GBRI Launches Video Series To Drive International Ownership In The UK

The first episode in a five-part video series to showcase the various aspects that make owning a horse-in-training in Britain worthwhile, was launched by Great British Racing International (GBRI) on Monday. Titled 'Be A Part Of it: Owning In Britain', the first video is Sir Mark Prescott reflecting on the history and heritage that underpins the British racing experience. Additional videos will be released every Monday. The series, backed by the National Trainers' Federation (NTF), will also show the training environment that Thoroughbreds are exposed to in Britain, as well as the high-quality facilities available; spending a morning with your trainer at their yard or on the gallops; and the quintessential British raceday experience. The final installment is scheduled for right before the Goffs UK Premier Yearling Sale on Aug. 23-24.

NTF Chief Executive Paul Johnson said, “This video series is an excellent initiative by GBRI on behalf of British trainers, as it showcases all the elements that we do so very well in Britain–the heritage, the facilities, the training environment, the behind-the-scenes experience and the raceday experience. Exhibiting each of these elements to prospective international investors can only be a positive for the industry.”

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Nine Students Graduate From Riding A Dream Academy

The inaugural class of nine students from the Riding A Dream Academy have graduated from its scholarship programme. Set up after Khadijah Mellah became the first British Muslim woman to win a UK horse race, the Riding A Dream Academy offers the year-long Khadijah Mellah Scholarship which was established to help other young people aged 14-18 from diverse and underrepresented communities get into racing and to increase diversity and inclusion in the sport. The Academy is funded by the Racing Foundation, with additional support from the Jockey Club and Champion Equestrian.

The students learned to ride racehorses under the expert tuition of the instructors at the British Racing School (BRS) in Newmarket where the Academy and its programmes are run. The course began with a residential week at the BRS in August 2021 and the students have returned for one weekend each month since then to continue their tuition.

Mellah said, “I am so incredibly proud and humbled by everything that the students have achieved this year. To see them arrive in August last year having only ever sat on riding school ponies, to now be riding racehorses on the gallops here is just mind blowing. As a group and individually I am so impressed by the talent, hard work and commitment they have put in and I can't wait to see where their careers in racing take them next. None of this would have been possible without the support of the Racing Foundation and the incredible instructors at the British Racing School–I am so grateful to everyone who has made the Academy possible.”

The Academy was set up by Naomi Lawson and ITV Racing's Oli Bell as a legacy to the achievements of Khadijah Mellah who became the first British Muslim woman to win a horse race in the UK when landing the Magnolia Cup at Goodwood in 2019.

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Team JHR Launched By Jessica Harrington Racing

Team JHR, a new and exclusive member-only club, was launched by dual-purpose trainer Jessica Harrington Racing on Monday. The club will give fans a taste of what goes on behind the scenes at Commonstown, with information on the yard's runners, big race previews, and videos. Regular competitions for private tours and race-day experiences are also on offer. Team JHR updates will be available through an app on your smart phone. The cost to join the club is €50 or £42.57 per year.

“We have always been an innovative and progressive yard,” Harrington said. “On the track we strive to produce the best results possible and that's down to the team here and a hell of a lot of hard work put in by everyone involved behind the scenes at Commonstown.

“We are sure there are many racing enthusiasts that would thoroughly enjoy this app and relish the regular insider tips, yard updates and behind the scenes footage. They may or may not ever have a horse in training but either way this will give them a sense of being part of our team. It also links well with our Alpha and Omega Syndicates, ideal for those who want a taster of membership with the hope of progression to shared ownership.”

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One Night In Vichy: It’s Right Up Our Allier 

“Come to Vichy,” they said. “We'll stop in Deauville on the way, it'll be fun.”

So began a 60-hour pilgrimage to one of the five days of racing that comprise the biggest week of the year at the Hippodrome Vichy Bellerive, a charming course with delicate touches of Art Nouveau glamour set on the banks of the Allier river. 

TDN readers of a National Hunt persuasion (there may be some!) might have felt their interest piqued at the mention of the Allier region, deep in central France and famed for its AQPS graduates, such as the Bruno Vagne-bred Envoi Allen (Fr) and Haras de Saint Voir's Gauloise (Fr). But Vichy in the sweltering heat of July is all about the Flat, with the racecourse's most prestigious race, the G3 Grand Prix de Vichy, being the highlight of the Festival du Galop, which this year celebrated its 25th anniversary. 

The history of Vichy Bellerive stretches back much farther than that, almost 150 years in fact. In 1875, the grand old Duc de Morny, largely remembered as the architect of the rather more celebrated racing resort of Deauville, persuaded his great friend Baron de Veauce to set up a riverside racecourse in the spa town. Vichy, referred to by one pithy bloodstock agent as “the capital of the collaborators”, was of course later more readily known for its status during the war, but it is a place well worth visiting even if horses aren't your thing. There certainly aren't any TDN readers of whom we can say that, but some of us do occasionally look up from our pedigree pages and poultices to enjoy the odd pursuit unconnected to equines, and if you have even a passing interest in architecture and Art Deco style, then hotfoot it to Vichy at once and walk around looking up. You won't be disappointed.

Our own rather more jolly collaboration for a road trip, which began in 40-degree Suffolk heat, comprised of three co-owners of a horse we visited briefly in Deauville, with the expedition being led by the sole owner-breeder of the rather aptly-named Duc De Morny (Fr) (Cityscape {GB}). The latter was set to run in the mouthful of a race that is Vichy's Listed Prix des Jouvenceaux et des Jouvencelles Bernard Ferrand. The Prix Morny would have been much more straightforward.

The owner-breeder in question is Jocelyn Targett, a man never knowingly under-enthused about life in general, and about horseracing in particular. Hopes were high en route, and deservedly so, because the equine Duc had won his first two starts for Christophe Ferland and had mercifully arrived in Vichy from La Teste de Buch ahead of the forest fire that forced the evacuation of his stable-mates to Bordeaux last Tuesday. 

It is a safe bet that not many breeders compose songs in their heads about their horses, but then Targett is rather extraordinary in a number of ways. So as the 400 miles between Deauville and Vichy were whiled away we joined him in several choruses of 'Duc, Duc, Duc, Duc de Morny, Morny, Morny' to the tune of Gene Chandler's Duke of Earl, and arrived eventually, in the highest of spirits. 

The heatwave had abated sufficiently to provide perfect conditions for a turf meeting en lumiere, and Vichy Bellerive was awash with families enjoying an agreeable evening at the races. Not all of them were necessarily there to witness the European debut of the surprise Saudi Cup winner Emblem Road (Quality Road), whose connections sprang even more of a surprise by deciding to run him a) on turf, and b) in the Grand Prix de Vichy.

His new trainer, Alessandro Botti, was playing a rather straight bat, if one can use a cricketing analogy for a French-based Italian, when it came to discussing Emblem Road's chances on his first run for 144 days and since moving from Riyadh to Chantilly. Following his fifth-place finish in a Grand Prix field of six, narrowly behind a horse who had been claimed for €18,111 after his previous run, the Botti bat was straighter still as his poker face made it impossible to discern to what, if any, extent he was surprised by the horse's lacklustre performance.

It has been a strange week for Saudi Cup winners. The 2021 winner Mishriff (Ire) plainly wasn't right in February when never travelling in this year's race on a dirt track which appeared to have been prepared with a deeper, more attritional surface than had been the case 12 months earlier. Mishriff bounced back to finish only a neck behind Vadeni (Fr) in the Coral-Eclipse, but he was almost 11 lengths behind Pyledriver (GB) when third in Saturday's King George, and he has dwelt in the stalls on both his last two starts.

Emblem Road's disappointing comeback was of little concern to the many racing fans who swamped the winner's rostrum after the 6-year-old Riocorvo (Ger) (Pastorius {Ger}) was led back in as the Grand Prix winner under Gerald Mosse.

As giant sparklers were let off around the podium, the evergreen jockey, who won the G1 Poule d'Essai des Pouliches in May on Mangoustine (Fr), was enjoying the delights of Vichy every bit as much, if not more than, ParisLongchamp. And who can blame him? With 'Miss Allier' on one arm and her similarly sashed deputy on the other, and laden with bottles of champagne and a giant box of chocolates, Mosse certainly appeared to be, as the youngsters say, living his best life. 

A bit like on Grand National day, the race immediately after the main event was restricted to amateurs and apprentices, which was just as well for Mosse, as there followed the longest presentation ceremony known to man. Speeches, more sparklers, some more speeches, and yet more champagne thrust into the jockey's welcoming arms ensued. By now, with darkness properly descended and just the final race set to go off at 10.45pm, one might have expected the family-heavy crowd to start dissipating. But the many miniature ponies scattered about the racecourse were still doing sterling service transporting young children about by saddle or by cart, the restaurants and bars were swinging, and it was clear that there would be no leavers until the last banger had gone up in the post-race firework display.

Duc De Morny had silenced us only temporarily with his performance on the night which, though creditable, saw him finish in the position all breeders with a black-type runner dread: fourth. As a young colt who has already shown much promise, he'll be back, for sure, and by then we may have learned the lines to the second verse of Duke of Earl.

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