ARC Malton Open Day Returns Sept. 12

Malton Open Day, sponsored by Arena Racing Company (ARC) and organized by Racing Welfare, returns Sunday, Sept. 12, and will be held in conjunction with the start of the inaugural National Racehorse Week, celebrating the racehorse and the staff who care for them. The event will feature 12 training yards in and around Malton, which will open their doors to the public, offering the opportunity to see behind the scenes at one of the most prominent and historic racing centers in the U.K. A slew of equine stars will be on show, along with a chance to speak to the trainers and the stable staff who provide their day-to-day care.

Tickets are on sale at www.maltonopenday.co.uk, with the opportunity for buyers to take advantage of early bird ticket prices before the end of July. Tickets are priced at £10 for adults and £6.50 for concessions (over 65's) including a program. Any tickets booked online after July 31 are £12.50 for adults and £8.50 for concessions. Visitors under 16 attend for free.

Yards will open from 8:45 a.m until 12 noon, with buses provided to transport attendees between the various yards. Among the horses in the spotlight this year are a number of Royal Ascot winners, including Richard Fahey trained Perfect Power, who won the G2 Norfolk S. this year, as well as John Quinn's Buckingham Palace S. winner Highfield Princess.

The event will be raising funds for organizers Racing Welfare, which provides a wide range of advice and support services for people working in or retired from racing, and offers a range of events, trips and activities both in the local community and virtually. A total of 1,019 individual beneficiaries from the Northern region received support from Racing Welfare last year.

For more information and a complete itinerary, visit www.maltonopenday.co.uk.

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Burrows Charts Options for Minzaal Before Sprint Cup Tilt

Shadwell's Minzaal (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}) may mark his seasonal return at Nottingham next month in advance of a potential outing in the G1 Betfair Sprint Cup at Haydock Park Sept. 4. The G2 Gimcrack S. winner will use either the five-furlong British Stallion Studs EBF Conditions S. Aug. 10 or the G3 Phoenix Sprint S. at the Curragh over six furlongs Aug. 8 as a stepping stone to Haydock's marquee sprint event.

Minzaal was last sighted finishing third in the G1 Middle Park S. at Newmarket in October. Minzaal was forced to miss the first part of the 2021 season through injury.

“Minzaal is in good strong work now, but he is still carrying a good bit of weight and we need to sharpen him up now over the next couple of weeks,” trainer Owen Burrows said. “There are not a huge number of races around for horses like him, but I would like to think he would be ready in early August.”

In regard to taking the Nottingham route, he added, “He has never run over five furlongs before that might be an option to blow away the cobwebs. He is showing plenty of his old speed at home.”

While a trip to Ireland is the more high-profile option, Burrows believes that keeping Minzaal closer to home might be the better option.

“Both races slot in nicely in before the Sprint Cup and as long as it is not bottomless up at Haydock, which it can get, that is the type of race we want to be talking about,” he said. “It might be the more sensible option putting him in the box and going to Nottingham as it is not easy taking horses away at the moment.

“If we feel his first run will be needed then Nottingham would be the more favorable option.”

Minzaal is listed at 20-1 for the Betfair Sprint Cup.

“There is no pressure this year with him as he is a horse that will be staying in training as a 4-year-old,” he said. “It is nice to know we don't have to be panicking that time is of the essence with him.”

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Blizzard Conditions In High Summer

Aidan O'Brien used the word “special” to describe Snowfall (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) following her stunning success by a record-breaking 16 lengths in the G1 Epsom Oaks, but most would argue that tag did not go far enough to fully quantify what was witnessed on the first Friday in June. Looking more like a freak of nature as she glided by toiling rivals in early straight, the Ballydoyle bombshell out of the portentously-named dam Best In the World (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) probably needs to do no more than she did there to become the 15th filly to complete a revered double in Saturday's G1 Juddmonte Irish Oaks at The Curragh. This is not a competitive Classic by any means, with her own stable responsible for half the field and the closest-rated to her being Donnacha O'Brien's June 17 G2 Ribblesdale S. third Nicest (Ire) (American Pharoah), who is fully 15 pounds behind. It will almost certainly fall to the Coolmore partners, who have the first four in the betting and the only fillies worthy of being quoted at reasonably short odds, and so there is a responsibility on Snowfall to put on a show to salvage this renewal.

Snowfall would be favourite for this based solely on her emphatic success in York's G3 Musidora S. May 12, but her Epsom tour de force places her in elevated territory and greater tests await further into the season. If there is any achilles heel, it could be that the slower surface she has raced on so far this term is ideal and this quicker going could compromise her, but her pedigree suggests that is highly unlikely. “Last year she was always showing a lot at home–that's why she was running in all those good races–but obviously she has got stronger over the winter,” her trainer said. “Maybe she was a little bit weak or something last year, but we always liked what we saw at home. I know she's been winning on soft ground, but we always thought that nice ground would suit her.”

O'Brien also saddles the June 23 Listed Naas Oaks Trial scorer Willow (Ire) (American Pharoah), whose dam Peeping Fawn (Danehill) took this in 2007, and the Oaks third and Ribblesdale fourth Divinely (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) who is a full-sister to the aforementioned Best In the World. “Willow won a nice trial last time out and she's in good form–we've been happy with her since Naas,” he added. “Divinely had a lovely run around Epsom and a nice run at Ascot and she seems to have been in good form since.”

Nicest, whose dam Chicquita (Ire) (Montjeu {Ire}) is also an Irish Oaks heroine, lost a shoe in the Ribblesdale but needs an epic jump forward to make a race of it with the favourite while John Kalmanson's Party House (Ire) (Camelot {GB}) also had luck against her when sixth in the Naas Oaks Trial. Like Ballygallon Stud's Mariesque (Ire) (Lawman {Fr}), who was a place ahead of her there, she looks to have a class chasm to bridge here. The latter's trainer Joseph O'Brien is not waving the white flag already, however.

“Mariesque is a lovely filly that we always hoped would make up into a stakes performer,” he said. “She made a winning return to action in a maiden at Gowran Park and then acquitted herself very well when fifth in the Naas Oaks Trial last month. She was still notably green at Naas and shaped as though this longer trip is what she wants. This is obviously a huge step up in class, but the race has cut up a bit and we're happy to throw her in at the deep end. She has very little to lose and an awful lot to gain, so hopefully she'll acquit herself well.”

Also at The Curragh, the five-furlong G2 Sapphire S. sees Patrick Moyles's May 16 Listed Sole Power Sprint S. and June 9 Listed Midsummer Sprint S. winner Logo Hunter (Ire) (Brazen Beau {Aus}) take on the June 18 G1 Commonwealth Cup third Measure of Magic (Ire) (Kodi Bear {Ire}) and the June 26 Listed Dubai Duty Free Dash S. scorer Romantic Proposal (Ire) (Raven's Pass) in a clash of three sprinters who could yet emerge as Group 1 winners in time. The preceding G3 Jebel Ali Racecourse and Stables Anglesey S. for the juveniles is a storied race staged over the unique trip of six furlongs and 63 yards which is crying out for a star performer to revive its glory days when it played host to Johannesburg, One Cool Cat, Oratorio (Ire) and Myboycharlie (Ire). Perhaps it could be the Ger Lyons-trained Beauty Inspire (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}), who impressed on his winning debut over a straight six here June 25.

Newbury's Listed Steventon S. features Juddmonte's 'TDN Rising Star' Derab (GB) (Sea the Stars {Ire}), who was far from disgraced when eighth in the 10 1/2-furlong G1 Prix du Jockey Club at Chantilly June 6. The G3 Hackwood S. is the key contest, with the six-furlong sprint acting as the first start on turf for the Clive Cox-trained 3-year-old Diligent Harry (GB) (Due Diligence)  who was third last time in the G3 Chipchase S. at Newcastle June 26. “I'm hoping he can translate his promise and progress on the all-weather across to the turf,” his trainer said. In the £200,000 Weatherbys Super Sprint S., the June 16 Listed Windsor Castle S. winner Chipotle (GB) (Havana Gold {Ire}) encounters the June 15 G2 Coventry S. third Vintage Clarets (GB) (Ardad {Ire}).

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King George, York Options For Mishriff

While the July 24 G1 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth II S. is the most likely next port of call for dual Group 1 winner Mishriff (Ire) (Make Believe {GB}), the 4-year-old also has the option of the G2 York S. on the same day, said Ted Voute, racing manager to the colt's owner Prince Faisal. The plan would be to then push on to the G1 Juddmonte International on Aug. 18.

After winning the Saudi Cup going 1800 metres on the dirt in February, Mishriff backed up five weeks later to win the G1 Dubai Sheema Classic over a mile and a half on the grass for John and Thady Gosden. He was third of four runners on his return to the European turf in the G1 Coral-Eclipse over a mile and a quarter on July 3.

“He might go to York or he might go to the King George,” said Voute. “He's got to give away a lot more weight at York as he gets a Group 1 penalty there as well as [giving away] the age allowance. It's in John's hands.”

Voute said Mishriff appeared to have needed the race in the Eclipse.

“Mishriff came back from the Eclipse and was kicking and bucking. John said was very fresh so he got him back on the gallops. After the Eclipse he blew quite a bit. He's a 4-year-old now and that might have put him spot on for a race next Saturday.

“It's in John's hands and the Prince is happy to go with whatever he feels. We'll wait and see where he guides us, but I suspect he'll guide us to the King George. That seems to be the way the vibes are. There's only one horse, Twice Over, who has won the Group 2 at York and then the Juddmonte at York. There is a Group 1 at Munich, but we'd have to supplement him. That was in the middle of the Eclipse and the Juddmonte, but we are keen to get a domestic Group 1. That would be the icing on the cake.”

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