Risults Day 1, wednesday 20 august 2014
GOING: GOOD TO FIRM (Good in places; 7.0). STALLS: 5f & 6f – Stands’ side; 1m4f – Centre; Remainder – Inside
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1:55 - Symphony Group Stakes (Handicap)5½f, Class 2, £31,125.00 1 Blaine 12/1 NR: Caspian Prince (IRE), Free Zone,Goldream, Magical Macey (USA),Monsieur Joe (IRE) 15 ran Distances: shd, nk, ¾l Jockey: Amy Ryan WIN £16.10 PL £5.20, £3.00, £6.10 |
2:30 - Tattersalls Acomb Stakes (Group 3)7f, Class 1, £45,368.00 1 Dutch Connection 16/1 NR: Medrano, Misleading 10 ran Distances: hd, 1¼l, ¾l Jockey: William Buick WIN £12.90 PL £3.30, £5.00, £1.10 |
3:05 - Neptune Investment Management Great Voltigeur Stakes (Group 2) (Colts & Geldings)1m4f, Class 1, £85,065.00 1 Postponed 5/2F NR: Kingston Hill 9 ran Distances: 2¼l, 8l, ¾l Jockey: Andrea Atzeni WIN £3.30 PL £1.20, £1.70, £5.00 |
3:40 - Juddmonte International Stakes (British Champions Series) (Group 1)1m2½f, Class 1, £453,680.00 1 Australia 8/13F 6 ran Distances: 2l, 2¼l, 3¼l Jockey: Joseph O’Brien WIN £1.60 PL £1.10, £2.90 |
4:20 - Fine Equinity Stakes (Handicap)2m½f, Class 2, £24,900.00 1 Edge Of Sanity 25/1 NR: Dolphin Village (IRE) 16 ran Distances: ½l, 2l, 1l Jockey: Paul Mulrennan WIN £29.40 PL £6.30, £3.20, £1.90, £2.30 |
4:55 - StanJames.com Stakes (Nursery Handicap) (Bobis Race)6f, Class 2, £24,900.00 1 Felix Leiter 3/1F NR: Izzthatright (IRE), Mattmu,Midterm Break (IRE), Prize Exhibit,Teruntum Star (FR), Typhoon Season 14 ran Distances: hd, nk, 1¼l Jockey: Ben Curtis WIN £3.80 PL £1.70, £3.50, £3.60 |
Australia: added the Juddmonte International to his two Derby wins
PICTURE: Edward Whitaker (racingpost.com/photos)
Australia flies home to win International
Report: York, Wednesday
Juddmonte International Stakes (British Champions Series) (Group 1) 1m2½f, 3yo+
AUSTRALIA powered through his toughest test to date with brutal ease, adding the Juddmonte International to his expanding seasonal haul of Group 1s in an impressive display of both speed and class.
Settled in last by his fasting jockey Joseph O’Brien, Australiafollowed the field as his stablemate Kingfisher set a fair gallop. Turning for home, pace was injected and as the field straightened up it became quickly apparent the race was Australia’s.
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He travelled comfortably and as O’Brien fanned out to deliver his run he had to take a pull, so instant was the response from his mount. Having wasted his way down to ride at 8st 12lb his jockey could be forgiven for wanting to pause and take in the moment.
The feeling Australia would give him when letting out an inch of rein at this very moment had been one of the reasons O’Brien had committed to making his lowest riding weight for over two years. The way his equine companion responded it is sure to be the one that puts the biggest smile on his face.
It was an emphatic performance, especially from a horse Aidan O’Brien had openly admitted beforehand was not fully wound up. “If he was going to get beaten today it was the trainer’s fault,” he said. “I thought maybe I let him get too heavy.
“If it was an ordinary race he would probably have gone for a racecourse gallop. But obviously with the prize-money here and the way everything is done at York and being such a prestigious race – the prize-money was so enticing he had to come here rather than go anywhere else.”
Australia: rewarded his rider’s efforts to make 8st 12lb
PICTURE: Getty Images
Yet come the line two lengths separated him from his nearest pursuer The Grey Gatsby, himself a Classic winner. Kevin Ryan’s French Derby winner, a 12-1 shot, did his bit to further the impression the current generation of three-year-olds is beyond exceptional by putting a further two-and-a-quarter lengths back to Royal Ascot winner and King George runner-up Telescope in third.
Arc favourite Taghrooda managed to put less than that into Sir Michael Stoute’s yardstick, yet Betfred and William Hill left O’Brien’s colt unchanged at 5-1 for Europe’s richest race. Paddy Power however did cut him to 2-7 (from evens) for the Irish Champion Stakes.
The trainer said: “The plan was if he came here then he would go back to Leopardstown, but the boys will decide that. The Arc is a possibility but he is never a horse who needs to go a mile and a half. The lads will decide where he goes but I don’t think he has a lot to prove to anybody.”
Two Derby wins had failed to take Australia out of the tremendous shadow cast by both his illustrious parents and his trainer’s assertions he could be the greatest he’d ever trained. With victory at York he stepped into the light for the first time, and has begun on his own path to greatness.
Postponed: strides clear for decisive Group 2 win over Snow Sky
PICTURE: Martin Lynch (racingpost.com/photos)
Postponed lands the Voltigeur in great style
Report: York, Wednesday
Neptune Investment Management Great Voltigeur Stakes (Group 2) 1m4f, 3yo colts & geldings
POSTPONED took advantage of the late withdrawal of Kingston Hill to land the Great Voltigeur Stakes at York.
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The Luca Cumani-trained winner was 5-2 favourite in the reformed market and strode clear to score decisively from 7-2 shot Snow Sky. Odeon (40-1) was third.
Postponed was two and a quarter lengths clear at the line, suggesting Kingston Hill would have needed to be on top form to beat him.
The winner was the only Great Voltigeur runner not entered for next month’s Ladbrokes St Leger and Cumani said he was unlikely to head for the Doncaster Classic.
“He could be supplemented [for the St Leger] but my inclination would be to not stretch him that far. He’s a mile-and-a-half horse,” the trainer said.
Kingston Hill was withdrawn by trainer Roger Varian less than 30 minutes before the race on account of the fast ground, leaving nine runners.
Postponed, having been promoted to favourite, revelled in the conditions and the fast pace set by the hard-pulling Odeon.
The brave Odeon proved difficult for most of the field to catch but Postponed eased past him with a furlong and a half to run. He quickly opened a decisive gap and, although Snow Sky attempted to throw down a challenge, was never in danger of defeat.
Snow Sky finished eight lengths ahead of Odeon, who held on for third as none of the others could land a blow.
The runner-up put in the best trial of those entered for the St Leger and is a best-priced 10-1 with the sponsor for the Classic.
Kingston Hill: was a late withdrawal from Wednesday’s Great Voltigeur
PICTURE: Edward Whitaker (racingpost.com/photos)
Kingston Hill to go straight to the St Leger
KINGSTON HILL will go straight to the Ladbrokes St Leger after his trainer Roger Varian deemed the ground to be too fast for the Derby runner-up to run in the Neptune Investment Management Great Voltigeur Stakes on day one of York’s Ebor meeting.
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Varian said: “It was a very difficult decision but we have got to think long term, we have got to think if we want to have a crack at the St Leger in three and a half weeks’ time.
“The ground is quick and it is drying out. I walked the course before racing, I watched two races and I spoke to the jockeys – there is no jar but it is quick. We might get away with it but, if in doubt, we have chosen to sit it out.
“He has got a future, he has got big targets in the autumn and he is likely to stay in training. He is a hell of a good horse.
“I think we would have to go straight there if we go for the Leger but we can get him ready on the day. It is agonising that it has come to this with such a late call but you have to go with your gut feeling, usually in this game your gut feeling is right. “
fonte: RacingPost