Shadwell’s Baaeed Crowned Cartier Horse Of The Year

Shadwell homebred Baaeed (GB) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) was named the Cartier Horse of the Year and Cartier Older Horse at the 32nd Cartier Racing Awards at the Dorchester Hotel in London on Wednesday evening.

The first Shadwell colourbearer to earn the Horse of the Year accolade, the William Haggas trainee added another four Group 1 victories to his pair earned in 2021, posting wins in the Lockinge S., Queen Anne S., Sussex S., and International S. in succession. His only loss in an 11-start career was a fourth-place finish in the G1 Champion S. on QIPCO British Champions Day in October. It was announced on Tuesday that the son of Aghareed (Kingmambo) would stand for £80,000 at Shadwell's Nunnery Stud in 2023.

Also shortlisted for Horse of the Year were G1 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe heroine Alpinista (GB) (Frankel {GB}), quadruple Group 1-winning stayer Kyprios (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) and three-time Group 1-winning sprinter Highfield Princess (Fr) (Night Of Thunder {Ire}). G1 Champion S. hero Bay Bridge (GB) (New Bay {GB}) and dual Group 1-winning miler Kinross (GB) (Kingman {GB}) were fellow nominees in the Cartier Older Horse category.

His Highness The Aga Khan's Vadeni (Fr) (Churchill {Ire}) was named the Cartier 3-Year-Old Colt on the back of victories in the G1 Prix du Jockey Club, G1 Eclipse S., and G3 Prix de Guiche. Runner-up in Alpinista's Arc, the Jean-Claude Rouget trainee was also third in the G1 Irish Champion S. He follows Sinndar (Ire) (Grand Lodge) (2000) and Dalakhani (Ire) (Darshaan {GB}) (2003) in earning the 3-year-old colt award for the owner-breeder. This year marked the centennial of The Aga Khan's operation.

Already awarded the title of Cartier 2-Year-Old Filly, Inspiral (GB) (Frankel {GB}) became just the third filly to also take the Cartier 3-Year-Old Filly title. The Cheveley Park Stud homebred is in good company, however, as the earlier two winners are none other than Divine Proportions (Kingmambo) in 2005 and Minding (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) in 2016. The John and Thady Gosden-trained bay scored an imperious victory in Royal Ascot's G1 Coronation S., and, after a second-place finish in the G1 Falmouth S., she bounced back with a gritty win in Deauville's G1 Prix Jacques Le Marois.

Kyprios proved unstoppable in the stayers' ranks throughout a six-start 4-year-old season, collecting victories from April through October. Trained by Aidan O'Brien for Moyglare Stud and the Coolmore partners, the chestnut's victory in the Listed Vintage Crop S. kickstarted a tour de force, quickly followed by the G3 Saval Beg Levmoss S. a month later. Stepped up to Group 1 company, the colt delivered in the Gold Cup, Goodwood Cup S., Irish St. Leger, and the Oct. 1 Prix du Cadran was a 20-length demolition job.

A hardy veteran of the handicap ranks, Highfield Princess proved a revelation when cut back to sprinting trips for owner-breeder John Fairley and trainer John Quinn. In action from February through November, the 5-year-old scored her first group win in the G2 Clipper Logistics S. at York in May, her fifth start of 2022. She earned her first top-drawer tally in the G1 Prix Maurice de Gheest two starts later at Deauville on Aug. 7, and then added the G1 Nunthorpe S. returned to the Knavesmire and in the Curragh's G1 Flying Five S, in August and September, respectively. Connections opted to try for an international Group 1 four-timer at the Breeders' Cup, but her draw and a rough trip did her no favours, and she was a close fourth.

Part of a legion of Group 1-winning juveniles for Aidan O'Brien and the Coolmore partners in 2022, Blackbeard (Ire) (No Nay Never) got the nod as the Cartier 2-Year-Old Colt. He won six of his eight starts in a busy 2-year-old campaign which culminated in a two-length victory in the G1 Middle Park S. The Derrick Smith, Mrs. John Magnier, Michael Tabor and Westerberg silksbearer also captured the G1 Prix Morny, G2 Prix Robert Papin, G3 Marble Hill S. and the Listed First Flier S. Set for stallion duties at Coolmore Ireland in 2023, he was second by a nostril in the G2 Railway S. en route to championship honours.

Blackbeard's Cartier 2-Year-Old Filly counterpart is Lezoo (GB) (Zoustar {Aus}). The Ralph Beckett-trained filly, owned by Marc Chan and Andrew Rosen, was first or second in all five starts in 2022. After taking the Listed Empress Fillies S. in late June, she was only a half-length back of 'TDN Rising Star' Mawj (Ire) (Exceed And Excel {Aus}) in the G2 Duchess Of Cambridge S. at Newmarket a month later, and returned to winning ways in the G3 Princess Margaret S. at Ascot on July 23. Lezoo defeated subsequent GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf heroine Meditate (Ire) No Nay Never) in the G1 Cheveley Park S. back at Newmarket to end her season on a high in September.

The recipient of the Cartier/The Daily Telegraph Award of Merit is owner-breeder Kirsten Rausing of Lanwades Stud. Besides celebrating her homebred Alpinista winning the G1 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, Rausing was also the breeder of G1 St Leger hero Eldar Eldarov (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}), as well as recent Australian Group 1 winners Zaaki (GB) and Durston (GB). In addition, Rausing serves as an integral figure in the sport's governance and administration, while through her Alborada Trust, she has also provided vital funding for a host of causes in racing and wider society.

Laurent Feniou, Managing Director of Cartier UK, said, “We have been fortunate to witness another exceptional year of European horse racing and I am delighted to celebrate an outstanding group of horses at the 32nd Cartier Racing Awards. Baaeed lit up the season with four brilliant victories and he is a worthy recipient of the Cartier Horse of the Year award. We are also thrilled to honour Kirsten Rausing, who has given so much to the industry, with the Cartier/The Daily Telegraph Award of Merit. It is a privilege for Cartier to be able to recognise these champions of the sport and my deepest congratulations go out to all of this year's winners. I would like to extend special thanks to Racing Post, The Daily Telegraph and Sky Sports Racing for their continued support of the awards.”

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Trainer David Elsworth ‘Honored And Privileged’ To Receive 2021 Cartier Award Of Merit

The Cartier/Daily Telegraph Award of Merit for 2021 goes to David Elsworth, one of the most successful dual-purpose trainers Britain has produced.

After watching a video tribute to his career, Elsworth said: “Well, what can I say? I've never heard so much bullshit in all my life! Having said that, I'd like to thank Cartier and those misguided people who've got me up here. I am very flattered to be considered for this award when I look at my predecessors. And here I am, a 20/1 shot. It happens, doesn't it? I'm very flattered. I feel like a bit of an imposter, in fact. But it is a great honour and when I think of those predecessors…. it is something I shall treasure and appreciate those people who have supported me.

“It's a well-known cliche that the success one has as a figurehead, the trainer or whoever he may be, we all need the support of the staff and everybody. And I've been very lucky in that department. In fact, I've been very lucky everywhere. Thank you very much, I'm very honored and privileged. Thank you.”

During a career spanning 67 years, Elsworth has scaled the heights of both Jump and Flat racing, enjoying Classic success alongside victories in the Cheltenham Gold Cup and the Grand National. A self-made man with a brilliant affinity for training, he has been responsible for two of the most popular horses in racing history, Desert Orchid and Persian Punch.

David Raymond Cecil Elsworth was born into inauspicious surroundings at Salisbury Infirmary on Dec. 12, 1939. An illegitimate child, Elsworth was raised by his grandparents in a council house just a few miles from the village of Whitsbury, where he would later enjoy some of his greatest training successes.

His schooling at Tidworth Down Secondary Modern was far from prodigious – “the only subjects I did well at were cross-country running, religious knowledge and history” – although a girl who sat next to him in class brought about his introduction into racing. Her father worked for Alec Kilpatrick, who trained at the Herridge stables now occupied by Richard Hannon. Elsworth rode his bike over to the yard and enquired about a job, securing an apprenticeship that would start on January 3, 1955.

After overcoming initial second thoughts – “for the first couple of months, I only stayed because I didn't have the guts to tell the guv'nor that I wanted to go home” – Elsworth ended up completing his three-year apprenticeship with Kilpatrick. He enjoyed his first winner as a jockey on Rathrowan in a 35-runner novices' hurdle at Cheltenham on November 15, 1957.

Elsworth's career in the saddle failed to hit the heights of some of his contemporaries with 31 wins in total, although he claimed he had to ride “a lot of bad buggers” against the likes of Tim Moloney, Dick Francis, Michael Scudamore and Fred Winter. A bad fall saw him briefly quit the saddle until he fell back in love with racing under the guidance of Toby Balding, a trainer who, like Elsworth, excelled in both Flat and Jump racing.

By 1971, Elsworth had set his sights on becoming a trainer but having no money or facilities proved problematic. A solution presented itself when he joined up with Lieutenant-Colonel Ricky Vallance, who trained in the village of Bishop Cannings near Devizes. Vallance would hold the licence but Elsworth would help in the yard, as well as bringing in two horses – Willoblige and Indulgent – that he already looked after for bookmaker John Duffy.

The arrangement paid immediate dividends as Elsworth rode Willoblige and Indulgent to win both divisions of a maiden hurdle at Newton Abbot on Easter Monday, 1971. Further significant success soon arrived for the yard with Red Candle winning the 1972 Mackeson Gold Cup and 1973 Hennessy Gold Cup, although the partnership hit an abrupt end following the victory of Well Briefed at Exeter in 1974. The stewards refused to accept the explanation of Well Briefed's improvement following his previous lacklustre run at Fontwell and Vallance promptly lost his licence. “I think our professionalism with that particular horse was misinterpreted as dishonesty,” Elsworth would later say about the first of several brushes with authority.

Denied the opportunity to take over the licence by the Jockey Club and told to reapply in a year's time, Elsworth undertook a variety of jobs outside of racing, including selling fabrics at the local markets as well as working as a security guard at Stonehenge.

Elsworth continued to ride out for Jim Old and spent a winter working as an assistant to Richmond Sturdy before striking out on his own again in 1977, setting up a pre-training establishment in a cattle yard in the village of Figheldean on the outskirts of an army firing range.

After successfully applying for a licence in June, 1978, Elsworth returned from Newmarket sales that November with three horses – Raffia Set, Skyline Drive and Cumberland Reel. All three ensured that the trainer would hit the ground running as they notched eight victories between them in 1979. Raffia Set, purchased for 1,650gns, would become Elsworth's first Flat winner when scoring at Salisbury on April 8, 1979. 2,500gns buy Skyline Drive captured five races, including the Great Metropolitan Handicap at Epsom Downs.

Elsworth moved to surroundings more conducive to training horses, Luckham Park Stables, near Calne in late 1979 and continued to burnish his reputation as an astute handler over both codes with the exploits of Heighlin.

Bought for 14,000gns with the express aim of winning the Triumph Hurdle, Heighlin duly provided Elsworth with the first of nine winners at the Cheltenham Festival in the 1980 renewal of the juvenile contest. The son of High Line would also provide his trainer with a first success at Royal Ascot in the same year's Ascot Stakes – one of eight handicap wins on the Flat for the horse that season – before going on to win the 1982 Goodwood Cup.

Relocating to Whitsbury Manor Stables in 1981 heralded the start of a golden period for Elsworth. Mighty Fly became the first horse to complete the Lincoln/Royal Hunt Cup double in 1983. Melindra, who cost 400gns, captured another of Royal Ascot's most fiendish handicaps, the Wokingham, the same year.

Mighty Flutter finished third behind Secreto and El Gran Senor in the 1984 Derby, while Miss Silca Key, purchased for just 8,000gns, won the Jersey Stakes at Royal Ascot the following month.

Elsworth's reputation of being a superb judge of a horse was further enhanced by 16,000gns buy Naheez, who would place in both the Prix du Jockey Club and the Irish Derby in 1987. Princess Athena, who would go on to produce leading stallion Acclamation, would also more than repay her 25,000gns outlay with victory in the Queen Mary Stakes the same year.

His third Group winner at Royal Ascot would continue the theme. Indian Ridge cost just 22,000 Irish punts but the son of Ahonoora captured the 1988 Jersey Stakes before establishing himself as a top-class sprinter with further Royal Ascot success in the 1989 King's Stand Stakes. Indian Ridge would go on to more fame as a stallion, siring several G1 winners including Ridgewood Pearl and Indian Ink.

But it was over the jumps that Elsworth really excelled during the 1980s. Lesley Ann, Combs Ditch, Ghofar, Cavvies Clown and dual Queen Mother Champion Chase scorer Barnbrook Again plundered major prizes over fences, while Robin Wonder, Sir Blake and Floyd all enjoyed significant success over hurdles.

Rhyme 'N' Reason's victory in the Grand National helped Elsworth clinch a first Champion Trainer title in 1987/1988, although one horse – Desert Orchid – would enter the public consciousness like no other since Red Rum.

With his bold front-running style, “Dessie” became a national treasure thanks to a host of victories, including four wins in the King George VI Chase and an emotional success in the 1989 Cheltenham Gold Cup. The brilliant grey found his way into the nation's heart with his durability as he tackled every race with exuberance, winning 34 times over distances from two miles to three and a half miles.

On the Flat, speedy filly Dead Certain became Elsworth's first G1 winner in October, 1989, when scoring in the Cheveley Park Stakes at Newmarket.

Six weeks in the spring of 1990 epitomised Elsworth's talent as a trainer over both codes. Desert Orchid defied top-weight to take the Irish Grand National at Fairyhouse on Easter Monday, while In The Groove also headed across the Irish Sea the following month to provide her trainer with a first Classic success in the Irish 1,000 Guineas.

In The Groove, who cost 20,000gns, would establish herself as an outstanding filly with further G1 victories that season against colts in the Juddmonte International and the Champion Stakes, before adding a fourth success at the highest level in the following year's Coronation Cup.

Seattle Rhyme also earmarked himself as a Classic contender as he ended the 1991 season as favourite for the Derby after winning the G1 Racing Post Trophy, only for injury to rule him out of the early part of his three-year-old campaign.

Having enjoyed success over both jumps and on the Flat, some were keen to compare Elsworth's achievements with those of the great Vincent O'Brien.

“I'm flattered by it but I wouldn't think it's accurate,” he commented in 1993. “Perhaps some of my achievements compare with his, but he has won a lot more than I have. What I will say, and I'm not trying to knock him in any way, is that racing, like all sports, is much more competitive these days. By the time I jumped into the sea, the current was moving faster.”

Elsworth relocated to Dorset in 1993, taking over half of Whitcombe Manor Stables, but the move coincided with a relatively quiet spell for the trainer, and he headed back to Whitsbury in 1996. The same year he returned from Kentucky having spent $25,000 on a son of Lear Fan. Lear Spear would go on to win the 1998 Cambridgeshire before beating Fantastic Light in a thrilling climax to the 1999 Prince Of Wales's Stakes.

Persian Punch proved another astute acquisition. Costing just 14,000gns as a yearling, the giant son of Persian Heights endeared himself to the racing public with his stirring performances throughout a career that spanned nine seasons.

The winner of 13 Group races, Persian Punch forged a reputation as a stayer with a never-say-die attitude in both victory and defeat. Owned by Jeff Smith, his roll of honour included two Goodwood Cups and a Doncaster Cup, together with three wins apiece in the Henry II Stakes and the Jockey Club Cup.

The near-misses included a head defeat by Royal Rebel in the Gold Cup at Royal Ascot, as well as two battling third places in the Melbourne Cup. A life-sized statue at Newmarket, funded by many of his fans, honours the great horse, who tragically collapsed and died during the 2004 Sagaro Stakes.

Victory in a British Classic continued to elude Elsworth, although The Geezer finished a length behind Scorpion in the 2005 St Leger and both Norse Dancer and Stubbs Art finished third in the 2,000 Guineas. He did part-own and train a subsequent Classic winner in Island Sands, the 1999 2,000 Guineas winner who was sold to Godolphin following an unbeaten juvenile campaign.

After deciding to focus almost exclusively on Flat racing in 2000, Elsworth moved to the historic Egerton House Stables in Newmarket in 2006. He continued to enjoy significant success with his long-standing ally Jeff Smith, including his homebred filly Barshiba, who would win back-to-back renewals of the G2 Lancashire Oaks in 2009 & 2010.

Barshiba's first foal Arabian Queen would progress to greater heights, becoming the most recent of Elsworth's seven G1 wins on the Flat when gamely defeating Derby and Eclipse winner Golden Horn in the 2015 Juddmonte International, 25 years on from In The Groove's victory in the same race.

The number of winners may have lessened, but Elsworth continues to be a trainer who warrants plenty of respect, with Desert Skyline, Master The World, Sir Dancealot and Dash Of Spice, the latest of 16 Royal Ascot wins, capturing significant prizes over the past few seasons.

As he approaches his 83rd birthday, talk has inevitably turned towards Elsworth's retirement. “You don't realise it but when you are young, you do things in a hurry and you are more aggressive. I'm still pretty aggressive but, when you get old, you slow down a bit. You've been there, you've done it before,” he told Sky Sports Racing earlier this year.

“It's still fun. I've had a wonderful time and really enjoyed it but I think a lot of the romance goes with increasing years. I don't know if that's just me – we are all made differently – but personally I still enjoy it. Staffing is a problem and the fixtures and the travelling. I wouldn't say I fell out of love with it but I'm happy to slow down a bit.”

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St Mark’s Basilica Named Cartier Horse Of The Year

St Mark's Basilica has been announced as the Cartier Horse Of The Year at the 31st annual Cartier Racing Awards during a glittering ceremony at the Dorchester Hotel on Wednesday evening.

The Siyouni colt, who races for Sue Magnier, Michael Tabor and Derrick Smith, becomes the sixth horse owned by a member of a Coolmore partnership to be crowned Cartier Horse Of The Year following Giant's Causeway (2000), Rock Of Gibraltar (2002), Hurricane Run (2005), Dylan Thomas (2007) and Minding (2016).

The Cartier Racing Awards were established in 1991 to reward excellence in horseracing. There are eight equine awards – the Cartier Horse Of The Year, the Cartier Older Horse, the Cartier Sprinter, the Cartier Stayer, the Cartier Three-Year-Old Colt, the Cartier Three-Year-Old Filly, the Cartier Two-Year-Old Colt and the Cartier Two-Year-Old Filly.

European horseracing's top awards are delivered through a tried and tested combination of points earned by horses in Pattern races (30%), combined at the end of season with the opinions of a panel of racing journalists/handicappers (35%) and votes from readers of Racing Post and The Daily Telegraph (35%).

In addition to the equine awards, the Cartier/Daily Telegraph Award of Merit goes to the person or persons who, in the opinion of the special 16-strong Cartier Jury, has/have done the most for European racing and/or breeding either over their lifetime or within the past 12 months.

Highlights of the prestigious evening will be shown on Sky Sports Racing on the evening of Friday, Nov. 12.

Winner of the G1 Darley Dewhurst Stakes as a two-year-old, St Mark's Basilica has sparkled this season with four G1 victories across France, Britain and Ireland during an unbeaten campaign.

He annexed the Emirates Poule d'Essai des Poulains, the Qatar Prix du Jockey Club, the Coral-Eclipse and the Irish Champion Stakes. The other nominees for the Cartier Horse of the Year were Baaeed, Mishriff and Torquator Tasso.

Trained by Aidan O'Brien, St Mark's Basilica also takes the honors in the Cartier 3-Year-Old Colt category ahead of Adayar, Baaeed and Hurricane Lane.

Palace Pier, owned by Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed Al Maktoum and trained by John and Thady Gosden, takes the Cartier Older Horse award following a superb season that included G1 wins in the Al Shaqab Lockinge Stakes, the Queen Anne Stakes and the Prix du Haras de Fresnay-le-Buffard Jacques le Marois. The other nominees were Lady Bowthorpe, Mishriff and Torquator Tasso. Palace Pier was previously crowned the Cartier 3-Year-Old Colt at the 2020 Cartier Racing Awards.

Snowfall recorded the largest winning margin in the history of the G1 Cazoo Oaks when capturing the Epsom Downs Classic by 16 lengths and the daughter of Deep Impact is named the Cartier 3-Year-Old Filly.

Trained by Aidan O'Brien for a Coolmore syndicate, Snowfall also recorded dominant wins in the G3 Tattersalls Musidora Stakes, G1 Juddmonte Irish Oaks and G1 Darley Yorkshire Oaks. Also nominated for Cartier Three-Year-Old Filly were Alcohol Free, Mother Earth and Saffron Beach.

Starman takes the Cartier Sprinter honors for trainer Ed Walker and owner David Ward following an admirable season headlined by success in the G1 Darley July Cup. The Dutch Art colt also placed in the G1 Larc Prix Maurice de Gheest and was narrowly denied in the G1 Betfair Sprint Cup. Fellow G1 winners Creative Force, Emaraaty Ana and Winter Power were also nominated.

One of the most popular horses in training, Trueshan, is named the Cartier Stayer. Trained by Alan King for the Singula Partnership, the five-year-old is unbeaten in his last three starts having won the G1 Qatar Goodwood Cup, the G1 Qatar Prix du Cadran and the G2 QIPCO British Champions Long Distance Cup. Also nominated for Cartier Stayer were Hurricane Lane, Stradivarius and Subjectivist.

Native Trail is the Cartier 2-Year-Old Colt. Owned by the Maktoum family's Godolphin operation and trained by Charlie Appleby, the Oasis Dream colt is unbeaten in four starts and recorded a brace of G1 successes in the Goffs Vincent O'Brien National Stakes and the Darley Dewhurst Stakes. Native Trail saw off competition from Angel Bleu, Luxembourg and Perfect Power to win the award.

Inspiral takes the honours in the Cartier Two-Year-Old Filly category. Trained by John and Thady Gosden for Cheveley Park Stud, the Frankel filly has won all four of her starts and finished her campaign with victory in the G1 bet365 Fillies' Mile. Also nominated were Discoveries, Tenebrism and Zellie.

The recipient of the Cartier/Daily Telegraph Award of Merit in 2021 is David Elsworth, one of the most successful dual-purpose trainers Britain has produced. In a racing career spanning 67 years, Elsworth has scaled the pinnacles of both Flat and Jump racing, combining Classic success with victories in the Grand National and the Cheltenham Gold Cup.

Equally adept at saddling winners at Royal Ascot and the Cheltenham Festival, the trainer also oversaw the careers of two of the most popular horses in racing history – Desert Orchid and Persian Punch.

Harry Herbert, Cartier's Racing Consultant commented: “The 2021 European Flat season has once again highlighted all that is wonderful in this great sport.

“With capacity crowds back at racecourses and some brilliant equine performances, we were ultimately rewarded with a season to savour.

“Racing cannot continue without the ongoing support of owners and I would like to extend my congratulations to tonight's winners – Coolmore, Godolphin, Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed Al Maktoum, Cheveley Park Stud, David Ward and the Singula Partnership.

“David Elsworth has truly reached the summit of his profession and is the perfect recipient for the Cartier/Daily Telegraph Award of Merit in 2021. A man whose life has been steeped in racing, Elsworth's career spans 67 years and has scaled the heights of both Jump and Flat racing. One of the most successful dual-purpose trainers Britain has produced, the sport is lucky to call him one of our own.

“I would like to end by extending special thanks to Cartier, Sky Sports Racing, The Daily Telegraph and Racing Post.

“Cartier's support of these prestigious awards stretches right back to 1991 and is ongoing as we once again enjoy all coming together at the Dorchester Hotel for such a wonderful event. We are truly blessed to be able to enjoy such tremendous support.”

Laurent Feniou, Managing Director of Cartier UK, commented: “The 2021 European Flat season has lived up to its billing as horseracing once again highlighted the magic and brilliance of the sport following a challenging 2020.

“I am delighted for the Cartier Racing Awards to be taking place once again at the Dorchester Hotel celebrating another wonderful year of sport.

“It is an honour to celebrate the very best of horseracing and it is a privilege for Cartier to be celebrating the 31st anniversary of the Cartier Racing Awards. My heartfelt congratulations go out to this year's exceptional winners.

“I would like to thank our long-standing media partners, the Racing Post and Daily Telegraph, as well as Sky Sports Racing for their involvement in the awards again.”

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Palace Pier Holds Narrow Lead As Voting Opens For Cartier Horse Of The Year Standings

Five-time G1 winner Palace Pier has established a narrow lead in the Cartier Horse of the Year points standings in spite of his neck defeat by Baaeed in the Queen Elizabeth II Stakes (sponsored by QIPCO).

The Cartier Racing Awards were established in 1991 to reward excellence in horseracing. There are eight equine awards – the Cartier Horse Of The Year, the Cartier Older Horse, the Cartier Sprinter, the Cartier Stayer, the Cartier Three-Year-Old Colt, the Cartier Three-Year-Old Filly, the Cartier Two-Year-Old Colt and the Cartier Two-Year-Old Filly.

The 31st annual Cartier Racing Awards will be awarded on Wednesday, Nov. 10 at the Dorchester Hotel to mark a brilliant year of action on the track.

Cartier is delighted to be involved with such a special occasion, which recognizes the hard work, effort and talent of all those involved in the sport.

We are pleased to announce that Sky Sports Racing will broadcast highlights of the awards from the Dorchester Hotel. Coverage from the event will feature interviews with some of the leading names in the sport, as well as winning connections on the night.

Voting is also now open for the 2021 Cartier Racing Awards via www.cartierracingawards.co.uk. Voters will have a direct influence on the outcome of who comes out on top at the Cartier Racing Awards.

Discussing the voting process, Cartier's Racing Consultant Harry Herbert said: “It's been a fabulous season of racing and how exciting to see the various categories with such tight margins. The votes from The Daily Telegraph and Racing Post readers will as always be crucial in deciding this year's champions.”

European horseracing's top awards are delivered through a tried and tested combination of points earned by horses in Pattern races (30%), combined at the end of season with the opinions of a panel of racing journalists/handicappers (35%) and votes from readers of Racing Post and The Daily Telegraph (35%).

The participation of the public plays a crucial role in determining the winners of each year's Cartier Racing Awards and gives horseracing fans the chance to put forward their favourite horses in a meaningful way. The public vote starts Wednesday at noon and ends on Tuesday, Nov. 2 at Noon.

Trained by John and Thady Gosden, Palace Pier has 168 points following his first reversal of the season as Baaeed (88) secured a sixth straight win in one of the centerpieces of a thrilling QIPCO British Champions Day at Ascot on Oct. 16.

Palace Pier heads fellow five-time G1 hero St Mark's Basilica (160) and dual G1 scorer Poetic Flare (156) who have both recently been retired to take up stallion duties in Ireland and Japan respectively.

The 4-year-old is also the clear leader in the Cartier Older Horse category ahead of stable companion Mishriff (108), who could only finish fourth in the QIPCO Champion Stakes, and Qatar Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe hero Torquator Tasso (96).

Baaeed has been one of the success stories of the season for Shadwell, William Haggas and Jim Crowley, and the dual G1 scorer has 88 points ahead of Lady Bowthorpe (84), who was third in the Queen Elizabeth II Stakes (sponsored by QIPCO)

St Mark's Basilica (160) and Poetic Flare (156) continue to lead proceedings in the Cartier Three-Year-Old Colt category ahead of Godolphin's Hurricane Lane (152 points) and stablemate Adayar (100), who was fifth in the QIPCO Champion Stakes.

Aidan O'Brien retains a strong hand in the Cartier Three-Year-Old Filly category with Mother Earth and Snowfall both on 144 points. Mother Earth finished a creditable fifth to Baaeed at Ascot, whilst Snowfall suffered a shock defeat to Eshaada (40) in the G1 QIPCO British Champions Fillies & Mares Stakes.

Starman remains the pacesetter in the Cartier Sprinter category on 64 points ahead of G1 Qatar Prix de l'Abbaye scorer A Case Of You (58) and Dragon Symbol (56), who finished down the field behind Godolphin's Creative Force (32) in the G1 QIPCO British Champions Sprint.

Trueshan continues to stamp his authority on the Cartier Stayer award for Alan King. The five-year-old backed up victories in the G1 Qatar Goodwood Cup and G1 Qatar Prix du Cadran at ParisLongchamp with a gutsy success in the G2 QIPCO British Champions Long Distance Cup, a contest which saw old rival Stradivarius (60) finish third.

Dual G1 scorers Native Trail and Perfect Power set the pace in the Cartier Two-Year-Old Colt category with 80 points, while G1 bet365 Fillies' Mile heroine Inspiral leads the Cartier Two-Year-Old Filly standings with 48 points.

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