Veterans Beauty Generation, Hot King Prawn Facing New-Guard Challenge

Beauty Generation (NZ) (Road To Rock {Aus}) and Hot King Prawn (Aus) (Denman {Aus}), two of the five highest-rated horses in Hong Kong, are the heavyweights in a pair of Group 2 races Sunday at Sha Tin Racecourse, but face younger and well-handicapped rivals who figure to take all the beating.

On a rating of 130, the 8-year-old Beauty Generation remains Hong Kong’s top-rated galloper and he will–once again–have to deal with rising superstar Golden Sixty (Aus) (Medaglia d’Oro), this time in the Oriental Watch Sha Tin Trophy H. (1600m). The two rivals met in the G3 Celebration Cup H. over 1400 metres Sept. 27, and, in receipt of 17 pounds from the dual Horse of the Year, Golden Sixty kicked home 1 3/4 lengths best, with Champion’s Way (Aus) (Hinchinbrook {Aus}) dead-heating for second. Golden Sixty figures a warm favorite, but the dual G1 Longines Hong Kong Mile winner figures to improve back over his pet trip and with a seven-pound shift in the weights with the once-beaten Golden Sixty.

Hot King Prawn returns to action as the 133-pound king of the hill in the G2 Premier Bowl H. (1200m). Though his lone victory last season came in a Class 1 handicap, the 6-year-old gray gelding just missed to stablemate Beat the Clock (Aus) (Hinchinbrook {Aus}) in last year’s G1 Longines Hong Kong Sprint and was last seen finishing a close second in the G3 Sha Tin Vase H. over course and distance May 24. Four-year-old Computer Patch (Aus) (Exceed and Excel {Aus}) is the likely favourite stretching out in trip off a dominating 2 3/4-length success in the G3 National Day Cup H. up the 1000-metre straight course Oct. 1. The ridgling gets a whopping 16 pounds off Hot King Prawn Sunday afternoon.

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Son Of Izzi Top Starts At Wolverhampton

Observations on the European Racing Scene turns the spotlight on the best European races of the day, highlighting well-pedigreed horses early in their careers, horses of note returning to action and young runners that achieved notable results in the sales ring. Today’s Observations features the son of a multiple Group 1 winner.

6.00 Wolverhampton, Novice, £5,300, 2yo, 8f 142y (AWT)
ZAGATO (GB) (Frankel {GB}) makes a low-key introduction after the Champions Day action has played out further South, but is a notable John Gosden newcomer as a son of the stable’s G1 Pretty Polly S. heroine Izzi Top (GB) (Pivotal {GB}) who was also awarded the G1 Prix Jean Romanet. Like Telecaster (GB) (New Approach {Ire}), the Meon Valley-bred April-foaled bay who is a half to two black-type performers and the fellow Gosden-trained Wokingham H. runner-up Dreamfield (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}) sports the colours of Castle Down Racing having been unsold at 725,000gns at the Tattersalls October Book 1 Sale. He meets Godolphin’s similarly-unraced Folk Magic (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}), the 1.1-million gns Book 1 graduate from the family of the multiple Group 1 heroine Soviet Song (Ire) (Marju {Ire}) who represents Charlie Appleby.

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October Surprise Marches On

NEWMARKET, UK–So here we are, at the furlong pole, and somehow still hard on the bridle. With just Book 4 to go, the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale continues to confound the gloom generated this year as the bloodstock industry–along with the wider economy–reeled under the nightmarish burden of a pandemic.

On Friday, even the weaker second session of Book 3 sailed serenely clear of the riptide. Turnover of 2,274,500gns soared past the equivalent day last year, up a giddy 27% from 1,796,400gns. That yielded an average of 10,245gns, up from 9,212gns; while the median inched forward to 7,000gns from 6,500gns. The clearance rate, which has been understandably brisk even at unhappier auctions, raced to 83% from 73% in 2019.

Aggregate business also held strong across the two days. Transactions totalling 7,367,200gns represented a 5% advance on 7,007,900gns last year; with the average basically static at 16,051gns (compared with 16,147gns) and the median solid at 11,000gns (from 10,000gns). As many as 85% found a new home, overall, up from what had been a healthy 80% even in the complacent world of 2019.

For some who arrived for Book 1 last week, of course, even these returns won’t have stopped fatigue setting in. But while many of the elite prospectors have by now drifted away, Book 3 always has a rather compelling theatre of its own.

Whatever the state of the market, it’s reliably instructive to observe the real judges, picking out something they think has fallen through the cracks; or an equal artistry in the better auctioneers, as they draw out the extra bid or two that can make all the difference, though hundreds rather than thousands, to smaller breeders. After all, everyone knows that one or two nuggets will be turned up every year.

Elliott Jumps To The Top

In much the same spirit, Alex Elliott was justly enthusiastic after topping trade, late in the session, with a 90,000gns son of Authorized (Ire), presented as lot 1923 by the Castlebridge Consignment.

“I love Book 3,” the agent exclaimed. “It’s a fun sale that gives you a real chance: you can trawl through those pedigrees, and try and find the sleepers. I bought [listed winner] Dave Dexter (GB) (Stimulation {Ire}) here. I thought this chap would top the sale. It’s been a long day waiting for him.”

The colt is out of an unraced New Approach (Ire) half-sister to three stakes winners out of the Group 1-placed German mare White Rose (Ger) (Platini {Ger}). This is a deep family of quality stayers and there will be a corresponding spectrum of opportunity for his new Irish-based owner.

“He’s a brother to a 106-rated filly [dual listed winner Scentasia (GB) (Cape Cross {Ire})], so he can obviously go on the Flat,” Elliott said. “Or you could keep him and go the National Hunt route. He has French premiums, too, so the options are endless. But if he is any good he will definitely end up in Cheltenham rather than Melbourne. We love the sire and they’re not making them anymore, as it were, unless you’re in Turkey. This is a beautiful horse, with a great outlook, who vetted out good.”

Like so many, Elliott has been catching his breath this week. “Everyone thought Book 2 would be a bloodbath,” he said. “But it’s all been a bit like Brexit. Nobody expected that either. It was hard, but I was lucky to have some good clients and got some good staying horses.”

Night-and-Day Page Shines Bright

Not many yearlings can have raised as much this autumn, per catalogue line, as the Night Of Thunder (Ire) colt who made 46,000gns from James Tate as lot 1839, despite the snowfields extending across the bottom half of the page.

In fairness, it’s a family in rapid development: he’s the very first foal of his dam, a winner by Rock Of Gibraltar (Ire); and the second dam has had two winners from just three foals of racing age, including one as accomplished as G2 Norfolk S. runner-up Reignier (GB) (Kheleyf). And, of course, Night Of Thunder has made a splendid start regardless.

“Sire power is everything, isn’t it?” remarked Eric Cantillon, who consigned the colt from Plumton Hall Stud on behalf of breeder Sean Gollogly. “It was a great price, and Sean is thrilled. But he’s a nice horse, the sire’s doing well, and I suppose you’re better off as a big fish in a small pond at a sale like this than the other way round. We’ve had the horse since he was weaned, around January time, and we sold Reignier as well. Sean’s a very good friend and I’m delighted for them: they just have a few acres down by Epsom Racecourse and it’s lovely to see breeders like that doing well.”

“Obviously Night Of Thunder has done incredibly well so we were looking for his stock,” explained Tate. “We thought he was a really lovely example of the stallion and really liked the way he walked around the ring.”

Fast Start As Harte Lands Running

True to the momentum of the week, only the third animal into the ring realized a sum matched just five times in the equivalent session last year. This was lot 1662, a Fast Company filly who caught the attention of Jane Chapple-Hyam at 40,000gns.

Pinhooked only in February (for €27,000 at Goffs by Howson and Houldsworth), this is the first foal of a winning Harbour Watch (Ire) half-sister to G2 Lowther winner Living In The Past (Ire) (Bungle Inthejungle {GB}). She was presented by Keith Harte, who had processed one of the catalogue’s joint-top sales in a 130,000gns Churchill filly the previous day. He credited the breeder, Barrettstown Farm House, for also furnishing him with the Starspangledbanner filly he sold for 75,000gns in Book 2.

“This is a straightforward colt, a real 2-year-old type, out of a mare who reached a rating of 90,” Harte observed. “I think Jane just bought him after seeing him walking out here. We were hoping he’d sell well, and this market has been so strong. Everyone has told me that a good horse won’t be missed here.”

“He looks racy,” Chapple-Hyam said. “He’s for a Hong Kong client I’ve had for 20 years, Mr. Gordon Li, so he’ll start in England and hopefully we can get him to a rating high enough to end his career in Hong Kong. I’ll do my best, anyway.”

Chapple-Hyam added that she will be targeting the G3 Nell Gwyn S. for Saffron Beach (Ire) (New Bay {GB}), duly keeping her to the course and distance of both her impressive debut and last week’s success in the G3 Godolphin Lifetime Care Oh So Sharp S.

“Fingers crossed for a good winter,” she said.

Juddmonte Lines Combine In National Service

Saffron Beach’s sire was picked as the 2018 mate for a very well-bred mare in Bellwether (GB) (Three Valleys), whose dam Heat Haze (GB) (Green Desert) is one of five elite scorers out of the broodmare legend Hasili (Ire) (Kahyasi {Ire}) in addition to Dansili (GB) (Danehill), the sibling who somehow never won a Group 1. New Bay himself, of course, was bred by Juddmonte, from whom Rosemont Stud bought Bellwether for 50,000gns at the 2018 December Sale here.

The resulting filly duly brought something of a Book 1 page as lot 1696, if not quite a Book 1 price as Rabbah Bloodstock was able to secure her for 42,000gns. “A nice filly by a very exciting young stallion,” said Rabbah’s Jono Mills. “Dubawi (Ire) looks like he’s becoming a fabulous sire of sires.”

The filly was presented by the National Stud, whose director Tim Lane remarked, “We’ve had a good week–trade has been amazing. Long may it last. It’s the biggest draft of yearlings we have sold for a long time and we’ve been very lucky.”

Time Passing Sales Test

The National Stud is itself standing another son of Dubawi from the Juddmonte programme in Time Test (GB), and his first yearlings continue to perform well in the ring. Indeed, he accounted for two of the top seven prices of the session. Nick Bradley gave 45,000gns for his daughter of an unraced Canford Cliffs (Ire) mare, herself out of a half-sister to G1 Coronation S. winner Maids Causeway (Ire) (Giant’s Causeway). The filly was presented as lot 1807 by the Castlebridge Consignment on behalf of breeder Lady Richard Wellesley.

Further back this is the good Wildenstein family of Verveine (Lear Fan), but Bradley felt that a thin page under the first two dams had been a decoy.

“The pedigree put her in this catalogue, but she was Book 1 as a physical,” he said. “I didn’t want to have to give quite so much for her but Federico [Barberini, underbidder] is a good judge and if I’m on one, I tend to find he is on it too–and unfortunately he made me pay. On another day I might have got her five grand. But she has a belting physique, and was my pick of the sale. She’ll be going to Richard Fahey. The two first-season sires I really like are Time Test and Churchill (Ire).”

Bradley was in buoyant spirits, with his syndicate business thriving. “Things are flying,” he said. “I got 12 deals done yesterday and 12 the day before.”

His emphasis is very much on fillies, not least with the Great British Bonus in mind. “I own 22 fillies and not one colt,” Bradley said. “My theory is that if I won the Dewhurst, it would have to be by a fashionable stallion and then I’d need to be selling the horse on–and then the owners would say, ‘Why are you trying to sell?’ If we won the Cheveley Park or the Fillies’ Mile, the value will be there all the time; I won’t be in a rush to sell, and the owners can live out their dreams. The bonus helps as well. We complain about prizemoney but there’s 20 grand there for winning a race.”

Tim Lane pronounced himself “delighted” by the reception of Time Test’s first crop. “A good stallion stamps his stock and that’s just what he has been doing,” he said. “They have great minds, they have the Dubawi middle and that bit of swagger. And he’s fully booked in New Zealand.”

Time Test’s son out of Royal Ascot-placed juvenile Excello (GB) (Exceed And Excel (Aus}) made 40,000gns to Heels Bloodstock through his home farm consignment as lot 1751. His third dam ties into another world-class outfit as a half-sister to the Wertheimer champions Pas De Reponse (Danzig) and Green Tune (Green Dancer).

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Champions At A Distance

   Still in its infancy but already firmly established as a staple of racing’s culinary experience, Ascot’s Qipco British Champions Day is back on Saturday with the first of possibly several editions set in the COVID-19 era. No crowds, none of the hoopla that characteristically greets the collection of luminaries in all categories, no atmosphere other than that created by the races themselves.

Back in June, the Royal meeting was the first of the country’s major festivals to take place in the current void and it came through thanks largely to an epic performance by Stradivarius (Ire) (Sea the Stars {Ire}) in the G1 Gold Cup. It is therefore a relief that he belongs to one of the most sporting of owners with a genuine sense of the importance of tradition. Thankfully, Bjorn Nielsen has opted to allow his radiant staying star the chance to kick off the action in the opening G2 QIPCO British Champions Long Distance Cup. Successful in 2018 before being inched out by Kew Gardens (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) in a memorable encounter 12 months ago, the undeniably loveable chestnut slingshots from his shot at history in the G1 Qatar Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe 13 days ago. Seventh when bogged down in an unsuitably-run affair at ParisLongchamp, he is back in his counting house with Moyglare Stud’s dual G1 Irish St Leger heroine Search For a Song (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) the freshest challenge on his continuing odyssey.

Despite Stradivarius’s natural ebullience ensuring he is in the line-up, John Gosden does have a worry about the conditions. “The ground at Royal Ascot was what I would call ‘wet soft’ and this is going to be more ‘holding soft’. It has been very wet and unless we get some rain overnight, it will be riding holding and a little bit sticky,” he said. “I think the ground will worry a lot of people because most horses like to get through it and they like it loose wet, rather than holding. Having spoken at length with Mr Nielsen, the plan next year is to go for a fourth Gold Cup and as he won’t be running until May, here we are at the end of the season and we thought we would have a go at the Champions Day race.”

If Stradivarius is the opening of the concerto, then it is up to his unbeaten stablemate Palace Pier (GB) (Kingman {GB}) to supply the cadenza in the G1 Queen Elizabeth II S. before Magical (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) provides the closing movement in the feature G1 QIPCO Champion S. If there is one horse in action on the card who has the look of prodigy, it is Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed Al Maktoum’s Palace Pier who could bear reasonable comparison with the likes of former QEII kingpins Warning (GB), Dubai Millennium (GB) or even Frankel (GB) if he comes through this with flying colours. Warning was sensational in 1988, when the race was the feature of the “Festival of British Racing” which served as one of the precursors of this great meeting. There are similarities between Palace Pier and that former Juddmonte celebrity, with the duo arguably denied 2000 Guineas glory only by dint of the fact that neither were ready for that Classic at that stage of their careers. The current leader of the division holds an upper hand in the fact that he has yet to taste defeat and his electric display when overturning Pinatubo (Ire) (Shamardal) over the turning mile here in the June 20 G1 St James’s Palace S. stays in the mind’s eye. That was backed up by a similarly impressive traversing of Deauville’s straight mile when taking the Aug. 16 G1 Prix Jacques le Marois and he is beginning to wear the air of invulnerability.

“He would have been a Guineas horse, but we weren’t able to have a prep in the Greenham so I went to Plan B,” Gosden said. “I wasn’t prepared to run him first time up in the Guineas, having missed last autumn because we had planned to run him in the Lagardere on Arc day. We’ve planned this race since the Jacques le Marois and he is coming into the race fresh and well.”

“We’ve been happy with him in his pre-race preparation,” he added. “He ran well on the round mile in June and it was hard to judge if his run in Deauville was better than his Royal Ascot run, given the ground. He was impressive at Deauville, but I thought he was impressive at Royal Ascot because he came strongly on the bridle and I think Frankie had a good hold of him at the end to win in good style.”

Magical is the third of the day’s short-priced favourites and in some ways the most rock-solid given that she has achieved the greatest piece of form so far this term by ending the streak of Ghaiyyath (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) in the G1 Irish Champion S. at Leopardstown on Sept. 12. In a renewal that contained the subsequent Arc hero Sottsass (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}), the sovereign of Ballydoyle finally delivered the kind of landmark performance that connections had long hoped for but feared would not emerge. In the aftermath of the retirement of her great female rival, she is here to complete the double-double of back-to-back English and Irish Champions, something that in itself if completed is unlikely to be matched for some time to come.

Aidan O’Brien will be looking to round off 2020 on a high following the contaminated feed debacle and the mixing-up of the fillies last Friday. Unusually, he has few other likely winners on the card, so Magical is very much the key player in their 2020 raiding party but she is one of those imperturbable types who can carry such responsibility. “She’s an amazing filly really–we’ve seen how consistent she has been. She has run in all the top Group 1s since she was a 2-year-old, which is unusual,” her trainer said. “There doesn’t seem to be any ceiling to her yet. She doesn’t need anybody else to help her–she’s very happy to plough a lone furrow.”

As usual, Gosden offers the main opposition to Ballydoyle in the Champion with Prince Faisal’s July 5 G1 Prix du Jockey Club hero Mishriff (Ire) (Make Believe {GB}) and Sheikh Zayed bin Mohammed Racing’s June 17 G1 Prince of Wales’s S. winner Lord North (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}). Frankie seems never to have wavered in opting for the former, who enhanced his reputation with an authoritative follow-up score in similarly testing ground in Deauville’s G2 Prix Guillaume d’Ornano on Aug. 15. He has come the route of the 2016 hero Almanzor (Fr) (Wootton Bassett {GB}), one of only two 3-year-olds to collect in the nine renewals since it was moved from Newmarket. The vanquished include the former Gosden luminaries Nathaniel (Ire) and Jack Hobbs (GB), as well as the likes of Ruler of the World (Ire), Free Eagle (Ire), Found (Ire) and Brametot (Ire), so it is a tough contest for the Classic generation.

Lord North was 1 1/4 lengths off Magical when third to Ghaiyyath in York’s G1 Juddmonte International on Aug. 19 and is a fresh horse re-opposing her over the course and distance on which he was so impressive at the Royal meeting. Testing ground is an unknown in this kind of company, but he was able to overcome it when taking a much weaker contest in the Listed James Seymour S. at Newmarket last November and this will answer that question.

“Obviously you are bringing 3-year-old French form to bear against proven older horses and that will be quite a challenge for him, no doubt,” Gosden said of Mishriff. “He has improved for racing this year. He was racing in the Saudi Cup at the end of February, he has been to Chantilly and Deauville so he has seen a lot of the world but he is not over-raced, that is for sure. Lord North put in a great run in the Prince of Wales’s and he is another one that has come up through the ranks. He is talented and is in exceptionally good form. He likes the track and he should handle the ground and I hope he runs a really solid race for us.”

“The standard is set by Magical, let’s hope he is good enough to give her a race,” Gosden added of Lord North. “James [Doyle] felt he was spinning his wheels all the way at York and that he wasn’t comfortable. He said he wasn’t really getting hold of the ground, so to that extent he felt he didn’t show his true ability.”

Soft conditions are ideal for last year’s runner-up Addeybb (Ire) (Pivotal {GB}), who also chased home Lord North in the Prince of Wales’s before enjoying a freshener and returning to defy a seven-pound penalty in the Listed Doonside Cup over this trip at Ayr on Sept. 19. Despite the merit of that performance, Sheikh Ahmed Al Maktoum’s 6-year-old still has to raise his game to an unprecedented level to see off this field and trainer William Haggas is fully aware of the task in hand. “It’s a tough race. He’s very well and will enjoy the ground,” he said. “It was a much weaker race he won at Ayr, but he had to have a run and that was good.”

The Champion’s unknown quantity Skalleti (Fr) (Kendargent {Fr}) has that fairytale aura of the inaugural Ascot Champion S. hero Cirrus Des Aigles (Fr) (Even Top {Ire}). Jean-Claude Seroul’s beloved grey made the most of a six-pound swing with Sottsass in the G3 Prix Gontaut-Biron over this distance at Deauville on Aug. 15 before winning Cirrus Des Aigles’s old warm-up, ParisLongchamp’s G2 Prix Dollar, on Arc Saturday. He showed a telling turn of acceleration in deep ground that could make a difference here and he also has the benefit of Pierre-Charles Boudot which counts for a lot these days.

Trainer Jerome Reynier said of Skalleti, “We’re pretty happy with him. He has been training in Chantilly and is training well. It is the toughest race in his career and there is only two weeks between his last race and Saturday, which is not long. We’ve been managing his career and giving him time between his races and this time that won’t be the case, so that’s a little concern. He can handle any ground, I think, but he is much better on heavy ground and other horses are not as happy with that, so the softer the ground the better. It’s a good achievement for us to bring a horse like this to run on Champions Day and we are going with confidence.”

France and “PCB” lead the way in taking on Palace Pier in the Queen Elizabeth II, with last year’s runner-up The Revenant (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) only just back on the scene having won on his belated seasonal bow in the Oct. 3 G2 Prix Daniel Wildenstein at ParisLongchamp. “He has had no physical issues since last year,” trainer Francis Henri Graffard explained. “I had him ready to run at the beginning of the season, then lockdown came and we had no idea how long it would last and feared that it would force him to run on summer ground that he does not like. We decided to turn him out and wait until the autumn. He came back in July to allow us to get him ready for this race and the Wildenstein. The Revenant has come out of his Prix Daniel Wildenstein victory very well. He needed the race badly, so he will come on a lot. The softer the ground the better for him. Last year it was very soft, which helped us. It would be great if he runs a similar race. With humility, I see Palace Pier as the one to beat and if we were placed again it would be a very good performance.”

Among the supporting cast but perhaps not just a bit-player is Ballydoyle’s Circus Maximus (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), who is impossible to write off despite two heavy defeats when third in the Prix Jacques le Marois and in the G1 Prix du Moulin at ParisLongchamp on Sept. 6. Back over this straight mile over which he captured the G1 Queen Anne S. on June 16, the Flaxman Stables and Coolmore representative is two-for-two here and it is worth remembering that he upstaged another Gosden star in Too Darn Hot (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) in last year’s G1 St James’s Palace S. “He won the St James’s Palace and the Queen Anne there, so he does love Ascot,” Aidan O’Brien commented. “He’s a very hardy, tough horse who loves a strongly-run mile, which is what he usually gets at Ascot. The Jacques le Marois was a very strongly-run race and we were forward, whereas Palace Pier was taking his time. The ground was very deep as well and Deauville is a flat track, while Ascot is stiffer. We’re very happy with the horse and we’re looking forward to the race.”

Gosden has another string to his bow in Shadwell’s July 10 G1 Falmouth S. and Oct. 3 G1 Sun Chariot S. winner Nazeef (GB) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) and she is ample back-up should Palace Pier misfire. “She has improved remarkably this year,” her trainer said. “She is a very good filly with a great attitude that won well the other day. She handles the slower ground. She is a course-and-distance winner and the owner felt she had every reason to be in the race. I think this is probably a better option than America for her and I’d say that is now unlikely for her.”

Such is the success story of Hollie Doyle in 2020, it seems almost probable that she will choose this day for an inevitable first Group 1 victory and the most likely mount to provide that is Anthony Oppenheimer’s Dame Malliot (GB) (Champs Elysees {GB}) in the G1 QIPCO British Champions Fillies & Mares S. One of the final shots at enjoying a triumph at this level for the soon-to-be-retired trainer Ed Vaughan, the homebred does appear primed for the headlines. Her success in the G2 Princess of Wales’s S. over this mile-and-a-half trip on July 9 sets the standard in a weaker-than-average renewal and she meets nothing of the calibre of Tarnawa (Ire) (Shamardal) who she trailed when third in the Sept. 13 G1 Prix Vermeille at ParisLongchamp last time.

“I’m really hoping Dame Malliot can win, because it would be wonderful for Ed Vaughan,” Oppenheimer said. “Sadly, fairytales rarely come true, apart from in Walt Disney, but we’ll keep our fingers crossed. We missed the race in France on Arc weekend because the ground was too heavy. She’s had a bit of a rest since her last run, which was very good and she’s well and in good form.”

Christopher Wright’s Wonderful Tonight (Fr) (Le Havre {Ire}) beat a solid field in the 14-furlong G1 Prix de Royallieu at ParisLongchamp last time on Oct. 3 and still arguably has untapped potential, while Susan Magnier and Linda Shanahan’s G1 Irish Oaks heroine Even So (Ire) (Camelot {GB}) was just behind Dame Malliot and Wonderful Tonight when sixth in the Vermeille on ground that was probably too lively. Trainer David Menuisier said of Wonderful Tonight, “I’m very pleased with her. She’s fine and has been giving us the right signals throughout. She did a good canter on Thursday morning on the bridle and we were very pleased with her. In the grand scheme of things, we don’t have anything to lose and if she wasn’t feeling the way she is I would have been more than happy to pull the plug and turn her out for next year. But considering she’s like this, we felt we ought to give her a go.”

Doyle may have already achieved the feat by the time the Fillies & Mares swing into action, as she rides the live outsider Glen Shiel (GB) (Pivotal {GB}) in a competitive edition of the G1 QIPCO British Champions Sprint S. Just 1 1/4 lengths behind Saeed Suhail’s Dream of Dreams (Ire) (Dream Ahead) in the Sept. 5 G1 Haydock Sprint Cup, he is one who will relish ground conditions and Hambleton Racing’s racing manager Cosmo Charlton said, “He’s in great form–his last few bits of work have been really good and Archie [Watson] has been very happy with him since Haydock. The more rain they get, the better. The ground will be fine for him, I’m sure, but we know he handles heavy ground particularly well and will stay further. Hopefully he’s going there with a good each-way chance. We’re massive fans of Hollie’s and it would be brilliant if we could provide her with her first Group 1 winner.”

Dream of Dreams has turned around his fortunes this summer with a seven-length success in the seven-furlong G2 Hungerford S. at Newbury on Aug. 15 and with his Haydock Sprint Cup score, but he remains winless from five starts at this track. Two of those were narrow and possibly unlucky defeats in the G1 Diamond Jubilee S., while two others were unplaced efforts in this contest so the messages are mixed. “The gelding operation has helped Dream of Dreams, but most sprinters improve as they get older and he’s the same,” the owner’s racing manager Bruce Raymond said. “I wouldn’t say he was fragile, but he used to come back from his races a bit sore and things and he’s just more mature now. I think he’s a worthy favourite. He had a little breeze on Wednesday morning under Ted Durcan and he was very happy with him. I don’t think he would want really heavy ground, but soft ground is fine.”

One who is historically highly effective on deep ground is Lael Stable’s sensation One Master (GB) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}), who was denied success in this late on 12 months ago. Having brought up a third consecutive success in the G1 Prix de la Foret over her ideal seven at ParisLongchamp on Oct. 4, she has specialist sprinters to overcome but trainer William Haggas is expecting another bold show from the versatile mare. “She should run a good race. She’s done her bit now,” he said. “This is a bonus, but she ran such a good race last year and she seems in really good form.”

Whereas Doyle has yet to score at this exalted level, another burgeoning young talent in Cieren Fallon has the jump on her having bagged Newmarket’s July 11 G1 July Cup S. with Oxted (GB) (Mayson {GB}). He re-appears for the first time subsequently and trainer Roger Teal said, “We were unfortunate to miss Haydock, but he seems back on song now. Conditions are probably going to be his biggest hurdle. It suits other horses like Dream of Dreams and One Master. They have got solid form on soft ground, but if we do handle conditions we’re in with a fighting chance. The owners are keen to find out and I’m keen and he’s in good shape. It’s fingers crossed he handles it and he can put up a performance and mix it with the best of them. He’s only had two races this year so we’ve been pretty steady with him and he’s a horse who runs well fresh.”

Both Doyle and Fallon are names that are sure to appear on the honour roll at this meeting for several years, as is Doyle’s partner Tom Marquand who is on David Ward’s unbeaten and exciting Starman (GB) (Dutch Art {GB}). He beat the smart Dakota Gold (GB) (Equiano {Fr}) in the Listed Garrowby S. over this trip at York on Sept. 6 and is being chanced on ground that his trainer Ed Walker is concerned about. If he manages to overcome and win, he can be marked down as one of the race’s best winners but it would be no surprise to see him come back in 12 months’ time with stronger credentials.

“He’s done nothing wrong and Dakota Gold, who he beat at York last time, has won the Bengough and the Rous S. since,” Walker said. “To go into a Group 1 like this on his fourth start is a big ask, but he deserves to take his shot–he’s in great form and this has been the plan since he won at York. The ground probably won’t be ideal, but we’ll see. There was cut in the ground when he won at York, but this will be different again. It’s exciting and we’re looking forward to it.”

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