International Group 1 Winner Mogul A Strong Lone Entry For Coolmore On Dubai World Cup Night

Ballydoyle's blue-blooded multiple Group 1 winner Mogul comes into this Saturday's Group 1, $5 million Longines Dubai Sheema Classic in top form, but it seems no matter his success, expectations persist. A $4.6 million yearling purchase, the Aidan O'Brien-trained half-brother to top-level performers Secret Gesture and Japan has a pair of prestigious wins of his own, but a lingering debate of whether there is more potential in him is a common query. Such could be put to rest come Saturday at Meydan Racecourse.

The son of Galileo comes to Dubai a the lone runner for the powerful Coolmore operation, as well as the global powerhouse's sole nomination to the meeting. A Group 2-winning 2-year-old of 2019, winning the Champions Juvenile (G2) at Leopardstown before a fourth to Kameko in the Vertem Futurity Trophy (G1), he entered his sophomore season as obvious Derby material, but a sole prep at Royal Ascot—fourth as the favorite in the King Edward VII (G2)—did not provide enough bottom for him to stand up to the challenges of Epsom.

Stepping up his game with fitness, Mogul went on to win three of his next five races against some of the world's best, including Grand Prix de Paris (G1) and Hong Kong Vase (G1). Wedged between was a good fifth in Tarnawa's Breeders' Cup Turf (G1). The Hong Kong Vase, in mid-December, gives him a 15-week break coming to Dubai.

“We're happy with everything he's done,” O'Brien said. “He had a little break after Hong Kong and then he got going again and seems to be in good form. He's a horse who takes his racing very well and we think he's ready to start back again.

“I suppose it is his first run of the season, but he ran in December and that's hopefully an advantage,” he continued. “He wouldn't have had as long a break as he would have had last year, so we're hoping he's well enough and fit enough to do himself justice, really.”

Progress from three to four is expected from the well-built sort, but such was also the case for Japan, whose 2020 4-year-old campaign was a bit underwhelming. A winner of Group 1s, including the Juddmonte International and Grand Prix de Paris, in 2019, Japan could manage only a pair of thirds from five tries last year.

“Mentally they're a bit the same, but physically they're different,” O'Brien explained. “Mogul is probably a stronger, more powerful type of horse than Japan. Japan looks like a mile and a quarter, mile and a half horse, physically, whereas this horse looks more like a sprinter-miler. I suppose, physically they're different, but mentally, they're the same. They're relaxed horses who sleep and eat well.

“He's a big, strong, powerful horse and there's a lot of Danehill in him, so he carries plenty of condition. Even though he is fit and has done plenty of work, he still looks round and strong and looks more like a horse who will improve with the run, but that's the way he always looks.”

While O'Brien only has one win in the race–with the brilliant St Nicholas Abbey in 2013–his horses have often given strong accounts of themselves in a race that is arguably the toughest of the card. St Nicholas Abbey was second in 2012 and talented filly Seventh Heaven took up the same spot in 2017. In 2020, before the cancellation, he held a strong entry with Derby winner Anthony Van Dyck. One thing all those had in common was an affection for firm ground, which is likely at Meydan on its expansive 12-furlong course this Saturday.

“The quicker the ground the better,” O'Brien concluded. “The flat track will suit him and a nice even pace will suit him. He likes to take his time and he comes home well. He's flying out on Monday and we will be on the track as soon as we can.”

After a 48-hour quarantine, Mogul will make his first appearance to the public, post-Hong Kong-conquering, at morning track work on Thursday.

The current best-price $5 million Dubai Sheema Classic (G1) market:

5/2 CHRONO GENESIS
11/4 MISHRIFF
6/1 MOGUL
7/1 WALTON STREET
8/1 CHANNEL MAKER
16/1 STAR SAFARI
20/1 LOVES ONLY YOU
25/1 BERKSHIRE ROCCO
50/1 SIMSIR

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Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: From Mishriff To Enable, Every Day Is The ‘Olympics’ For Traveling Tony Proctor

When UK native Antony Proctor checked the odds on Mishriff just before the start of the $20 million Saudi Cup last Saturday, he was surprised the French Classic winner wasn't getting much respect. As trainer John Gosden's head traveling lad, Proctor knew the 4-year-old colt was up to the challenge of facing high-profile American runners Charlatan and Knicks Go.

“The boss wouldn't send him out there just to fill the gate,” Proctor said. 

Mishriff wound up defeating Charlatan by a length, paying $41.60 on a $2 wager in the American pools. Proctor was thrilled, meeting his charge on the track in Saudi Arabia to give 21-year-old jockey David Egan a high five before leading Mishriff into the winner's circle.

“It was pretty amazing,” said the 50-year-old industry veteran. “You know, people back home say to me sometimes, 'Don't you get tired of winning all the time?', and I have to say, I don't. It's not an easy life, and it's not the best-paid job in the world, but if you're in love with it, and I am, then it's one of the most rewarding jobs in the world.”

While Mishriff's Saudi Cup win was a great one for the entire Gosden team, it doesn't come close to Proctor's most memorable moment in racing. That honor lies with champion Enable.

“There's never been a horse to make the hairs on the back of my neck stand up like she did,” Proctor said. “I'll always remember walking her over for the Breeders' Cup at Churchill Downs, leading her around that walking ring. The American public were just so pleased to see her, and everyone was rooting for her. They'd see her and say, 'Oh, look, the Queen.'

“It was quite emotional; it was just unreal.”

Antony Proctor, left, gives Enable a pat after her 2018 victory in the Breeders' Cup Turf

The only horse to win the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe and the Breeders' Cup Turf in the same season (2018), Enable won 15 of her 19 career starts, 11 of which were Group/Grade 1 races. She won the Arc twice, in 2017 and 2018, finished second in the premier race in 2019, and won a record three editions of the King George VI & Queen Elizabeth Stakes.

Her race record isn't the only reason Enable was unique, Proctor explained. The mare also had a special presence about her, an almost human-like intelligence, that no other horse has ever come close to.

“It was a bit of a family thing, because my partner, Hannah, was the head girl to Enable when she was in training,” he said. “It's quite funny, because she's quite quirky in the box, and it's only Imran (Shahwani, her traveling exercise rider) and Hannah that could catch her at home. But I'd come down and yell her name, and she'd stick her head out and start whinnying. 

“That's why I think she's the best, and she'll always be my favorite. It's just the character, her whole persona. You'd walk around with her, and she knows she's good, but she also had a little bit of insecurity to her. She'd look to see where you are, then she'd see me, and it's like she'd say, 'I'm okay and I'll carry on.'

“I saw it because I was beside her, and she'd look for me. I got the best of her; I was there when she won her biggest races, every one of them. I have this relationship with her that will never be topped.”

Head traveling lad Tony Proctor pats Enable on the neck during morning training at Churchill Downs in 2018

There are a couple good reasons that even the best horses look to Proctor for security; first, he's always there beside them, and second, his quiet temperament and steady touch are a calming presence in unfamiliar surroundings.

His employers also place a lot of faith in Proctor, especially Gosden, not just because he's good with the horses, but because he is meticulous in his care of them and is also good at dealing with people, from owners to shipping managers.

“I think the biggest compliment I've had from the boss was that when I came to Churchill with Enable, I had her and Roaring Lion, and he sent me on my own,” Proctor said. “So to go over there with two horses of that ability, be over there for best part of a week before the boss turns up, obviously there's a good deal of trust there. He knows the way I work and he's happy with it.”

Tony Proctor with John Gosden trainee Global Giant in Saudi Arabia in February, 2021

Proctor has been all around the world caring for some of the top racehorses in the game. His resume includes exercising Dubai World Cup winners Dubai Millennium and Street Cry for Godolphin, three years under Henry Cecil, another three under Michael Stoute, and he is now in his ninth year with Gosden, for whom he has worked with horses like Golden Horn, Kingman, and Stradivarius, along with those already mentioned.

Perhaps Proctor was destined to work with racehorses, since his own father was a jockey and long-time employee of four-time champion trainer Major Dick Hern.

Father and son, Brian and Antony Proctor

Brian Proctor taught himself to ride and enjoyed some success as a jockey, but his real talent was as an exercise rider. Among his top charges were Brigadier Gerard, rated as the best racehorse trained in Britain in the 20th century, as well as stars like champion Bustino and Dayjur.

His father was his hero and his mentor, Proctor said. Though his father passed in 2017, he still remembers hearing stories about the journey to America for the Breeders' Cup Sprint with Dayjur in 1990. The horse famously jumped a dark shadow over the track in the stretch and lost by a neck, but had he not jumped the shadow, Proctor said, Dayjur likely would have won the race.

“Dad said one of the clock watchers was kind of winding him up, because we were English, and English horses can't compete with American sprinters on the dirt,” Proctor remembered. “After Dayjur worked later that morning, the clocker said he'd never change that clock again, saying, 'I've never seen anything so fast.'”

Dayjur leaps over a shadow just yards from victory in the 1990 Breeders' Cup Sprint

Proctor's father didn't pressure him into the racing business, but by the time he was 13 years old, the young Proctor was riding out on weekends and school holidays. From there, it was a natural progression to become an apprentice jockey.

He was one of the rare few in England who could ride both on the flat and over jumps, and wound up winning just over 200 races in his career, including at Cheltenham, Aintree, and even Royal Ascot.

“I don't think there's any place that comes close to riding at the Cheltenham Festival,” said Proctor. “As far as I was concerned Cheltenham was the place to be. I was in love with jump racing; there's no better feeling than coming up to a fence and the horse coming up to you. It's like you're flying.”

In 1997, Proctor got a call from Godolphin inviting him to come down to Dubai.

“I was riding bad horses at the time which isn't a great feeling, wondering if you're going to make it all the way around, not where you're going to finish,” he said. “I got to ride Dubai Millennium for them there, and obviously he was very good, I'd never felt anything like him before.”

After five years in the sunshine, Proctor was ready to head home to the UK. He rode races for a couple more years, then took a job as the third traveling lad to 10-time champion trainer Sir Henry Cecil.

“He was just a perfect gentleman, and we got on like a house on fire,” Proctor said. “I can't describe how good it was working for him, really.”

Unfortunately there were no opportunities to advance his career in Cecil's yard, as the two traveling lads ahead of him planned to stick by the trainer until his retirement, so after three years, Proctor decided to move on.

“I promise you now it was the hardest decision I've ever made,” said Proctor, his voice catching with emotion. “I was nearly in tears telling him I was leaving, but I'd been head-hunted by Sir Michael Stoute to be his second traveler. I won't tell you a lie, I think it was the worst decision I ever made.

“I learned a lot, though, in the three years with him. I'm a great believer in fate, so when the job at Gosden's came up, I took it, and then got to be first traveler within a year.”

One of the first really good horses Proctor remembers riding for Gosden was Kingman, before the colt made his first start.

“The assistant met me at the end of the gallops, and asked what I thought of him,” Proctor remembered. “I told him, 'I've waited 13 years to ride a horse that quickens like this. The last horse I sat on that quickened like this was Dubai Millenium.' 

“The assistant said, 'That's a pretty brave statement.' But you look at what he did on the track, and I guess it wasn't that brave, after all.”

Kingman won four Group 1 races as a 3-year-old and was voted the 2014 Cartier Horse of the Year.

“When you look back and think of the horses I've traveled now, from the first year with Golden Horn, then I end up with Enable, Stradivarius, Roaring Lion, and now Mishriff, you sort of think to yourself, I mean, you've almost got to pinch yourself sometimes!”

Trainer John Gosden, right, and head traveling lad Antony Proctor, left, with champion Enable following her 2018 Breeders' Cup Turf victory at Churchill Downs

Proctor isn't just in charge of traveling with the horses. He rides out nearly every morning at home, then gets the racing gear ready, loads the horses, drives to the races, finds lads to get them ready, saddles them, and then drives them back home again.

The most fun part of his job is the trips overseas. Proctor makes annual trips to the Breeders' Cup, the Arc meet in France, the Saudi Cup, and sometimes Dubai, among other places.

“Just being around good horses, it's unreal,” Proctor said. “When you're working for a trainer like the boss, I'm not sure respected is the right word, but you know you're going there competing, you're not just making up numbers. It's like for an athlete going to the Olympics, you're always at the top of your game, and I think that's something we all strive for, if we're honest.”

When he isn't traveling, Proctor spends his afternoons watching his 20-year-old daughter and two younger sons enjoy their own horses at home. His 6-year-old, Thomas, is an especially gifted rider. 

“I know one thing, I couldn't ride like him when I was six,” Proctor said. “It's frightening how good he is. My father was very, very good, he had the best hands I'd ever seen, and I think Thomas has his traits. He's so soft with his hands, he doesn't move. He's a very rare talent.”

Still, Proctor won't push any of his children toward the racing lifestyle, just as his father never pushed him. 

“You need to be in love with it,” Proctor said. “I've been very lucky in my progression, always been with good trainers, but even though I've had good jobs, I have to be happy, myself, in what I do to go to work every day. 

“Obviously, I have no intention of leaving at the moment!”

Antony Proctor and his son, Thomas, out for a ride

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York On Top Of The World

York's G1 Juddmonte International S. didn't just provide the world's best 130-rated performance of 2020 for Ghaiyyath (Ire) but, with its stellar back-up cast of seven-time Group 1 winner Magical (Ire), the G1 St James's Palace S. winner Lord North (Ire) and 2000 Guineas hero Kameko, the race was also judged to be the Longines World's Best Horse Race last year on ratings.

Along with announcing the World's Best Racehorse Rankings on Tuesday, Longines and the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities (IFHA) also published the list of top 100 Group 1 and Grade 1 races of the year. It is the first time that the Juddmonte International has achieved this accolade and its rating of 125.25 was derived from the average rating of the first four finishers in the race.

William Derby, chief executive and clerk of the course at York Racecourse, said, “This is a huge honour and a thrill. It's what we're all about at York Racecourse in terms of trying to attract the very best horses and jockeys to race on the Knavesmire. We're thrilled to be named number one against all the wonderful races around the global sport of horseracing.”

He continued, “We're incredibly grateful to Longines and the IFHA for compiling these ratings, ranking every [Group/Grade 1] race around the world based on the first four horses home. To come top of that pile is a huge honour. We're delighted and grateful for their support, and that of the connections of every horse, and Juddmonte Farms, without whom we wouldn't be able to stage such a magnificent race for everyone to enjoy.”

The QIPCO Irish Champion S. at Leopardstown, in which Magical turned the tables on Ghaiyyath, was the second highest-rated race in the world last year on 124.75, with Armory (Ire) and subsequent Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe winner Sottsass (Fr) completing the first four.

With Japan's darling of the racecourse, Almond Eye (Jpn) set to make her swansong, the Japan Cup of 2020 was always going to be special, not least because the field also featured the two best 3-year-olds in the country, Triple Crown winner Contrail (Jpn) and Triple Tiara winner Daring Tact (Jpn) (Epiphaneia {Jpn}). The star trio crossed the line in that order in Tokyo, with Curren Bouquetd'or (Jpn) (Dee Impact {Jpn}) in fourth to make the Japan Cup the third top race of the year on 124.50.

Japan had two races in the top five, the other being the Tenno Sho, which was joint-fourth with the Breeders' Cup Turf at Keeneland on 123.75. Also making the top ten were the Coral-Eclipse at Sandown, Tokyo's Yasuda Kinen, the Prix Jacques le Marois at Deauville, the QIPCO Champion S. at Ascot, and the Arima Kinen, run at Nakayama.

Churchill Downs staged both the highest-rated race in the world for fillies only, the Kentucky Oaks (119.25), won by Shedaresthedevil (Daredevil), and the highest-rated race reserved for 3-year-olds, the Kentucky Derby (121.25), won by subsequent Breeders' Cup Classic hero Authentic.

Among the 11 countries in the list of top Group/Grade 1 races run at 40 different racecourses, Australia, with 25, was the world leader, followed by Britain (18), Japan (14), America (13), France (9), Hong Kong (9), South Africa (6), Ireland (4), Germany (3), Argentina (1), and New Zealand (1). The 2020 list of top races stretches to 103 contests owing to a six-way tie for the 98th spot.

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Multiple G1 Winner Pinball Wizard Chasing Breeders’ Cup Berth This Saturday In Argentina

Led by multiple Group 1-winning 5-year-old Pinball Wizard and the fast-closing 4-year-old Tetaze, winner of the Longines Gran Premio Latinoamericano (G1), a standout field of 13 runners has been entered for Saturday's 1 ½-mile Gran Premio Internacional Carlos Pellegrini (G1) — South America's most prestigious race — at Hipódromo de San Isidro in Argentina. The winner will receive an automatic berth into the 2021 Longines Breeders' Cup Turf (G1) through the Breeders' Cup Challenge Series.

The Breeders' Cup Challenge is an international series of stakes races whose winners receive automatic starting positions and fees paid into a corresponding race of the 2021 Breeders' Cup World Championships, which is scheduled to be held on Nov. 5-6 at Del Mar racetrack in Del Mar, California.

As a part of the benefits of the Challenge series, the Breeders' Cup will pay the entry fees for the winner of the Gran Premio Internacional Carlos Pellegrini to start in the 1 ½-mile Longines Breeders' Cup Turf. Breeders' Cup also will provide a $40,000 travel allowance for all starters based outside of North America to compete in the World Championships. The Challenge winner must be nominated to the Breeders' Cup program by the pre-entry deadline of Oct. 25, 2021 to receive the rewards.

The Gran Premio Internacional Carlos Pellegrini, which was first run in 1887, is the first Breeders' Cup Challenge Series race of the 2021 season.

Owned by Haras Don Teodoro and trained by Jorge Mayansky Neer, Pinball Wizard won two Group 1 races in October, among his four wins in nine starts on turf. A dark bay son of Orpen out of Pink Pony (ARG) by Pure Prize, Pinball Wizard scored a half-length victory in the 1 ½-mile Gran Premio General San Martin on Oct. 3 at Palermo and improved on that performance on Oct. 31 when he dominated the 1 ½-mile Copa de Oro – Alfredo Lalor at San Isidro, crossing the wire 5 lengths in front in 2:25.34. As he was in his last two wins, Juan Cruz Villagra has the mount on Pinball Wizard, breaking from post seven.

Due to the effects of the Coronavirus pandemic on racing in Argentina, Egalite de 9's Tetaze will be making his first start since his biggest career score in March, when he won the 1 ¼-mile Gran Premio Latinoamericano (G1) at San Isidro by 2 lengths over a heavy course. Trained by Roberto Pellegatta, Tetaze, a bay son of Equal Stripes, will try to improve on his fifth-place finish in last year's Carlos Pellegrini. He will be ridden by Gustavo Calvente from post 11.

Haras El Angel de Venecia's 6-year-old Village King, a bay son of Campanologist out of the Pleasant Tap mare Villard, has enjoyed success in both Argentina and in the United States during his 15-race career. Trained by Carly Etchechoury, Village King won three races in Argentina and finished third in the 2017 Carlos Pellegrini. He spent the following two years in the U.S. under the care of trainer Todd Pletcher, making eight starts. He won the Red Smith Stakes at Aqueduct in 2018 and finished third in the 2019 Pan American Stakes (G3) at Gulfstream Park.

After an eighth-place finish in the Man o' War at Belmont Park in May 2019, Village King was returned to Argentina and was back racing on Oct. 10 of this year, winning the 1 ½-mile Progreso (G2) at San Isidro, going wire-to-wire in an 8-length victory. In his last start, the 1 ½-mile Copa de Oro, he gained the lead into the stretch, but was no match for Pinball Wizard, finishing 5 lengths behind the winner. Village King will be ridden by Brian Enrique from post three.

Trainer Alfredo Gaitan Dassie has saddled five winners of the Carlos Pellegrini. This year he is starting six-time Group stakes winner Emotion Orpen (ARG), who took the Group 1 Dardo Rocha Internacional (G1) at 1 ½ miles by 2 ½ lengths at La Plata on Nov. 19. Owned and bred by Haras Firmamento, Emotion Orpen, who is a 5-year-old son of Orpen out of the Distorted Humor mare Unavailable, also won the 1 3/8-mile Organizacion Sudamericana de Fomento (G3) by 8 lengths at La Plata on Oct. 20. Emotion Orpen will be ridden by Francisco Fernandes Goncalves from post position nine.

Making the leap from listed company to Group 1 competition is Las Canarias's undefeated 4-year-old Rohit Joy. A bay son of Fortify out of Stormy Rose by Bernstein, Rohit Joy made his first start on Sept. 11, and reeled off four consecutive wins at Palermo as the favorite each time for trainer Juan Saldivia. His last win was a 9-length triumph in the 12-furlong Minstrel on Nov. 26. Juan Noriega has the mount, breaking from post eight.

Gaitan Dassie is also saddling the 3-year-old Cool Day, a chestnut son of John F Kennedy, who was a fast-closing second in the Jockey Club (G1) at 1 ¼ miles on Oct. 31 at San Isidro in just his third start. He will be ridden by Eduardo Ortega Pavon from post six.

 

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