05/05/2019. NEWMARKET REPORTS 1,000 GUINEAS – Hermosa (Galileo) 7-1 for the Oaks after landing 1,000 Guineas for Aidan O’Brien // Maqsad lays down Investec Oaks marker with Pretty Polly romp

 
Hermosa and Wayne Lordan (right) win the Qipco 1,000 Guineas at Newmarket
Hermosa and Wayne Lordan (right) win the Qipco 1,000 Guineas at Newmarket
Edward Whitaker (racingpost.com/photos)
 
By Tom Collins, 
   

Another for that man. Hermosa, considered the third string for trainer Aidan O’Brien by many, made every yard to win the Qipco 1,000 Guineas, the first fillies’ Classic of the season.

Sporting the second colours of Michael Tabor, Hermosa, who was supported into 14-1 from an early show of 25-1, made virtually all the running in the smaller far-side group to win the Newmarket Classic under jockey Wayne Lordan.

Lady Kaya, who set the pace in the nearside group, finished second for trainer Sheila Lavery, while 7-2 favourite Qabala did the best of those coming from off the pace to finish third.

Lordan said: “She’s a good filly and was competing at Group 1 level last year, including taking on the colts. She likes to bowl along and saves a little bit. When they came to me she battled well.

“She’s a beautiful filly by the right sire and finds plenty. It was good.”

Lady Kaya looked the winner for a long way but perhaps did not stay the final furlong as well as the eventual winner.

Owner Joanne Lavery said about her runner-up’s effort: ”She’s got so much heart and she puts everything out there. It’s unbelievable. She’s done us proud and it feels like we’ve won.”

Hermosa was cut to 7-1 (from 25) for the Investec Oaks by Paddy Power.

 

Maqsad lays down Investec Oaks marker with Pretty Polly romp

Maqsad: cut for the Investec Oaks after an easy win in the Pretty Polly Stakes
Maqsad: cut for the Investec Oaks after an easy win in the Pretty Polly Stakes
Alan Crowhurst
 
By Stuart Riley, Lewis Porteous and David Milnes,  
   

Maqsad advertised her Investec Oaks credentials with a big performance in the Listed Tweenhill Pretty Polly Stakes, although she is not yet guaranteed to take the Epsom route after showing speed to burn as she strolled to a five-length success as the 5-4 favourite. 

Taghrooda, who like Maqsad carries the Sheikh Hamdan Al Maktoum colours, won the same race before taking the Oaks in 2014 and the winner was cut to 10-1 (from 33) to repeat history. 

“I was impressed with her,” said winning trainer William Haggas. “She’s got a bit of speed but they need speed if they’re going to stay and there’s lots of lots of stamina on the dam’s side.

“She’s in the Prix Saint-Alary at the end of this month, which is over a mile and a quarter, and she’s in the French and English Oaks. We’ve got to sit down and think about it.  

“The Oaks is not ruled out but going from a mile, to a mile and a quarter and then a mile and a half is hard. We’ll see.”

Worth Waiting for Dahlia as filly dots up

Worth Waiting ran out an apt winner of the main support race on 1,000 Guineas day, the Dahlia Stakes, as the contest was delayed by 16 minutes after Rasima spread a plate at the start.

The well backed 3-1 chance was David Lanigan’s first winner of the year on turf and benefited from a positive ride from James Doyle to rest the spoils from front-runner Nyaleti and last season 1,000 Guineas winner Billesdon Brook.

Favourite Veracious, who was bidding to give Sir Michael Stoute a seventh win in the 1m1f contest, threatened at the bushes but backed out of it in the dip and could only muster fourth.

The Group 2 win was a career-best for the four-year-old, who won a Group 3 in France last year and may well be on her travels again later in the year.

Lanigan said: “Worth Waiting has been going pretty well at home on the watered gallop, which runs next to the racecourse, and I knew when Ted Durcan got off her the other day and said he was pleased that I thought we were in business.

“She was a bit slow to come to hand through the winter as she had a chip taken out of a hind fetlock, but we will try to win a Group 1 win with her now.

“I think a mile and a quarter will be her trip this year as, although she won over a mile and half last year, she struggles to get it in top company. There’s the Pretty Polly at the Curragh and I’ve always fancied a crack at the Beverley D Stakes in the US with her.”

Baghdad back and Royal Ascot-bound

Baghdad has been through a lot in the last year. He became a Royal Ascot winner and fractured a cannon bone in the process last June, after which life-saving surgery and a ten-month recovery followed. 

A comeback on the all-weather at Newcastle last month set him up for 1,000 Guineas day and he returned to the winner’s enclosure in tenacious style, outbattling the vastly bigger Corelli under an inspired Silvestre de Sousa. 

The Mark Johnston-trained King George V winner could now be heading back to the royal meeting to try and land a second handicap success, with the trainer pinpointing the Duke of Edinburgh Stakes as a potential target.

“It’s great to see horses coming back from fairly serious injuries,” said Johnston. “It was a great job done by the surgeons and clearly he’s still just on the upgrade.

“He walked off the track sound, but it was a significant fracture. I can’t remember how many screws they put in it, but it wouldn’t be all that uncommon.”

Capping a productive Guineas weekend, Johnston completed a day-two double thanks to Nayef Road in the 1m2f handicap, who was again the beneficiary of De Sousa dictating the pace from the front. 

Appleby on the Wokingham warpath

Baghdad is not the only winner on the card being targeted at Royal Ascot, with Charlie Appleby’s 6f handicap winner On The Warpath bound for the Wokingham.

Appleby, who said his Lincoln winner Auxerre would next run in a Listed race at Windsor on May 13, said: “He was consistent in Meydan and ran well at the Craven meeting.

“James Doyle, who rode him that day, said he’d be more than capable if we dropped him to six, so we did and he’s gone and done what he’s done. Hopefully it opens more avenues for us.”

The trainer added: “We’ll look at what the handicapper does but we could go for something like the Wokingham. He’s right on the edge of Group class, he’s won well and it was a decent enough time. We’ll enjoy today and regroup next week.”

fonte : RacingPost

 

Galileo’s Hermosa Dominates the 1000 Guineas

Sunday, May 5, 2019 
 
4th at NEW, Gr. Stk, £5000,000 G1 Qipco 1000 Guineas S. (8f) Winner: Hermosa (Ire), f, 3 by Galileo (Ire)
 

 

Hermosa | Racingfotos.com

By Tom Frary

Unusually, Galileo (Ire) was without a representative in the 2000 Guineas, so his one shot in Sunday’s G1 QIPCO 1000 Guineas at Newmarket just had to hit the target if the laws of the universe applied in their customary way. The inevitability that Hermosa (Ire) would triumph for her immeasurably important sire seemed to evade the betting public, but with every passing furlong of the Rowley Mile test her starting price of 14-1 grew ever-more incredulous as Wayne Lordan took the race by the scruff of the neck. There was a brief moment when the Cheveley Park colour-bearer Angel’s Hideaway (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) managed to get ahead of her running down into the Suffolk venue’s infamous “dip”, but brief was all it was ever going to be as that unceasing determination took hold. Once the full-sister to Hydrangea (Ire) was safely on the rising ground to the line, there was only one result in the offing and she got there just a tick off the time of stablemate Magna Grecia (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) 24 hours earlier. At the finish a length separated her and the rags-to-riches compatriot Lady Kaya (Ire) (Dandy Man {Ire}), who in turn was a neck in front of the 7-2 favourite Qabala (Scat Daddy) who fared best of the British in third. “She likes to bowl along and saves a bit, so when I saw her flick an ear I was happy,” commented Lordan, who rode Winter (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) to another surprise success for the yard in 2017. “She’ll stay a mile and a quarter no problem and she’s a very easy ride–you can put her anywhere.”
This is the fourth time that Aidan O’Brien has won both Newmarket Guineas over the weekend and his fifth renewal of this Classic in total. Unsurprisingly, he was pointing at the May 31 G1 Epsom Oaks for last year’s G1 Fillies’ Mile and G1 Criterium International runner-up. “Her sister got a mile and a half in soft ground at Ascot, so we always thought she would stay and be an Oaks filly,” he explained. “She’s very laid-back and lazy with a great mind. She got passed and came again, so that’s a great sign. It’s such an advantage to have Galileo’s influence and he’s going to be so massive for years to come. It’s that will-to-win that makes them so different and they are so genuine when push comes to shove. They will get down on their knees for you when the real fight comes. She’s always been a very good filly–Donnacha has been riding her in all her work and thought she was going to be his danger, so he wanted to follow her [on Iridessa]. She has improved a lot over the winter, Wayne gave her a great ride and she kept coming.”

Like Hydrangea before her, Hermosa was an industrious juvenile and that aptitude to her work earned her a G3 Weld Park S. success at Naas in September and a third placing in the G1 Moyglare Stud S. at The Curragh in September both over seven furlongs prior to her main autumn engagements. Second to Iridessa (Ire) (Ruler of a the World {Ire}) in the Fillies’ Mile over this track and trip in October, she was back in action 16 days later when second to Godolphin’s colt Royal Meeting (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) in the seven-furlong G1 Criterium International at Chantilly. Extra time was always going to serve her well, with her late foaling date being May 6, so it is a credit to her temperament and testament to the undeniable quality in her pedigree that she has thrived on a busy career.
Lady Kaya’s fairytale journey continues apace and trainer Sheila Lavery was understandably delighted with her performance afterwards, but her doubts about this mile remain. “At the back of mind I was just a bit worried, but she very nearly got there,” she said. “I’m not discounting a mile, but I will go back and look at it and take advice. I’m just ecstatic. I suppose in a way it hasn’t sunk in–but now I will have a drink and relax once I go see how she has walked off. I know Richard Hannon said yesterday ‘who remembers second’, but I will remember this second.”
Roger Varian was more in keeping with Hannon’s philosophy as he reflected on the effort of Qabala. “You are a bit disappointed not to win, always,” he said. “It was tight two from home. I’m not going to say she would have won, because it was too far out and it is a too grey an area to say that. But he [David Egan] thought it cost him about a length, because he couldn’t hold his pitch and he has had to come out around Fairyland–just when you want to really run in a straight line. It is disappointing not to win, but I can’t fault anyone or the filly because she has run a great race.” Aidan O’Brien said of the fifth-placed Fairyland (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}), “She’s a fast filly and so we were always worried about her and the trip. “She’s a big, powerful filly with a great mind and there was always the chance that she would drop back after today.”

Hermosa is now the third group 1 winner for Beauty Is Truth (Ire) (Pivotal {GB}), who raced for Richard Strauss and captured the five-furlong G3 Prix d’Arenberg as a 2-year-old and the G2 Prix du Gros-Chene at three. The pace displayed by Hermosa throughout at least the first half of this Classic stems directly from that daughter of the similarly fast and precocious fellow Kilfrush Stud-bred G3 Prix du Bois winner Zelding (Ire) (Warning {GB}). Proof that Galileo’s matings with fast mares can produce that ultimate in racing, stayers that can carry speed, is seen most obviously in the exploits of Hydrangea who was able to win Leopardstown’s seven-furlong G3 Ballylinch Stud 1000 Guineas Trial and that track’s G1 Matron S. over a mile and–as O’Brien stated in his post-race interview here–then win the 12-furlong G1 QIPCO British Champions Fillies & Mares S. Beauty Is Truth’s The United States (Ire) was also successful over middle-distances and recorded a career-best win in the 10-furlong G1 Ranvet S., in contrast to the dual six-furlong group 3 winner Fire Lily (Ire) who was by Dansili (GB) and only just stayed a mile.
Zelding’s other daughter of note was Glorious Sight (Ire) (Singspiel {Ire}), who took the Listed Prix Finlande and was runner-up in the G1 Poule d’Essai des Pouliches before selling to Oceanic Bloodstock for €1.7million at the Arqana Arc Sale in 2011. Zelding is kin to the G2 Prix Robert Papin winner and G1 Middle Park S. runner-up Zipping (Ire) (Zafonic) and the G3 Prix du Petit Couvert scorer Nipping (Ire) (Night Shift), with this family also featuring the GI Breeders’ Cup Mile hero and leading sire Last Tycoon (Ire) (Try My Best), the G1 Prix Jacques le Marois and G1 Coronation S. heroine Immortal Verse (Ire) (Pivotal {GB}) and the G1 Poule d’Essai des Pouliches heroine Valentine Waltz (Ire) (Be My Guest). Beauty Is Truth is one of Galileo’s permanent dates and her 2-year-old full-sister to the winner is named Salsa (Ire). Her yearling is again a filly.

Sunday, Newmarket, Britain
QIPCO 1000 GUINEAS S.-G1, £500,000, Newmarket, 5-5, 3yo, f, 8fT, 1:36.89, gd.
1–HERMOSA (IRE), 126, f, 3, by Galileo (Ire)
1st Dam: Beauty Is Truth (Ire) (MGSW-Fr, $226,426), by Pivotal (GB)
2nd Dam: Zelding (Ire), by Warning (GB)
3rd Dam: Zelda (Ire), by Caerleon
1ST GROUP 1 WIN. O-Michael Tabor, Derrick Smith & Susan Magnier; B-Beauty Is Truth Syndicate (IRE); T-Aidan O’Brien; J-Wayne Lordan. £283,550. Lifetime Record: GSW & G1SP-Ire, G1SP-Fr, 8-3-2-1, $678,588. *Full to Hydrangea (Ire), G1SW-Eng & Ire, G1SP-Fr, $1,313,667; and The United States (Ire), G1SW-Aus & GSW-Ire, $1,684,244; and 1/2 to Fire Lily (Ire) (Dansili {GB}), Hwt. 3yo-Ire at 5-7f, MGSW & G1SP-Ire, G1SP-Fr & GSP-Eng, $412,541. Werk Nick Rating: A+++ *Triple Plus*. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Lady Kaya (Ire), 126, f, 3, Dandy Man (Ire)–Kayak (GB), by Singspiel (Ire). (€15,000 Wlg ’16 GOFNOV; €12,000 RNA Ylg ’17 TIRSEP). O-Joanne Lavery; B-John O’Connor (IRE); T-Sheila Lavery. £107,500.
3–Qabala, 126, f, 3, Scat Daddy–Entwine, by Empire Maker. ($300,000 Wlg ’16 FTKNOV). O-HH Sheikh Mohammed bin Khalifa Al Thani; B-Eutrophia Farm (KY); T-Roger Varian. £53,800.
Margins: 1, NK, HD. Odds: 14.00, 11.00, 3.50.
Also Ran: Angel’s Hideaway (Ire), Fairyland (Ire), Just Wonderful, Iconic Choice (GB), Iridessa (Ire), Look Around (GB), Dandhu (GB), Star Terms (GB), Garrel Glen (GB), Mot Juste, Skitter Scatter, Fleeting (Ire). Click for the Racing Post result or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigreeVideo, sponsored by Fasig-Tipton. (fonte : TDN)