Magical Display in the Offing

Avoiding her arch-foe Enable (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}) at Ascot, Magical (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) is kept to home soil to extend her awe-inspiring record in domestic races in Sunday’s G1 Tattersalls Gold Cup at The Curragh. With the race open to 3-year-olds in this unusual year but drawing only one which is her stable’s Armory (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), Coolmore’s mare supreme looks to have a straightforward task in accomplishing a ninth success from 12 starts in Ireland. Her latest, in the course-and-distance G1 Pretty Polly S. June 28, was arguably her finest as she was giving 12 pounds weight-for-age and a 4 1/2-length beating to the subsequent G1 Irish Oaks runner-up Cayenne Pepper (Ire) (Australia {GB}). Last year’s G1 English and Irish Champion S. heroine has five victories at the top level to boast of, including in this last year and her odds reflect the prospect of her making it six here.

“She is very well and we’ve been very happy with her since her last run,” Aidan O’Brien said of the 5-year-old, who will have to wait a bit longer for a rematch with the Juddmonte mare. “Magical and Japan were being trained for the King George and you’re never sure what is going to happen, but the two of them seem to have come to this weekend very well. Magical was happy to stay at home and run on a track that she knows without having to travel–it looks like the race is going to suit her lovely. She’s only had the one run this year, whereas Japan has had the two runs and the King George was a race we had our eye on with him for a long time. The Tattersalls Gold Cup is a great race to have at the Curragh, and it’s a lovely race for Magical ahead of the autumn.”

Joseph O’Brien saddles Lloyd Williams’ admirable Buckhurst (Ire) (Australia {GB}), who beat Magical’s stablemate Sir Dragonet (Ire) (Camelot {GB}) in the G3 Alleged S. over this track and trip June 27 and his level of consistency could easily see him pull off a group 1 placing. if there is a suprise package in the line-up, it could be Zhang Yuesheng’s June 12 G2 Mooresbridge S. winner Leo De Fury (Ire) (Australia {GB}) who looked a different proposition when hammering Ballydoyle’s smart Fleeting (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}) by three lengths in that 10 1/2-furlong prep here.

Munich’s G1 Grosser Dallmayr-Preis shares the same status as the Tattersalls Gold Cup, but it will take considerably less to win which is good news for Godolphin’s Barney Roy (GB) (Excelebration {Ire}) and Chantal Regalado-Gonzalez’s Patrick Sarsfield (Fr) (Australia {GB}). The former, who took the G1 Jebel Hatta at Meydan Mar. 7, was third in the G1 Prince of Wales’s S. over this mile-and-a-quarter trip at Royal Ascot June 17, while the quick-progressing Patrick Sarsfield comes into this on the back of an authoritative success in the nine-furlong G3 Meld S. at Leopardstown July 11. “Barney Roy put up a decent performance on ground that was slower than ideal in the Prince of Wales’s Stakes,” Charlie Appleby said. “He came out of the race well and this has always been the target since. He goes into this race in good shape and a repeat of his runs so far this year should make him the one to beat.”

In Ascot’s G3 Betfred Valiant Fillies’ S. over a mile, Billesdon Brook (GB) (Champs Elysees {GB}) looks for compensation for her neck defeat in Newmarket’s G1 Falmouth S. July 10 in which she split Nazeef (GB) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) and Terebellum (Ire) (Sea the Stars {Ire}). She encounters Lael Stable’s unbeaten and still unexposed Miss O Connor (Ire) (Roderic O’Connor {Ire}), who was last seen taking the G3 Prix Perth at Saint-Cloud in October. “It’s a lovely race for her and she’s in great nick,” trainer Richard Hannon said of Billesdon Brook. “She has run good races at Ascot and elsewhere. It’s all to do with if she’s in form on the day–if she is then she’s very hard to beat and if not she runs moderately, but we never know until a furlong and a half out. She’s a star–no matter how she runs, she’s loved at home. To have a Classic winner still in training at five is great for racing and we’re all enjoying the ride.”

Also on the card is the G3 Princess Margaret Betfred S., in which the increasingly-elusive TDN Rising Star More Beautiful (War Front) needs better ground than she encountered when ninth in the G2 Queen Mary S. at the Royal meeting June 20. Third in that contest at 100-1, Caroline Dale (GB) (Lethal Force {Ire}) has since won at Windsor July 6 and heads a two-pronged attack from the David Loughnane stable alongside the July 10 G2 Duchess of Cambridge S. third Santosha (Ire) (Coulsty {Ire}). The form of that Newmarket contest was boosted by the subsequent Listed Star S. success of the runner-up Fev Rover (Ire) (Gutaifan {Ire}) and the trainer is relishing seeing them both in action. “We only have 10 or 11 two-year-old fillies in the yard, so to have two of their calibre is fantastic,” he said.

“I would prefer not to run them against each other, but you have to train them as individuals and it’s the right race for them both,” Loughnane added. “I think they both have fantastic chances and I’m very bullish about both. They are both different fillies–Caroline wears her heart on her sleeve, bombs out of the gate and is dynamite in front and if you are good enough to pass her they’ll have to fight for it. Santosha likes to take her time and saves a bit up her sleeve–she’s very tough. She was green still at Newmarket and when she came with her run Dandalla just drifted across her a bit. She’s come on a lot, while Caroline just has so much ability. I think both are borderline on their way to being group one horses.”

At York, the Listed British Stallion Studs EBF Lyric Fillies’ S. sees Khalid Abdullah’s Franconia (GB) (Frankel {GB}) take on the older horses following her impressive success in Newbury’s Listed Abingdon Fillies’ S. The form of that 10-furlong Oaks prep has been boosted by the listed win of the runner-up Cabaletta (GB) (Mastercraftsman {Ire}) and the highly-regarded half-sister to the G1 Nassau S. heroine Winsili (GB) (Dansili {GB}) will be a warm order to cap another stellar weekend for Juddmonte. John Gosden said of the homebred, who was forced to miss the G3 Musidora S. here earlier this month, “She scoped with mucus before the Musidora. She has always been a little bit inclined that way and I just wasn’t happy with her. She is like her sister Winsili and is very full of herself at home. She is quite a character, but she seems in good form. It was a good effort to break her maiden in a listed race, but she now has to carry a penalty for that victory in this race. The race at Newbury is working out quite well.”

Franconia encounters Mohamed Khalid Abdulrahim’s highly-regarded Gold Wand (Ire) (Golden Horn {GB}), who was out of her depth and probably running over too far when a distant seventh in the July 4 G1 Epsom Oaks. Jockey Andrea Atzeni is confident she can bounce back. “I think a mile and a quarter on a flat track like York will suit her perfectly, because she won over that trip at Newbury,” he explained. “She is a filly that we like quite like. We took a chance in the Oaks, because we thought she would be competitive in that race. But it just never happened for her, as she probably didn’t have enough experience. She didn’t have a hard race in the Oaks and she came out of it fine. We are very pleased with her.”

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Next Targets Set for Serpentine, Santiago

Trainer Aidan O’Brien has announced plans for two of his 3-year-old stars of 2020, G1 Investec Derby upsetter Serpentine (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) and G1 Irish Derby hero Santiago (Ire) (Authorized {Ire}).

Serpentine will make his next start in the G1 Juddmonte Grand Prix de Paris at ParisLongchamp on Arc Trial day Sept. 13.

“The lads [owners Coolmore] wanted to keep him at a mile and a half, with a view that he could go for the Arc or something like that,” O’Brien said. The Grand Prix de Paris replaces the G2 Prix Niel, the customary 3-year-old course-and-distance prep for the Arc, which has been suspended this year.

Santiago, who gave O’Brien his 14th Irish Derby success late last month, will take on Stradivarius (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) in the G1 Goodwood Cup over two miles and will be in receipt of 15 pounds.

“It was always the plan to come here after Ascot, and we took in the Irish Derby on the way,” said O’Brien. “He seems to have come out of the Irish Derby well–we’re very happy with him at the moment.

“We always thought the Goodwood Cup was a race that would suit him. He’s a horse we always thought would stay very well– that’s why he ran him first time out this year at Ascot over a mile and six (furlongs).

“He’s a very straightforward horse to handle and to train and he’s very clean-winded. He’s a very exciting horse, and we always viewed him as possibly a Cup horse for next year, so this is all good experience for him really.

“If everything goes well, he’ll probably go straight from here to the [G1] St Leger, because there isn’t really anything for him in between.”

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Enable Clash Headlines Saturday Action

Khalid Abdullah’s Enable (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}) will bid to break new ground on Saturday in the 70th and certainly one of the strangest editions of the G1 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth QIPCO S. ever witnessed.

Ascot’s midsummer showcase may be lacking in diversity and numbers, even more so after Anthony Van Dyck (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) was withdrawn Friday, but it will be a fascinating encounter to witness, with the Juddmonte queen looking for an astounding 11th victory at this level. Her Galileo-sired opponents Sovereign (Ire) and Japan (GB) have a mere four successes in this company to boast of between them and regardless of their quality, it will rank as one of the race’s bigger upsets if she surrenders her crown. John Gosden has said it all in the lead-up and it is down to the mare and her greatest admirer Frankie Dettori now.

“She still has that exuberance she had as a 3-year-old, but she is older and has grown a little wiser,” he commented. “I see all of the mental strength and wanting to do it still there with her. She’s more measured about it now, that’s probably the best way of putting it.”

With Sovereign having punished his peers from the front in last year’s G1 Irish Derby on a Curragh track predisposed to bold front-runners, it will be a turn-up if William Buick does not attempt to repeat the antics on Saturday.

In a precursor to the recent Epsom success of Serpentine (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), the chestnut slammed Anthony Van Dyck by six lengths in that Classic prior to that 2019 G1 Epsom Derby hero running a distant 10th in this contest.

Interestingly, Japan’s sole outing over this track and trip came when winning the G2 King Edward VII S. impressively at last year’s Royal meeting. Only fourth in the June 17 G1 Prince of Wales’s S. on his return to this venue, he improved markedly to finish a head behind Enable when third in the July 5 G1 Eclipse S. at Sandown and it is not implausible that he could have progressed again in the interim. Ryan Moore has picked last year’s G1 Grand Prix de Paris and G1 Juddmonte International winner and he looks Ballydoyle’s closing act in a tactical conundrum.

“Everyone knows that Enable is the one to beat and no one is going to argue that she shouldn’t be a short-priced favourite to win her third King George, which would be some feat and a measure of how good she is,” Moore commented. “Sure, she wasn’t at her best behind Ghaiyyath (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) on her return in the Eclipse, but you would have thought they would have been pretty pleased with her there as a 6-year-old having her first start in over nine months. But she has been beaten in her last two starts, time catches up with us all and that gives us all hope, especially when the opposition here is as good as it is. You have a six-length Irish Derby winner in Sovereign, a Derby winner in Anthony Van Dyck, who is very capable, indeed, when getting decent ground and my mount Japan.

He continued, “Japan’s best form to date came in his Juddmonte victory over an extended mile and a quarter, but he clearly gets a mile and a half well and I was very happy with his third in the Eclipse, just a head behind Enable. I’d like to think my horse comes in here with a career-best performance in him after his two runs this season and he has everything in his favour conditions-wise. That may not be good enough if Enable is at the level of her Yorkshire Oaks win last season, but we will give it a go.”

Aidan O’Brien was bullish about Japan’s chances on Friday. “The first day at Ascot, he got upset in the stalls and missed the break, then he got a little tired, but we were happy. We were delighted with him at Sandown and we felt he would progress big time for it,” he said. “Everything about his work since has been very good and we are where we hoped he would be. We always had it in our minds this would be Japan’s first big target. We’ve run lots of horses against Enable but we’re always trying to compete, that’s what everybody loves. It’s great having strong competition, so it’s great Enable is there. It will be Enable and Frankie and Japan and Ryan, so it will be some spectacle. The two horses and the two lads, we’re looking forward to it. The reality is it’s like one of those old matches. It’s on a great track, a stiff mile and a half, so it should be great.”

The King George is a Breeders’ Cup ‘Win and You’re In” qualifier for the GI Breeders’ Cup Turf at Keeneland in November.

Elsewhere, Shadwell’s TDN Rising Star Elarqam (GB) (Frankel {GB}) bids for back-to-back wins in the G2 Sky Bet York S. following a failed try at a mile and a half in the Hardwicke. Third and possibly unlucky in the G1 Juddmonte International in August, the 5-year-old appears to appreciate the Knavesmire but has questions to answer after two below-par runs in his last three.

“I would need to go back and have a proper look at what he beat in the race last year, but I know we had Addeybb (Ire) (Pivotal {GB}) a few lengths behind us in second and I’m not sure there’s anything of his quality in the race on Saturday,” Charlie Johnston said. “We obviously didn’t run up to expectations in the Hardwicke. But he lost a shoe and I just think the race went against him–they went hard early and it turned into a war of attrition over a mile and a half, which possibly didn’t suit him.”

Hughie Morrison pitches Castle Down Racing’s Telecaster (GB) (New Approach {Ire}) into battle, with last year’s G2 Dante S. scorer having enjoyed a confidence boost when successful in the G3 La Coupe at ParisLongchamp June 25. Previously, he had been third when Elarqam was runner-up to Lord North (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) in the G3 Brigadier Gerard S. at Haydock June 7 and he remains relatively unexposed.

“We have quite a bit to find with Elarqam on ratings and a bit to find with Aspetar (Fr) (Al Kazeem {GB}) and Regal Reality (GB) (Intello {Ger}). Hopefully he can prove everyone wrong and show he’s the best horse in the race.”

Ascot’s supporting card sees the Listed BetfredTV Pat Eddery S. host a clash between Sheikh Ahmed Al Maktoum’s July 4 Woodcote S. winner Twaasol (GB) (Adaay {Ire}) and Al Shaqab Racing’s June 20 G2 Coventry S. third Saeiqa (GB) (Shalaa {Ire}). Twaasol is trained by Owen Burrows, who said, “We’ve been very happy with him since Epsom and this is the natural progression for him. It looks as if the step up to seven furlongs will suit him. It looks a good race and we should learn a bit more about him, hopefully.”

At Gowran Park, the Listed Irish Stallion Farms EBF Vintage Tipple S. sees the return of a potential star stayer in The Aga Khan’s Kastasa (Ire) (Rock of Gibraltar {Ire}) who signed off 2019 with a seven-length success in The Curragh’s G3 Loughbrown S. in September.

Anthony Van Dyck Withdrawn…

Anthony Van Dyck (Ire), who was to be one of three sons of Galileo (Ire) to tackle two-time defending champion Enable (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}) in Saturday’s G1 King George VI & Queen Elizabeth Diamond S. at Ascot, has been declared from the race by trainer Aidan O’Brien.

“We weren’t 100 per cent happy with Anthony Van Dyck’s bloods when they came back this evening and as a result we’re not going to run him at Ascot tomorrow. It’s disappointing but we have to do the right thing by the horse.”

The 2016 G1 Investec Derby hero was set to have his third run of the season Saturday, having finished runner-up to Ghaiyyath (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) in the G1 Coronation Cup at Newmarket June 5 before finishing a disappointing fifth over unsuitably soft ground in the G2 Hardwicke S. at the Royal meeting two weeks later.

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Anthony Van Dyck Out of King George, Two to Challenge Enable

Anthony Van Dyck (Ire), who was to be one of three Aidan O’Brien-trained sons of Galileo (Ire) to tackle two-time defending champion Enable (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}) in Saturday’s G1 King George VI & Queen Elizabeth Diamond S. at Ascot, has been declared from the race.

“We weren’t 100 per cent happy with Anthony Van Dyck’s bloods when they came back this evening and as a result we’re not going to run him at Ascot tomorrow,” the conditioner told Racing Post. “It’s disappointing but we have to do the right thing by the horse.”

The 2016 G1 Investec Derby hero was set to have his third run of the season Saturday, having finished runner-up to Ghaiyyath (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) in the G1 Coronation Cup at Newmarket June 5 before finishing a disappointing fifth over unsuitably soft ground in the G2 Hardwicke S. at the Royal meeting two weeks later.

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