Auguste Rodin Likely to Target Derby Double

Michael Tabor, John and Susan Magnier, Derrick Smith and Westerberg's Derby hero Auguste Rodin (Ire) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) is expected to make his next start in the July 2 G1 Irish Derby at The Curragh.

“I would say he'll go to the Irish Derby,” Tabor told racingtv.com. “I haven't discussed it, but it's common sense to say he definitely goes to the Irish Derby. Then we'll bring him back in trip–a mile and a quarter–for some of those races.”

The striking bay colt previously finished 12th in the May 6 G1 2000 Guineas, the initial leg in the Triple Crown.

“He won't go to the [1 3/4-mile] St. Leger,” Tabor added. “In my mind, that Triple Crown dream is over. A St. Leger horse is not what we are looking for, once he can't do a Triple Crown.”

Looking a bit farther down the road, Tabor indicated the G1 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe at ParisLongchamp in October could be a consideration in addition to the Breeders' Cup at Santa Anita the following month.

“It is a long way before the end of the year,” he said. “We'll see how he is. It could be the Arc, but the ground could be against him, although he won on soft as a 2-year-old. We've even got the Breeders' Cup [Turf] as an option on the turf. We'll see how he goes and have those discussions, I'm sure.”

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Derby Fifth The Foxes Set For Drop In Trip – Coral-Eclipse Could Be Next

Dante winner and Derby fifth The Foxes (Ire) is set for a drop back in trip for his next outing, with the Coral-Eclipse put forward as a possible target, after connections felt the Churchill (Ire) colt failed to see out the trip at Epsom on Saturday. 

Andrew Balding's charge was a good winner of the Royal Lodge in September and was only touched off by Indestructible (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) in the Craven at Newmarket on his first run as a three-year-old.

Owned by King Power Racing, he improved on that display at York, taking the extended 10-furlong Dante in his stride, beating subsequent Derby third White Birch (GB) (Ulysses {Ire}) by a neck.

However, connections are now looking to drop The Foxes back in trip, after he failed to see out the 1m4f in the Derby.

King Power's racing manager Alastair Donald said, “It was 100 per cent the case that he didn't stay the trip. He got a little further back than ideal, but I don't think it made a massive difference.

“He came with a good run to look like he was going to finish a nice third, and then didn't get home in the last furlong and a half. Looking at the sectionals, it clearly shows that.

“We hoped he might stay a bit further, but he is the same as his half-brother Bangkok (Ire) (Australia {GB})–it looks like he will end up being very much a 10-furlong horse.”

Connections are now considering options for The Foxes, who was sent off 7-1 in the 14-strong Derby field.

“We are just weighing things up at the moment. The Eclipse is in the thinking for his next race, but we will certainly look at international options as well,” Donald added.

“But I definitely think he will be campaigned at 10 furlongs and we wouldn't be afraid to drop him back to a mile. In the Craven, he travelled the strongest of any horse over a mile, so we wouldn't be afraid to drop him back.

“We think we still have a very good horse and I think it will prove to be a pretty strong Derby. Sometimes you have a good first three and the rest don't tend to do much in future, but I think quite a lot of good horses will come out of that race over various different distances.”

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Ascot Assessing Security Plans Ahead Of Royal Meeting

Officials at Ascot are liaising with authorities over security plans for the Royal meeting following the attempted disruption to Saturday's Betfred Derby at Epsom.

Police arrested 31 people on Saturday, including 12 on the racecourse grounds, after Animal Rising announced their intention to “cancel or severely delay” the Derby in the lead up to the race, which went ahead as planned.

Surrey Police confirmed on Sunday that Ben Newman, 32, from Hackney, east London, had been charged with causing public nuisance after running onto the track during the Derby itself.

He appeared at Guildford Magistrates' Court, where he pleaded not guilty to causing public nuisance, on Monday. It comes after he was filmed jumping the fence and sprinting on to the course at Epsom as the race began on Saturday. He was chased by police as the crowd jeered before officers tackled him and pulled him away.

The protest occurred after the Jockey Club, which owns Epsom, was granted an injunction prohibiting the group from intervening in the event, claiming the organisation had made “explicitly clear” that it intended to breach security.

Ascot are looking closely at all security options ahead of the five-day meeting which starts on Tuesday, June 20.

The Berkshire track's director of racing and public affairs, Nick Smith, said, “Epsom did a fantastic job and kept the protesters under control. Anyone who saw the efforts of all involved could not fail to be impressed. Swift and decisive action was taken.

“We will be holding internal discussions and will be liaising with the Jockey Club and the police to develop and deliver our plan over the next few days. Watch this space is all I can say at the moment.”

 

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Continents Collide as Derby Prevails Under Duress

EPSOM DOWNS, UK–Asked to hold up nine fingers to represent his number of wins in the Derby, Aidan O'Brien laughed as he deliberately counted out each one. Two more–and let's face it, he's only 53 and shows no signs of stopping–and he will need to borrow a hand from someone else to keep tally.

Only last weekend, O'Brien's record of Group or Grade 1 wins reached 400. Now it stands at 401, and the most recent addition is arguably the most important of all for the wider racing world. The 243 runnings of the Derby that have gone before have not been without controversy. From the ringer Running Rein in 1844 to the tragic death in 1913 of the suffragette Emily Davison, who threw herself under the King's horse, the Derby's history has its share of skulduggery and scandal. 

In 2020, of course, it was run a month late with barely anyone at Epsom to watch the procession of Serpentine (Ire) as Covid wrought havoc on sporting events. This year, with the racecourse and its enclosures reinforced by a ring of steel barricades and uninformed officers, it took place once more, in 2m 33.88s completed largely without incident, but under immense duress in its build-up.

Serpentine had served an important reminder, just as the 40/1 shot Wings Of Eagles (Fr) had done three years earlier, that it is never wise to rule out a challenger from Ballydoyle when it comes to the race that is still arguably prized more highly than any other by the Coolmore team. In Auguste Rodin (Ire) we had an entirely more obvious winner, though even he came here with a question mark dangling over his head after the bitter disappointment of the 2,000 Guineas. The sages always say that the Guineas is the best Derby trial, but presumably that is usually in reference to a horse who has been a running-on fourth rather than one who was beaten 22 lengths into twelfth place.

Auguste Rodin has also had something of a poignant weight of expectation on his shoulders from the early days. One of only 24 foals in the final crop of Japan's hugely influential Deep Impact (Jpn), he had been the subject of high praise from the far-from-hyperbolic Ryan Moore, according to O'Brien.

“The hype of expectations was there straightaway,” he said. “He was measured, measured, measured all the way, and he was ticking the top of the measurements all the way. And then he came to Ballydoyle and I remember Ryan sitting on him in the February as a two-year-old, and saying, 'This is very special'. And then the bar is even higher.”

O'Brien continued, “I think this is the most important horse [for Coolmore] ever, because he's out of Rhododendron, who is one of the best, if not the best, Galileo mares, and he's by probably the best Japanese stallion ever, and we know what is after happening with the Japanese breeding, and we know about our own breeding, and he's after connecting the two of them together. This horse has everything: he has temperament, he has movement, he has a personality.

“I think he's the most important horse we've ever had because he's bringing the two continents together. We've always said he is the most special horse we've had in Ballydoyle.”

Fans of Galileo might have something to say about that last statement, but, as O'Brien pointed out, his first Derby winner features as Auguste Rodin's damsire in a cross which we have already seen to good effect in his fellow Ballydoyle Classic winners Saxon Warrior (Jpn) and Snowfall (Jpn). A similar blend will be on display on Sunday in the Prix du Jockey Club when Moore partners Continuous (Jpn), who is by another son of Sunday Silence in Heart's Cry (Jpn) and is out of Fluff (Ire), a full-sister to Saxon Warrior's dam Maybe (Ire).

The Coolmore mating planners have clearly not been shy in patronising the best that Shadai's stallion roster has to offer. Speaking in the immediate aftermath of the Derby, Coolmore's MV Magnier said, “Aidan was very confident of winning. He thought that he would just bounce off the ground, and yet again he got it right.

“I just want to say a big thank you to the Yoshida family for everything they have done. They have looked after us and our mares very well and we are very grateful to them.”

Magnier also made reference to the extensive–and expensive–security operation which was in play at Epsom over the two days to safeguard the participants from the actions of protestors.

“The job that the Jockey Club and Nevin Truesdale has done is a great credit to them,” he said. “They've done a very good job and they've worked very hard and I'm just glad nothing has happened.”

That was a sentiment widely echoed by those at Epsom on Saturday. It is a desperate state of affairs that one of Britain's most historic sporting events, enjoyed by tens of thousands in person and millions more on television, could be held to ransom by a small group of activists with dubious claims to having the best interests of animals at heart. The Covid year aside, this was the most muted Derby in living memory, as a collective holding-of-breath took place on the Downs as the runners headed to post.

As a precautionary measure, the horses had been saddled in the racecourse stables and were in the parade ring for a shorter amount of time than usual. Understandable in the circumstances, but a shame for those gathered at the parade ring who love to spend time observing the physiques and, often more crucially, the demeanour of the runners prior to the biggest test of their young lives.

Following arrests during early-morning raids on houses, Derby day appeared to be proceeding without incident and, despite much grumbling as to the early start time to avoid a clash with the FA Cup final, this was in the end perhaps a mercy, so as not to prolong the trepidation.

A loud cheer went up as the 14 runners sprang from the gates on time, but within seconds a male protestor had somehow breached the lines of security along the rails on both sides of the track to burst onto the course. Moments later a woman tried to jump the fence from the grandstand side but, like her predecessor, was swiftly brought down and handcuffed. 

In the winner's circle as the presentations were concluded, Brian Finch, chair of the racecourse and an Epsom local, congratulated those connected to Auguste Rodin and admitted to a huge sense of relief that the race had been run without significant incident. 

“The pressure has come from knowing that you have a potential issue but not quite knowing where that issue will manifest, so you stay planning for multiple events, which in turns puts pressure on the team,” he said. 

“But I applaud everybody for pulling together. It's been effective. Everyone wanted to make sure that the 244th Derby actually happened and went off as close as possible to 1.30pm and we achieved that.

“Our teams will stay vigilant until the day is over. We owe it to the sport to protect the Derby, and to all the people who came before us. They took us through 243 years, through wars and everything else that went in between.”

The promotional banners inside and outside the course boasted of the Derby being 'historic, unmatchable, eternal'. The first two are undeniable. The third, we hope, is a claim we will not have to abandon any time soon. 

 

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