L’Europa manda in scena il suo weekend clou dopo quello del 1° Ottobre in Francia, con la giornata del QIPCO Champions Day di Ascot sabato 21 Ottobre. In programma ci sono 6 corse di 5 al massimo livello e, nell’ordine, sono programmate così: Alle 14:25 la Qipco British Champions Long Distance Cup G2, alle 15,00 la Qipco British Champions Sprint Stakes G1, alle 15,40 le Qipco British Champions Fillies & Mares Stakes, alle 16,15 le Queen Elizabeth II Stakes G1 (Sponsored By Qipco) e alle 16:50 le Qipco Champion Stakes G1.
Notate la delicatezza: Le Queen Elizabeth, essendo intitolate a Sua Maestà, non possono essere “sporcate” dallo sponsor QIPCO, che figura solo dopo l’enunciazione del nome e non prima come nelle altre corse.
Nella prova regina del pomeriggio è previsto il classico scontro tra campioni della generazione, ed in particolare tre cavalli che vengono da segmenti diversi e si confronteranno per capire chi sia veramente il più forte. Ulysses (Galileo), l’anziano che ha guardato negli occhi la campionessa Enable ed è rimasto pietrificato, poi Cracksman (Frankel) che per non rimanere come una medusa ha preferito bypassare ma arriva perfetto all’appuntamento ed è figlio di quel Frankel che qui chiuse la carriera vincendo, in un giorno particolarmente emozionante per l’ippica mondiale, e poi Barney Roy (Excelebration) che ha calcato altri palcoscenici ma ha già incrociato le armi con Ulysses a York, praticamente stendendogli un tappeto rosso verso la vittoria nelle Juddmonte ed è ansioso di rifarsi. L’unico dubbio che riguarda Ulysses è il terreno e l’opzione Breeders’ Cup G1 in America il 4 Novembre prossimo, sul miglio e mezzo e su terreno forse preferito ma con 12 ore di viaggio e sbattimenti sul groppone. Alan Cooper, rappresentante dei Niarchos, sta decidendo insieme al team. Comunque molto probabilmente sarà ad Ascot, il 4 anni che alla fine dell’anno entrerà in razza al Cheveley. Un bel colpo!
Questo è il tema delle Champion per le quali sono ancora 17 i cavalli dentro in attesa della dichiarazione ufficiale dei partenti in programma giovedì. Oltre a questi è ancora possibile l’inserimento di Brametot (Rajsaman) e degli alfieri di Aidan O’Brien che sono ancora 8 nella lista. Se Churchill (Galileo) come sembra andrà alle Queen Elizabeth II G1, allora sono possibili gli inserimenti di Cliffs Of Moher (Galileo), Highland Reel (Galileo) alla ricerca della vittoria numero 25 a livello di G1 che gli permetterebbe di eguagliare Bobby Frankel alla mitica cifra di 25 in un anno. Degli altri è possibile ancora Poet’s Word (Poet’s Voice), e non solo.
Molto intrigante sarà la lotta nelle Queen Elizabeth II Stakes G1 sul miglio in pista dritta. Ovvio favorito è Ribchester (Iffraaj) a 2/1, in discesa rispetto al 5/2 di qualche ora fa. Il cavallo di Rich Fahey è reduce dalla vittoria nel Moulin G1 di Longchamp, a Chantilly. Contro ci saranno appunto Churchill e poi l’esaltante Beat The Bank (Paco Boy), progredito fino a vincere in G3 e G2 in ascesa continua, e di proprietà di Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha (provate a dire Sri Lanka con un Buondì Motta in bocca), proprietario del Leicester che sta investendo tantissimo nei cavalli. Orbene, Beat The Bank ha corso 6 volte ed ha vinto in 5 occasioni, steccando solo nelle Jersey G3 di Ascot, ma dimostrandosi un cavallo di spessore alla prova della verità con questi canacci del miglio. La sua quota è di 9/2 rispetto al 6/1 di ieri. Addirittura è più considerato di Al Wukair (Dream Ahead) a 6/1, all’ultima corsa in carriera prima dell’ingresso in razza, Thunder Snow (Helmet) a 12/1, come del resto Roly Poly (War Front).
Il Qipco British Champions Sprint Stakes G1 ha un favorito a 11/10 che si chiama Harry Angel (Dark Angel), alla prova della conferma della sua qualità dopo l’annata scintillante. Sono 14 i rimasti e tutti hanno una chance, senza escludere nessuno tra i Tupi (Tamayuz), Brando (Pivotal), Caravaggio (Scat Daddy), Quiet Reflection (Showcasing), The Tin Man (Equiano), Tasleet (Showcasing) etc. La cosa curiosa è che il favorito non ha mai vinto su tracciato e distanza, mentre molti degli avversari si.
Nelle Qipco British Champions Fillies & Mares Stakes G1 sono ancora 15 le rimaste e ruolo di favorita affidata a Journey (Dubawi), la 5 anni di John Gosden che avrà ancora in sella Frankie Dettori. Corsa molto aperta con Coronet (Dubawi), Bateel (Dubawi), Rhododendron (Galileo) etc…
Nella Qipco British Champions Long Distance Cup G2 si preannuncia un duello tra Order Of St George (Galileo), favorito, e Big Orange (Duke Of Marmalade) a 5/1, che lo ha battuto nella Gold Cup G1 al Royal Ascot. Frankie Dettori sarà su Stradivarius (Sea The Stars), un 3 anni reduce dal St Leger, poi Desert Skyline (Tamayuz) e Dartmouth (Dubawi), senza dimenticare i soliti cornoni da distanza e con in pista anche UAE King (Frankel), fratellastro di Dubawi, che sta cercando un posto al sole ed è a 33/1 con Andrea Atzeni in sella, su un tracciato ed una distanza già percorsi con successo!
Hannon: Barney certainly won’t be setting it up for old foe Ulysses
The score is two-nil to Ulysses, but Richard Hannon, trainer of Barney Roy, is more than a little hopeful his plan to exact revenge will be rewarded on Saturday in a dazzling Qipco Champion Stakes that he likens to the Arc.
Hannon said of his St James’s Palace Stakes winner: “The Champion Stakes should be about the top, top horses, and that’s what it’s become.
“The prize-money reflects that and I think Saturday’s race is like the Arc, with all the top horses meeting at the end of the year.”
There is certainly no doubting the quality of Ulysses and Barney Roy, and while the Sir Michael Stoute-trained four-year-old has had the better of his rival in the Coral-Eclipse and Juddmonte International there was just a nose between them at Sandown.
But it is the nature of Barney Roy’s third at York that has prompted Hannon to put his thinking cap on, as he thinks the tactics employed did not show Barney Roy to best advantage. As a result, he will be ridden more patiently than on the Knavesmire.
Hannon said: “The general theory is that he did too much at York, although I don’t think James [Doyle] did too much wrong and I like the way he decided to do his own thing.
“We got into a battle with Churchill – taking each other on, maybe two and a half furlongs or three furlongs down – and it very much played into the hands of Ulysses.”
He added: “I bet Jim Crowley on Ulysses couldn’t believe his luck seeing us two scrapping it out two and a half furlongs from home, and he’d have been thinking, ‘We’ll just wait for you lads to get knackered and then we’ll go past’. Other than that our form is very closely tied in with Ulysses and there’s not much between us.”
A lesson learned then, and Hannon added: “We certainly won’t be setting it up for Ulysses this time. We’ll get a lead and sit in a little bit. He likes a bit of time between races and goes into Saturday’s race in great nick. He’s very happy and has done all he needs to do.”
Barney Roy followed his usual pre-race routine by having a day out at Kempton last week, and on Tuesday enjoyed a confidence-boosting strong canter on turf with a lead horse.
His trainer reported: “Today he just did six and a half furlongs with a fast horse rated 90-odd and he gave him about five or six lengths start. He didn’t do a lot, but it was a nice confidence-booster.
“He also went to Kempton last week, which he did before the Guineas, the St James’s Palace and the Juddmonte. It was just a day out, but James rode him and said he moved great.
“We’ve got him nice and settled. The whole idea is to get him relaxed in behind, which it looks like he’s doing, and he should do that at Ascot too.
Hannon is hoping Barney Roy will stay in training, and if he does, he envisages a four-year-old campaign in which Barney Roy’s speed will be tested at a mile again and his stamina could be stretched to a mile and a half.
He said: “In a world without Ribchester [the QEII favourite likewise owned by Godolphin] we might well have gone back to a mile after York, but we’ll probably start him off at a mile next year in the Lockinge, then we’ll have the choice of going either Queen Anne or Prince of Wales’s.
“We’ll put him in the Arc too. He’s proved already he gets a mile and a quarter well. Whether he’ll get a mile and a half, we’ll see, but if he relaxes he’ll give himself every chance.”
Barney Roy will be joined at Ascot by stablemates Tupi in the British Champions Sprint and Oh This Is Us, George William and The Grape Escape in the Balmoral Handicap, who all have “live chances”, according to Hannon.
He said: “Tupi will run so long as it’s not soft ground, but he can run anywhere between 90 and 120, so God knows what he’ll do.
“He was brilliant in the Maurice de Gheest when third to Brando, then he was not so good the next time, then ran another super race last time. He’s going to Dubai for the winter whatever happens.”
Wanted: more Barney Roys
Barney Roy is very much the team’s flagship horse this year, but while his St James’s Palace Stakes win remains the stable’s only Group 1 success so far Richard Hannon insists it has been “a great season”.
He said: “We’ve had 177 winners, which is already more than we had in 2016, and we’ve found a good horse. That’s what we want to do now – to get back to the days when we had horses like Canford Cliffs, Toronado, Sky Lantern, Paco Boy, Toormore and all of those other good ones.
“Like Canford Cliffs, Paco Boy and Toronado, Barney Roy lives in what we call the honeymoon suite, which is two boxes knocked together with Sky and a minibar. When you get one that good, my God you appreciate them. That’s where you want to be.”
Although the stable lacks a top-flight two-year-old so far this year, Hannon points out that he had only just taken the wraps off Barney Roy at this time in 2016.
“This time last year Barney Boy had just made his debut,” he said. “The days when we used to have four or five in the Norfolk and another four or five in the Windsor Castle are behind us.
“Their season is over come June or July and we’re now looking for the classier types over a mile or maybe a mile and a quarter, who are worth more, earn more, and have much more longevity as racing prospects.
“We haven’t yet unearthed a very good two-year-old, but there are still some lovely ones to run, and some nice ones we’ve already run that will make three-year-olds. I’d like to think there might be another Barney Roy among them.”
If orders and sales are a guide, then Hannon’s owners are happy with the stable’s subtle change in direction.
He revealed: “We’ve bought something like 108 yearlings and we’ve got only eight left to sell. They’re selling very well and that’s how you can judge what sort of year you’ve had. We’re clearly doing something right. All in all we’ve had a very good year, but we’d love to round it off with a nice win in a £1 million-plus race.”
fonte : RacingPost