Tag Archive for: Al Riffa

From Los Angeles to Paris – O’Brien has designs on another Arc

Los Angeles leads Aidan O’Brien’s bid for a third victory in the Qatar Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe at ParisLongchamp on Sunday.

Third in the Derby to illustrious stablemate City Of Troy and winner of the Irish version at the Curragh later the same month, he then won the Great Voltigeur with a penalty.

Los Angeles was dropped back in trip for the Irish Champion Stakes next and finished well for fourth when a length and a quarter behind William Haggas’ Economics.

That run sealed O’Brien’s decision to send him to Paris, with the St Leger at Doncaster left for his stablemates to contest in his absence, although the prospect of soft ground meant stablemate Auguste Rodin stayed at home.

Speaking after watching Illinois win the first Group race of the weekend O’Brien – whose two Arcs have come with Dylan Thomas (2007) and Found (2016) said: “The ground is plenty soft – it’s plenty slow with a lot of moisture in it.

“When we landed I was kind of half-sorry for taking out Auguste Rodin, but when I walked out on the track I’d say it was yielding Irish ground/good to soft English ground. Ryan (Moore) says it’s plenty soft and he was very happy that it was the right thing.

“Los Angeles and Continuous shouldn’t mind it. Los Angeles is in good form and everything has gone well with him since last run.

“We’ve been very happy with Los Angeles since the Irish Champion Stakes. We were hoping if he finished in the first four that would be good enough to run in the Arc and that’s what he did.

Los Angeles (right) winning the Great Voltigeur Stakes
Los Angeles (right) winning the Great Voltigeur Stakes (Mike Egerton/PA)

“After the Irish Derby we knew Los Angeles could be a Leger horse, but we had other horses for that as well so we started to think of the Arc then.

“We went to York to get a run into him when he won with a penalty over a mile and a half and we came back to a mile and a quarter after that. It’s been the plan for a long time with him.”

O’Brien also runs Continuous, who will be the mount of Christophe Soumillon after horse and jockey teamed up to finish third in the Prix Foy over course and distance last time out.

He added of his other runner, who was fifth in 2023: “Continuous is the same, the last day wasn’t ideal as he would have preferred not to make the running, but it was only a trial and he needed that race and he’ll be better taking his time.

“We’ve trained him with an autumn campaign in mind. Last year it was a slowly-run race but we were happy with his run, we always had it in mind that he would be better this year and hopefully prepare better for the race.”

Al Riffa at the Curragh
Al Riffa at the Curragh (Lorraine O’Sullivan/PA)

O’Brien’s son Joseph will saddle Al Riffa, a son of Wootton Bassett who was runner-up behind City Of Troy in the Eclipse and then won the Group One Grosser Preis von Berlin by five lengths at Hoppegarten last time out when stepping up to the Arc trip.

“I was very proud of the performance in Germany and I have always thought, with the extra distance, he really did look like he was better for it,” said O’Brien, whose colt will be ridden by Japanese great Yutaka Take.

“This race has always been a good prep race for the Arc and we thought that it was good for him to go there as a fresh horse. He is versatile in terms of the going.

“He had a busy first half of the season and that is why we made the decision after Germany to keep him fresh. It is no bad thing to have had a run at Longchamp, but it will be a completely different experience in the Arc.

“The Arc is one of the biggest races in the world and it is special just to have a runner in it with a live chance.

“We are looking forward to it and we are going to enjoy the race and the whole experience. If we were lucky enough to win it, it would be right up there with anything I have done before.”

Bluestocking was supplemented by Juddmonte
Bluestocking was supplemented by Juddmonte (Mike Egerton/PA)

Bluestocking, trained by Ralph Beckett, was a supplementary entry after winning the Prix Vermeille last time out.

Barry Mahon, European racing manager for owners Juddmonte, said: “She produced a career-best in the Vermeille and she was tough and gutsy and I think she likes a little bit of ease in the ground.

“She also likes to get into a battle and she had all of that the last day and it was a great performance.

“We’re hoping it will be third time lucky, it is the third year in a row ourselves and Ralph will have been to the Arc, twice with Westover and now with Bluestocking, so hopefully we get lucky.”

It is no secret the Arc is greatly revered by the Japanese and this year their hopes are pinned to Shin Emperor, who made his first start in Europe when a gallant third in the Irish Champion Stakes.

Shin Emperor (left) in the Irish Champion Stakes at Leopardstown
Shin Emperor (left) in the Irish Champion Stakes at Leopardstown (Healy Racing/PA)

Trainer Yoshito Yahagi said: “He was not yet in his top form when he was in Ireland and I thought that race was going to be very hard, so when he finished third we were very encouraged by that run.

“Because the ground in Ireland was all right, the horse didn’t actually have a very tough race and was not too tired afterwards. Since then we haven’t been excessive in either way, he hasn’t had a lot of work and he hasn’t been completely off work.

“It looks very open, but there are many good horses in there. I can’t really pick out one horse who I fear as an opponent, they are all very good horses and you have to have some luck in running to win this race.”

French-born David Menuisier will be represented by Sunway, third in the St Leger and the runner-up of the Irish Derby in June.

“We’d been mulling over with (co-owner) Guy Pariente whether to go for the Arc, and it seems to be the case of now or never,” the Pulborough-based handler said. “Especially as the horse is flying at the moment having been in good form all year. There’s no reason not to go for the Arc.

“Sunway deserves to take his chance and he goes there with a fighting chance of being in the money, and the colt also has every right to win the race. He finished very close to a horse of the calibre of Los Angeles and he will be ridden by Oisin Murphy.

“He is one of the toughest horses I have ever trained, and he never stops giving his best.”



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Japanese support growing ahead of Al Riffa’s Arc date

Joseph O’Brien is appreciative of all the support he has received from Japan as Al Riffa prepares to tackle the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe.

So far Europe’s richest middle-distance prize has eluded Japanese raiders, with both Nakayama Festa (2010) and Orfevre (2012 and 2013) both silver medallists in recent years and Through Seven Seas fourth behind Ace Impact 12 months ago.

This year it is Irish Champion Stakes third Shin Emperor who will primarily carry Japanese hopes, but O’Brien’s four-year-old has a distinct connection with Masaaki Matsushima part of the ownership and decorated Japanese jockey Yutaka Take taking the ride.

O’Brien finished no better than fifth in the Arc during his career in the saddle, but hopes improve on that with Al Riffa, in what he regards “as big a race as there is anywhere in the world”.

Trainer Joseph O’Brien dreams of winning the Arc with Al Riffa
Trainer Joseph O’Brien dreams of winning the Arc with Al Riffa (Niall Carson/PA)

“We have definitely had lots of well wishes from Japan and especially on social media we’ve had plenty of messages wishing us luck,” said O’Brien.

“It’s a pleasure to have the support of plenty of Japanese racing fans and hopefully we can do them proud at the weekend.

“It’s as big a race as there is anywhere in the world and it would rank right at the top as good as any if we could win it. I’m very happy to be going there with a live chance and hopefully the horse does us proud.”

Al Riffa’s big-race pilot Take is no stranger to riding in the ParisLongchamp feature and has visited O’Brien’s Owning Hill base to put the son of Wootton Bassett through his paces.

O’Brien continued: “Take is a legendary jockey with lots of experience riding in the Arc. He came to Ireland to sit on the horse last week and they seemed to have a very good relationship.

“It’s a real pleasure for me to have Yutaka riding Al Riffa and we have really felt the good wishes from all of Japan since their involvement in the horse. It’s special.”

Al Riffa is as short as 8-1 for Arc glory following his five-length success in the Grosser Preis von Berlin in August.

That was just his second Group One victory, but he has long been a consistent operator at the higher levels and his handler hopes he can follow in the footsteps of Danedream, who won the Hoppegarten event in 2011 before striking in the French capital.

“I think it is probably fair to say he has been slightly underrated,” added O’Brien.

“Even though he has won two Group Ones he has also ran some outstanding races and, to be quite honest, has run quite well almost every time.

“I think since Germany everybody has appreciated him and he has been spoken about as a live contender for the Arc, so that is really great for the horse and I’m proud to have a horse like him.

“To win a race like the Arc would be so special but we’re just hoping to run a good race, be competitive and then we’ll see what will happen on the day.”

Al Riffa has showcased his skills in a variety of conditions, leaving connections feeling at ease heading into the weekend’s showpiece contest.

O’Brien said: “Soft ground isn’t a disadvantage. He has handled a variety of conditions well in the past.

“When he was behind Ace Impact last year (at Deauville) it was pretty firm, but when he won his Group One as a two-year-old it was quite soft.

“We always thought he was a horse that would suit the Arc as he had the speed to run over shorter distances and he had lots of stamina in his pedigree.

“So we always thought potentially he was a horse for this, it’s been in the back of our mind for some time.”



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Monday Musings: Fours, and All Sorts

With more than a week to go before the next big thing, York’s Ebor meeting, It may be a suitable time for a little quantity over quality, writes Tony Stafford. For Iain Jardine, whose week had brought a tragic note with the passing of his barn manager John McPherson, 54, found on Thursday morning after dying in his sleep, it ended on a much happier note.

Runners from the Jardine yard took the 70 miles or so ride up the west coast of Scotland from the Borders to Ayr and clocked up four consecutive winners. Not the least surprising were the prices and that there were three tight photo-finishes.

Jardine kicked off with 7/2 shot Parisiac by a head; followed with the only clear scorer, 16/1 outsider Can’t Stop Now; with Giselles Issy (12/1) completing the hat-trick by a neck. The four-timer, amounting to 5,468/1, was completed with another head finish by 9/2 Jonny Concrete. This is one achievement that will indeed be set in stone.

That brought Jardine to 40 wins for the season, more than two-thirds of the way to his career-best of 58 in an always upwardly mobile career which began only in 2011.

Jardine’s was not the only Saturday four-timer, but in the case of championship-leading Oisin Murphy, his quartet at Newmarket illustrated why he is unbackable to win a fourth career title.

Winners count towards the jockeys’ title only from May 4, the start of the Guineas meeting at Newmarket. In 98 days therefore, Oisin has already passed 100 (101) and can add (but nobody bothers about that) 46 clocked up in the first four months of the campaign.

That puts him a mere 122 behind the record of Gordon Richards (later Sir) set in 1947 when the sport was just getting going after the Second World War and Richards had the benefit of compliant starters under the old gate start. They always made sure Gordon was ready!

Unlike in Gordon’s day, getting to the races has been eased by motorway travel and, for the top boys, small planes or helicopters to get the likes of Ryan Moore, William Buick and no doubt Murphy home safe and quickly.

At the same time, the ruling that stopped double meetings might have reduced the potential for racking up the wins in the summer when the fields tend to thin out.

That’s all well and good, but rather than stick around to mop up the all-weather opportunities after November 4 when the flat season ends at Doncaster, the named trio will be off far and wide in search of the riches available in those countries. That's in contrast to the UK, racing here held in thrall by the bookmakers and racecourses whose strangling effect has been evident by yet another Levy shortfall and the missing millions from media rights payments that never find their way to a race purse.

But I wonder. Those riches will still be available after the turn of the year to Murphy, who is already virtually assured of a fourth title to go with the three he collected from 2019 to 2021 before his ban. He’s 36 clear of Rossa Ryan who also continues to thrive despite last year’s break up from the poisoned chalice that is retained rider for Amo Racing. Maybe David Egan and his calm personality can outlive the previous incumbents in that position.

No, I would like to see Oisin stay for the winter. There hasn’t been a Triple Crown winner in the UK since Nijinsky in 1970. How sweet would it be for Oisin to exceed Sir Gordon's 269 and break a record set the year after I was born. Blimey, when you think of it like that!

So, say he stays, just taking four days off for the Breeders’ Cup and one or two more for overseas spectaculars like Irish Champions' Weekend. Then he would only need to maintain the present rate of progress to collect the 123 wins he needs.

Somebody should step in to sponsor it – no doubt a bookie like Fred Done (Betfred) or Bet Victor – and publicise it with a daily update on his progress towards this record which has seemed an impossibility for much of the time since Lester Piggott was the successor to Richards.

*

Racing In South Africa might have been regarded as a backwater for a long time but efforts to redevelop it and the removal of the ban on importing horses from South Africa to Europe has given it a massive shot in the arm in the season which ended last month.

I keep in touch via a regular look at the well-regarded five times weekly Turf Talk newsletter and was able to tell William Knight before his horse Holkham Bay won at Ascot on Saturday that his South African lady jockey Rachel Venniker was very talented.

The last few months, until season's end, Turf Talk had a daily Richard Fourie barometer as the leading jockey approached and then galloped past the previous record of 335 wins in a season on June 8. He eased off a shade but still stretched to 377 by the end of last month.

Looking at his stats on the At the Races site, Oisin Murphy’s strike-rate looks almost pedestrian. Fourie over the past 12 months has won 276 races on turf and another 106 on all-weather surfaces, so in all 382 – 115 better than Gordon’s best.

Just why nobody has thought to recruit rampant Richard for a spell riding over here, I don’t know. He wouldn’t be the first South African rider to do well, Michael (Muis) Roberts won our title in 1992 and is now a successful trainer back home. I’ve told the tale before, but Roberts and I shared flights travelling to, I think, three tracks in one day.

Getting off the small plane to go to Leicester, he nimbly stepped out. By the time I’d followed him, Neil, the pilot was already on the move, and the rear fin knocked me over with a right bang. The bruise was there as evidence for a good few days!

Returning to Fourie, it's probably more likely that he could become another South African to test his skills in Hong Kong.

*

The phrase plus ca change, plus la meme chose [roughly, 'the more things change, the more they stay the same'] doesn’t seem to apply to life in the mid-2020s. Long-held ideas on behaviour and respect seem to have gone out the window in the UK and last week's riots came as a shock to everyone that had been expecting something much more likely to ruin Paris’s Olympic Games.

They, though, have gone along famously well and the home crowds have shown that there is a place for patriotic support without its boiling over into violence.

For the regulars in the Newmarket owners’ room, last Saturday was a very sad occasion and one where change will certainly not be la meme chose, but very different. We (I’ve plenty of friends who get me owner’s badges) who regularly attend have marvelled at the ultra-professional Lynda Burton as she runs the lunchroom with welcoming efficiency, never seeming to get slower than a fast canter as she attends to the inevitable issues that crop up.

In times when catering staff can be at either end of the acceptable spectrum, she has gathered some excellent colleagues, so it was a shock to hear that owing to an “unpleasantness”, as she described it, Lynda had decided to resign forthwith.

I’ve known her for 15 years from when she was running the Goodwood owners’ room, before she transferred to Newmarket. It has been very demanding, travelling so often from her home in the West Country and now, with a grandchild and as her husband has retired, Lynda is reserving her considerable energies for closer to home.

Judging by the bouquets of flowers and other examples of gratitude for the past years’ efforts, I’m clearly not the only one to rue her departure. Her shoes will not be easy to fill. Good luck Newmarket!

At Goodwood I had a great reunion with a friend who around two decades ago asked me if I would introduce him to Sir Henry Cecil. Gerhard Schoeningh, a German based in London where he worked in finance, wished to ask Henry whether he would be prepared to train his home-bred horses, mostly stayers.

Among the best he sent to the master trainer were Brisk Breeze and Templestern, but he says that when Henry died, he failed to find another trainer to suit him. Instead, he bought a racecourse, Hoppegarten in Berlin, and over time he has lovingly improved and restored it.

I asked how it’s gone. He said: “It’s getting better and better every year. This year, I hope we can break even!”

Yesterday, he staged his most valuable and important race, the €100k to the winner 134th running of the Grosser Preis von Berlin (Group 1). He was still trying to recruit supplementary entries for the race at the time and his negotiations with Joseph O’Brien bore fruit with Al Riffa, the excellent runner-up to City Of Troy in the Coral-Eclipse Stakes at Sandown Park last month, lining up.

Ridden by Dylan Browne McMonagle, Al Riffa started the 3/5 favourite and won by five lengths. Gerhart has asked me to try to come over either in October or next spring. I’ve never been to Germany, but you know, I might take him up on it.

- TS



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Al Riffa books ticket to the Arc with Group One strike in Germany

Al Riffa put himself firmly in the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe picture when proving he stays a mile and a half with a dominant win in the Group One Westminster 134th Grosser Preis von Berlin.

Having chased home City Of Troy in the Coral-Eclipse at Sandown last month, Joseph O’Brien’s four-year-old was trying this trip for the first time at Hoppegarten.

Dylan Browne McMonagle tracked the front-running Tunnes and Lips Prince in the early stages of the contest, but then loomed up alongside the former and asked his mount to kick on around two furlongs from home.

Al Riffa responded emphatically to that request and quickly put daylight between him and the rest of the field.

Despite only being pushed out with hands and heels in the closing stages, the four-year-old kept on strongly all the way through the finishing line and scored by five lengths from the staying-on Narrativo.

Charlie Appleby’s King Of Conquest was chasing a hat-trick following Listed-class wins at Goodwood and Newmarket but never threatened to trouble the judge and came home last of the seven runners.

O’Brien told Wettstar: “It’s been a wonderful day here today and Al Riffa put up a really good performance and we’re really proud of him. Dylan gave the horse a fantastic ride and we’ve had a great day.

“He’s had quite a busy season so far; he’s raced in France, the UK, America and now also he’s raced in Germany.

“So I think he will have a little rest and probably then he will be prepared for the Prix de l’Arc.”

It was a second Group One success for the son of Wootton Bassett, who struck at elite level as a juvenile in the National Stakes at the Curragh but had not tasted victory since.

Paddy Power responded to his win in Germany by cutting Al Riffa from 20-1 to 14s for Arc glory.



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Al Riffa on trial for Arc when stepping up in trip at Hoppegarten

Al Riffa could pave the way for a tilt at the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe when he heads to Germany for the Westminster 134th Grosser Preis von Berlin on Sunday.

Despite not tasting victory since landing the Group One National Stakes as a two-year-old, Joseph O’Brien’s son of Wootton Bassett has been a regular in elite company and showcased his talent when a gallant second to City Of Troy in the Coral-Eclipse last month.

He will now try a mile and a half for the first time at Hoppegarten, with connections eyeing a shot at Europe’s richest middle-distance prize in early October.

A bold showing at Hoppegarten could ignite Parisian dreams for the Al Riffa team, with the mid-summer visit to the German capital possibly the only stop en route to ParisLongchamp in the autumn.

“It’s the plan (to go to Germany) and he’s been in good shape since the Eclipse,” said O’Brien.

“It will be his first try at a mile and a half but we think that will suit him and he’s been given a nice draw. It would be great if he could be competitive in another Group One.

“I think we’re taking it race-by-race but potentially he could roll straight into the Arc from here.”



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Joseph O’Brien working back from the Arc with Al Riffa

Joseph O’Brien is targeting a successful autumn with Al Riffa following his brave Coral-Eclipse second to City Of Troy, with peaking in the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe the main objective for the rest of the season.

The four-year-old, who was a Group One winner at two, momentarily gave the Derby hero something to think about in the closing stages at Sandown, beaten only a length in the hands of Dylan Browne McMonagle.

He is now being freshened up to return in the autumn, where sights are firmly locked on reaching ParisLongchamp on October 3 for a shot at Europe’s richest middle-distance prize.

His route to the French capital is still to be decided, but connections are hopeful the son of Wootton Bassett can make his mark in the second half of the season.

“It was a great run, he ran a fantastic race,” said O’Brien.

“He’s pulled up well and we’re looking forward to an autumn campaign for him now, excited about what the rest of the season has in stall for him, hopefully.

“The Arc would be the plan. We have a few ideas how we get there, but nothing has been finalised yet. We will see how the horse feels and then lock in our targets from there.”



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Al Riffa Arc-bound after admirable second in Coral-Eclipse

Joseph O’Brien is targeting the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe with Al Riffa after momentarily threatening to spoil his father’s party in the Coral-Eclipse at Sandown.

A Group One winner at two, the son of Wootton Bassett has proved a consistent performer over the years and having bounced out of a recent trip to America in top form, was routed to Esher by connections to take on the might of City Of Troy.

With a furlong to run, the momentum belonged to the four-year-old as Dylan Browne McMonagle in the saddle asked his mount for every ounce of effort available.

Although briefly threatening to move upsides Aidan O’Brien’s Derby hero inside the closing furlong, Al Riffa was ultimately unable to bridge the one-length advantage City Of Troy held at the finish.

His Owning Hill handler was delighted with the performance and his campaign will now be geared around a step up in trip and a tilt at Europe’s richest middle-distance prize at ParisLongchamp in early October.

O’Brien said: “I think we all thought for a moment he was going to make it interesting and he did. I’m very proud of him.

“It was a fantastic run from a top horse and it is the first time he has had a bit of juice in the ground since the National Stakes (in 2022).

“We’ll probably make the rest of the season all about the Arc, which will be his main target.

“We came here a bit soon after America. Things didn’t go our way in America but it was worth a chance and we decided to come here from there and in fairness to the horse we have kind of rushed him back a little bit.

“He’s vindicated the decision to run and we won’t rush him now, we will prepare for the Arc.

“He should enjoy the mile and a half as his family is all stamina. It looked like mile and a half will suit him on his run today. He hasn’t tried a mile and a half yet but I think he will be better.”

It was Clive Cox’s Ghostwriter who first broke cover to duel with City Of Troy and after running with credit on testing ground in the French Derby before this, his handler is yet again desperate to see the son of Invincible Spirit on a sounder surface.

Ghostwriter winning at Newmarket as a two-year-old
Ghostwriter winning at Newmarket as a two-year-old (Tim Goode/PA)

Cox said: “I am over the moon. It was a tremendous performance bar being beat and he has run with full credit. We are all very proud of him and he has tried very hard.

“We would appreciate slightly drier ground but I am not making any excuses as he has still run a very solid race.

“I think a mile and a quarter is a perfect for him and Richard (Kingscote) agrees. He is in the Juddmonte and that is a track (York) that I think he would enjoy.”



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Back-to-form Al Riffa one of those looking to sack City Of Troy

Joseph O’Brien will attempt to spoil the party when Al Riffa takes on the mighty City Of Troy in the Coral-Eclipse.

Aidan O’Brien is searching for a record-extending eighth victory in the Sandown feature with his all-conquering Derby hero, but his son, who finished second in the race aboard his father’s Declaration Of War in 2013, now hopes to go one better with his first Eclipse starter as a trainer.

A Group One winner at two, Al Riffa has failed to add to his juvenile success despite pushing the Arc-winning Ace Impact close at three and also shaping with promise this term.

The son of Wootton Bassett was poised for a step up in trip following his most recent run at Saratoga, but has impressed connections since returning from the US, with a rethink seeing the four-year-old rerouted to this high-class 10-furlong event.

Al Riffa will be Joseph O’Brien's first runner in the Eclipse
Al Riffa will be Joseph O’Brien’s first runner in the Eclipse (Niall Carson/PA)

“He’s in very good form since America, originally it wasn’t our intention to come here, but he’s been very well since Saratoga,” said O’Brien.

“It looks like a competitive renewal of the race with a few unexposed ones in there, but we hope we can mix it with them. We will just ride our own race and get a nice set-up for our horse.

“He ran really well in the Prix Ganay and even in America the last day he ran much better than the finishing position would suggest, so we are excited about the horse for the season ahead and hopefully he can keep taking forward steps.”

Al Riffa’s participation has led to Kieran Shoemark picking up the spare ride aboard Roger Teal’s Dancing Gemini, replacing Dylan Browne McMonagle.

Dancing Gemini at Epsom ahead of the Derby
Dancing Gemini at Epsom ahead of the Derby (Bradley Collyer/PA)

The son of Camelot has already clashed with City Of Troy once this season, with eight and a quarter lengths separating the pair in the Derby.

However, Teal is hopeful a drop back to 10 furlongs can help bridge the gap between the Epsom winner and his French 2000 Guineas runner-up.

“He’s been very good, everything has gone nicely. We’ve just been ticking him over, really, and everything’s gone according to plan,” said Teal.

“He didn’t disgrace us at all (in the Derby). We’d have wanted a better trip round ideally, we were a long way back and then ended up going wide on the turn in and scrimmaging for a position.

Trainer Roger Teal has enormous faith in Dancing Gemini
Trainer Roger Teal has enormous faith in Dancing Gemini (John Walton/PA)

“He ended up coming wide on dead ground from the day before so it wasn’t ideal, but taking that into consideration, he ran a blinder.

“The track will probably be more up his street and coming back a few furlongs won’t hurt him at all, everything seems to be a lot better suited to him.

“We deliberately missed Ascot to keep him fresh for this. Ascot comes pretty quick after Epsom and we knew we were going to have a battle at Epsom whatever happened.

“We decided before we ran there that we would keep our powder dry for the Eclipse, so hopefully it pays off.”

Ghostwriter winning at Newmarket as a two-year-old
Ghostwriter winning at Newmarket as a two-year-old (Tim Goode/PA)

Owner Jeff Smith is represented by both Clive Cox’s Ghostwriter and Andrew Balding’s See The Fire, but it is the former who will carry the main hopes after two sterling efforts in Classic company this term.

Last year’s Royal Lodge winner was fourth in what has worked out as a red-hot 2000 Guineas on his return to action, while his brave effort to fill the same position in the Prix du Jockey Club has connections craving a return to a sounder surface at the London track.

“His fourth in the Guineas was a commendable effort, and that form has been franked by the Richard Hannon colts Rosallion and Haatem,” said Cox.

“They finished just in front of him at Newmarket and have flown the flag for the Guineas since in Ireland and at Royal Ascot.

“We hoped he’d deal with what we thought would be just slightly easier ground in France, but the times were reflective of proper soft ground and I think it just took a little bit of his punch away from him.

“We are pleased to remain at a mile and a quarter and we are very much looking forward to Saturday. The way he finished off on the rising ground in the Royal Lodge was very pleasing and I see no reason why Sandown won’t suit him.”

Brian Meehan gives Jayarebe the chance to become his second Eclipse winner after registering his second win of the season at Royal Ascot.

It is 18 years since David Junior struck for the Manton handler, but he has an improving colt on his hands in Jayarebe, who is deserving of this move into deep waters after his Hampton Court Stakes triumph.

Jayarebe winning at Royal Ascot
Jayarebe winning at Royal Ascot (David Davies/PA)

Ahead of a key British Champions Series event, Meehan said: “I know they thought King’s Gambit was an unlucky loser at Royal Ascot, but Sean (Levey) committed Jayarebe early and he hit the line strong. We ran a very straightforward race and I don’t think you could say we were lucky winners.

“He’s very progressive and apart from Chester, where he didn’t handle the track, he’s done nothing wrong. He’s very, very good and he’s going to keep improving.”

Reminiscing about his 2006 win, he added: “David Junior was a great horse and won three Group Ones for me. He was very prolific and he’d already won a Champion Stakes and a Dubai Duty Free when he went to Sandown.

“The Champion Stakes and the Eclipse are bucket list races. They are high on everyone’s wish list, so it was great to win them both.”



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Rogue Millennium on course to defend Duke of Cambridge crown

Big-money purchase Rogue Millennium is set to defend her Duke of Cambridge Stakes title when she forms part of Joseph O’Brien’s team for Royal Ascot.

A star performer when trained in the UK by Tom Clover, she edged out Random Harvest by a neck when successful in the one-mile Group Two event at the Royal meeting 12 months ago.

Sold for 1,650,000 guineas at Tattersalls in December, she transferred to Ireland to be trained at Owning Hill on behalf of her new owner Scott Heider.

The daughter of Dubawi was a beaten favourite when making her return in the Curragh’s Lanwades Stud Stakes, but her trainer was encouraged by the performance ahead of her quest for an Ascot repeat.

“I think she will head for the Duke of Cambridge,” said O’Brien.

“She made a lovely reappearance and we’re looking forward to getting her back on track.

“We’re looking forward to the week, it will be great racing and one of the best weeks of the year really.”

Another key member of O’Brien’s Royal Ascot plans is crack two-year-old Cowardofthecounty who made the perfect debut at the Curragh in the spring and could get his trainer’s week off to the perfect start in the opening day’s Coventry Stakes.

Cowardofthecounty impressed on debut
Cowardofthecounty impressed on debut (PA)

The son of Kodi Bear heads to Berkshire with just the one appearance to his name, but is as short as 9-2 favourite with both Paddy Power and Betfred having seen the form of his two-and-a-half-length victory over Aidan O’Brien’s Whistlejacket franked in style by the runner-up in Listed company since.

O’Brien continued: “Cowardofthecounty has had a good preparation since his debut. The plan has always been to come here since then and everything since his debut has gone smoothly.

“He made a really good debut, the form of the race has worked out well and he’s been training really well since then.”

One horse who will not be at the Royal meeting but is on course to still run at Ascot in his next start is international traveller Al Riffa.

Al Riffa has always been a high level performer for Joseph O'Brien
Al Riffa has always been a high level performer for Joseph O’Brien (Lorraine O’Sullivan/PA)

A Group One winning two-year-old, the son of Wootton Bassett has always been a consistent performer and will be pointed towards the King George VI And Queen Elizabeth Stakes at the end of July following his run at Saratoga last weekend, where he was sixth in the Manhattan Stakes over an extended nine furlongs.

“He didn’t get the rub of the green, but he didn’t lose anything in defeat,” said O’Brien of his US performance.

“The track was a bit sharp for him, but he has pulled out of the race well and we look at something like the King George for him now.”



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O’Brien planning American adventure for Al Riffa

Al Riffa will head to America before Joseph O’Brien starts to plot a route towards the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe.

A Group One winner as a juvenile, his three-year-old season was disrupted by injury but he did manage two second place finishes.

He was beaten less than a length into fourth in the Prix Ganay on his reappearance and will now aim for glory in New York.

“Al Riffa is going to Saratoga for the Manhattan Stakes, a Grade One on June 8,” said O’Brien.

“He ran really well in France, his first run back. He was coming there but got a bit tired and the race didn’t set up nicely for him.

“He actually gets a 7lb allowance in America for not winning a Group race last year, so the conditions of the race suit him very well and it’s a lot of money.

“I think he’s going to stay well and we are kind of dreaming he may be an Arc horse, but the aim is to win a Group One first.

“The worry is he’s a big horse and the track might not suit but it’s a $2million race. His other options were the Tattersalls Gold Cup against Auguste Rodin or Royal Ascot and meet whatever there.”

Closer to home, Atlantic Coast will represent the yard in the Tattersalls Irish 2,000 Guineas this weekend.

Atlantic Coast (left) winning the Killavullen Stakes
Atlantic Coast (left) winning the Killavullen Stakes (Damien Eagers/PA)

“Atlantic Coast disappointed in Leopardstown on his first run back but he’s been training good since then. He’ll probably run in the Guineas because it’s a good spot for him,” said O’Brien.

“He could end up in the Jersey at Ascot but I think the Guineas is a good spot for him. He’s a smart colt but the Guineas looks like being a hot race. I think he just got stuck in the mud first time out but he’s a lovely horse.”

Raise You may be eight but after the best part of two years off, he returned with a decent comeback effort recently behind White Birch.

“We took him out to Sydney but it was a bit of a disaster because he got injured and couldn’t run,” explained O’Brien.

“It was a promising run on his comeback because he’d been off the track for 580 days, it was a really good run and he goes back for the Orby Stakes this weekend. He won it a couple of years ago so it should be a nice race for him.”

O’Brien is also building a strong team for Royal Ascot, adding: “Uxmal won at Killarney the other day and he’ll go for the Queen Alexandra because I think that will suit him.

“He could be a Melbourne Cup horse, I thought he won well the other day and he’s done nothing wrong. His form from last year has worked out. He’s a tallish horse and always took time. He got beat in a maiden at Gowran when we thought he’d win but A Piece Of Heaven beat him, then he won his maiden and just got beat in a Listed race in France going up to 106. I thought that looked steep but the horse that beat him did really well in Dubai.

“Nusret goes for the Ascot Stakes. He’s a staying handicapper who likes cover. He might end up in a Galway Hurdle or something as well.

“Stromberg ran well on his first run back behind Donnacha’s horse (Bremen). He’ll probably run in the Gallinule and then go to the Hampton Court at Ascot, that kind of a programme.

“Dawn Rising will head to Ascot. He took a bit of getting fit this year. His first run was only OK but his second run was a lot better. He loves the long distance. He always gets a bit hot, you’d think a guy of his age would know by now but that is just what he does. He’s done it since he was a young horse.”

One horse who O’Brien has especially high hopes for is Galen, who was kept on the sidelines after a very promising debut behind City Of Troy.

“Galen was second in a maiden last year and will have an entry in the Curragh this weekend,” he said.

“He had a bit of a hold up last year but I’ve been waiting for some nice ground. Hopefully he’s a stakes horse going forward, he’s done well over the winter. He’s still a maiden and has to go up through the ranks. We’ll take it slowly with him.”



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Haya Zark belies big odds to claim Prix Ganay glory

Joseph O’Brien’s Irish raider Al Riffa had to make do with an honourable fourth as Haya Zark claimed a surprise victory in the Prix Ganay at ParisLongchamp.

Already a Group One winner in the 2022 National Stakes, Al Riffa was well fancied to double his top-level tally on his first start since pushing subsequent Arc hero Ace Impact close in the Prix Guillaume d’Ornano at Deauville last August.

The four-year-old was delivered with what looked like a winning chance in the home straight by Dylan Browne McMonagle and while his effort petered out inside the final furlong, connections will surely take plenty of encouragement from this first competitive outing in over eight months.

The Adrien Fouassier-trained Haya Zark had previously won three times at Group Three level, most recently landing the Prix Exbury at Saint-Cloud in mid-March.

With Alexis Pouchin deputising in the saddle for the unavailable Christophe Soumillon, the five-year-old son of Zarak moved up to challenge the pacesetting pair of Crypto Force and Zarakem halfway up the straight and found plenty for pressure to see off the challenge of Zarir by a head.

Feed The Flame was close up in third, as was Al Riffa in fourth and Horizon Dore in fifth.

The winner was cut to 33-1 from 66s for this year’s Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe by Betfair and Paddy Power.

O’Brien was pleased with the performance of Al Riffa, telling Sky Sports Racing: “It was a really good run, he’s obviously an older colt and maybe he got just a little bit tired in the last 100 yards, but hopefully it’s an exciting and long season with him.

“We’re really pleased to get him back on track and we’re dreaming about Group Ones with him later in the summer.”

Joseph O'Brien at the Curragh
Joseph O’Brien at the Curragh (Damien Eagers/PA)

The Owning Hill handler did not leave ParisLongchamp without visiting the winner’s enclosure, with Al Riffa’s stablemate American Sonja securing Group Three honours in the Prix Allez France Longines.

O’Brien added: “It’s fantastic to start the season well with her, she was ultra-consistent last season and it was a lovely ride from Dylan and a very impressive performance from the filly.

“She was a very solid Group filly last year, but I think this year we have Group One aspirations.

“She has many options – she has options in Ireland, obviously the UK and France as well, but I think it’s likely you’ll see her in America at some point this season.”



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O’Brien sets Ganay assignment for returning Al Riffa

Al Riffa is on course to return to France for his seasonal reappearance, with the Prix Ganay the starting point for a campaign Joseph O’Brien hopes will yield big-race success.

A Group One winner at two, the son of Wootton Bassett stamped himself among the top juveniles in Ireland when winning the Vincent O’Brien National Stakes in 2022.

Amongst the leading fancies for the following year’s Irish 2,000 Guineas, he missed the early part of the season and following a low-key comeback at the Curragh took on the might of Ace Impact in the Prix Guillaume d’Ornano at Deauville.

Although vanquished by Jean Claude-Rouget’s superstar – who would go on to retire unbeaten after victory in the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe – Al Riffa was beaten less than a length.

That was his final start as a three-year-old with a stone bruise ruling the colt out of the Irish Champion Stakes.

However, he has been kept in training and will head to ParisLongchamp for his return to action on April 28, with a Group One victory at four firmly in his sights.

Al Riffa is proven at the highest level
Al Riffa is proven at the highest level (Lorraine O’Sullivan/PA)

“It was a really nice run at Deauville and the Irish Champion Stakes was going to be his next target but he missed that,” said O’Brien.

“We’re excited about his prospects this season and he’s on target for the Prix Ganay, that’s the plan.

“He’ll have a lot of entries, he’ll be entered in all of those top middle-distance races and we’ll take it race by race.

“We’re hoping he can be a horse that could maybe win a Group One for us this year.”



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Joseph O’Brien looking forward to Rogue Millennium this season

Joseph O’Brien could be racking up the air miles with “exciting” new recruit Rogue Millennium this season.

The five-year-old mare was a star performer for Tom Clover last term, winning the Group Two Duke of Cambridge Stakes at Royal Ascot and finishing second to Tahiyra in Leopardstown’s Matron Stakes at elite level.

Having initially been snapped up for just 35,000gns by the Rogues Gallery syndicate, the daughter of Dubawi was sold for 1,650,000gns in December and will now be trained by O’Brien in County Kilkenny.

In a stable tour on Attheraces.com, her new handler said: “We are very happy with her. She looks great. Her training is all going smoothly, and she’s been impressing.

“She gives the impression that she’ll always appreciate better ground and she shows plenty of pace.

“We won’t be shy about travelling her and have a long list of potential options for her in America where we think the style of racing will suit her. She’s a very exciting prospect to have in the yard.”

Curragh Races – Sunday 10th September
Lumiere Rock with connections after winning at the Curragh (Damien Eagers/PA).

O’Brien is also looking forward to Lumiere Rock’s four-year-old campaign, with a crack at his father Aidan’s dual Derby hero Auguste Rodin on the cards in the Tattersalls Gold Cup at the Curragh.

The Saxon Warrior filly was a Group Two victor in the Blandford Stakes at that track last season, as well as being placed in the Ribblesdale and the Prix de l’Opera before finishing off with a solid sixth behind Inspiral at the Breeders’ Cup.

“She had a busy campaign last season, but never let us down and kept improving,” said O’Brien.

“We all got a real thrill from her win in the Blandford Stakes, and it was great that her owner Michael O’Flynn was there on the day to enjoy it with us.

“We are looking at the Tattersalls Gold Cup as an early-season target and will drive on from there.”

Irish Cesarewitch winner Magellan Strait has already got off the mark in 2024 with a Dundalk triumph in January and may be heading to the UK in search of more success.

O’Brien added: “He’s a solid staying horse that gave us all a great day when springing a very pleasant surprise in the Irish Cesarewitch.

“He could be one for the Chester Cup. We’ll see what happens between now and then, but the Ascot Stakes or Queen Alexandra Stakes at Royal Ascot would be options for him too.”

Last season’s Queen Alexandra Stakes star Dawn Rising went on to finish third in the Irish St Leger in the colours of JP McManus.

“At this stage, it looks likely that we’ll stick to the Flat with him,” said O’Brien. “He gave everyone a real thrill by winning at Royal Ascot last season and we’ll look to get him back to the Queen Alexandra Stakes again this year. He came back from a break in great shape and we’re looking forward to him.”

Al Riffa has not been seen since chasing home Ace Impact at Deauville last August but the 2022 National Stakes victor is very much on the comeback trail.

Curragh Races – Saturday August 6th
Al Riffa winning as a juvenile (Lorraine O’Sullivan/PA).

O’Brien declared: “We are delighted with him. He was always a tall, rangy horse and has filled out into a magnificent athlete now.

“We were very sweet on him for the Irish Champion Stakes, but a little issue the day before meant we couldn’t run. Everything has gone very smoothly with him this preparation and we are steadily stepping up his work.

“We are working him towards the Prix Ganay at ParisLongchamp in late April. Longer term, I could see him stepping up to a mile and a half.

“He won a Group One over seven furlongs as a two-year-old and has never looked short of pace, but he has the most lovely, relaxed way of going and it will give him a great chance to carry his pace over further if we ask him to. I’d be very hopeful he can win another Group One.”

Among the three-year-olds at Owning Hill, Atlantic Coast is being aimed at the Irish 2,000 Guineas or the French equivalent, while Stromberg could take in a Derby trial.



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Irish and French options on the table for Al Riffa

Al Riffa has a choice of engagements for his next outing, with Joseph O’Brien sure “the best is yet come” from his lightly-raced colt.

Winner of the National Stakes last season, the son of Wootton Bassett did not make his three-year-old return until the Curragh in July, finishing second to Mashhoor in the International Stakes.

He went from there to Deauville for the Prix Guillaume d’Ornano – and gave unbeaten French Derby winner and Arc favourite Ace Impact a real race in going down by just three-quarters of a length.

“He’ll either go to the Irish Champion or the Prix Niel, I’d say,” said O’Brien.

“He came out of his last run well. It was a great run, the winner is one of the best three-year-olds in Europe and we were right in the mix with him.

“Hopefully the best is yet to come with him.”

O’Brien also had news on his high-class filly Above The Curve, who has been placed in Group One company three times so far this campaign, most recently in the Prix Jean Romanet.

He said: “She may go back to France for the Prix Vermeille. She’s come out of the Prix Jean Romanet well.”



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Al Riffa tackles Ace Impact in Deauville highlight

Al Riffa faces a big ask as he heads to Deauville to take on the unbeaten Prix du Jockey Club champion Ace Impact in the Prix Guillaume d’Ornano on Tuesday.

Raiders have won five of the last six renewals of the 10-furlong Group Two contest, however, the last two victories for the home side have been provided by trainer Jean Claude-Rouget and his latest contender will be a warm order to follow in the footsteps of stablemate Al Hakeem, who won this prize en route to finishing fourth in the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe 12 months ago.

Ace Impact finds himself favourite for Europe’s richest middle-distance prize on October 1 following his emphatic French Derby triumph earlier this summer and this contest represents a key step on the road to ParisLongchamp for the son of Cracksman.

He will run for the first time in the colours of the Chehboub family’s Gousserie Racing, who purchased 50 per cent of the colt from Serge Stempniak following his Chantilly triumph.

Pauline Chehboub, racing manager for the operation said: “Ace Impact is in good form and should run well tomorrow.

“We are targeting some exciting Group Ones in the autumn, so tomorrow’s race is important.”

However, despite the presence of Ace Impact, Al Riffa’s trainer Joseph O’Brien is undeterred and feels his charge is well placed to run a big race following his comeback second at the Curragh in the International Stakes.

“We’re hoping for a good run,” said O’Brien.

“Obviously it looks a very good race, but he is in good shape and we think he can run a really good race.”

Al Riffa is a Group One winner in his own right having claimed the National Stakes as a two-year-old and is one of three making the trip from Ireland alongside Aidan O’Brien’s Victoria Road and Greenland.

Both Ballydoyle challengers are capable of playing a part, with the former accounting for Blue Rose Cen before scoring at the Breeders’ Cup during a four-race winning streak last season – a record the Saxon Warrior colt will be attempting to extend on his belated seasonal return.

Meanwhile, stablemate Greenland already has winning form in France this term having landed the Prix Greffulhe at Saint-Cloud in May.

Andre Fabre has won this race more times than anyone else and relies on Compiegne Listed winner Birr Castle, while Ponty (Hiroo Shimizu), Cambronne (Rouget) and Andreas Wohler’s German raider Straight complete the line-up.



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