From Ballet Dancer To Northern Dancer: Scrope’s Life Less Ordinary

This week started with International Women's Day and, while it could be argued that there's more to be done when it comes to equal opportunities, in many ways women today have it relatively easy when it comes to finding employment in racing.

This was not the case when Alex Scrope began her career in bloodstock. In fact, initial opposition to her working in the world in which she had been immersed since birth came from within her own family. Her father, Colonel Adrian Scrope, the revered manager of Lord Derby's studs, regularly took on students keen to learn the business but was reluctant for his own daughter to follow this path.

“There were no professional women on the studs when I started; my father wouldn't take me,” says Scrope. “Even Elisabeth Couturie, although she ran her own stud, never considered it was a role for a girl.”

Scrope's own pedigree is as impressive as those of the horses she has devoted her life to studying and, as with Thoroughbreds, the dam line played a significant role. Her mother's family owned Sledmere Stud in Yorkshire, which at that time was the leading commercial stud in the country. The important position of the Sykes family's stud in the history of Thoroughbred breeding is guaranteed, Sledmere being the birthplace of the incredibly influential foundation mare Mumtaz Mahal, and of 1873 Derby winner Doncaster, whose male line extends through Phalaris.

In 1927, at the age of 21, Scrope's father was appointed manager at Sledmere and a year later married Lady Sykes's daughter, Everilda, having set his heart on his future bride when first glimpsing her at his job interview. Within a decade the couple had moved to Newmarket when Colonel Scrope was appointed to run Lord Derby's Stanley House and associated studs not long after Hyperion took up stud duties.

“Pa went to Lord Derby in 1936 or '37 and he had Hyperion virtually all his life as a stallion,” recalls Scrope, who attended nursery school with the twins Henry and David Cecil.

Were it not for a back injury, however, her encyclopaedic knowledge of pedigrees might have been lost to the breeding world as, realising the lack of opportunities for women in bloodstock at that time, she initially steered a different course.

“I started life as a dancer, that was what I really wanted to do,” she says. “I trained with Rambert in London and then went to Paris, but I had a bone problem in my back. I absolutely adored it, but of course, I always rode and I always came home. And while I was in Paris, I was offered a job with Hipavia.

“I wasn't a huge success in the office,” admits Scrope, whose days with the equine transport company led to her accompanying mares on the first jet flight for horses in Europe. “In those days, rather like now, horses used to have a lot of paperwork, so I had an attache case with the paperwork for the day's flights and I would fly with the horses and look after the customs. I absolutely loved it and I continued to travel for years after that as they didn't have that many people who had experience of flying with the horses. I would work through the stud season getting yearlings ready for the sales, but then I had to have work to take me through to the next season.”

It was a role that transpired literally to be a flying start to one of the most diverse careers in the stud business. From assisting veterinary surgeon James Roberts, best known as the man who saved Mill Reef for a stud career, to working for a range of leading farms, Scrope's CV reads like a who's who of some of the most significant owner/breeders of the 20th and 21st centuries.

Stints in Normandy with Paola Ciechanowska and in Bolgheri at the Tuscan breeding wing of Tesio's partner Marchese Mario Incisa Della Rochetta expanded the international element of Scrope's thorough grounding in the business, which has been largely rooted in Newmarket with regular foreign forays.

“The person who really gave me a leg up was Peter Burrell, when he was still at the National Stud,” she says. “Marcos Lemos was looking for someone to manage Warren Hill Stud and Peter put me up for it. That was my first independent stud role, and then I went to Wyld Court, which then belonged to Peter de Savary and was managed by Dave Dick. I suspect that in the two years that I was there I got in very nearly a lifetime's laughter. I don't think I've ever come across anyone as funny as Dave.”

Over the years, she has worked the sales for various trainers, such as Harry Thomson 'Tom' Jones in the era in which Sheikh Hamdan was first introduced to British racing, Henry Cecil and Guy Harwood. On the stud side, Scrope's clients have included the 'big three' of Coolmore, Darley and Juddmonte, along with Car Colston Hall, Fittocks and Brookdale studs, as well as her long-term association with Gerald Leigh.

“When James Delahooke went to Juddmonte, I got the job buying yearlings for Guy Harwood,” says Scrope, who also worked for Prince Khalid Abdullah for five years. “When I worked for Guy, I would go over to Kentucky every March because I used to do the selection in Europe for Keeneland for the July Sale, and so I used to do 10 days with their selection team there so I could see what the crop was like. While I was there I used to go to look at the yearlings at Juddmonte as well. Jeremy Tree always got the first 30 yearlings, Guy got the second 30, and any leftovers were handed around.”

One of Prince Khalid's most significant purchases in the early years of Juddmonte was Dancing Brave who was bought for him at Fasig-Tipton by Delahooke. Though the son of Lyphard ended his career with the highest rating ever awarded to a horse at that time, his recruitment to the Harwood stable was less auspicious, as Scrope recalls vividly.

She says, “He wasn't a magnificent horse to look at because he had that ugly head and terrible parrot mouth. Jeremy had taken his 30 yearlings and Guy had picked 29 and needed one more. The horses that came over from America were with Anthony Webber at Newbury, so Guy and I went down to look, and we'd narrowed it down to three that we were interested in. There was a Best Turn, an Alleged, and a Lyphard. I always used to work out the odds for these horses on how many foals they'd had–I'd assume that 50% were fillies and 50% were colts and would work out the odds of a horse getting a group-class colt and the odds of getting a group-class filly. We decided that we would go 10/1 or better on colts and 12/1 or better on fillies, so I would work out all the stallions to the percentages.”

She continues, “And so when we looked at these three horses, probably the best looking was the Best Turn. I told Guy that he wouldn't be my pick because they are very American, so I'd let him choose between the Alleged and the Lyphard. So he said, 'Okay, what are the odds?' I told him that Lyphard was 9/1 and Alleged 10/1. He replied, 'Well I've had nine Lyphards and they were all useless so this must be the one.' Whereupon the horse stood on his hind legs, spun round, got his rein over his neck and disappeared towards the A34. And I didn't see him again until he arrived at Pulborough.”

The arrival at Harwood's stable of Brocade (Habitat {GB})–subsequently the dam of Group 1 winners Barathea (Ire) and Gossamer (GB), both by Sadler's Wells–coincided with the start of Scrope's work for the trainer and it was here that she was first introduced to their owner/breeder Gerald Leigh.

“It was just when he sold Cayton Park and moved to Eydon [Hall Farm],” she says. “He was a great friend and a wonderful person to work for, and he was quite happy to have endless conversations about matings and the mares.”

Among her closest allies in the business, it is the late Leslie Harrison for whom Scrope perhaps reserves the greatest affection.

“Well, he was such a lovely person, a complete one-off with a superbly dry wit,” she says of Harrison, who managed Plantation Stud after its sale from Lord Derby to Lord Howard de Walden, having started off as one of Colonel Scrope's many pupils.

“We were students together and we used to drive Pa mad because we would be in different yards but Leslie would shout 'King Of The Tudors' and all sorts of names, and I had to shout back with the pedigree.”

Henry Cecil also remained a lifelong friend. From nursery school to a shared internship at the Equine Research Centre, and later as a sales advisor and regular rider in the Cecil string, Scrope has had greater insight than most to the mind of the late champion trainer.

She says, “My Pa said that of all the students he ever had, Henry was the most talented. Henry was a walking stud book. I remember a filly coming in and I said, 'when I saw that filly, I thought she looked just like…' and straight away he said the name of one of Hollingsworth's. In those days the pedigree really mattered so much.

“I can remember standing on the side of the gallop at Chantilly with Francois Boutin one day and he had a filly who was out of the Relance family. She came up the canter and he said, 'Did you know Relance?' When I said I didn't, he said, 'Well you're looking at her', and it was a grand-daughter. But he and Henry, they just knew those horses. They'd worked for so long with those owner/breeders, and my father and mother were the same.”

The culmination of Scrope's own involvement in seeking equine excellence on behalf of different owner/breeders was the founding of her own pedigree database known as Horse Power. For years the programme featuring qualifying group horses in Europe and America was available on subscription to fellow pedigree analysts and enthusiasts and was maintained by Scrope's cousin Manou Koch de Gooreynd, who is well known to many on the sales circuit in her part-time role as 'front of house' for the Castlebridge Consignment. Latterly, Horse Power has been sold to Coolmore, for whom Scrope worked on “an ad hoc basis” for more than three decades. It is now used regularly by the Coolmore team to help customers when booking their mares, and it is also in the process of being updated with Australasian group horses.

She says, “My year in Italy in 1977 was incredibly lonely and tedious because I used to be in an attic and I worked there on all these pedigrees day in and day out. But when I left, Mario Incisa said, 'Take what you've done and see if you can build a business for yourself out of it.' He gave me all the work that I'd done.”

Scrope continues, “I don't have a computer brain at all but I knew the information I wanted to get and I have been fortunate to have Paul Muldoon as my programmer for over 30 years. Mario Incisa said that Tesio had been a great believer in nicks, and just when Northern Dancer was becoming the be-all and end-all and we were getting all the Lyphards and Nijinskys coming into the equation, he said that he wanted to see if there was anything that we were missing, that goes with Northern Dancer. So I had copies of the Stud and Stable, and they used to print all the pedigrees of the group winners. So we took the group horses as being the bullseye on the target of what he was trying to breed. That was how it all started. I had two copies of each pedigree on a 6×4-inch card, one by sire and one by broodmare sire. And then gradually as it became clearer which were the chefs de race, I colour-coded them so I could follow the different sirelines and see where we were. I found that we had all these horses–Nijinsky was out of a Teddy-line mare and Storm Bird was out of a Teddy on Teddy on Teddy-line mare-and it was a really strong indication that that was where the stallions came from, on a cross with Teddy. Of course that's all gone now. But it looked to me like all this sorting was made for a computer.”

She adds, “I'm lucky because I've always had such great support and that all comes back to the people. When Mags [O'Toole] was about 25 she came to work with me. We worked together until I stopped doing the sales and she made an enormous contribution to the business. Then Manou, when she stopped riding out for Henry [Cecil], came to work with me full-time and she took over all the inputting for the database and took to it like a duck to water.”

Scrope's own mental equine database, as much instinctive as learned, would be worthy of collation itself. Certainly, for those eager to expand their own knowledge of breeding, with some spicy anecdotes along the way, no minute in her time is wasted. Her work has been as much guided by data as it has been through hands-on experience with horses from her early childhood. And, as most people who have observed some of the greats of the racing game might come to conclude, she knows that there is no one method which offers a guaranteed path to success.

“There definitely isn't a right and wrong,” she says. “But I do firmly believe that the whole thing is guided genetically and when you get these families that consistently come to Group 1 level of course your chances are better. Partly because they have the genetic capability to achieve that, but also partly because if you have a family that is loaded with group winners–and for me buying a horse I would always look down the family–and when you go through those and you see the family trees on the computer, they will show you immediately how many group-class colts there are and how many Group 1 winners. So if you see that under the first three generations you've got, say, between six and ten fillies that have won group races or placed in Group 1 races, you know they are all going to be in the best hands and they are all going to be going to the best stallions. So success repeats itself because it's given the opportunity to repeat itself.”

She adds, “I've been very lucky with the mares that I've bought for people because when I'm given my head I would much rather buy what I call 'Cinderella mares'–a poor relation out of a good family, and you can do it because you know the good horses are going to come up in the family. In five to 10 years, if the mare is no good, she has still retained her value because all around her, she's got these little satellites of where her sisters and half-sisters have produced at group level and the family is working for you still.

“So I think that, in a sense, you can make your own luck.”

There's that old saying, referred to often in racing, about the harder you work, the luckier you get. Alex Scrope was perhaps born lucky, but during the course of a career in the bloodstock world which dates back to the time when the owner/breeder still held sway, she has put in an awful lot of work into becoming the pre-eminent pedigree expert of a generation.

 

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Mourning a Kind of Immortality

Thanks to advances in obstetrics, our own species is blessed to no longer confront quite so frequently the awful paradox that routinely confronted our ancestors: the death of a mother, as the cost of new life. And, of course, even a Thoroughbred as precious and cherished as Kind (Ire) (Danehill) is ultimately always livestock, prone to the kind of mishaps that tend to school the stockman in understatement whether facing triumph or disaster. But the consolation that we can seek, on their behalf, is the same: legacy.

Undoubtedly there will have been Victorian scientists who owed their own existence to the loss of a mother. But sometimes that cruel trade-off might be redressed by another: having survived, the infant could be raised to contribute to the sum of human knowledge; could even improve our understanding of why these things happen, and how to make them happen less often.

A similar calculation applies to our quest for greatness in Thoroughbreds. We know that these animals are fragile, that their very existence—being predicated on exercise, competition and breeding—will inevitably expose them to a degree of risk. But we also know that we can proceed with a clear conscience, when our management of the breed can yield a champion as glorious as Frankel (GB). So while there will doubtless be grief among those who have tended this venerable mare for many years, they must console themselves that her service to the breed amply redeems the relatively marginal risk it entailed.

That comfort, moreover, will be shared by all those who lavish no less care—in all weathers, 365 days a year—on Thoroughbreds that contribute nothing to the breed, other than a hint as to the kind of breeding formula to avoid in future. Because all these endeavours share the same purpose; and we all need the example of a freak like Frankel to make sense of the collective enterprise.

Many of us will have shared the same immediate reaction, on hearing that Kind had succumbed to complications arising from the delivery of a Kingman (GB) colt last week: how poignant, that one of the pillars of this extraordinary breeding empire should have crumbled so soon after the loss of its founder. And not only how poignant but also, on some inexpressible level, how apt. But you can be sure that Prince Khalid Abdullah himself would be anxious to share the credit, for Kind, with those who had cultivated her family with the same far-sighted principles that characterised his own intervention.

The Prince welcomed his first homebred winner in 1982, a thrill that sustained a period of around 15 years during which—with the particular assistance of James Delahooke—he targeted well-bred, well-shaped females from various sources: at auction, both as yearlings and broodmares; in private deals with other breeders; and absorbing such carefully curated herds as came with Belair Farm and Ferrans Stud.

Then, in 1983, came the mares kept by John Hay 'Jock' Whitney at Mount Coote Stud in Ireland. These famously included Rockfest, the granddam of Kind. But the line had passed relatively briefly through Whitney's hands, Jeremy Tree having bought him Rockfest's dam Rock Garden as a yearling in 1971. (Tree had meanwhile become The Prince's first trainer and was instrumental in securing the Whitney herd.) Kind's family had much deeper roots in the Oxfordshire stud of Lady Wyfold, whose father-in-law had bought a pregnant mare at a dispersal sale in Berkshire, in the last weeks of peace before World War I. The filly she delivered in the spring of 1915 was the first in a chain of half a dozen Sarsden graduates extending to Rock Garden.

These included the 1942 Queen Mary winner Samovar, who incidentally produced two highly accomplished siblings in Zabara (GB) (1000 Guineas) and Rustam (GB), a sharp juvenile who stood at Mount Coote for a while. Samovar is the sixth dam of Kind.

Rock Garden, a Chepstow maiden winner, had delivered Rockfest after Whitney sent her to his homeland for a date with Stage Door Johnny, whose success in the 1968 Belmont S. defused one of the most explosive Triple Crown series in history. That's another story, but I think Stage Door Johnny is close enough in Frankel's pedigree to be credited with some role in the hard-running style we often see in his stock. He's a tremendously wholesome influence, for sure: his sire Prince John was by Princequillo and proved a particularly effective broodmare sire; and his dam was by Ballymoss (GB), that deep well of stamina.

Rock Garden was a fairly mediocre producer, Rockfest proving the most distinguished of her foals as runner-up in the G3 Lingfield Oaks Trial. In turn, Rockfest produced her only really worthwhile dividend as a broodmare in Rainbow Lake (GB). Being by a staying influence as thorough as Rainbow Quest (GB), unsurprisingly Rainbow Lake's keynote performance came with an emphasis on stamina, winning the G3 Lancashire Oaks by seven lengths. That qualified her as hot favourite for the G1 Yorkshire Oaks, but she ran poorly then and in her only subsequent start.

Rainbow Lake, of course, became the dam of Kind—whose own strengths, as a prolific sprinter trained by Tree's Beckhampton successor Roger Charlton—tell us much about the astounding capacities of her sire Danehill.

Frankel famously combines those twin highways to the breed-shaping Northern Dancer, Sadler's Wells and Danzig, through their most important respective sons in Galileo and Danehill. When Rainbow Lake was sent to Sadler's Wells, in 1999, she duly came up with a top-class middle-distance operator in Powerscourt (Ire), whose sustained bid for a glamorous prize over 10 furlongs eventually paid off in the GI Arlington Million but who stayed well enough to have closed to within a length of Vinnie Roe (Ire) (Definite Article {GB}) in the G1 Irish St Leger. For her next cover, Rainbow Lake went to Danehill and came up with this 103-rated, stakes-winning sprinter, Kind.

Sure enough, when Kind was herself sent for consecutive coverings by Sadler's Wells, Galileo and then again Galileo, the idea was that she might come up with the optimal equilibrium between speed and stamina. As aspirations go, pretty hackneyed. The results, as we all know, were not quite so standard.

Yes, the Sadler's Wells earned his place in the Derby by making all the Lingfield Trial: but Bullet Train (GB) bombed out at Epsom, and Sir Henry eventually decided that since all he could do was keep going, he could serve his kid brother as pacemaker. He performed this role dutifully in the last six starts of his career.

Frankel had by then become the closest many of us have seen to the grail, that elusive blend sought by so many breeders who usually end up with slow sprinters or short-winded stayers. I have always said that the way he carried his speed, once he had calmed down, would have made Frankel no less a legend on dirt. It's a shame that circumstances did not permit that experiment—nor indeed much else in the way of adventure, with maybe a crack at the Arc instead—once he had established his dominion on home soil. As a stallion, however, he has been a conduit for the trademark assets of Galileo (let-me-run-through-that-wall) to the extent of winning a Leger.

So it's been fascinating to follow Noble Mission (GB), his brother, both on the track and at stud. He never had Frankel's brilliance, but showed much of his indomitability in winning three Group 1s—notably when bowing out, just like his brother, with a slugfest in the Ascot mire. Sadly, things have not worked out for the Bluegrass farm that tried to live up to his name, even though he produced a Kentucky Derby runner-up at the first attempt. It proved as hopeless a mission as it was a noble one, trying to overcome the local commercial prejudice against turf, and the horse was recently exported to Japan. In their mutual aversion to bloodlines tested on each other's preferred surfaces, American and European breeders are vying with each other in myopia. And in amnesia, too, looking at the game-changing traffic of years past. As it is, the Japanese are picking up the pieces, and will have the last laugh.

Juddmonte did subsequently attempt to repeat the kind of twist that had paid off with Rainbow Lake, giving Kind a couple of home-farm dates with a faster stallion in Oasis Dream (GB). This was around the time Oasis Dream came up with his decoy Midday (GB), however, so possibly that was a fairly equivocal gamble. Anyhow the results were a decent handicapper at a mile and, a priceless bequest to the broodmare band, a dual stakes-winning sprinter in Joyeuse (GB).

In fairness, it's not as though Danehill was simply a conduit of Danzig speed. Certainly his versatility looks commercially vital to Frankel, given all those stamina influences loaded elsewhere: Galileo, Rainbow Quest, Stage Door Johnny. Actually it may be that Frankel tempered these with some of the dash concentrated in all those Sarsden House mares, who were by largely forgotten English stallions. Rock Garden, for instance, was by the miler Roan Rocket (GB); while her granddam was by a July Cup winner (and, as already noted, out of a Queen Mary winner).

A long game, this, after all. Genetic legacy is about accretion; about noticing the pale glimmers rising and fading somewhere within the dark tangle, and patiently working those strands closer to the surface. Some people have talked of Kind as though she were some kind of token in the nicking manual (“insert Danehill mare here”). That view is too fatuous to dignify with attention on the day when we mourn her passage from flesh and blood to a vicarious afterlife, through Frankel, Joyeuse and others, within the binding of the Stud Book.

It does sound as though age had, in recent years, increasingly recalled Kind to her mortal limitations. But who knows? Perhaps her orphaned colt will thrive for a foster mare, and someday extend the legacy anew. Regardless, the same, natural processes of maternity that have now taken her away have long since guaranteed her immortality.

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Frankel’s Dam Kind Dies From Foaling Complications

Kind (Ire) (Danehill-Rainbow Lake {GB}, by Rainbow Quest), the dam of the undefeated champion Frankel (GB) (Galileo {Ire}), passed away from foaling complications on Monday, Juddmonte announced. Also the dam of fellow Group 1 winner Noble Mission (GB) (Galileo {Ire}), the second generation Juddmonte homebred and listed winner was 20. Her final foal, a colt by Kingman (GB), was foaled on Mar. 2.

Stud Director UK Simon Mockridge commented, “I cannot thank the Rossdales and Juddmonte team enough for the tireless care they have given Kind. To many she will rightfully always be best remembered as the dam of Frankel and Noble Mission, to us at Juddmonte she will always be Kind by name and Kind by nature.”

Foaled Apr. 21, 2001, Kind was sent to the yard of Roger Charlton and won a brace of listed races during three seasons on the racecourse. Her best showing was a third in the G3 Ballyogan S. in 2005 and she was retired with a mark of 13-6-0-4 and $132,320 in earnings. However, it was as a broodmare that she truly flourished.

Overall, she produced eight foals, six runners and five winners. Bullet Train (GB) (Sadler's Wells), a winner of the G3 Derby Trial, was Kind's first foal. She visited the court of Galileo (Ire) in 2007 and her best performer, the outstanding European Horse of the Year Frankel was the result. Besides that G1 2000 Guineas hero, Kind also produced three-time Group 1 winner Noble Mission (GB) (Galileo {Ire}) and the multiple stakes winner and dual group-placed Joyeuse (GB). The latter is already the dam of the G1 Coronation S. third Jubiloso (GB) (Shamardal) and the MSP Jovial (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}). Her 3-year-old Galileo filly is named Chiasma (Ire) and is in training with John Gosden. Kind's name is also on the IFHA's International List of Protected Names.

Barring her latest foal, the other five colts out of Kind have all found their way to stallion barns, with Frankel showing the way at Banstead Manor Stud for Juddmonte with great success. Bullet Train stands at Woodfield Farm Stud and Proconsul (GB) (Galileo {Ire}) is at Annshoon Stud, both in Ireland. Noble Mission, after spending several season at Lane's End Farm in Kentucky, is standing his first season in Japan, while the winning Morpheus (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}) is at Haras de Toury in France.

Kind's second dam, the group-placed Rockfest (Stage Door Johnny), joined the Juddmonte broodmare band as a private purchase out of the John 'Jock' Hay Whitney dispersal and subsequently threw the G3 Lancashire Oaks heroine Rainbow Lake (GB) to the cover of Rainbow Quest. In addition to Kind, Rainbow Lake foaled Irish champion and GI Arlington Million scorer Powerscourt (GB) (Sadler's Wells), three-time Group 2 winner Riposte (GB) (Dansili {GB}) and Group 3 winner Last Train (GB) (Rail Link {GB}), second in the G1 Grand Prix de Paris.

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Juddmonte-Bred Derevo Takes King’s Cup In Saudi Debut

The silks of the late Prince Khalid Abdullah's Juddmonte Farms were already set to be carried aboard US raider Tacitus (Tapit) in the $20-million Saudi Cup (1800m, dirt) Feb. 20, and the breeding operation will also be represented by Derevo (GB) (Dansili {GB}), after the former Sir Michael Stoute galloper arrived in the nick of time to take out the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques Cup (2000m, dirt) Saturday at King Abdulaziz Racetrack in Riyadh. The 340,000gns Tattersalls Autumn Horses In Training acquisition just touched off the commonly owned multiple Chilean Group 1 winner Cariblanco (Chi) (Awesome Patriot) with fellow TATAUT purchase Making Miracles (GB) (Pivotal {GB}) third.

Drawn in the auxiliary gate in 15, Derevo traveled well off the inside and better than midfield on the long backstretch run. Into a clear fifth for the run around the bend, he was switched out in the straight and required every bit of the final 400 metres to be along in time.

Derevo won his maiden at second asking at Chelmsford in 2019 and added victories on the turf at Pontefract and a Newcastle handicap over 2400 metres of that all-weather surface later that summer. On behalf of Najd Stud, Voute Sales signed for Derevo at Tattersalls last October. The winner's dam produced a Kodiac (GB) filly for Juddmonte in 2020.

 

WATCH: Derevo (#1, red cap, far left) gets up on the wire in the King's Cup

 

Saturday's Results:
CUSTODIAN OF THE TWO HOLY MOSQUES CUP (King's Cup) (NBT), SAR1,000,000 (£194,569/€219,734/US$266,667), King Abdulaziz, 1-30, 4yo/up, 2000m, 2:04.15, ft.
1–DEREVO (GB), 127, g, 5, Dansili (GB)–Pavlosk (SW-Eng), by
Arch. (340,000gns HRA '20 TATAUT). O-Prince Faisal Bin
Khaled Bin Abdulaziz; B-Juddmonte Farms Ltd; T-A M Al
Khatani; J-A Alwafi; SAR500,00. Lifetime Record: 12-4-2-1,
$176,019.
2–Cariblanco (Chi), 127, h, 5, Awesome Patriot–Entera Buena
(Chi), by Hurricane Cat. SAR200,000.
3–Making Miracles (GB), 127, g, 6, Pivotal (GB)–Field of
Miracles (Ire), by Galileo (Ire). (47,000gns Ylg '16 TATOCT;
22,000gns HRA '19 TATAUT). SAR150,000.
Margins: NO, 1HF, 3.

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