Oxford-Born Blacker Hits Milestone

On Feb. 6, the Oxford-born Dan Blacker celebrated his first graded stakes win as a trainer when Hit The Road (More Than Ready) took Santa Anita's GIII Thunder Road S., unleashing a powerful turn of foot inside the final furlong to win by an eye-catching 3 3/4 lengths. The progressive 4-year-old now has his sights set on Grade I glory in the Frank E. Kilroe Mile over the same course and distance as the Thunder Road on Mar. 6, and a victory there would epitomize everything Blacker has been working toward since taking out his license 10 years ago.

Blacker, the son of acclaimed National Hunt jockey-turned equine sculptor Philip Blacker, dabbled in showjumping as a youngster and rode out for various trainers–including Richard Gibson, Jonathan Pease and the late steeplechase trainer Peter Monteith–while studying environmental geoscience at the University of Edinburgh. It was during this time that Blacker decided he wanted to be a trainer, but it was during his stint in America as part of Darley Flying Start, and in particular in the midst of the festivities surrounding the 2006 GI Kentucky Derby, that Blacker had a real epiphany: he wanted to be a trainer in America.

“The thing about starting up in the United States is that there is a unique opportunity here for young people and young trainers,” said the 38-year-old Blacker, who took out his license in 2011 after stints as an assistant to Richard Mandella and Tom Albertrani. “Back home it's really challenging for trainers to get started. You need a lot of financial backing. When I came to the States I just fell in love with it and loved California and the racetrack atmosphere, but there is a unique opportunity here for young trainers to get a foot in the door and get started that doesn't exist anywhere else. Here you can start with two horses, which I did, and I think it would be so hard to do that anywhere else. I asked the racing secretary at Hollywood Park, 'hey, can I get two stalls?' He said, 'sure, what are the names of the horses?' I gave him the names he said, 'alright, barn 52, next to [trainer Mike] Puype.' And away you went. I borrowed a saddle and a bridle and a groom-I literally had nothing. I had no money and was just rocking and rolling from the beginning and built it up from there. I went up to three horses but had one claimed so was back down to two, then three horses, four horses-you just build it up slowly.”

Blacker credited a few loyal owners for helping him build his stable up to 28 today, and his friend and former Flying Start classmate Craig “Boomer” Rounsefell for picking out Hit The Road at Keeneland. The horse was bought privately after failing to sell in the ring at $200,000.

“He was Hip 16 of Book 1, and it's a funny story; I typically hadn't been to Book 1 for a few years before that, just because it's not typically in my price range. But I was on the East Coast for [trainer] Norm Casse and [TV presenter] Gabby Gaudet's wedding, and I thought, 'I may as well just go for Book 1,'” Blacker recalled. “So I hooked up with Boomer and we looked at that horse a bunch. He had a great pedigree by More Than Ready. We really liked the horse and knew he would be a grass horse. He was a bit small as a yearling but was a lovely mover and had a really nice temperament. He didn't sell, he RNA'd, but we went back to the barn at Taylor Made and bought him back at the barn. But I give Boomer all the credit, he was really bullish about getting him and he felt really confident about the horse. We were really thrilled at the time to get him for a great group of owners, some of which have been with me from the beginning and have been really loyal.”

Blacker described his first 10 years as a trainer as “hard but rewarding.”

“It's building up your name, your reputation, your stable, getting better quality horses, better owners-it's been hard but it's been rewarding and I'm glad we're getting to the point where we're improving our quality of horses,” he reflected. “But my path [starting with two horses], I don't think that's something you could do in other countries, and that's what I love about America. People are much more willing to give young people a chance and you can start with nothing. If you're passionate about it and you work hard, you're going to make it.”

Blacker said another major gulf between racing in America and Europe is in the opportunities to acquire quality bloodstock.

“You look at all the horses that have won the Kentucky Derby the last 10 years–I don't know the exact numbers but the vast majority of them went through the ring,” he said. “The big owners back home in Europe have all the best stock and best families, whereas in America, all the best horses go through the ring and there is a small number that are homebreds. You can have a chance to get the best horses if you have the money and you have the eye.”

Another factor keeping trainers like Blacker on their toes in America is the higher rate of turnover of horses than one might see in Europe.

“Horses come in and out much quicker,” Blacker noted. “A yard in Newmarket might start the year with 40 or 50 horses, and at the end of the year you'd pretty much have on the whole the same 40 or 50 horses in the yard. Here, you might start the year with 25 horses and end it with 25 horses, but most of them will be different horses. We bring the horses in, get them ready, run them a few times, they might pick up something and we send them back to the farm. They have a few months off and we bring them back in and bring them up. There's no winter and summer season; the horses are in constant turnover. So you're always looking for that next horse to fill the space of the one that just left. You have to keep your foot on the gas and keep hustling and working away. When you take your foot off the gas, you might get your numbers down and get out of the limelight. You have to keep getting your name out there.”

One way Blacker enjoys filling his stalls is with European imports.

“I love the Tattersalls horses in training sale,” he said. “It's a fun sale but what's really interesting is why certain horses work. There is a certain profile of European horse that when you bring it to California, it excels. It's something to do with their pedigree, with the way we train here, their conformation; it's not just that better horses in England will go on and be the better horses here. There is a certain type of horse that really excels, and that's the key, is really trying to pinpoint that type of individual.”

Blacker said he tends to look for the progeny of sires that have already worked in America, as well as horses with good form on firm going themselves and that are of a lighter build.

“Generally the stallions that are obviously firm turf influences will do well, but I'll look for stallions that have already had success over here,” he said. “That's the first thing, and firm ground form really helps. Typically, I've found that horses tend to put on weight, put on muscle, when they come here. I look for the lighter framed ones, the smaller fillies that might, when they come here and put on weight, start looking really good. If you start with one that's really big and bulky, a lot of times when they get here they get too big and heavy and they can't handle training on the dirt oval every single day. Because it's not just the racing, it's training on the flat dirt every single day. That's hard on horses and you need a really sound horse that's conformed well in order to withstand that constant pounding every single day. So it's a really unique type of individual that thrives here.”

So Blacker continues his quest to continue building the quality of his stable. He'll also be hoping that Hit The Road continues to thrive ahead of his next big assignment.

“We've got the Kilroe Mile pencilled in on Mar. 6,” Blacker said. “Everyone keeps telling me that he runs well fresh so this will be a little test for him. It's coming back in four weeks and that's probably the shortest we'd want to come back in. But he bounced out of the race really well; he's got good energy and all the signs are looking very favourable that he's going to be ready for the race on Mar. 6 and run well. We know he loves the track here at Santa Anita, he loves the firm turf, so that's the most likely scenario. After that there might be some things further afield, but we're just pointing him to that one right now.”

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‘Pharoah’ Gets His Group 1 in February S.

Café Pharoah delivered a first win at the highest level on dirt for his sire, U.S. Horse of the Year and Triple Crown winner American Pharoah, in the G1 February S. going a mile over the Tokyo dirt on Sunday. His three-quarter length victory guaranteed him a spot in the starting gate in the GI Longines Breeders' Cup Classic this fall.

Favoured at 2-1, the 4-year-old entire settled in a tracking fifth, as Wide Pharoah (Jpn) (Henny Hughes) and Air Almas (Majestic Warrior) slugged it out on the front end. He emerged a clearcut third as noses pointed for home, and swung out to make his challenge 400 metres from the wire.

Conservatively handled to that point by jockey Christophe Lemaire, a trio of right-handed taps kept the Koichi Nishikawa colourbearer's mind on business with a furlong to travel as he passed Air Almas, and he held safe the late rush of 27-1 shot Air Spinel (Jpn) (King Kamehameha {Jpn}) to win with ears pricked. Wonder Lider (Jpn) (Statue of Liberty) closed from midfield to take third, another 1 3/4 lengths behind. Second favourite Arctos (Jpn) (Admire Aura {Jpn}) never threatened and checked in ninth.

“His condition was super, and I had confidence already at the paddock,” said Lemaire. “We decided to use cheek pieces hoping for a more aggressive performance. His start was good, we were positioned well and he responded beautifully. The colt has such high potential. I had no doubt that he could land a Group 1 win if he gave his best. I'm happy that it all worked out today.”

A winner going 1800 metres at Nakayama in December of 2019, his only race at two, Café Pharoah added the Listed Hyacinth S. last February and June's G3 Unicorn S., both at Tokyo. Only seventh in sloppy going in the Listed Japan Dirt Derby at Oi on July 8, the bay rebounded with another victory in the G3 Sirius S. facing elders last fall. He ran sixth in the G1 Champions Cup in his final start of 2020.

Pedigree Notes
Bred by the late Paul Pompa, Jr. in Kentucky, the winner is the second at the highest level out of American Pharoah's first crop after GI Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup victress Harvey's Lil Goil. The Ashford Stud resident has already celebrated a Group 1 winner from his second crop with G1 Criterium International scorer Van Gogh. The trio are among 14 black-type winners for the Coolmore sire, while five other progeny have placed at the highest level so far.

Selected out of the OBS March Sale for $475,000 after breezing a quarter mile in :21.1, Café Pharoah is one of three group/graded winners for his two-time graded scoring dam and the second male after Giant's Causeway's Night Prowler. The colt is also the first Group 1 winner for Mary's Follies, who was trained by the late John Forbes before Pompa acquired her. The mare's 2018 Uncle Mo colt died, while she has colts of 2019 and 2020 by Candy Ride (Arg) and Connect, respectively. A granddaughter of four-time stakes winner Wave to the Queen (Wavering Monarch), she aborted to Curlin for this spring.

In early January, Mary's Follies (lot 725) was knocked down for $500,000 to BBA Ireland as part of the Pompa Dispersal during the Keeneland January Horses of All Ages Sale. Her daughter, MGSW and 'TDN Rising Star' Regal Glory (Animal Kingdom) (lot 403) sold earlier in the day for a co-sale topping $925,000 to Peter Brant's White Birch Farm, which races both Stateside and in Europe and won the G1 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe with Sottsass (Fr) (Siyouni {Ire}) in October.

Sunday, Tokyo, Japan
FEBRUARY S.-G1, ¥194,800,000 (US$1,847,689/£1,318,449/€1,524,588), Tokyo, 2-21, 4yo/up, 1600m, 1:34.40, gd.
1–CAFE PHAROAH, 126, c, 4, by American Pharoah
                1st Dam: Mary's Follies (MGSW-US, $338,889),
                                by More Than Ready
                2nd Dam: Catch the Queen, by Miswaki
                3rd Dam: Wave to the Queen, by Wavering Monarch
1ST GROUP 1 WIN. ($475,000 2yo '19 OBSMAR). O-Koichi
Nishikawa; B- Paul P.Pompa (KY); T-Noryuki Hori; J-Christophe
Lemaire. ¥103,360,000. Lifetime Record: 7-5-0-0. *1/2 to
Night Prowler (Giant's Causeway), MGSW-US, $535,682; and
Regal Glory (Animal Kingdom), MGSW-US, $773,884. Click for
   the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree. Werk Nick Rating: A++.
2–Air Spinel (Jpn), 126, h, 8, King Kamehameha (Jpn)–Air
Messiah (Jpn), by Sunday Silence. O-Lucky Field Inc.; B-Shadai
Farm (Jpn); ¥40,960,000.
3–Wonder Lider (Jpn), 126, h, 8, Statue of Liberty–Astrea Peace
(Jpn), by Mayano Top Gun (Jpn). O-Yoshinari Yamamoto;
B-Oshima Farm (Jpn); ¥25,480,000.
Margins: 3/4, 1 3/4, HF. Odds: 2.30, 27.00, 18.30.
Also Ran: Red le Zele (Jpn), Air Almas, Inti (Jpn), Mutually (Jpn), Soliste Thunder (Jpn), Arctos (Jpn), Yamanin Imprime (Jpn), Sunrise Nova (Jpn), Smart Dandy (Jpn), Auvergne (Jpn), Wide Pharaoh (Jpn), Success Energy (Jpn), Helios (Jpn).
Click for the JRA chart & video or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.

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February S. Kicks off Japanese Group 1 Season

Group 1 racing action returns to Japan with Tokyo's G1 February S., a 'Win and You're In' event for the Breeders' Cup Classic, which will be held at Del Mar this fall. Heading the 16-horse field is Café Pharoah (Jpn) (American Pharoah), who aired by 10 lengths in an 1800-meter maiden race at Nakayama in December 2019 before reeling off three consecutive wins, including Tokyo's G3 Unicorn S. (1600m) last June. Favored in the 2000-meter G1 Japan Dirt Derby at NAR-Oi in July, he finished an even seventh over the muddy track before returning from a three-month layoff to win the G3 Sirius S. at Chukyo in October. Jumping up in class for his latest, he came home sixth in the 1800-meter G1 Champions Cup at Chukyo Dec. 6.

Red le Zele (Jpn) (Lord Kanaloa {Jpn}), who has registered seven wins between 1200-1400 meters, rounded off last term with a runner-up finish in the 1200 meter-G3 Capella S. at Nakayama in December. Stepped up to 1400 meters for his latest, the 5-year-old took the Jan. 31 G3 Negishi S. at Tokyo.

The February S. will be the bay's first appearance at the 1600-meter distance, but trainer Takayuki Yasuda is unconcerned.

“The stretch-out in distance is not a worry,” he said. “I am very exciting to see his performance over the distance.”

Auvergne (Jpn) (Smart Falcon {Jpn}) comes into this event off a three-race win skein, including the 1800-meter G2 Tokai TV Hai Tokai S. at Chukyo Jan. 24.

“Last time out, he was able to run 1,000 meters in :59.3, and asserted well at the end to go on and win,” said assistant trainer Eiko Umeuchi. “He's quite easy to control and has good racing sense, as can be seen by him getting into good positions early in a race without too much effort.”

Sunrise Nova (Jpn) (Gold Allure {Jpn}) makes his fourth attempt on the February S., a race in which he finished third last year. Winner of the G3 Procyon S. at Hanshin last July, he was fourth in Morioka's Listed Mile Championship in October before returning to score in the 1600-meter G3 Tokyo Chunichi Sports Hai Musashino S. Nov. 14. In his final start of the seaon, the chestnut finished 12th in Chukyo's G1 Champions Cup.

Trainer Hidetaka Otonashi said, “He doesn't seem suited by Chukyo for some reason, but the mile at Tokyo is good for him. On returning from a short break at the farm, he's been working with stablemate Danburite, and he's been moving well.”

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Strength In Depth On Saudi Cup Undercard

The first three home in last year's Red Sea Turf Handicap have all returned to Riyadh for this $2.5 million staying contest over 3,000 metres. The trio is led by the George Strawbridge homebred Call The Wind (GB) (Frankel {GB}), whose victory over Mekong (GB) (Frankel {GB}) and Prince Of Arran (GB) (Shirocco {Ger}) was followed through the French summer with wins in the G3 Prix de Barbeville and G2 Prix Kergorlay. 

Freddy Head, who arrived in Saudi in time to see the 7-year-old have an easy canter on Thursday morning, said, “The lads are happy with him and I am very happy with him. The preparation has gone well and he looks to be in the same form as last year.”

Jamie Osborne was another Thursday arrival at the track to check up on Khalid Bin Mishref's Mekong, who had made just one start after last year's Saudi Cup meeting when fifth in the Gold Cup at Royal Ascot. He reappeared for a tune-up at Wolverhampton on Jan. 18 in the countdown to his overseas trip. 

Mekong has not been seen on the main track in the mornings this week and his trainer explained why. “He is an interesting character,” said Osborne. “He has a tendency to plant himself and when we brought him to the track last year to do his thing, we couldn't get him to go anywhere. That's normal for him. So we shock him into it, in the sense that he is a horse that needs to have his routine changed regularly, because he gets used to something and then he resents it. So the first time he will see the track is when he runs.”

The hugely popular Prince Of Arran appears to be exactly the opposite. Routinely the first out in the morning among the internationals, the 8-year-old exercises willingly in partnership with rider Aled Beech and seems to retain plenty of enthusiasm after a number of overseas trips. He will jump from stall four under Frankie Dettori, two outside Call The Wind, who has the services of Olivier Peslier.

Nine of the 13 runners hail from European stables, with Mark Johnston's Mildenberger (GB) (Teofilo {Ire}) having drawn the rail for his first start since winning an All-Weather Championships fast track qualifier over an extended two miles at Wolverhampton in January. 

Charlie Appleby's quartet for the meeting arrived from Dubai on Wednesday and he has the lightly-raced Secret Advisor (Fr) engaged in this event. The 7-year-old has not raced since early November but he undertook a racecourse gallop at Meydan last week which his trainer said has put him spot-on for this assignment. 

A busy international weekend for Andrew Balding sees the Kingsclere trainer with three runners in Qatar and Saudi, including Team Valor and Gary Barber's G2 Doncaster Cup winner Spanish Mission (Noble Mission {GB}) in this competitive contest. 

Champion Channel The Class Act In Turf Cup

The Neom Turf Cup has been blessed with the presence of America's champion turf horse, Channel Maker (English Channel), who accompanied his Bill Mott stable-mate Tacitus to Riyadh in order to take part in this 2,100-metre test. The 7-year-old was just a length behind Tarnawa (Ire) (Shamardal) when third in the GI Breeders' Cup Turf, his final start in a 2020 campaign which saw him win back-to-back Grade 1s at Saratoga and Belmont. He does, however, appear to be more effective when stretching out to a mile and a half.

In his time, Gronkowski (Lonhro {Aus}) has been trained in Britain, America and Dubai, but the 2018 Belmont S. runner-up is now trained locally in Saudi by Abdulaziz Bin Mishref. To be ridden by Olivier Peslier, he has drawn stall seven in the field of 12, which has also lured runners from Britain and Ireland. 

Willie Mullins may be more focused on preparing his battalions for the Cheltenham Festival next month but he will be represented in Saudi on the Flat by the globetrotting mare True Self (Ire) (Oscar {Ire}), who was last seen winning the G3 Queen Elizabeth S. at Flemington in November for the second year in a row. Hardy and versatile, the 8-year-old's 10 wins have come between 10 furlongs and two miles, as well as over hurdles. This is her second trip to Saudi after running sixth in the Red Sea Turf H. last year.

The Adrian McGuinness-trained Saltonstall (GB) (Pivotal {GB}) was in great form in Ireland last autumn when winning his final three races of the year over a mile.

The trainer's son Tadhg has been riding him in the mornings in Riyadh and gave him a spin round the grass track on Thursday.

“He took a good pull and handled the surface,” said the trainer following that exercise. “He's just done a nice, steady canter and quickened a little bit up the straight just for half a furlong. We're delighted with him and he came back great.”

A contender who should not be overlooked is Juddmonte's Tilsit (First Defence), who has made just four starts for Charlie Hills for two wins, including the G3 Thoroughbred S. at Goodwood.

Described as a little quirky by his rider Henry Morshead, the 4-year-old has nevertheless behaved well in the mornings and looks to be in terrific form ahead of his first start since chasing home Kameko (Kitten's Joy) when fourth in the G2 Joel S. at Newmarket in September. 

Blues The One To Beat In Turf Sprint

The stc 1351 Turf Sprint takes its unusual distance of 1,351 metres from the year in the Islamic calendar in which the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia was founded (1932 in the Gregorian calendar). 

It's a trip which will certainly suit the class act in the field, Space Blues (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}). Granted, he hasn't been seen in the heat of battle since winning the G1 Prix Maurice de Gheest last August, but that victory completed a faultless string of four progressive runs in Europe last summer which marked the 5-year-old as a sprinter of huge potential. Gifted stall two in the draw, he has wintered in Dubai and travelled to Saudi on Wednesday with his stable-mate and rival Glorious Journey (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}), who was third in last year's race from a wide draw and has a slightly better starting point this year in gate nine. 

Last year's winner Dark Power (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) was one of two on the inaugural Saudi Cup card for Bahrain. The 7-year-old is trained by British ex-pat Allan Smith and returns to defend his title this year with Frankie Dettori booked to ride. 

Momkin (GB) (Bated Breath {GB}), the half-brother of Saudi Cup challenger Mishriff (Ire) (Make Believe {GB}), is another repeat performer, who was seventh last year. He has left Britain and is now trained in Saudi by Abdullah Mushrif, as has the former Richard Hannon trainee Urban Icon (GB) (Cityscape {GB}), who is now representing Fahad Saad. 

Another former European-trained horse is the G2 Juddmonte Royal Lodge S. winner Royal Dornoch (Ire) (Gleneagles {Ire}), who has left Aidan O'Brien and is now trained in Dubai by Musabbah Al Mheiri.

Oxted Primed For Dirt Debut

As well as being represented in the Saudi Cup by Charlatan, WinStar Farm's veteran Speightstown has the likely favourite for the $1.5 million Saudi Arabian Airlines Riyadh Dirt Sprint in Japanese raider Matera Sky, as well as recent G3 Dubawi S. winner Switzerland. Trained by Hideyuki Mori for Tsuyoshi Ono, the 7-year-old Matera Sky was runner-up in the 1,200-metre contest last year and has also made appearances at the Dubai World Cup and Breeders' Cup meetings.  

“He is a proven shipper and he gained 10kg of weight during the flight from Japan to Saudi Arabia,” said Mori. “He can take a lead and use his natural speed to the finish. We will not change any tactics and his inside draw will be an advantage for us. He has trained very well since he has arrived.”

Matera Sky faces not just last year's winner, the Fahad Saad-trained New York Central (Tapit), but an intriguing runner from Britain in last season's G1 July Cup winner Oxted (GB) (Mayson {GB}). Now five, Roger Teal's stable star is racing on dirt and round a bend for the first time but the trainer and his son Harry, who rides Oxted in the mornings, have both been very bullish about the gelding's condition since arriving in Riyadh, as well as his ability to handle the dirt surface. 

The truly international $1.5 million contest, which features 14 runners from Saudi Arabia, America, Britain, Ireland and Japan, will also be the first experience on the dirt for Brad The Brief (GB) (Dutch Art {GB}), a Group 3 winner on heavy ground in Chantilly last October for Tom Dascombe and his breeder Andrew Black's Chasemore Farm, but the 4-year-old is versatile when it comes to the going, and has also won on quicker ground at Bath as well as Wolverhampton's synthetic surface. 

Harry's Bar (GB) (Exceed And Excel {Aus}), one of two runners at the meeting for Ireland's Adrian McGuinness, has good recent form on another synthetic surface at Dundalk, where he has won his last two starts over six furlongs.

Proven on the dirt is another of the three Japanese challengers, Justin (Jpn) (Orfevre {Jpn}), who won the GIII Capella S at Nakayama in December.

Godolphin Pair Clash In Saudi Derby

The Saeed Bin Suroor-trained Soft Whisper (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) was the emphatic winner of the UAE 1000 Guineas on her most recent start at Meydan and she will take on the colts over a mile in the $1.5 million Al Rajhi Bank Saudi Derby. She may well find that her strongest opposition comes from within the Godolphin camp in  Rebel's Romance (Ire), another Dubawi 3-year-old but this one trained by Charlie Appleby.

“She's one of the best fillies I've had on the dirt,” said Bin Suroor this week of the Godolphin homebred Soft Whisper. “I've won the Guineas 12 times and she won it very well and is a top filly. It's a tough race to face the colts, but if the filly is good enough, she will run very well here and she can win.”

He added, “I also plan to run her in the UAE Derby after this.”

Appleby is equally positive in his view of the statuesque Rebel's Romance. He said, “Rebel's Romance has already had a run and has been here [in Dubai] all winter. He's very much learning on the job but you can't fault him. The penny is dropping at the right end of the race. He's three from three and had two starts on the synthetics at Kempton and Newcastle, then he came over here and put in a nice performance in the Guineas Trial. He learned plenty, getting the kickback and a feel of the surface as well as the style of dirt racing. He overcame the greenness through that and managed to win still, so that was very pleasing. He's definitely come forward again since then so, for me, he's a live contender in the Derby.”

Steve Asmussen, who runs Max Player in the Saudi Cup, has also sent over GII Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint runner-up Cowan (Kantharos) from America to take his chances on the Saudi dirt, while Salem Bin Ghadayer will saddle G3 UAE 2000 Guineas runner-up Meshakel (Ire) (Shamardal).

Francis Graffard's Chantilly stable is represented by Homeryan (Fr) (Sea The Stars {Ire}), a winner at his local track at the end of January as well as finishing second in the G3 Prix Thomas Bryon on his final run of 2020. 

John Gosden was second in the inaugural Saudi Derby with Mishriff (Ire), who runs in this year's Cup, and his Newmarket stable this time fields the gelding New Treasure (Ire), a Group 3 winner in Ireland last season for his breeder Jim Bolger. 

Ted Voute, racing manager for New Treasure's owner Prince Faisal bin Khaled, said: “He was a rig when we bought him, with one testicle quite high which we felt was probably hurting him a little, so we gelded him and obviously hope that's made a bit of difference. He's quite a keen horse and his work on the track has been good so far. I'm hoping that being out of a Congaree mare he will like the dirt, and hope that the race will be run with a bit of speed, which might suit him.”

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