable over a start in the nine-furlong Grade 1 Coaching Club American Oaks, which was run on July 22.

Undefeated New York-bred Maple Leaf Mel looms large after an easy last-out score in the Grade 3 Victory Ride on July 8 at Belmont Park in her first outing for her conditioner and namesake Melanie Giddings.

Dorth Vader [post 6, John Velazquez] will face a rematch with Pretty Mischievous after coming up a head shy in the Acorn with a strong late rally under returning Hall of Fame rider John Velazquez for trainer George Weaver.

Todd Pletcher trainee Munnys Gold [post 7, Irad Ortiz, Jr.] was last seen finishing a pacesetting fourth in the Acorn, defeated 4 1/2 lengths by Pretty Mischievous after setting moderate fractions.

Completing the field are the dual-winning Michael McCarthy trainee Clearly Unhinged [post 2, Javier Castellano]; stakes-winner Tappin Josie [post 3, Kevin Gomez] for trainer Horacio De Paz; stakes-placed Jersey Pearl [post 4, Luis Saez], a last-out 9 1/2-length allowance winner at Ellis Park for conditioner Darrin Miller; and graded stakes-placed Interpolate [post 5, Flavien Prat] for four-time Eclipse Award-winning trainer Chad Brown.

Test Entries

5:01 p.m. – Grade 1 Saratoga Derby Invitational at Saratoga

Nine sophomores representing three nations will face off in the 1 3/16-mile turf affair. Belmont Derby winner Far Bridge has boasted talent and trajectory for Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher, who also conditioned his Champion sire English Channel. In five runs, he has three wins and a pair of seconds. He will be piloted from post 5 by Jose Ortiz, who is perfect in two trips aboard Far Bridge, including the Belmont Derby coup.

Belmont Oaks heroine Aspen Grove [post 3, John Velazquez, 119 pounds] takes on the boys on the strength of her first top-level win. A Group 3-winner at two, who was last-of-10 in May's Group 1 Irish 1000 Guineas, she is trained by Fozzy Stack and is a daughter of Coolmore-based Triple Crown winner Justify.

A second Irish raider comes in the form of Lindy Farms' The Franchise [post 4, Luis Saez], who is trained by State of Rest's conditioner, Joseph O'Brien. Graduating at fifth asking in a nine-furlong handicap last out on June 30, he is a son of Siyouni, sire of Wednesday's Group 1 Sussex Stakes winner Paddington. The Franchise hails from a deep Daniel Wildenstein female family and is related to a pack of Group 1 horses, including Loup Sauvage, Loup Solitaire and Loup Breton.

Another European of high regard and solid connections entering the fray is Lion of War, a son of European Horse of the Year of 2018, Roaring Lion. From his late sire's only North American crop, the emblazoned bay has three wins from nine starts and exits a strong second in the Golden Gate at Ascot over 10 furlongs, where he was a bit unlucky for running room when it mattered most. Two races back, he was a green, but successful victor in Musselburgh's Edinburgh Cup over nine furlongs, carrying 131 pounds. Oisin Murphy, who rode his brilliant sire, takes the reins from post 8.

Christophe Clement-trained Mondego finished third after setting the pace in the Belmont Derby. The promising colt was making his stakes debut in the Grade 1 affair and returns to top-tier action in what will be his sixth start. Joel Rosario, aboard for his past four runs, including two victories, rides from the inside post.

Klaravich Stables and trainer Chad Brown, who teamed up to win this event in 2020 with Domestic Spending in just his fourth career start, will try to do one better with Program Trading [post 2, Flavien Prat], who races for the third time on Saturday. The bay ridgling won impressively on debut in May at Monmouth and then appeared to improve again when winning in Belmont optional-claiming company on June 25.

On the opposite side of the experience spectrum is Mark Casse-trained Webslinger [post 6, Javier Castellano], a four-time winner from 10 starts, including Churchill Downs' Grade 2 American Turf. The son of Constitution seeks to become a millionaire with a top-two finish in this spot, having earned more than 18 times his $50,000 auction price thus far. Last out, he was an unlucky fourth when closing wide in the Belmont Derby, beaten a dwindling 1 1/2-lengths.

Another with ample graded form from the stateside team is Battle of Normandy [post 7, Tyler Gaffalione], who conquered his debut maiden over the Saratoga turf one year ago. Subsequently second in Saratoga's Grade 3 With Anticipation and fifth in Keeneland's Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf, he has a pair of rallying seconds in allowance company under Irad Ortiz, Jr. at Keeneland and Pimlico this season for Hall of Fame trainer Shug McGaughey.

The field is completed by lightly raced blueblood Truly Quality [post 9, Irad Ortiz, Jr.], a son of Quality Road and grandson of Breeders' Cup champion Forever Together, a dual Grade 1 Diana-winner over the Saratoga sod. The Jonathan Thomas-trained dark bay gelding exits a 2 3/4-length Belmont maiden turf win over 10 furlongs—course and distance of the Belmont Derby, one day later. That effort followed a pair of eye-catching runner-up efforts.

Saratoga Derby Entries

5:42 p.m. – Grade 1 Whitney Stakes at Saratoga

The magical story of Cody's Wish will add another chapter in this “Win and You're In” race for the Breeders' Cup Classic. Five rivals have signed on to face the Bill Mott trainee over nine furlongs.

Cody's Wish, who boasts a record of 13-9-1-3 and field-high earnings of $2,328,530, will attempt to add a fifth consecutive Grade 1 triumph to his ledger. The son of multiple Champion-producing stallion Curlin arrives at the Whitney from a 3 1/4-length victory in the Hill 'n' Dale Metropolitan Handicap where he equaled a career-high 112 Beyer Speed Figure while besting returning rivals Zandon and White Abarrio.

Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher will saddle Charge It, who was a last-out winner of the Grade 2 Suburban on July 8 at Belmont Park. The 4-year-old Tapit gray colt was in command throughout most of the 10-furlong journey, building on his advantage en route to a 4 3/4-length score while garnering a 106 Beyer.

Grade 1 winner Zandon will attempt to turn the tables on Cody's Wish after finishing a late-closing second in the Met Mile for four-time Eclipse Award-winning trainer Chad Brown. The son of Upstart, who finished third in the 2016 Whitney, seeks his first trip to the winner's circle since capturing the Grade 1 Blue Grass last April at Keeneland, but has finished on the board in 6-of-7 starts since that effort.

Trainer Dale Romans will send out Giant Game [post 3, Luis Saez, 20-1]. The 4-year-old dark bay showed newfound frontrunning dimensions in a victory two starts back in a 1 3/16-mile allowance on May 11 at Churchill Downs and parlayed that style into a three-quarter length triumph in the nine-furlong Grade 3 Cornhusker on July 8 at Prairie Meadows.

White Abarrio [post 5, Irad Ortiz, Jr. 6-1] ran a career-high 106 Beyer when third to Cody's Wish in the Met Mile in his first start for trainer Rick Dutrow, Jr.

Legendary Hall of Fame horseman D. Wayne Lukas will send out Last Samurai [post 4, Flavien Prat, 15-1]. The 5-year-old Malibu Moon chestnut won last year's Grade 2 Oaklawn Handicap while being trained by Dallas Stewart and captured this year's Grade 3 Razorback in February and Grade 3 Essex in March, both at Oaklawn Park, for Lukas. He enters from a fourth-place finish in the Grade 1 Stephen Foster on July 1 at Ellis Park.

Whitney Entries

9:30 p.m. – Grade 1 Clement L. Hirsch Stakes at Del Mar

The Hirsch is a Breeders' Cup “Win and You're In” challenge race that guarantees the winner an admission free berth in the $2-million Breeders' Cup Distaff, which will be run this year at Santa Anita in November. It drew a field of five distaffers.

Trainer Bob Baffert, who won the Hirsch in 2020 with Fighting Mad, will send out a pair of solid candidates in the Saturday headliner in Adare Manor and Fun to Dream.

Adare Manor, an Uncle Mo offspring who has five victories and four seconds in 11 careers starts, well could be the favorite in the crucible. The speedster comes into the race off a trio of scores, the last two coming in Grade 2 stakes at Santa Anita. She figures to be on or near the lead throughout and she'll have the saddle services of her regular rider, Juan Hernandez, for the test, which goes as Race 10 on an 11-race card.

The other Baffert filly, Fun to Dream, is a California homebred daughter of the trainer's Hall of Fame stallion Arrogate out of the Maria's Mon mare Lutess. She's won six of her eight outings and is the lone runner in the lineup with a Grade 1 tally already to her credit, that coming in the La Brea Stakes at Santa Anita last December. Hernandez had ridden the filly in all eight of her previous starts, but chose to go the other way for this affair. That left the door open for veteran Ramon Vazquez to pick up the mount.

Trainer Phil D'Amato, who'll be in quest of his first victory in the stakes, also will saddle two of the runners in Elm Drive along with Desert Dawn.

Elm Drive, who'll have Ricky Gonzalez in the tack, is a five-time winner who has gone two turns only once before with results that were not promising. She's by the Tapit sire Mohaymen out of an Indian Charlie mare

Desert Dawn, who is also by a Tapit stallion, this one named Cupid, has only won twice after 14 starts, but has a pair of seconds and five thirds that have built her earnings up to $696,525, tops among all the runners in the lineup. She'll have regular rider Umberto Rispoli aboard as she goes again in a race where she ran second last year to the top mare Blue Stripe.

Finally, trainer John Sadler, with five notches already on his belt in the Hirsch, will send out Keith Abrahams' Kirstenbosch. Kirstenbosch is a homebred by Midnight Lute with a trio of victories and six other placings to her credit. She'll be handled by Hector Berrios in the select field. In her most recent start, Kirstenbosch finished second to Adare Manor in Santa Anita's Santa Margarita Stakes on June 10.

Hirsch Entries

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ThoroughBid To Offer Baycliffe Farm Dispersal

The complete dispersal of William Harrison-Allan's Baycliffe Farm, a breaking and pre-training yard, will sell at the ThoroughBid August Sale on Friday, Aug. 11. Harrison-Allan has owned and bred Thoroughbreds for more than 25 years.

Among the 10 lots offered from the Wiltshire operation will be Undertheboardwalk (Ire) (Acclamation {GB}) (lot 8), a winner on debut as a 3-year-old and a half-sister to listed-placed Atomic Lady (Fr) (Kodiac {GB}); and the 4-year-old filly Kissininthebackrow (GB) (Sixties Icon {GB}) (lot 17), a winner of a mile novice event at Lingfield two starts back.

“Selling a total sum of stock privately or at physical sales can be tricky, expensive and time-consuming, so the fact that all of Mr Harrison-Allan's horses can be sold online with us will hopefully make life much easier for them,” James Richardson, CEO of ThoroughBid, said

The full catalogue can be viewed online.

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