Major Dude, Candidate Clash Again In Friday’s Grade 2 Penn Mile

Changing approaches to training and the decision often to duck major confrontations until the Breeders' Cup has sharply reduced the number of major rivalries that create excitement among racing fans.

On Friday night, however, Major Dude and Candidate – two of the most promising 3-year-old turf stakes horses in the country – face off for the third time in the ninth running of the Grade 2, $400,000 Penn Mile on the grass at Hollywood Casino at Penn National Race Course in Grantville, Pa.

The most important race of the year at the track drew a high-quality field of eight runners and highlights an 11-race card featuring six stakes races worth a combined $950,000.

The supporting features are topped by the $150,000 Penn Oaks, which attracted a field of nine, led by 9-5 morning-line favorite Princess Bettina, a resounding gate-to-wire winner in March of the China Doll Stakes at Santa Anita.

Post time for the first race is 5 p.m. ET with the Penn Mile scheduled to go off as race number six at 7:45 p.m.

Famed race announcer Larry Collmus, who calls the Breeders' Cup World Championships and first two legs of the Triple Crown, will call the Penn Mile as well as the five other stakes races. Race fans are invited to meet Collmus at the track apron beginning at 4:30 p.m.

Spendthrift Farm's Major Dude, the 8-5 favorite on the morning line, comes into the Penn Mile off a half-length defeat when third following a tremendous stretch battle in the Grade 2 American Turf on Kentucky Derby Day at Churchill Downs.

After beating Candidate to win the Grade 3 Kitten's Joy in February at Gulfstream Park, Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher ran Major Dude in the Grade 3 Jeff Ruby Stakes to see if the turf ace might also be a Triple Crown contender. Major Dude was beaten as the favorite that day on the synthetic Turfway Park surface, but his credentials were sharply enhanced when winner Two Phil's came back to nearly upset the Kentucky Derby, only losing the lead late in the stretch to Mage and finishing second.

“We were kicking it around,” Pletcher said of the idea of running Major Dude in the Derby. “At the time, it looked like he was going to be second on the also-eligible list, which it turned out would have got him in. On entry day, we preferred to know we were in the body of the American Turf. He's a very solid horse on all surfaces, but, in the end, we know he's best on turf.”

Major Dude, who will be ridden by champion jockey Irad Ortiz Jr. in the Penn Mile, has competed in eight straight stakes races since breaking his maiden on debut last summer at Monmouth Park. He's won the Grade 2 Pilgrim along with the Kitten's Joy. One of his defeats came to Candidate in the Dania Beach Stakes in January at Gulfstream Park. Pletcher, second last year in the Penn Mile with Annapolis, is keenly aware of his formidable rival.

“We have met him several times, and he's a nice horse as well,” Pletcher said. “Racing could use more rivalries.”

Mark B. Grier's Candidate began his career last fall at Laurel Park then over the winter stamped himself as a force in the 3-year-old turf division by knocking off Major Dude and then finishing second to him in the Kitten's Joy.

In his most recent start, the Grade 3 Transylvania at Keeneland, Candidate finished a close-up sixth in a race that has proven a giant key heat, with third-place finisher Webslinger coming back to win the American Turf and runner-up Nagirroc running a powerhouse race to take the James Murphy Stakes on Preakness Day at Pimlico.

Candidate, 5-2 on the morning line, had been doing his most effective running on or near the lead until the Transylvania.

“It didn't set up well last time at Keeneland,” trainer Arnaud Delacour said. “He was a little behind, and he's a free-running horse. We tried to rate a little bit. [The track] was speed favoring, but it just didn't set up well for him, that's all.

“We gave him a little time [off] since Keeneland, and it looks like he is ready to take a step forward.”

Trainer Jack Sisterson will send out Talla Racing, David Bernsen and Rockingham Ranch's Behind Enemy Lines (5-1), the easiest kind of two-length winner in April of the Cutler Bay Stakes. In his next start, the American Turf, the colt hopped in the gate and found himself well back early, buried behind horses along the inside. When jockey Flavian Pratt, who returns to ride in the Penn Mile, came off rail in the stretch to attack, the leaders did not come back to him.

“It was kind of a merry-go-round race,” Sisterson said.

Sisterson helped the owners privately purchase Behind Enemy Lines after the colt made two starts in Europe through his relationship with bloodstock agent Justin Casse and trainer Joseph O'Brien.

The Cutler Bay showed immediately showed the horse's quality.

“We kind of expected that for him,” said Sisterson, who will be making his first start at Penn National. “He was training like he'd put in a performance like that. Every work when he got to the U.S. got better and better.

Behind Enemy Lines' speed figures rose slightly in the American Turf even though the trip was less than ideal. Sisterson said he is looking forward to battling the likes of Major Dude and Candidate throughout the year.

“It's a good division,” he said of the 3-year-old turfers. “That's what racing needs, for these divisions to be competitive.

Defending Penn Mile-winning trainer James Lawrence returns this year with a Pennsylvania homebred, 20-1 long shot in James Chandley's Fletcher, but the Fair Hill-based conditioner sounds unflappable, especially after having won the race last year with 83-1 bomb Wow Whata Summer.

Fletcher has been soundly beaten in his two most recent starts, and never raced on grass, but Lawrence is full of confidence heading into the race.

“You're only a 3-year-old once, and [the Penn Mile] has been good to us,” he said. “This horse is very talented. We're so lucky at [the] Fair Hill [Training Center] to have all three surfaces – from dirt to synthetic to turf – and he impressed us on all three but really floats on the synthetic surface, really looks phenomenal, and when they do well on that, they usually do well on the turf.

“I'm a small stable, but when we get one that's talented, I'm not afraid to take shots. Over the years, we have knocked out nice races at big prices.”

Cash Is King and LC Racing's Tuskegee Airmen (6-1), like Fletcher, will try turf for the first time in the Penn Mile for trainer John Servis. The son of Kentucky Derby winner Street Sense won a stakes race at 2 at Delaware Park and then finished third in the Grade 2 Remsen. In his return to the races May 2 at Belmont Park, he sprinted to a fourth-place finish in the Gold Fever Stakes.

Tuskagee Airmen, however, has a solid turf pedigree: His great-grand-dam is multiple graded-stakes-placed turf mare Starry Dreamer, who produced Ecclesiastic, the two-time winner of the Grade 3 Jaipur Stakes on the grass at Belmont Park.

Nick Sanna Stables and Lynch Racing will also try the turf for the first time with their colt Recruiter (6-1), who has dominated in winning five of six starts for trainer Cathal Lynch, all by open lengths. His only defeat came over a muddy track from post position 13 in the Grade 3 Gotham at Aqueduct.

Recruiter also has a bit of turf blood in his pedigree, coming from the same female family as Grade 3 turf stakes winner Buffalo Man.

F L I Racing's Movistor (12-1), trained by Edward Vaughan, and Blackstone Farm's locally based three-time winner Upstate and Back, for trainer Naoise Agnew, complete the field.

Donald Dizney's Princess Bettina headlines a solid field of nine in the Penn Oaks, which, like the Penn Mile, is carded for a mile on the turf. After winning the China Doll for trainer Peter Eurton, the filly was transferred to the barn of Pletcher for an East Coast campaign.

“We've had her a little over a month now and got in a couple nice works at Churchill Downs,” Pletcher said. “We felt like this was a good spot for her. We'll see how she handles this and possibly stretch her out in other races.”

Five other runners entered have stakes experience, but the most dangerous threat to the favorite might be from the outside post in Klaravich Stables Royalty Interest (5-2), a late supplemental entry by powerful trainer Chad Brown.

The French-bred Royalty Interest effortlessly won on debut in March at Tampa Bay Downs and will have Ortiz in the irons for just her second career start.

Joseph Imbesi's Buy Land and See, a three-time stakes winner last year, makes his 6-year-old debut for trainer Guadalupe Preciado as the 5-2 favorite in the $100,000 With Anticipation Stakes, a 1 1/16-mile turf race for registered Pennsylvania-breds 3 years old and up.

The 5-2 favorite in the field of 12 should face stern competition from William Esworthy Jr.'s Dee Jay, a lightly raced 6-year-old who has four wins and three seconds in eight starts for trainer Lawrence.

The only off-the-board finish for Dee Jay came when he stumbled out of the gate in his second start and finished fifth.

“We gave him two years off,” Lawrence said. “He's come back and had three wins and a second, and that's been on dirt, and we think he's a better turf horse. He worked big – 1:12 and change [over six furlongs] – on Friday.”

Ortiz will ride the 8-5 favorite Heartyconstitution for trainer Joe Sharp in the $100,000 Lyphard Stakes at 1 1/16 miles on the turf for Pennsylvania-bred fillies and mares 3 years old and up.

In the $100,000 Danzig Stakes, a six-furlong sprint for Pennsylvania-bred 3-year-olds, Imbesi's Gordian Knot is the 3-2 morning-line favorite in a field of seven with two stakes victories under his belt at Parx Racing and Presque Isle Downs.

In the final stakes on the card, the $100,000 New Start Stakes for 3-year-old fillies going six furlongs, Darryl Abramowitz's Tappin Josie is the 2-1 morning-line favorite in a field of seven. Trained by Horacio De Paz, Tappin Josie has won four of five starts this year with a second-place finish two races back in the Cicada Stakes at Aqueduct. In her most recent start, she won going away in an allowance race at Penn National.

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Kentucky Oaks Third The Alys Look Ships West, Will Make First Start For Chris Davis In Santa Anita’s Summertime Oaks

Fresh off a solid third place finish for trainer Brad Cox in the Grade 1 Kentucky Oaks, The Alys Look figures prominently as she goes for a new barn and makes her Southern California debut in Saturday's Grade 2, $200,000 Summertime Oaks at Santa Anita. A wide- open affair on paper, the Summertime Oaks, to be contested at a mile and one sixteenth, has attracted a field of seven sophomore fillies.

Owned by Ike and Dawn Thrash, The Alys Look, who has been stabled at Keeneland following her 2 ¾ length defeat in the Kentucky Oaks May 5, will make her first start for Kentucky-based trainer Christopher Davis, who at entry time, had eight wins from 73 starts this year.

A 3-year-old filly by Connect out of the Harlan's Holiday mare Foul Play, The Alys Look, who shipped into Santa Anita on May 24, had her final Summertime breeze at Keeneland on May 19, going a half mile in 48.80.

An ungraded stakes winner going a mile and 70 yards at Fairgrounds in New Orleans three starts back on Jan. 21, The Alys Look was subsequently third, beaten seven lengths in the G2 Fairgrounds Oaks at a mile and one sixteenth March 25. Off at 30-1 in the Kentucky Oaks, she kept to her task to secure third money under Javier Castellano.

With Mike Smith engaged to ride on Saturday, The Alys Look approaches the Summertime Oaks with earnings of $304,278 from an overall race record of 7-2-1-3.

Although light on seasoning, John Sadler's Anywho looks to be long on ability, as she galloped to a two-length score in a seven furlongs allowance here on March 27, which was her first start for Sadler. A first-out winner at going seven eighths at Aqueduct Oct. 23, Anywho, a filly by Bolt d'Oro, rang up a Summertime Oaks best last-out Beyer Speed Figure of 90 in her March 27 win.

Off at 9-2 with Flavien Prat in her local win, Anywho, who was purchased privately by Hronis Racing, LLC following her maiden win in New York, gets the services of Joe Bravo as she tries two turns, a route of ground and stakes company for the first time.

A disappointing fifth as the 3-5 favorite two starts back in the Sunland Park Oaks on March 26, Bob Baffert's Doinitthehardway returned home and bounced back with 2 ¼ length allowance score on May 12 and thus looms a solid contender.

A rollicking nine-length, one-mile maiden winner here three starts back on March 3, a race in which she earned a solid 86 Beyer, Doinitthehardway will no doubt be forwardly placed with Juan Hernandez up.

Owned by recent Hollywood Gold Cup winning connections Mike Pegram, Karl Watson and Paul Weitman, Doinitthehardway is by Street Sense out of the Awesome Again mare Virtuoso. With an 8-2-2-1 mark, she has earnings of $144,920.

Distanced by 17 lengths at 45-1 in the Kentucky Oaks, Peter Miller's Grade 1 winning And Tell Me Nolies should run a much improved race with regular rider Ramon Vazquez back aboard. Second to Baffert's Faiza in both the G2 Santa Anita Oaks April 8 and in the G3 Santa Ysabel March 5, And Tell Me Nolies had an outstanding 2-year-old campaign, winning both the G1 Del Mar Debutante and the G2 Chandelier Stakes prior to running eighth in the G1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies at Keeneland Nov. 4.

Owned by Peter Redekop B.C., Ltd, And Tell Me Nolies is by Arrogate out of the Exchange Rate mare Be Fair. The leading money earner in the field with $485,300, she's 8-3-2-0 overall.

Ridden by Juan Hernandez to a fourth place finish going a mile and one eighth on turf in the G3 Providencia Stakes here on April 29, Ancient Peace will be handled by a red-hot Tiago Pereira for the first time on Saturday. Pereira, who is currently third in the Hollywood Meet standing with 15 wins, had four winners this past Sunday and his two wins on Monday included a score in the G1 Shoemaker Mile with Exaulted.

A runaway six length allowance winner going one mile two starts back on April 8, Ancient Peace is one of two John Sadler trainees and rates an upset chance in what will be her fifth career start and her second on the main track.

Owned by Boardshorts Stables, Inc., Ancient Peace, an Ontario, Canadian-bred daughter of War Front out of the A.P. Indy mare Deceptive Vision, has a win on turf and one on dirt.

THE GRADE 2 SUMMERTIME OAKS WITH JOCKEYS & WEIGHTS IN POST POSITION ORDER

Race 8 of 9 Approximate post time 4:30 p.m. PT

  1. The Alys Look—Mike Smith—120
  2. Window Shopping—Hector Berrios—120
  3. And Tell Me Nolies—Ramon Vazquez—124
  4. Lily Poo—Umberto Rispoli—120
  5. Doinitthehardway—Juan Hernandez—120
  6. Ancient Peace—Tiago Pereira—120
  7. Anywho—Joe Bravo—120

First post time for a nine-race card on Saturday is at 1 p.m. with admission gates opening at 11 a.m.

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First Foal Out Of Daddys Lil Darling, Savethelastdance Among Top Choices For Epsom Oaks

Friday's Classic, the Epsom Oaks, which is part of the QIPCO British Champions Series, has gone to either Aidan O'Brien or John Gosden every year since 2014, and last year's winner Tuesday was O'Brien's tenth in the race since 1998. Underlining the grip the two stables have on the race, Tuesday held on by just a short head from the Gosden filly Emily Upjohn, with Nashwa, also from the Gosden stable at which son Thady now shares the licence, in third.

The betting for this year's race points to a similar scenario, with O'Brien's 22-length Cheshire Oaks winner Savethelastdance a hot favorite ahead of the Gosdens' impressive Musidora winner Soul Sister and her stable-mate the Pretty Polly winner Running Lion.

Aidan O'Brien is invariably strongly represented in the Oaks, and Savethelastdance looks a worthy favorite after beating a much shorter-priced stable-mate in a decent maiden at Leopardstown before running away with the Cheshire Oaks, a race most recently used as a springboard to Epsom success by Light Shift in 2007 and Enable in 2017.

Savethelastdance won with ridiculous ease, and while the opposition was by no means strong and the margin of her superiority was almost certainly exaggerated by testing conditions, her dam's American pedigree suggests she ought to be every bit as effective on better ground at Epsom. The Galileo filly is the first foal out of Grade 1 winner Daddys Lil Darling.

Daddys Lil Darling, trained by Ken McPeek in the United States, is a daughter of Scat Daddy who won the G1 American Oaks on turf, finished second in the G1 Kentucky Oaks and the G1 Ashland, both on dirt, and retired with earnings of $1,335,305 for owner/breeder Normandy Farm. Upon her retirement, Daddys Lil Darling was sold at the 2018 Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Fall Mixed Sale, bringing a final bid of $3.5 million from Coolmore's M. V. Magnier.

The O'Brien stable will also be represented by Lingfield Oaks Trial runner-up Be Happy and rank outsider Red Riding Hood.

Meanwhile, David Menuisier will have his first Classic runner when the unexposed Longchamp maiden winner Heartache Tonight bids to break the recent O'Brien and Gosden stranglehold on the Betfred Oaks.

In another first, the filly, who is a half-sister to Menuisier's brilliant QIPCO British Champions Fillies & Mares winner Wonderful Tonight, will be ridden by internationally renowned Italian rider Cristian Demuro, who has yet to ride at Epsom.

Menuisier does not underestimate the task faced by Heartache Tonight, but he believes she is ahead of Wonderful Tonight at a similar stage, and he has little doubt that she will handle the occasion and also improve for the step up in distance.

He said: “They are similar in a lot of ways, but Heartache Tonight is a lot easier to handle as you can do whatever you like with her. She would walk through a brick wall without blinking if you asked her, and I think that's a really good trait going to Epsom. I'd be amazed if she was phased by the occasion.

“At this stage Wonderful Tonight would never have been able to run fourth in a ten-furlong Group 1, as Heartache Tonight did in the Prix Saint-Alary last time. This filly has much more speed than Wonderful Tonight, but she ran like a proper mile-and-four filly in the Saint-Alary, where she was coming back at the finish, so I'm sure she will improve for the step up in trip in the Oaks.”

Menuisier trains Heartache Tonight for her half-sister's owner Chris Wright and Andy MacDonald, who is also in the music industry. He had to think for a moment or two when asked about his own Classic experience, but confirmed Heartache Tonight would be his first runner.

He said: “I would have had one in the Derby last year but he chipped his fetlock the week before, and I might have had a runner in the St Leger but the owner took the horse away too soon!”

Demuro has won multiple Classics in France as well as an Arc with his Prix Du Jockey Club winner Sottsass, but he is seldom seen in Britain. Menuisier is not too worried about his lack of Epsom experience, as he believes it matters much less so long as Heartache Tonight is travelling. However, a first taste of Tattenham Corner on Land Lover in the opening Woodcote Stakes will be no bad thing.

Two of John Gosden's three Oaks winners were already winners over close to the Oaks trip, but both Frankie Dettori's mount Soul Sister, who put a poor reappearance on heavy ground behind her with a spectacular success at York, and Oisin Murphy's ride Running Lion have their stamina to prove.

Gosden said at a gallops morning last week: “The fillies won their trials with authority – a Listed and a Group 3 – and they very much belong in the race. Both fillies have a lot of speed, and stamina wise you never really know till you go the mile and a half.

“They are both really bred to be mile-and-a-quarter fillies and the last bit you just don't know, but you can't practise it at home.”

Dettori, also at the gallops morning, said: “John kept on believing in Soul Sister. When she ran at Newbury the ground was heavy and John's horses weren't running well at the time, but she took me by surprise at York. She travelled, she quickened twice, and she clocked a very good time. I was impressed. She has to go an extra two furlongs but all the signs are good.”

Running Lion would be a first Classic winner for the late Roaring Lion, on whom Murphy won four Group 1s in 2018. The filly has come via the Pretty Polly route which worked so well with the stable's Taghrooda in 2014, but she is less certain to stay.

Murphy said: “We were obviously delighted with her at Newmarket, and she came out of the race well.

“It's lovely to have a really nice horse to ride, but I don't know if she'll stay. No one knows. She might just find the last two furlongs too far but it would be nice to find out in the Oaks, and if I was still on the bridle approaching the three, like I was on her sire, that would be great.

“She's so chilled out, and that's a great characteristic which Roaring Lion certainly had. He improved from race to race as a three-year-old, and I hope that she can progress with racing too.”

The Lingfield Oaks Trial winner Eternal Hope, supplemented by Godolphin at the weekend, is the only runner outside the O'Brien and Gosden runners currently trading at shorter than 25-1.

Charlie Appleby, seeking a first win in the Oaks, said: “She bought her own ticket to the race by winning the Lingfield Oaks Trial. She travelled very well at Lingfield and finished off her race strongly. She put herself into the Oaks picture as a strong contender with that performance.

“She started her career in a Wolverhampton novice in February and all she has done is improve. Physically, she's got better all the time. Lingfield is seen as a test for Epsom, which shouldn't pose any problem for her.”

The QIPCO 1000 Guineas form is represented by Caernarfon, who finished fourth of 20, albeit beaten more than ten lengths. The filly, who is much improved since winning an Ayr nursery off a mark of only 70, races for first-season trainer Jack Channon, who has made an excellent impression since taking over the licence from his father Mick.

A field of 11 is completed by the Andrew Balding-trained Sea Of Roses, who was fifth in the Musidora, Karl Burke's Bright Diamond, who occupied the same position in the Lingfield Trial, and Richard Hannon's Maman Joon, who finished second in a Newbury maiden on her sole start to date.

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Epsom’s Coronation Cup: Tunnes An Intriguing Contender For Germany’s Six-Time Champion Trainer

German challenger Tunnes is an intriguing contender in what looks a particularly strong field for Friday's Dahlbury Coronation Cup, the latest leg of the QIPCO British Champions Series, which has attracted five runners headed by Emily Upjohn, Hurricane Lane and Westover.

One definition of the term “tunnes” is that it is colloquial slang in parts of Germany for a male person who is not to be taken too seriously. That cannot be said of the horse Tunnes, who completed a hat-trick of wide margin wins in his native Germany last year with a ten-length romp in the Group 1 Grosser Preis Von Bayern before finishing close up in the Japan Cup, despite a slow start.

Trainer Peter Schiergen needs taking very seriously too, for he is a six-times champion trainer and five-times champion jockey, and he has already enjoyed major success over here, as a previous winner of the Coronation Cup in 2002 with Boreal and then ten years later in the King George with his Prix de l'Arc De Triomphe winner Danedream.

Schiergen has a lot of belief in Tunnes and said: “Tunnes is very good, so he has not been named correctly! He won his races very easily last year and then when he went to Japan he had trouble at the starting gate. He was in the stalls for a very long time and became nervous.

“He lost the race in the starting gate, but we've worked on that at home since and he's very good now.”

Owner Holger Denz bought Tunnes almost by accident, as he had ceased bidding for the colt when the auctioneer misinterpreted a hand gesture made to a friend while the bidding stood at 38,000 euros.

Denz felt obliged to take Tunnes, whose half-brother Torquator Tasso was just a minor winner at the time, and the purchase price has already been repaid several times over already in prize money alone, and his close relationship with the subsequent Arc winner makes him all the more valuable.

A second Group 1 success in a race as historic as the Coronation Cup would make his chance purchase look even more fortuitous and Schiergen has high hopes of the colt, who will be a first ride at Epsom for Arc-winning jockey Rene Piechulek.

Schiergen said: “I have a good feeling about the long journey to England. I'm very optimistic. He's taking on better horses now than at home of course, but I think he's good enough. I think he has the same class as Boreal and Danedream. He's better on soft ground, but he acts on any going and good ground will be fine for him.”

The Coronation Cup has always been the preferred option for last year's unlucky-in-running Derby third Westover, who went on to gain handsome compensation in the Irish Derby and found only Japanese superstar Equinox too good for him in the Sheema Classic at Meydan on his return.

Ralph Beckett couldn't be more pleased with him and said: “He's in very good form. He worked well on the grass at the weekend over six furlongs and we are all very happy with him and with the place we are in.”

He added: “The Coronation Cup has always been everyone's first choice because he handled Epsom so well last year. I thought it was a terrific run in Dubai, especially as he'd had a difficult preparation. He hadn't settled there for the first few days and things only started to fall into place close to the race, but he ran superbly well.”

Emily Upjohn, arguably unlucky when beaten a short head in last year's Oaks, has been slow in coming to hand, but she is now pleasing John Gosden, who won the 2018 Coronation Cup with Cracksman and now shares the licence with his son Thady.

Gosden said at a gallops morning at Epsom last week: “She's in good form. We had a look at Dubai, but it was too soon for her. We had that February which was nearly spring-like and it fooled all of us and the fillies, and then along came March and April which were cold and wet and a lot of the fillies went back into themselves.

“It's been a little muddling this first part of the season with the combination of that and very heavy ground, and to that extent she was very much taking her time, but she just seems to be coming to herself now.”

The filly once again wears the hood she wore for the first time when impressing in the QIPCO British Champions Fillies & Mares Stakes at Ascot last October.

Charlie Appleby was relieved to see his 2021 Derby third Hurricane Lane gain an impressive six-length success in last month's Jockey Club Stakes, for it was his first win since the St Leger and followed a disappointing reappearance.

Appleby told Godolphin's website: “He showed a return to form last time, which we were delighted to see. It had been a little bit of a bumpy road prior to Newmarket. At Newbury previously, he was ring rusty and conditions took their toll in the end.

“From that run to his second run, we saw marked improvement in his physical presence and his alertness. He got his racing brain back engaged. With those good older horses, it often takes a run to get them back in the game again. I have been delighted with him since that run and I'd say he has improved again. He's tighter, and sharper mentally. He's got plenty going for him.”

Aidan O'Brien bids for a ninth Coronation Cup with Point Lonsdale, who met his only two-year-old defeat when second to champion juvenile Native Trail in the National Stakes at The Curragh and has returned to his best following a truncated 2022 with wins in the Alleged Stakes at The Curragh again and the Huxley Stakes at Chester.

O'Brien was particularly pleased with the four-year-old's Chester win, as he believes the tight track did not play to his strengths. He is by Australia, and further improvement is anticipated over this longer trip.

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