Royal Celebrations Planned For QIPCO Guineas Festival On Coronation Weekend

A celebration at Newmarket Racecourse during the three-day QIPCO Guineas Festival will coincide with the Coronation of King Charles III, the track said in a release on Thursday.

A garden party-themed picnic enclosure will be created trackside for Saturday, May 6 and Sunday, May 7 where a family of four can attend for just £32 and bring their own food and drink. The racecourse will be themed to reflect the national celebration and will open its gates early on the Saturday to show the Coronation, with dedicated screens around the course and racing beginning slightly later in the afternoon.

“The 2023 QIPCO Guineas Festival will have something for everyone, and it's going to be a real celebration of racing, royalty and the local community at price points which we hope are accessible for all,” said Sophie Able, Newmarket Racecourses and International Director.

There will even be an opportunity to receive a masterclass from jockeys who have ridden in the royal colours in the QIPCO British Champions Series Fanzone, as well as a retired royal racehorse and a coronation-themed photo theatre set. Slipofthepen (GB) (Night Of Thunder {Ire}), who is owned by the King and Queen Consort, is possible for the feature race, the G1 QIPCO 2000 Guineas, on the day of the Coronation.

Ticket prices across the QIPCO Guineas Festival and Newmarket's 2023 season have also been reduced year-on-year. Click here for more information.

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Book Review: Robert Braithwaite’s Places Reversed

Every novelist that engages the subject of horse racing is facing an odds-on favorite in Dick Francis. The all-time master, Francis effectively conjured racetrack heroes within the friendly confines of his umpteen mystery novels. With his passing, son Felix continues the family trade by employing the same tried-and-true formula.

Francis always presented the reader with protagonists like a chef with high culinary morals or a noble former jump jockey-turned-P.I. or a smart-looking specialist in kidnapping who moonlights as a philosopher-psychologist. The author had us at “Hullo, how are you?” In his tack room of pithy descriptors, you knew precisely who the good guys were. As for the black hats, they were always wielding a poker or employing henchmen that oozed bad manners and wore toe caps.

In Robert Braithwaite's independently published debut novel Places Reversed, the author who is clearly familiar with the yard, the ring and the racetrack pub, takes a totally different tack. Here we find a cast of characters that are all inherently flawed longshots. There is no Max Moreton, Sid Halley nor an Andrew Douglas afoot to save the day. A spine among this lot will only be found in the book itself. Braithwaite hands us the debt-ridden main character Freddie Lyons, a trainer named Birkett Coward who wants to bet everything with four legs in his stable, and Robert Hamley-Flowers, a former stud farm owner that is a poor judge of character, including his own. Braithwaite's Chunnel story is filled with rogues that are “a funeral away from ruin”. From the French countryside to Newmarket's famed racecourses, Lyons's well-trodden path is dogged by bills, creditors, the ubiquitous Russian mafia, and an ex-wife who did not let the grass grow under her feet.

When Lyons's bloodstock agent disappears and his business partner is poisoned in a racetrack bar and slips into a coma, chapter after chapter of scheming and degeneracy surrounds each scene. To make matters worse, Lyons, a former amateur jockey, teams up with his old boss Coward, in some train-wreck television at its best. With little in the way of cash, they decide that laying the money that they do have on the trainer's “sure bets” is the way to go. The goal? They are trying to raise enough to buy the dam of one of Coward's supposed prize runners. The mare, who happens to be owned by Hamley-Flowers is in foal, and the suitors believe she is a blue-ribbon ticket to the promised land.

The best and most compelling character in this whole book isn't any of these poor sods. Rather it is the shrewd business-minded Tara Fitzsimmons, whose diversified bloodstock and racing empire is always five chess moves ahead of this pathetic trio. She is complex, savvy and knows how to take advantage of weaknesses when she sees them in the male-dominated world of racing. Buying Hamley-Flowers's stud farm for a song, Fitzsimmons knows what her dunderheaded opponents want, and even though Lyons concocts bogus proof that he had a deal to buy the mare before the sale of the property, she smells a rat. If only we had more characters with her type of moxie!

Returning to Francis's world of racing, his antagonists let their greed and avarice rule. They seek an unfair advantage, they get caught, and in the end, the key gets thrown away. Another happy landing and comfort for all. In Brathwaite's tale, this bunch clearly doesn't understand the ramifications of their poor decision-making. Bearing witness to their ignoble behavior becomes a hair exhausting, and the reader longs for some of Francis's white knight chivalry. Whether set at Royal Ascot or Saint-Cloud, Places Reversed could use more stiff upper lip and less chocolate eclair. But anti-heroes are all the rage these days and there is nothing more exhilarating than a longshot made good.

Places Reversed, Printed in Great Britain by Amazon, 257 pages, October, 2022

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Royal Patronage Camp Leaning Toward The Derby

Highclere Thoroughbred Racing's Royal Patronage (Fr) (Wootton Bassett {GB}), who won the G3 Acomb S. and G2 Royal Lodge S. in succession in August and September, respectively, has developed well this winter and is likely to try the G1 Cazoo Derby route, according to co-trainer Charlie Johnston. Eighth in the G1 Vertem Futurity Trophy S. on Oct. 23 where he picked up an injury, the bay has been recuperating, but looks more of a “mile-and-a-quarter-plus” horse to Johnston and his co-trainer father Mark. Originally, the training duo had pencilled in a start in the G1 QIPCO 2000 Guineas for the colt.

“We've had lots of excited Highclere owners coming here at regular intervals to see Royal Patronage, who seems to have wintered very well, but it is still very much the early days of his preparation for the season ahead,” said Charlie Johnston. “We won't see him before the Guineas at the absolute earliest and I think we're starting now to lean towards the route of starting in the [G2] Dante [S.] with a Derby run in mind. He's certainly the flagbearer [for the yard] in the 3-year-old division.

“It always sticks in my head that dad has always said the best trial for the Derby is the Guineas and I think, probably going into the winter, we thought we had that as the favourite place for him to start this year.

“Only when we start to do some faster work with him in March will we get a better handle on what distance is going to be optimum for him this season but looking at him, the physical shape and size of the horse now, he's starting to scream a mile-and-a-quarter-plus.”

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Mehmas Sons Head Middle Park Market

First-season sire sensation Mehmas (Ire) has come to dominate that category since racing’s wheels began turning in June and it is fitting that he is responsible for three of the big four favourites for Saturday’s G1 Juddmonte Middle Park S. at Newmarket. Tally-Ho Stud’s son of Acclamation (GB), who was third in this race on his racecourse finale in 2016, has Method (Ire), Minzaal (Ire) and Supremacy (Ire) with all three coming into the six-furlong feature on the back of impressive wins in black-type company at the trip. Manton Park Racing’s Method is the only unbeaten of the trio, having brushed aside the subsequent G2 Prix du Calvados winner Fev Rover (Ire) (Gutaifan {Ire}) by 4 1/4 lengths at Doncaster on June 26 before dishing out another sound beating to the eventual G3 Sirenia S. scorer Mighty Gurkha (Ire) (Sepoy {Aus}) in Newbury’s Listed Rose Bowl S. on July 18. Method’s trainer Martyn Meade is keeping a close eye on the skies. “Everything that we can control I’ve been delighted with, but the one thing we can’t–the weather–may scupper us,” he said on Friday. “I really want to run him, because there’s nothing else for him–he’s not in the Dewhurst and I’d want to keep him over six furlongs anyway–but I wouldn’t want him pulled about on heavy ground.”

It would take a lot of rain to turn the ground heavy on the Rowley Mile and Meade’s fears may prove unfounded. “Newmarket can dry quickly and it is very windy–I just hope they don’t have any more of those downpours,” he added. “This has always been the plan and earlier in the week I thought the ground would be perfect for him. This is the one we’ve been aiming at, but I just don’t want to risk him on extreme ground. I’ve been pleased watching most of the others have hard races while we were always coming straight here–so he’s had a lovely break, been freshened up and hopefully we get to run him.”

Despite occupying favouritism at present, Method has a jump to make to get to Shadwell’s Minzaal and Jason Goddard’s Supremacy on form. Minzaal followed an impressive Salisbury novice success on Aug. 9 with an emphatic score in York’s G2 Gimcrack S. on Aug. 21, while Supremacy went from a 3 3/4-length Windsor maiden win on July 6 to a four-length verdict in the G2 Richmond S. at Goodwood on July 30. Minzaal’s trainer Owen Burrows said, “It looks a red-hot race, the best of the crop really and it was always going to be. Fingers crossed, we are going there with every chance. We knew straight after York this would be his race–I wasn’t tempted by anything else and timing-wise it has been perfect. There was plenty of rain before racing on Thursday and the jocks are saying it is riding a bit dead. I’d imagine it will be very similar ground to what it was in the Gimcrack, just on the soft side of good–no excuses for anybody, I shouldn’t think. We’ll learn a bit more about him and we’ll see how good he is.”

Trainer Clive Cox said of Supremacy, “He was an exciting winner of the Richmond and he’s had a healthy break in between there and here. He’s shown us plenty of class, but has physically progressed since Goodwood and we’re very much looking forward to seeing him perform here.”

If the winner comes from outside the “Mehmas three”, it is most likely to be Zhang Yuesheng’s Lucky Vega (Ire) (Lope de Vega {Ire}) who was firmly in command in The Curragh’s G1 Phoenix S. on Aug. 9. Jessie Harrington’s leading colt was successful by 3 1/2 lengths there, with Qatar Racing’s June 19 G2 Norfolk S. scorer The Lir Jet (Ire) (Prince of Lir {Ire}) being promoted to second from third. Unlucky when fifth in the seven-furlong G1 Goffs Vincent O’Brien National S. back there on Sept. 13, he sits comfortably among the elite of his generation. “It would be fair to say his last race didn’t go to plan, but we don’t need to say any more about that,” Harrington said. “Prior to that, he was very impressive in the Phoenix S. and on that form he should have a good chance. I wouldn’t imagine we’ll be using the ground as an excuse–he’s pretty versatile and it shouldn’t be bottomless. We haven’t done much with him since the National, just kept him ticking over. We’re looking for a big run.”

Dandalla Puts Unbeaten Record On The Line

Juddmonte also sponsors the G1 Cheveley Park S. in which the fillies pursue the title of champion headed by Nick Bradley Racing and Elaine Burke’s unbeaten Dandalla (Ire) (Dandy Man {Ire}). Successful in the G3 Albany S. by six lengths at Royal Ascot on June 19, the bay was deemed initially disappointing when just edging the aforementioned Fev Rover and Santosha (Ire) (Coulsty {Ire}) in the G2 Duchess of Cambridge S. on the July Course here on July 10 but subsequent events have shown that form in a different light. Trainer Karl Burke is full of confidence.

“We couldn’t be happier with her. She’s ready to run and hopefully she’ll do herself justice,” he said. “It took her a little while to come to herself [after the Duchess of Cambridge], but the last month has been very good. I think the bit of rain they’ve had will help, although she is a good-actioned filly and we were surprised how well she handled the ground at Ascot. I don’t think she’s ground-dependent. It’s going to be an exciting race, with some nice Irish fillies coming over, but you want to be taking on the best in these races. We’re looking forward to running our filly–hopefully she can prove us right.”

One of the Irish contingent that Burke was referring to is Doreen Tabor’s recent acquisition Miss Amulet (Ire) (Sir Prancealot {Ire}), who upset the June 20 G2 Queen Mary S. runner-up Sacred (GB) (Exceed and Excel {Aus}) in the G2 Lowther S. over this trip at York on Aug. 20. They finished clear of Saeed Bin Mohammed Al Qassimi’s Sept. 19 G3 Firth of Clyde S. winner Umm Kulthum (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) in the process and Miss Amulet’s trainer Ken Condon has a strong clutch of 2-year-olds in 2020. “She’s a very progressive filly. I thought it was a good performance at York and she’s done very well since,” he said. “She needs to step up again, but all the signs are good. She deserves to take her chance in a Group 1 now and we’re looking forward to it.”

In an open renewal, the McMurray Family’s Happy Romance (Ire) adds another string to the bow of Ballyhane Stud’s Dandy Man having beaten Alcohol Free (Ire) (No Nay Never) in the G3 Dick Poole Fillies’ S. at Salisbury on Sept. 3. Trainer Richard Hannon said, “Happy Romance is in great form. She has run well and improved all year. She has not run a bad race yet and this is the logical next step up. What she has done has not surprised us, because she has always shown us a lot. She did well at Salisbury as she did travel wider, but she picked up well. This is a much harder race than the Rockfel, but you would rather be winning a Cheveley Park. There are only certain opportunities to win a Group 1 and this is one of them, so we have to try to take it.”

Going The Distance

Potential middle-distance stars of 2021 have two major opportunities to shine on Saturday, with Newmarket offering the G2 Juddmonte Royal Lodge S. and The Curragh’s card featuring the G2 Alan Smurfit Memorial Beresford S. over a mile. The Royal Lodge has drawn a small field, with China Horse Club International’s Aug. 21 Listed Stonehenge S. winner Cobh (Ire) (Kodi Bear {Ire}) taken on by the Teme Valley syndicate’s Aug. 19 G3 Acomb S. scorer Gear Up (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}) and Ballydoyle’s Aug. 22 G2 Futurity S. third Ontario (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}). Trainer Clive Cox said of Cobh, “He was an impressive winner of the Stonehenge at Salisbury, clearly getting the mile well. He’s a big, scopey individual who has continued to physically develop with his progression on the race track.”

The Beresford may offer more strength in depth than the Royal Lodge, featuring a clash between two ‘TDN Rising Stars’ in High Definition (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) and Wuqood (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}). The former represents Team Ballydoyle successful an astounding 19 times already and is back over the course and distance of his impressive debut success on Aug. 22, while Shadwell’s Wuqood bids to back up the striking impression of his win on his racecourse bow over this trip at Gowran Park on Aug. 12. Jessie Harrington saddles another of Zhang Yuesheng’s talented juveniles in Ace Aussie (Ire) (Australia {GB}), who was off the mark over seven furlongs at Cork on Sept. 9.

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