27/08/2019. Stakes Double Heads A Winning Weekend For Goffs London Sale – KOREA – Round-Up: Cup & Sprint International Runners / Juvenile Winners / Victoire Injury / Seoul Mile Races

Stakes Double Heads A Winning Weekend For Goffs London Sale
 
David Simcock signs for sale topper Mohican Heights 
Goffs London Sale in association with QIPCO has enjoyed a number of black type winners in recent days.  On Friday the 2019 sale topper Mohican Heights won the Listed Irish Champions Weekend Stonehenge Stakes at Salisbury by two lengths in the colours of Qatar Racing.  The David Simcock trained Australia colt was purchased from Thomastown Castle in Kensington Palace Gardens in June for £520,000, and set the tone for a weekend of winners from the London Sale.
Alastair Donald purchaser of Shine So Bright at the London Sale
Shine So Bright was victorious in the Group 2 City Of York Stakes at York on Saturday for King Power Racing and Andrew Balding in a battle for the finish with Goffs UK graduate Laurens who came close second. Bred by Kirsten Rausing’s Lanwades Stud, this bright prospect was purchased by SackvilleDonald for £375,000 from Spigot Lodge Stables and owners Theresa Burns and Martin McHale at the Goffs London Sale 2018.
Matt Houldsworth signs the docket for Le Don De Vie 
The Hughie Morrison trained Le Don De Vie concluded the winning weekend, taking the Ladbrokes Handicap at Goodwood yesterday.  Le Don De Vie was bought by Howson, Houldsworth and Group 1 Bloodstock for £460,000 on behalf of owner Aziz Kheir earlier this summer at the London Sale where he was consigned by Kingsclere Racing.
 
Goffs’ next boutique Horses In Training Sale is the Goffs Champions Sale which takes place as the opening event of Longines Irish Champions Weekend on Saturday 14 September at Leopardstown. 
 
 
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KOREA - Round-Up: Cup & Sprint International Runners / Juvenile Winners / Victoire Injury / Seoul Mile Races

by gyongmaman

It was an eventful weekend of racing in Korea both on and off the track. First up, the selected International Runners for September 8th’s Keeneland Korea Cup & Sprint were announced:

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The ongoing trade dispute between Korea and Japan which has escalated into a full-blown diplomatic crisis over the past few weeks meant that Japan-trained horses were unable to be invited. This is somewhat of a blow to the event as Japanese horses bring high ratings to a race (organizers had spent some months pursuing one Japanese sprinter in particular who would have brought plenty of star power with him) which would have expected to have been IG3 this year but will now most likely have to wait at least another year before achieving that status.

On the other hand it leaves both races wide open and the USA is bringing a strong challenge for both races with Lone Sailor among those entered in the Cup and the mare Holy Legal in the Sprint. Hong Kong also have a horse in each race in the shape of Glorious Artist and Ugly Warrior.

Accepted Korean entries will be announced later this week with Dolkong expected to be among them in the Cup. However, he is set to be without new regular jockey Johan Victoire. Victoire, who was also expected to partner French raider Bakoel Koffie in the Sprint, suffered a heavy fall in Sunday’s race 7 at Seoul.

Johan Victoire

Victoire was riding Dolkong’s stablemate Jjang Kongwhen favourite Cheungdam Genie crossed in front of him on the corner leaving Jjang Kong with nowhere to go and Victoire unseated. He was taken to hospital for observation with a suspected broken shoulder and will undergo further tests on Monday.

It’s a big blow for the 32-year-old who has ridden 112 winners in just over two years riding in Korea. He gained his first local Group win on Dolkong in the Busan Mayor’s Cup. Cheungdam Genie, who finished 2nd in the race was disqualified and jockey Lee Hyeon Jong banned for three meetings for careless riding.

That incident overshadowed what was the first of two races over the new Mile distance at Seoul on Sunday. That race was won by last year’s Korean Oaks winner Special Stone while the second of them, another class 2 handicap, went to the returning Thunder Blade.

Feature races of the day at both Seoul and Busan were valuable juvenile events over 1200M. At Busan, Save The World (Menifee-Royal Scene) ran out a six-length winner while up in Seoul, Choegang Team (Old Fashioned-Sellsey) was similarly impressive. Both are unbeaten after two starts apiece with their next big tests likely to come in October.