Crowley Born To Excel At Ascot

Among some memorable performances at Royal Ascot last week, two that stood out at opposite ends of the distance spectrum were provided by Battaash (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) and Stradivarius (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}). The sprinter and the stayer may be poles apart in some respects, but what they share is the fact that, at the age of six, they have been around long enough to be taken to the hearts of the racing public. Six also unites their respective jockeys, Jim Crowley and Frankie Dettori, as that was the number of winners they each chalked up at Ascot, Crowley with a first-day treble, and Dettori snatching the leading rider title by pulling off the same feat on the final day and being ahead on the countback for the number of placed finishes.

Crowley knows all about stayers, especially of the jumping variety from his former days as a National Hunt jockey but, now in his fourth season as the number one retained rider for Sheikh Hamdan Al Maktoum, he has had the privilege of being the regular partner of the one of the world’s fastest horses.

“Battaash is unbelievable to ride,” says Crowley, who has been in the saddle for 13 of Battaash’s 21 starts, including his three Group 1 victories, most recently in the King’s Stand S. “I’ve ridden nice sprinters in the past but he is head and shoulders above anything I’ve ever sat on. He has so much natural speed, it’s scary really because there’s nothing quick enough in a race to lead him, or if they do lead him it’s pretty much only for a furlong.”

He continues, “It was nice for him to win at Ascot because the track wouldn’t be tailor-made for him, it almost rides like 5½ furlongs and we’ve been beaten by a marvellous horse both times previously, who basically has just out-stayed him really. Obviously it was important for him to win this year to get the three up—he’s now done the Nunthorpe, the Abbaye and the King’s Stand, and I think he feels as good as ever at six years old.”

The champion jockey of 2016, Crowley is based in Sussex at the famous Coombelands estate where his father-in-law Guy Harwood trained before handing over to his daughter (and Crowley’s sister-in-law) Amanda Perrett. Crowley’s role, however, takes him far and wide, not just for race meetings but for work mornings of the 13 different trainers who are honing the various members of the Shadwell string. Rarely, though, is he given the leg-up on the wily old Battaash at Charlie Hills’s Lambourn stable.

Crowley says, “I don’t actually ride him work that often because he’s such an intelligent horse and he knows as soon as I get on him. When I went to ride him work there two weeks before Ascot I just walked home on the gallops afterwards and I was buzzing because you actually forget how good he is. I’m very fortunate to ride nice horses all the time but riding him is literally like getting in a Formula 1 car. The feel he gives you, even on the gallops at home: he never puts in a bad day, he never works badly, he’s just a real pleasure to be around.”

He adds, “I suppose it’s nice that he’s a gelding because if he were a colt we might not even have seen him at four, so it’s marvellous that he’s been around a while and I think a lot of people have really taken to him.”

 

With his Group 1 success, Battaash may have been the crowning jewel of a right royal week for the jockey, but Crowley’s winners came across the grades and distances and for five different trainers.

“At the start of the year I thought we would have a really nice team of horses coming through and that’s been proved right so far really,” he says.

“But you can often go to Ascot thinking that and then leave the place licking your wounds, because it’s not an easy place to ride winners at all. So to get a treble on the first day, that really got the ball rolling. I thought I’d definitely have a couple and then three went in. I could have had four if Mohaather (GB) had had a clearer run in the Queen Anne, but you can’t be too greedy.”

Crowley also helped to play a part in a memorable Ascot for the man who was formerly one of his National Hunt weighing-room colleagues, Owen Burrows, who registered a first win at the meeting with the progressive Hukum (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) in the King George V S.

“It was obviously nice to ride Owen’s first winner there but to be honest it was just one of those weeks when all the horses ran really well, including the ones I didn’t ride when we had three or four in a race,” Crowley reflects. “And that’s all credit to the trainers because to go to Ascot, a lot of those horses were having their first run of the year, and to have them absolutely tuned up, I’m sure that hasn’t been easy.”

Unlike his fellow leading rider Dettori, Crowley is not one who actively seeks the limelight but he is readily approachable and certainly still hungry for success. Since his championship year, when he rode 189 winners—24 more than the runner-up Silvestre de Sousa, who had been champion the previous season—he has barely let his grip loosen, and he has notched annual tallies well into three figures in each of the three subsequent seasons. He may not crave the hoopla, but he certainly excels on the main stage. This year, of course, the Flat season so far has been a play with all the leading actors in place but with no audience present, and nowhere is that emptiness felt more keenly than at Royal Ascot.

“With the crowds not being there it did feel a little bit different but it didn’t feel any less important to ride winners there,” Crowley says. “It meant just as much, but obviously it would have been lovely to come in and for Sheikh Hamdan to have been there and the crowd, but it was still very gratifying.”

He adds, “It’s just great to be back really. Funnily enough, my first day back was an absolute nightmare. I went to Newcastle and I was beaten on a very short odds-on shot, and I had one slip over backwards in the stalls, and then I got brought down out the back. So it wasn’t a great start but obviously things picked up through the week and a couple of days later Nazeef won the Snowdrop at Kempton.”

The 4-year-old Nazeef (GB) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) may be lightly raced but she has done little wrong in her six starts and, as her progression this season from victory in the listed Snowdrop Fillies’ S. over former 1000 Guineas winner Billesdon Brook (GB) to G2 Duke of Cambridge S. winner at Ascot suggests, this late developer may well be stepping up to Group 1 level before too long.

“Hopefully we can just keep going and I think we will because there were some really nice horses who won at Ascot,” says Crowley of the prospects of the Shadwell team for the remainder of the season. “Obviously a few of them have to step up from handicaps into group company now but hopefully they are capable of doing that.

“I gave the boss a call on Saturday night to go through them and he was obviously very happy. It’s the most winners he has ever had at Royal Ascot so he was very pleased.”

For an operation such as Shadwell, what happens on the track isn’t just cause for celebration when Sheikh Hamdan finishes a major meeting as the leading owner, but also has positive implications in the development of its broodmare band and future stallion prospects. This is now another factor on Crowley’s agenda as he has familiarised himself over the last four years with the pedigrees of his daily mounts along with their racing form. As pedigrees go, there are few horses more exciting than that of his first winner following the Royal Meeting: Almighwar (GB). The 3-year-old colt is a son of Dubawi (Ire) and Sheikh Hamdan’s Oaks heroine Taghrooda (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) and was thus an important and impressive first winner on Sunday for his illustrious mother in her second career.

“I definitely take a real interest in that side of things,” he says. “When I first took the job on, and obviously it’s a big operation with so many horses, it was difficult to get my head around it, but now I’m starting to ride the families and you can understand their different traits and things like that. With so many horses it’s hard to keep up all the time but I do enjoy it.”

At 41, Crowley has been race-riding for over half of his life and is arguably in his prime, with a retainer for one of the sport’s major owners and the opportunity to ride a wide variety of well-bred horses. He admits that his own 7-year-old son is snapping at his heels and urging him out of bed in the mornings to ensure that he is able to take to the fresh gallops on his pony ahead of his aunt’s racehorses, and higher up the age ladder there are some talented junior members of the weighing-room with which to compete, not least the current champion jockey, 24-year-old Oisin Murphy.

“Oisin has done remarkably well,” Crowley says. “Tom Marquand has made giant strides, as has his partner Hollie Doyle, who is a fantastic jockey. I think she’s really good and I wouldn’t say ‘for a girl’, she’s just generally good all round. I think nowadays there’s so much more information for the jockeys out there, with jockey coaches, and being able to watch all their replays. Jockeys on the whole are getting better as time goes on.”

He adds, “And on the flip side of the coin, the senior jockeys are riding for much longer because we take care of ourselves. Jockeys are probably more athletes nowadays than anything else. I run everyday. Even if I’ve got five or six rides that day, I’d still run in the morning or go to the gym, and I know Ryan Moore is the same, and Frankie is the same. If you do that and you eat right, you can definitely prolong your career. When I first went into racing you would never see a jockey running on the track before racing started.”

Crowley certainly has plenty of enticement to maintain peak fitness, not least the prospect of being reunited with Battaash throughout the season.

“I think the plan is to go back to Goodwood to try to make it four in the King George Stakes and then obviously up to York,” he says of the sprinter’s options for the coming months. “Then we have the decision to make about whether or not he goes back for the Abbaye, or whether Sheikh Hamdan and Charlie [Hills] decide to take him to America. He’s got nothing to prove but it would be lovely to see him win abroad somewhere.”

For Crowley, however, the sprinter’s most pleasing win, even with no crowd present, is likely to remain his Group 1 at Ascot. The jockey was delivered into this world back in 1978 at Heatherwood Hospital, which sits almost in the shadow of the racecourse’s huge grandstand. You could say, when it came to racing, he was indeed to the manner born.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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The Weekly Wrap: By Royal Acclaim

Back in April, when major sporting events across the world were being cancelled left, right and centre, the management team at the Queen’s racecourse took the decision that, if racing had resumed in time, Royal Ascot would go ahead behind closed doors. The announcement was met with incredulity in some quarters, particularly by those keen to blame the spread of coronavirus on the Cheltenham Festival, but thank goodness Ascot stuck to its resolve to go ahead, even in extraordinary circumstances.

Of course the meeting lost some of its lustre, just as the Classics have done so far, with none of the pomp and circumstance which usually accompanies the racing, but the racing is, after all, what Ascot is really about. The extended fixture, with its extra six races, provided plenty of stories that were heartwarming enough to have us believing that all is right with the world again. Well, almost.

A Burst of Applause
For no better reason than the fact that the horse who has been my beloved daily companion for the last 14 years is a son of Royal Applause (GB) I’ve always had a soft spot for the 1997 G1 Haydock Sprint Cup winner. At 27, Royal Applause is living in retirement at the Royal Studs, an appropriate venue for a sire who played a significant role in the paternal line of seven of the 36 winners at Royal Ascot.

By the final day the old boy was represented in his own right, when his 7-year-old son Chiefofchiefs (GB) gave trainer Charlie Fellowes his second winner of the meeting in the Silver Wokingham. Ahead of that, however, the stallion most responsible for the blossoming of this line in recent years, Dark Angel (Ire), had provided one of the most explosive winners of the week in the sprint star Battaash (Ire), as well as Art Power (Ire) and Mountain Angel (Ire). The last-naned and Battaash are both 6-year-olds and represent one of Dark Angel’s great strengths as a stallion in the apparent durability of his stock.

Dark Angel’s sire Acclamation (GB) of course deserves plenty of credit. Runner-up to Choisir (Aus) in the G2 King’s Stand S. of 2003, the 21-year-old’s top-rated performer is Equiano (Fr), the dual winner of that same race after its upgrading to Group 1 status. Equiano in turn is the sire of Equilateral (GB), who chased home Battaash in the King’s Stand this year, while another of Acclamation’s sons, Harbour Watch (Ire), made a posthumous contribution through the thrilling G2 King Edward VII S. victory of Pyledriver (GB), who may now be a rare Derby runner for this sireline.

There are now at least nine sons of Dark Angel at stud in Europe, and two of those also provided winners at Ascot. The G1 Commonwealth Cup winner Golden Horde (Ire) lives in the stable once occupied by his sire Lethal Force (Ire) at Clive Cox’s Lambourn yard. He brought further fitting success for that stable on Friday when becoming the first Group 1 winner for his sire, who moved from Cheveley Park Stud to Haras de Grandcamp for the 2020 covering season.

Furthermore, Mickley Stud’s Heeraat (Ire) got the ball rolling for a hugely successful week for his former owner Sheikh Hamdan when his son Motakhayyel (GB) won the opening race of the meeting in the Shadwell blue and white.

Dark Angel has two sons with first-crop runners this season: Tara Stud’s Estidhkaar (Ire), who has already sired three winners, and Markaz (Ire), the full-brother to the brilliant mare Mecca’s Angel (Ire) who is at Derrinstown and got off the mark with his first winner on Sunday.

Success For O’Callaghan Clan
Bred by Gay and Annette O’Callaghan’s Yeomanstown Stud, Dark Angel returned there for his stud career but this was not the only O’Callaghan-owned stud to have plenty to celebrate during Royal Ascot. Gay’s brother Tony owns Tally-Ho Stud with his wife Anne and sons Roger and Henry, and the farm’s flagship stallion Kodiac (GB) enjoyed a terrific finale to Ascot with three group winners on Saturday.

The Tally-Ho Stud-bred Campanelle (Ire) started the treble with her victory in the G2 Queen Mary S. for Wesley Ward, who trains the Tattersalls October Book 1 graduate for Barbara Banke.

A juvenile Group 2 double was completed by the outsider Nando Parrado (GB), who was bred by Anita Wigan and again showcased the talents of Clive Cox and Adam Kirby in winning the G2 Coventry S. At 150/1, the colt became the longest-priced winner in the history of the Royal Meeting and if his victory surprised many, his trainer wasn’t one of them.

“Nando Parrado is a proper horse and we loved him from the start,” Cox said. “This was always the plan, it was just a sideways step on his first run. He came home and thrived from there, and then when the rain came earlier in the week, I knew he would be better on good or slower ground than quicker ground.”

Nando Parrado runs in the colours of Marie McCartan, who, with husband Paul, owns Ballyphilip Stud. The couple had already been represented as winning breeders at Royal Ascot through Battaash, and they have enjoyed a particularly fruitful association with Cox over the years. The trainer bought subsequent dual Group 1 winner Xtension (Ire) (Xaar {GB}) from Ballyphilip as a yearling for €15,000 in 2008 and, seven years later, he returned to the same source to spend £44,000 on a Dark Angel colt who would become known as Harry Angel (Ire) and go on to win the G1 July Cup and G1 Haydock Sprint Cup.

Kodiac’s memorable day was completed by Hello Youmzain’s victory in the G1 Diamond Jubilee S., giving young jockey Kevin Stott both his first Group 1 win and his first victory at Royal Ascot. Like London buses, Stott and trainer Kevin Ryan struck again in the very next race when Hey Jonesy (Ire) (Excelebration {Ire}) stuck his nose out to win the Wokingham. The 4-year-old Hello Youmzain, who races for the partnership of France’s Haras d’Etreham and New Zealand’s Cambridge Stud, quite clearly already has a dual-hemisphere stallion career mapped out for him.

Roger O’Callaghan, who will offer three Kodiac 2-year-olds among an eight-strong Tally-Ho Stud draft for this week’s Tattersalls Ascot and Craven Breeze-up Sale, said of Saturday’s results, “It was mighty, unreal. It was beyond our expectations really, and I am also delighted for Joe Foley and for Yeomanstown, it was a great week for the Irish stallion industry.”

Fine And Dandy
As noted by O’Callaghan above, the joy for Ireland’s independently owned studs didn’t end with the O’Callaghan family. Joe Foley enjoyed a juvenile group-race double on Friday for his Ballyhane Stud stallions through The Lir Jet (Ire) and Dandalla (Ire), representing the first-season sire Prince Of Lir (Ire)—himself a former winner of the G2 Norfolk S.—and the established Dandy Man (Ire).

The Lir Jet, who was bought by Qatar Bloodstock after his debut win at Yarmouth, might be considered to be the one who got away for the Tattersalls Ascot Breeze-up Sale, which makes a belated appearance this week.

Foley bought the colt as a foal from his breeder Donal Boylan for €9,500 and then sold him for £8,000 at the Goffs UK Premier Yearling Sale to breeze-up pinhooker Robson Aguiar. With the sales season delayed amid the COVID-19 pandemic, Aguiar took the sensible decision to do a deal with Nick Bell which enabled The Lir Jet to make the most of his precocity by racing from the Newmarket stable of Bell’s father Michael. Now, while many of his fellow sales entries are breezing on the Rowley Mile on Monday ahead of Thursday’s sale, The Lir Jet is already a Group 2 winner who has given an important boost to his young sire.

“The warm, fuzzy feeling hasn’t worn off yet,” Foley said on Sunday. “The Lir Jet had no lookers at the yearling sale except for Robson. I’ve bought two good breezers from Robson for Clipper Logistics in recent years, so I admire and respect him. I strongly encouraged him to buy the colt last year at Doncaster and Robson, to his credit, told me in February this year that he was a stakes horse at least. Then he kept improving his prediction as the months passed and he told me six weeks ago that he was a group horse for sure and a very good horse. Robson is obviously a very switched-on fella and I’m delighted for him that he has proven to be correct.”

He continued, “When Sheikh Fahad’s team were thinking of buying him they contacted me and asked what I thought of him and I gave them some encouragement to go ahead a buy him. The nice irony is that they also bought Extortionist from Dandy Man’s first crop and he won the Windsor Castle and was a fantastic fillip in Dandy Man’s first season, and I’m really pleased for Sheikh Fahad, David Redvers and Oisin Murphy that they have now had this success with The Lir Jet.”

Foley added,” It’s also fantastic for his breeder Donal Boylan. I’ve never met him as he’s based in Hong Kong but he’s a really nice man and keeps his mares with Brian O’Neill at Rockton Stud. [The Lir Jet’s dam] Paper Dreams was the first mare he ever sent to me.”

Credit Due To Crowley And King
While there were many performances of merit throughout the meeting at which Frankie Dettori and John Gosden topped the leading jockey and trainer lists, two men who deserve special mention both first made their names in the National Hunt division but are very much at home at Flat racing’s top table.

We have an interview with Jim Crowley running later in the week in TDN but his six winners for his boss Sheikh Hamdan Al Maktoum must be noted here as they put him on level-pegging with the more flamboyant Dettori. It would actually be hard to think of a more unassuming member of the weighing-room than Crowley, who rode over jumps before turning to the Flat more than 10 years ago. In 2016 he was crowned champion jockey, a month before he was signed up as number one rider to Sheikh Hamdan. In fact, three of the jockey’s Royal Ascot winners were provided by two of his former jumps weighing-room colleagues, Roger Varian and Owen Burrows, who celebrated his first win at the meeting with Shadwell’s Hukum (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}).

Alan King would be more readily identified as a National Hunt trainer but he has long had notable success with his Flat runners and his team of five sent up the M4 from his Barbury Castle base to Ascot included three winners and a runner-up. King won the closing race on Tuesday, Friday and Saturday with the dual-purpose performers Coeur De Lion (GB) (Pour Moi {Ire}), Scarlet Dragon (GB) (Sir Percy {GB}) and Who Dares Wins (Ire) (Jeremy). The last two named, both owned by Henry Ponsonby Racing, provided first victories at the meeting for Hollie Doyle and Tom Marquand, two of the rising stars of the weighing-room.

For the second time in the week, the late and much missed Kevin Mercer was brought to mind when the admirable Scarlet Dragon won his eighth race. Like Pyledriver, he was bred at the Mercer family’s Usk Valley Stud, where Pyledriver’s dam La Pyle previously boarded for Mercer’s friends and fellow breeders Roger Devlin and Guy and Hugh Leach. The trio has enjoyed extraordinary success with their first homebred, whose mating was advised by Mercer, and with Pyledriver heading towards Epsom for the Derby the fun may have only just begun.

Stradivarius A National Treasure
We started this column with speed and we’ll end with the star stayer, Bjorn Nielsen’s mighty Stradivarius (Ire), who is more than deserving of having the last word dedicated to him.

His fourth consecutive Royal Ascot triumph was the highlight of a good week for his sire Sea The Stars (Ire), who was also represented by Hukum (GB) and the impressive G2 Hardwicke S. winner Fanny Logan (GB) as well as featuring as grandsire of Alpine Star (Ire), who became the first Group 1 winner for her sire Sea The Moon (Ger) in the Coronation S.

With three Gold Cups among his 15 victories to date, Stradivarius is guaranteed his place in racing’s history books and he also, eventually, deserves a place at a good Flat stud. Where better for him to stand when his time comes to retire than at the National Stud, where many visitors would also be able to glimpse one of the most popular racehorses of the modern era?

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Royal Ascot Day Three: Stradivarius Romps To Third Straight Gold Cup Victory

The third afternoon of racing at Royal Ascot was delivered over a rain-sodden course officially listed as soft, but that didn't stop Stradivarius from delivering a third straight victory in the Group 1 Gold Cup. Trained by John Gosden and ridden by Frankie Dettori, Stradivarius recorded his fourth career win at the Royal meeting, having won the Queen's Vase in 2017.

Mid-pack for most of the 2 1/2-mile journey, Dettori swung the 6-year-old by Sea the Stars four-wide coming into the final stretch. Under a confident ride, Stradivarius responded immediately to Dettori's urging in the final furlong and pulled away to win by about 10 lengths.

In the first race of the day, Highland Chief won the 10-furlong Golden Gates Handicap to give jockey Rossa Ryan a first Royal winner. It was also a first Royal Ascot success for a training partnership, permitted by the BHA since the resumption of racing on June 1, with Paul and Oliver Cole being responsible for handling Highland Chief. Paul Cole trained 21 Royal Ascot winners when solely responsible for the training licence.

Referring to the fact that he now shares the licence with his father Paul, Oliver said: “As the expression goes, if it's not broken, why try to fix it? We have got some good horses and we are very lucky to have them.

“Sadly, my father is at his best friend's funeral today [Ben Leigh], which is why he didn't come. I did say to him today I thought we'd get an Ascot winner.”

Jockey James Doyle bagged his third winner of the week as he superbly delivered the Roger Varian-trained Mountain Angel up the inside to comfortably take the day's second race, the Listed Wolferton Stakes over 10 furlongs.

Regarding the week as he has had so far, Doyle said: “You have to enjoy it. It is obviously a bit, well a lot, different from what we are used to here. I was watching the replays back last night and it all seemed a bit quiet. It is nice to ride a winner to try and liven things up a little bit! I am not Frankie, unfortunately, but it is nice to be standing here!”

Jockey Jim Crowley is enjoying a Royal Ascot to remember, and he recorded his fifth winner of the week when Molatham landed the G3 Jersey Stakes over seven furlongs by half a length from Monarch Of Egypt after a sustained battle. It was a double for trainer Roger Varian, and like all of Crowley's four previous winners this week, Molatham is owned by Hamdan Al Maktoum, to whom Crowley is retained jockey.

“I had six winners at Royal Ascot coming into this,” said Crowley. “I am not complaining though. When you are a jockey, you take one for the meeting, so to get five is great. I am very lucky to ride such nice horses and for such a big operation.”

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Night of Thunder’s Molatham Takes the Jersey

Continuing the amazing week for Shadwell, Molatham (GB) (Night of Thunder {Ire}) emerged on top of a rain-hit G3 Jersey S. on Wednesday to score at 11-2. Always travelling strongly halfway down the field despite having no cover, the Listed Flying Scotsman S. winner cruised to the front passing two out and after a battle royal with Monarch of Egypt (American Pharoah) asserted for a neck success, with daylight back to Symbolize (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}) in third.

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