‘I Am Very Lucky’: Donnacha O’Brien Saddles Fancy Blue To Second Group 1 Win In Nassau

Fancy Blue was Donnacha O'Brien's first runner as a trainer in the UK and gave the Irish handler reason to celebrate as she became his first UK winner in the G1 Qatar Nassau Stakes at Goodwood on Thursday. It was a second success at the top level for the daughter of Deep Impact, following her win in the G1 Prix de Diane (French Oaks) on 5 July.

It was favorite Magic Wand (Aidan O'Brien IRE/Frankie Dettori) who took the seven runners along. She continued to lead until facing a strong challenge from Fancy Blue two furlongs out. Fancy Blue took the lead entering the final furlong and then had to see off the strong late challenge of One Voice (Jessica Harrington/Tom Marquand). Fancy Blue held on by a neck, with Nazeef (John Gosden/Jim Crowley) staying on for third, another two and three-quarter lengths behind.

Donnacha O'Brien said: “That was a lovely performance from Fancy Blue.

“Fancy Blue is unbelievable, and it is massive. You never believe you will get one like her in your first year of training. When you have the pedigrees that Coolmore have, you always have a chance and I am very lucky.

“I was given Fancy Blue as a yearling and you don't really expect these kind of things, but when they come along, it is more unlikely that the majority will be up to this sort of Group One class, but you do right by them so that they will fulfill their full potential and thankfully she has reached that class.

“It is unbelievable that I get a filly like her in my first year. People go a lifetime without getting a filly like her. I am no under no illusions as to how lucky I am, and I just need to do the best I can with her.

“I was looking after her as a yearling and I was responsible for her but I didn't have my licence, so she was not under my name.

“Ryan is employed by Coolmore and that is why he rode Fancy Blue.

“I was hopeful of a good performance due to the weight she was getting, and this race fitted in well after her win in the French Oaks.

“Every race she has won she has had to battle for and work for it. Jessie's filly [One Voice] came at her today and if she had got into a proper battle with her, I think she would have found more. She is a very tough, high-class filly who has shown how good she is today.

“We came here today unsure as to what she would think of the ground. I was speaking to Dad during the race that she was swapping and changing her lead leg coming down the hill. She didn't look particularly comfortable and I think a little bit of juice in the ground won't be any harm for her in the future.

“We will give her a little break now. She has had a busy start to the year. We might look at Irish Champions Weekend to bring her back. That could be in the Matron which I know is back down in trip or in the Irish Champion Stakes. She will then go to Arc weekend where she has the option of the Prix de l'Opera or the Arc itself.

“After that, it will probably be the Breeders' Cup or a trip to Japan for the Queen Elizabeth where there is big money on offer over a mile and three, and there is a bonus for winning the Prix de Diane.

“We're not really sure what is going on with America at the minute, but they are the options at the minute.

“All the people in Japan are massive supporters of racing and I know myself from riding Saxon Warrior and him being by Deep Impact that we got a good following from the Japanese fans. It is always somewhere I have wanted to go and whilst it is not set in stone, she could go there.

“Arc weekend fits nicely so whether it is the Opera or the Arc, we will sit down and speak with the owners. Taking in the Vermeille could maybe be a possibility, but we will have to see. There are a lot of good races around and I think she would be competitive anywhere from a mile to a mile and a half. With a fillies' allowance in the Arc, I wouldn't be writing her off either so we'll have to see how strong the Opera is and Coolmore could have Love for the Arc too. Nothing is set in stone.

“Love has a higher rating at the minute, but my filly Fancy Blue showed in France that she is suited to that style of racing. She relaxes and can quicken and whether Love can do it in the same – she looks like she is suited to a more galloping track like Epsom or Newmarket off a fast pace. Although she might not have been as impressive as Love yet, I think she has shown attributes that maybe Love hasn't just yet – that's all thoughts at the minute.

“If you had told me with everything that is going on in the world that I would have a dual Group One winner I wouldn't have believed you. Everything is a bit strange and I certainly wasn't expecting this.”

Discussing the difference between riding and training Group One winners, O'Brien continued: “It's strange. They are different and I think you get a different kick out of it. When you are riding, you feel under pressure and want to do good for the horse and give the horse a fair chance.

“When you are training, I nearly feel pressure for the guys who are working with her every day and working in the yard – you want her to achieve her best for them. They are the ones putting the hard yards in.

“They are the ones you are thinking of when you are training whereas when you are riding, you kind of just nearly think of yourself.

“I liked her last year. When she was going to her maiden which she won at Naas, I thought she would run well but I didn't fancy her to win it. She quickened up really nicely and gave me a lovely feel. Every time we have stepped her up in class, she has pleasantly surprised us, and she just continues to do so – she is just a filly who wants to please and she is improving the whole time. Hopefully, she continues to do that.

“I train at David Wachman's yard [in County Tipperary] and this is great. Last year that was really a satellite yard and I was training her.”

Ryan Moore, enjoying a 19.6/1 day three double following the earlier success of Mogul and also recording his 50th career success at the Qatar Goodwood Festival, said: “I think there were some solid horses in there – Nazeef had done nothing wrong all year. I know very well how good Magic Wand is and she is proven in the best mile and a quarter races in America, Hong Kong and Australia, and obviously Deirdre (the 2019 Qatar Nassau Stakes winner) was in there. My filly [Fancy Blue] showed that she is very straightforward and has a very good attitude. She is tough.

“This filly has done nothing wrong. She ran a good race in the Irish Guineas and she has won a Diane, and a Diane is very hard to win, and now she has beaten the older fillies, and you have got to be pleased with what she has done so far. I am sure Donnacha [O'Brien, trainer] will get her home, see how she is and make a plan for the future.

“She was happy enough today on this ground, I would just say that she just wouldn't want extremes of either.”

Speaking about his success on Mogul in the G3 John Pearce Racing Gordon Stakes earlier in the afternoon, Moore said: “Mogul has improved from both of his races this year. On form it was a very solid race; everything in there had shown form this year. He traveled nicely, and I was happy with what he did in the last furlong and a half – he put his head down and really wanted it. I thought it was a good, even pace; we just sat a little bit back off them and my horse was comfortable. He is a mile and a half horse really – I think that's his trip. I think he could end up being a Grand Prix [de Paris] horse, which is a bit later this year.”

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Malakeh Seeking Third Straight Victory In Woodbine’s Nassau Stakes

Malakeh, a five-year-old daughter of Harbour Watch (IRE), goes after her third straight score in Saturday's Grade 2 $175,000 Nassau Stakes, at Woodbine.

Bred by Gestut Gorlsdorf, the bay mare will make her first start in Canada when she goes postward in the one-mile E.P. Taylor Turf Course engagement that has drawn seven hopefuls. Trained by Graham Motion, who won last year's Nassau with Secret Message, the ultra-consistent Malakeh will shoot for the natural hat trick on Saturday.

After a polished performance to close the curtain on her 2019 campaign last August at Saratoga, Malakeh opened up her current season with another win, a gutsy neck score over firm going at Churchill Downs on May 22. Both victories came at the mile distance.

“I think we've decided that this is what she likes to do, distance-wise,” said Motion, who is closing in on 2,500 career wins. “I don't see why [Woodbine turf] wouldn't suit her. I'm sure it's in great shape.”

After a third-place debut at Chantilly in March 2018, the British-bred, owned by Heider Family Stables, Madaket Stables and Michael Kisber, headed to Germany for her next four engagements. Malakeh broke her maiden in her second German start, an efficient head score in the one-mile Henkel Stutenpreis on April 29, 2018.

She made her North American debut last April, finishing second, just a head back of the winner, in the one-mile race at Keeneland. In her next start, on May 24 at Belmont, Malakeh won by a neck at 1 1/8-miles. She arrives at the Nassau with a 4-3-2 record from 10 starts.

“She's so honest,” praised Motion. “To be truthful, I couldn't believe when I ran her in the allowance race at Keeneland that she was beaten. It turns out she was beaten by a pretty serious filly [Juliet Foxtrot]. So, I was very confused about her form right away because I liked her so much, that I couldn't imagine her not sailing through that condition. But it's funny how things work out. She's never run a bad race, really. She's very consistent and hard-trying.”

It was something that Motion discovered early on.

“When she was working in Florida last winter, she was very impressive.”

The Nassau is the first leg of Woodbine's Ladies of the Lawn Series, which offers $75,000 in bonuses to the top performers based on points accumulated in the designated graded turf routes for fillies and mares.

The series also includes the $175,000 Dance Smartly Stakes (Grade 2, on August 15), the $250,000 Canadian Stakes (Grade 2, September 12) and the $600,000 E.P. Taylor Stakes (Grade 1, October 18), which will serve as the series' final leg.

Eight horses have won the Nassau twice, including Eternal Search (1982-83) and Bold Ruritana (1995-96). Augustin Stable took a division of the 1985 edition with Annie Edge, who won the Grade 2 New York Handicap one year earlier.

The Nassau, Woodbine's first turf stakes of the meet, is Race 8 on Saturday's 10-race card. First post time is 1 p.m. Fans can watch and wager on all the action via HPIbet.com.

$175,000 Nassau Stakes (Grade 2)

Post – Horse – Jockey – Trainer

1 – Nantucket Red – Gary Boulanger – Ashlee Brnjas

2 – Another Time – Jerome Lermyte – Barbara Minshall

3 – Amalfi Coast – Rafael Hernandez – Kevin Attard

4 – Lunar Garden – Justin Stein – Stuart Simon

5 – Elizabeth Way – Emma-Jayne Wilson – Roger Attfield

6 – Malakeh – Kazushi Kimura – Graham Motion

7 – Eyeinthesky – Patrick Husbands – Mark Casse

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