DOMENICA 24 GENNAIO 2016 Italians all’estero. Sei vittorie in due giorni per Demurone (16), anche Dario Vargiu in Giappone. Gli italiani in Francia, poi Hero Look np ad HK, Roccia D’Oro quarto a Gulfstream
Djakadam: general 7-2 favourite for the Timico Cheltenham Gold Cup
PICTURE: Patrick McCann (racingpost.com/photos
Mullins attention turns to Djakadam in trial
AFTER Un De Sceaux and Faugheen passed tests of their credentials for Cheltenham’s championship races with flying colours, stable focus switches to Djakadam on Saturday with the Timico Gold Cup favourite going on trial for jump racing’s most coveted prize.
Djakadam, who scored impressively on his only start of the season in the Grade 1 John Durkan Memorial Chase, has been confirmed by connections for the BetBright Trial Chase at Cheltenham, where his potential rivals include last year’s winner Many Clouds and Hennessy Gold Cup hero Smad Place.
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Last season’s Gold Cup runner-up is a general 7-2 favourite to go one better in March with Willie Mullins-trained stablemates Don Poli and Vautour also high up the list in a tight market.
Rebecca Curtis has signalled her intention to send out 2014 RSA Chase winner O’Faolains Boy on Saturday and also entered fellow festival scorer Irish Cavalier, while Paul Nicholls could similarly be double-handed with Rocky Creek and Sam Winner.
The race is run over an extended 3m1f, a distance just short of the Gold Cup trip, and has proved a decent guide in the past with Looks Like Trouble in 2000 the most recent of four horses to have completed the double.
Djakadam is a 2-5 shot for the BetBright Trial Chase and the main supporting contest on Cheltenham’s trials day comes in the shape of the galliardhomes.com Cleeve Hurdle but that Grade 2 and the JCB Triumph Hurdle Trial have been reopened until Tuesday.
Cheltenham plan for Shantou Village
Neil Mulholland has entered Shantou Village in the Neptune trial, as well as the Albert Bartlett trial on the same day at Doncaster.
Shantou Village (left): set to run at Cheltenham on Saturday
PICTURE: Edward Whitaker (racingpost.com/photos)
“He’s in two races on Saturday but the intention is to go to Cheltenham,” the trainer said on At The Races. “The idea of going there is to test out the trip as we know he stays the three-mile trip for his pointing days.
“His win at Cheltenham was very good and the plan has always been to go back for trials day and then to the festival.
“He has improved and got stronger since November and the more time we can give him the better he’s going to be.”
Ziga Boy favourite for Sky Bet Chase
The feature race at Doncaster’s fixture, the £80,000 Sky Bet Chase, has attracted 22 confirmations with Holywell heading the weights and BetBright Trial Chase possibles Rocky Creek and Irish Cavalier also entered.
Ziga Boy has been made 7-1 favourite with the sponsors with Buywise next best at 8-1 and Le Mercurey joining Holywell at 10-1.
Mullins has a whole host of entries on the Doncaster undercard, including three in the OLBG.com Mares’ Hurdle – Morning Run, Petite Parisienne and Whiteout – as well as the likes of Shaneshill (Lightning Novices’ Chase) and Up For Review (Albert Bartlett Novices’ Hurdle).
Betbright Trial Chase
William Hill 2-5 Djakadam; 6-1 Many Clouds, Smad Place; 7-1 O’Faolains Boy; 12-1 Sam Winner, Wakanda; 25-1 Irish Cavalier, Rocky Creek, The Giant Bolster; 40-1 bar
Skybet Chase
William Hill 8-1 Buywise, Holywell, Ziga Boy; 10-1 Irish Cavalier; 12-1 Annacotty, Coologue, Le Mercurey; 14-1 Aachen, Audacious Plan, Doing Fine, Dolatulo, Pass The Hat; 16-1 Black Thunder, Court By Surprise, Double Ross, Ikorodu Road, Le Reve, No Planning, Rocky Creek; 20-1 bar
Karaka Sales In New Zealand
Signboards highlighting the success of New Zealand-bred horses worldwide are a common sight at the beautiful Karaka sales complex, a comfortable 30-minute drive from Auckland’s central business district. And there is plenty to shout about this year, with the sale coming only three months after Prince Of Penzance, a Kiwi long-shot, came up trumps in the G1 Emirates Melbourne Cup at Flemington to give Michelle Payne the honour of becoming the first female jockey to win Australia’s iconic race.
In the ‘old days,’ New Zealand-bred horses were always the ones to follow in the G1 Melbourne Cup. They had the old-fashioned bloodlines, laden with stamina, that were used so effectively to brush Aussie stayers aside in the final stages of the race.
The emergence of the European imports over the past 20 years suddenly pushed the Kiwis into the background. But Prince Of Penzance has reversed that trend. By Pentire, and bred by John Thompson’s Rich Hill Stud Farm in partnership with Katsumi Yoshida, of Northern Farm, Japan, he has ensured that the New Zealand stayer is back in fashion.
It is against this backdrop that New Zealand’s 90th National Yearling Sale will be conducted this week, starting Monday, 25th January. Many with the profiles of future Cup winners, not to mention G1 Cox Plate and G1 Emirates Stakes winners, are among the 1,378 lots in the three books assembled by New Zealand Bloodstock.
The Premier Sale takes place on Monday and Tuesday, the Select Sale on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, while the Festival Sale is scheduled for Sunday.
Prince Of Penzance sold at the 2011 Premier Sale for NZ$50,000.
Rule of thumb, these are the horses who should dominate the middle-distance and staying contests in Australasia in future years, while Sydney’s two Inglis-run sales (in February and April) are a regular source of early-coming two-year-olds and sprinters. But that is just the theory. In practice, anything can happen.
Two years ago, a colt by Tavistock, went through the ring at the Select Sale for NZ$45,000. Trained by Mick Price, and later named Tarzino, he bolted in with the G1 Victoria Derby at Flemington last November.
No surprise then that his brother, a handsome brown colt, appears in this year’s Premier (1st) Book, and looks certain to bring three to four times the amount paid for his sibling. That is the nature of horse sales. Quite often, a new elite family can be sparked by the performances of one horse, and sometimes a famous old bloodline can be re-vitalised by one specific mating.
Frankel, who retired unbeaten in October 2012, is still making headlines, even here in New Zealand. Lot 445 is a bay colt offered by Pencarrow Stud, Cambridge, by Frankel out of a Zabeel mare, who is from one of New Zealand’s blue-blooded families that includes Romani Conti, Darci Brahma and G1 Melbourne Cup winner Ethereal.
Then there is Lot 113, a pure white (in colour) filly by High Chaparral out of The Opera House. The novelty value is high with this one, but she has outstanding conformation and temperament, according to her handlers.
How successful will the Karaka Sale be? Mike Moran, of Windsor Park, said: “Inspections are up on last year, and it looks like a good turnout. So, hopefully, it will be a good buyers’ bench.
“Sales at the Gold Coast were very good, but that doesn’t always translate to Karaka. But New Zealand Bloodstock seem to have the right people here, so hopefully it will be good. We have some fantastic lots to sell,” he added.
fonte : Godolphin