‘This Chance Has To Be Grabbed With Both Hands’: 46-Year-Old Martin Dwyer Returns To Hong Kong With Likely Favorite

Sunday, Dec. 12, 2004: A nervous young jockey from Liverpool gazes round a star-studded Sha Tin paddock ahead of his ride on Andrew Balding's Phoenix Reach in the G1 Hong Kong Vase (2400m, or 1 1/2 miles) and wonders whether he truly belongs.

Frankie Dettori doesn't have a care in the world; Olivier Peslier, Christophe Soumillon and Gerald Mosse have seen it all before; and Douglas Whyte, Michael Kinane and Kieren Fallon wear the sort of steely gazes that suggest you wouldn't want to play poker with them.

There wasn't a catchy term for feelings of self-doubt brought on by pressurized situations back then. But there is now. And the man who rides Pyledriver in this year's LONGINES Hong Kong Vase recognizes the symptoms of Imposter Syndrome all too well.

“You do start to question yourself when you go abroad for those big international races for the first time,” says Martin Dwyer. “You don't tell anyone, of course, but it's there deep down. Doubt does creep in and Phoenix Reach was the horse who helped me get over that.”

Dwyer's pre-race nerves back in 2004 weren't helped at the start when it emerged that Phoenix Reach's bridle had broken and it took some sharp thinking to solve the problem.

“My horse was wearing blinkers and the starter said he would have to be scratched if we took them off to replace the bridle,” he says. “You can imagine how hard my heart was beating by this point and I could hear a few jockeys saying 'take that one in.'

“I couldn't blame them as senior riders use all sorts of little tricks to get an edge, but there was a great horseman called Fergus Gallagher on the stalls team. It was a scary moment right in front of a huge crowd but luckily my horse didn't flinch as Fergus replaced the bridle while I stood and held him.”

The rest, as they say, is history. Phoenix Reach was a 26-1 shot having finished sixth in the G1 Japan Cup two weeks earlier but he stalked the leaders in his new red headgear and struck for home halfway up the home straight.

Dettori loomed large aboard Godolphin raider Sights On Gold soon after but Dwyer had kept something in reserve and Phoenix Reach held on gamely by half a length as the pair drew clear of Peslier on the French-trained favorite Vallee Enchantee.

“Breaking through on the global stage is a massive moment for any jockey,” adds Dwyer. “I'm not one for wild celebrations but I did wave the whip after passing the post. Frankie came across to congratulate me and I just remember the whole trip as a mind-blowing experience.”

Phoenix Reach gave Dwyer another memorable success in the G1 Dubai Sheema Classic at Nad Al Sheba in March 2005 and his stock reached a new high back in Britain the following summer when he threaded Sir Percy through the narrowest of gaps to prevail in a dramatic four-way finish for the G1 Epsom Derby.

But top-level glory remains elusive for all bar a select few and, like his beloved Everton FC, Dwyer has spent most of the last 15 years performing consistently in the middle of the Premier League hoping for the arrival of a genuine star to take on the Galacticos again.

Cue the emergence of Pyledriver, trained in partnership by Dwyer's “glass half full” father-in-law William Muir and Chris Grassick and homing in on Sunday's (Dec. 12) LONGINES Hong KongVase as a fresh horse with just three runs in 2021.

“The first day I really knew we had something special was when he quickened so impressively to win the King Edward VII Stakes at Royal Ascot last summer,” he adds.

“We put a line through his run in a very messy Derby but he destroyed his rivals under a penalty in the Great Voltigeur Stakes at York and he's come back in great heart this year to win the Coronation Cup at Epsom and the Churchill Stakes at Lingfield last month.”

That G1 Coronation Cup success, following Casual Look's 2003 G1 Oaks win and Sir Percy's Derby, means Dwyer is one of a select handful of riders to have landed all of Epsom's crown jewels.

“I love Epsom and I'm really proud to have won all three G1s there as I don't get the chances every year that Frankie and Ryan (Moore) get. Of course, it was a blow that Pyledriver missed the summer with a muscle problem but sometimes things happen for a reason and maybe the best is yet to come.”

Pyledriver lines up this weekend as the highest rated horse in the field with an international rating of 121 and has beaten last year's LONGINES Hong Kong Vase hero Mogul comfortably in three of their four meetings, including the Coronation Cup.

His chance is there for all to see on form and Dwyer feels his unusual character is part of what makes him so good.

“He's like a schoolboy in class who has all the talent in the world but can look out of the window if he loses concentration,” he adds. “There's no way he would let me put his bridle on in a morning – and his groom Babu has plenty of bumps and bruises because of him – but that's just Pyledriver. He knows how much talent he's got and isn't afraid to tell you.”

Dwyer thinks carefully when asked how his 2021 Vase hope compares with the 2004 model.

“That's a tough one,” he concedes. “Phoenix Reach was great, so versatile, a warrior who really battled for you. Pyledriver has more character and quirks but I do think he has more natural ability and he means the world to everyone connected with him.”

Which brings us neatly to Sunday, Dec. 12, 2021, when a calm, veteran jockey from Liverpool will gaze around the Sha Tin paddock ahead of the Vase to see Soumillon, Moore, Joao Moreira, Vincent Ho and Damian Lane among his rivals.

“Yes, I'm a different person now and this will be a massive buzz,” says Dwyer. “But let's get this straight, this might be the last time I get to ride in an HKIR race. I hope it isn't but you never know and that's why this chance has to be grabbed with both hands.”

Now 46 and in the autumn of a 30-year career that has yielded over 1500 winners, Martin Dwyer knows Father Time is undefeated and that this sort of chance may never come again.

But this time there will be no sense of Imposter Syndrome. Dwyer and Pyledriver have shown time and again that they belong at the top level. All they need now is a little luck – and the bridle to remain intact.

The post ‘This Chance Has To Be Grabbed With Both Hands’: 46-Year-Old Martin Dwyer Returns To Hong Kong With Likely Favorite appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Hong Kong Superstar Golden Sixty Eyeing New Record Ahead Of International Challenge

Golden Sixty impressed trainer Francis Lui with a strong hit out on the turf Tuesday morning at Sha Tin as he prepares for the chance to create history in Sunday's (Dec. 12) HK$26 million (about US$3.3 million) G1 LONGINES Hong Kong Mile.

The brilliant son of Medaglia d'Oro will aim to defend his LONGINES Hong Kong Mile crown this weekend, in what will be his toughest to date as he eyes an extension to his winning sequence of 16 by capturing his 19th career win in Hong Kong – a local record.

After watching Hong Kong's champion clock 1:18.2 (27.9, 28.0, 22.3) over six furlongs alongside a partner horse (Valiant Dream), Lui declared: “He's good – Vincent (Ho) was happy with him – he's ready.”

Sharing the current mantle of 18 wins with Silent Witness and Beauty Generation, Golden Sixty will aim to enter unknown territory and stand unrivalled with victory at this weekend's LONGINES Hong Kong International Races.

“I just asked Vincent to roll him into it, let him work into it and he did it with a partner horse,” Lui said. “He will gallop again on Friday (Dec. 10) and it'll just be similar again.”

Standing in Golden Sixty's way this weekend is the might of Japan – a quartet from the Land of the Rising Sun spearheaded by Danon Kingly – this year's G1 Yasuda Kinen (1600m, one mile) winner.

Joining him is Salios – a two-time runner-up to the exceptional Contrail (Japan's eighth Triple Crown winner), Indy Champ – a two-time G1 winner as well as Vin de Garde who placed at the top-level behind Lord North in Dubai earlier this year.

Aidan O'Brien has the sole representative with his dual G1-winning 3-year-old filly, Mother Earth, while five others from Hong Kong feature: Waikuku, More Than This, Sky Darci, Excellent Proposal and Lucky Express.

Yesterday (Monday, Dec. 6) at Sha Tin, Golden Sixty – in an unusual turn of events – bit Vincent Ho on the hand, his regular rider.

“I asked him what happened, normally he always goes in the box after the gallop with the horse to communicate with him and he just sat outside the box and Golden Sixty maybe wanted to play with him and he just had a bite,” Lui said.

“Normally he's a good horse, they have their own character, and he has his,” he added.

Usually displaying flare on the track, Golden Sixty's incredible career has encompassed earnings of HK$80.633 million (about US$10.33 million), 18 wins from 19 starts, four G1 wins, 2020 BMW Hong Kong Derby (2000m, 1 1/4 miles) glory, a trio of G2 triumphs and two G3s.

“I liked his last run it was good to see – I hope he can carry on and that we can get more and more good horses to train,” Lui said.

The reigning Hong Kong Horse of the Year's winning margins are rarely big with his customary last-minute dash on show week in, week out.

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Badel Flying High As HKIR Week Looms

Frenchman Alexis Badel rode his first race in Hong Kong on a two-month contract on Longines Hong Kong International Races day Dec. 11, 2016 and earned his first local victory a little more than two weeks later, guiding Supreme Profit (Aus) (Encosta de Lago {Aus}) to a 24-1 upset of a 2000-metre Class 2 at Sha Tin for trainer Danny Shum, one of seven wins during that stint. Five years later, the former French champion apprentice will ride for much bigger stakes, with mounts in three of the four races that comprise the 2021 HKIR at Sha Tin on Sunday week.

Just 31 years of age, the son of trainer Myriam Bollack-Badel and former jockey Alain Badel rode his first winner at group level in France in 2013, scoring aboard Norse King (Fr) (Norse Dancer {Ire}) in the G3 Prix du Conseil for his mother. He served His Highness the Aga Khan as second-retained rider behind Christophe Soumillon at the outset of the 2015 season and finished in the top 10 in the French jockeys' premiership.

Badel returned to Hong Kong for the next two seasons, racking up a respectable 40 winners, while further honing his craft back at home, where he registered a maiden Group 1 success astride Nonza (Fr) (Zanzibari) in the Prix Jean Romanet. In his first full season in Hong Kong in 2020/2021, Badel booted home 58 winners–good for a share of fifth on the jockeys' premiership– winning at a strike rate of 9.32%, sixth-best among the locals. During that first full season in 2020/21, he partnered with Healthy Happy (Aus) (Zoustar {Aus}) to win the Hong Kong Classic Cup under a coy ride from the front and a first Hong Kong Group 1 badge courtesy of Wellington (Aus) (All Too Hard {Aus}) in the Chairman's Sprint Prize.

 

WATCH: Wellington gives Alexis Badel a first Hong Kong G1 in the Chairman's Sprint Prize

 

The latter, trained by Richard Gibson, gives Badel his best chance at HKIR success in next Sunday's G1 Longines Hong Kong Sprint, where he squares off with the likes of Japanese raiders Pixie Knight (Jpn) (Maurice {Jpn}) and Resistencia (Jpn) (Daiwa Major {Jpn}) as well as top locals Hot King Prawn (Aus) (Denman {Aus}) and the progressive Lucky Patch (NZ) (El Roca {Aus}). Badel put Wellington through his paces in a 1050-metre barrier trial over the Sha Tin all-weather track Friday morning, 'winning' the heat by a comfortable 3/4 of a length (video). Wellington missed an intended appearance in the G2 Premier Bowl H. Oct. 17, but was found to be lame, and resumed in the G2 Jockey Club Sprint Nov. 21, finishing seventh in a race he was certain to need.

“He gave me a good feel today as he was off the track for a long time, so he needed that first run to get him back to a better shape,” Badel told the HKJC notes team. “I'm expecting improvement from him, he trialled well and delivered a strong finish this morning. Hopefully he pulls up great, but he gave me a nice feel, he was strong and sharp so I'm very happy.”

He added, “We know he is a top horse in Hong Kong, we're just looking for some improvement following his first run–he should be back to a better shape now, so let's see on the big day what he can do.”

Badel rides Healthy Happy for trainer Frankie Lor in the G1 Longines Hong Kong Mile, and after failing in a trial last time, fared much better Friday morning, finishing a much-improved second (video).

“It was much better today because last time he couldn't pass the trial naturally, so today he showed a very big improvement and that's very positive,” Badel told HKJC media.

Healthy Happy races for the first time since finishing well behind Hong Kong Sprint candidate Sky Field (Aus) (Deep Field {Aus}) in the G3 Premier Cup H. (1400m) last June.

And for the trainer that gave him a leg up on his first Hong Kong winner five Decembers ago, Badel will climb aboard the very honest Tourbillon Diamond (Aus) (Olympic Glory {Ire}) in the afternoon's richest event, the G1 Longines Hong Kong Cup (2000m), to which he was supplemented for HK$30,000. The gelding, formerly known as Eric the Eel, was a troubled third for Badel in last year's Hong Kong Classic Mile and he has been aboard in all four starts this term, including a short-head success under a feather-weight in the G3 Sa Sa Ladies' Purse H. (1800m) Nov. 7 (video).

“So far he's done well, I hope he can maintain his good form and we will see if it is good enough to win such a big race but he's been very consistent with good form recently, so if he can repeat that again then he should run well,” Badel said.

Before his busy Sunday, Badel will look to improve on his podium finish in last year's Longines International Jockeys' Championship at Happy Valley Dec. 8. He shared third with Hollie Doyle last year and joins Purton, Moreira and Vincent Ho as the local representatives. He has 19 wins from 158 rides this term and ranks third behind Purton and Moreira.

“It's fantastic, I was very keen to participate again and I was fighting very hard for my spot to compete in the IJC again,” Badel said. “Now I just hope I can pick up some good rides, it looks competitive, but it looks quite fair and I believe the competition will be very competitive and open.”

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Loves Only You: History Made And In The Making

No matter where she finishes in the G1 LONGINES Hong Kong Cup (2000m, or 1 1/4 miles), those watching will be witnessing both history in the making and a history maker, Japan's champion mare with an endearingly fetching name – Loves Only You.

The LONGINES Hong Kong Cup will be the final race for Loves Only You, capping a short, star-studded, and decidedly international career, which has seen the now 5-year-old daughter of Deep Impact land one of the most elusive overseas wins for Japan – its first Breeders' Cup victory, while her FWD QEII Cup (2000m, 1 1/4 miles) triumph at Sha Tin earlier this year came at her first Hong Kong sortie.

Debuting in late 2018, Loves Only You pocketed her first G1 the next year in the fourth start of her career, with a win of the classic Yushun Himba (Japanese Oaks, 2400m, 1 1/2 miles).

And she did it unbeaten.

She'd been the race favorite from her career second start through her run in Japan's G1 Queen Elizabeth II Cup (2200m, 1 3/8 miles) in the autumn, when Loves Only You failed for the first time to meet expectations. It was still a far-from-shabby third behind older females, as she finished 0.2 seconds off winner Lucky Lilac who, the following month, finished second in the G1 LONGINES Hong Kong Vase (2400m, 1 1/2 miles).

Six months passed without a race, after which Loves Only You was given five starts for 2020, none of them wins and three out of the frame. They ran the gamut from understandable to forgivable to downright inexcusable.

On paper alone, it looked like the filly's career was on the rocks. But, key to her inability to show her form, incredible spring and a nimbleness that assistant trainer Kazunari Yoshida likens to a cat, was to be found in those six months at the beginning of 2020. That key was the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, or more specifically, the wrench it threw into racing.

When it was announced in late March 2020 that the Dubai World Cup meeting would be cancelled after all, 20 horses from Japan – its biggest team yet and Loves Only You among them – were already on site and had to return to Japan without racing.

The stress of quarantine, travel, and strange surroundings apparently took its toll on Loves Only You. It wasn't until Japan's Queen Elizabeth II Cup that year that the then 4-year-old started to look like her old self, finishing in third place for the second year in a row, this time only 0.1 seconds behind repeat winner Lucky Lilac.

But at year-end, her 10th-place finish nearly a full second behind the winner in the G1 Arima Kinen seemed to bode poorly for the future. The distance of 2500m was her longest assignment yet and barrier four had seemed advantageous. But Mirco Demuro blamed her loss on the trip.

“The inside ground was torn up and I'd wanted to travel about 4 widths off the rail, but there was too much pressure on the outside and I couldn't find a way out,” he said.

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The start of 2021 brought a new rider and new hope. Most importantly, it brought fantastic results. Loves Only You has yet to figure out of the top three in her five starts this year, all graded stakes, three of them top level. And, despite the continuing pandemic, Loves Only You has done more flying than most humans.

She started with a win of the G2 Kyoto Kinen (2200m, 1 3/8 miles) at Hanshin in February under Yuga Kawada, and the next month flew off to Dubai, this time finishing third G1 in the Dubai Sheema Classic (2410m, about 1 1/2 miles) under Oisin Murphy. In April, she debuted in Hong Kong and, with Vincent Ho up, led a Japanese 1-2-3-4 over the finish line of the G1 FWD QEII Cup (2000m, 1 1/4 miles).

“In one word, 'strong', is what she was,” said 60-year-old Yoshito Yahagi, currently only two wins from the top of Japan's trainers' championship. “She lost a shoe going into the first turn and, yet, was able to show the kind of speed she did in the stretch.

“Having kept her condition while training alone in Dubai before going to Hong Kong was quite an achievement. I think it shows how tough she is mentally.”

Ho agreed she was top notch.

“She was extremely calm and professional. She held on very strongly and won impressively,” he said.

Back home, after four months off, Loves Only You was given her first start for the campaign in the G2 Sapporo Kinen (2000m, 1 1/4 miles). She finished second, less than a length behind dual G1 winner Sodashi and, more importantly, was able to show her prowess over the specific grass unique to the Hokkaido tracks. And that was part of the plan.

The venue for this year's Breeders' Cup venue was of special interest to Yahagi.

“It is at Del Mar on the west coast, close to Japan. And, the turf at Sapporo is similar to the turf at Del Mar and I believe California turf will suit Japan horses,” he predicted leaving for the Breeders' Cup.

On Oct. 22, when Loves Only You departed Japan with stablemate Marche Lorrainel, Yahagi noted: “I think with two horses, it will make conditions very favorable. I think we have the best chances of success of any so far.”

The rest is history. Both horses won their respective races, Loves Only You with a gutsy, spine-tingling finish in the G1 Filly & Mare Turf (2200m, 1 3/8 miles) and Marche Lorraine in the Distaff, giving Japan not only its first long-coveted Breeders' Cup victory after 25 years of trying, but two wins for good measure.

“There's no words for how overjoyed I am,” Yahagi said post-race. “There were some difficult places, and I must admit I thought she wasn't going to make it.

“It was a very exciting race. There's nothing better than to be able to send that exciting news back home to Japan.

“I have nothing but gratitude for Loves Only You and wish to say to her, 'Thank you for bringing me here.' She is to me like a most-beloved daughter.”

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