Adam West is heartened ahead of Live In The Dream’s Nunthorpe title defence after a creditable run in defeat at Goodwood.
The chestnut rose steeply through the sprinting ranks last year, starting out in handicaps before stepping up to Listed and the lower Group levels with some admirable placed runs.
He then ran a clear career best when facing Group One company in the Nunthorpe at York, prevailing by a length ahead of Highfield Princess to provide his jockey, trainer and owners with the best day of their racing lives.
A subsequent trip to America for the Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint, and the preparatory Woodford Stakes, both ended in fourth-placed finishes, as the gelding refused to return home empty-handed.
This season, the five-year-old started out in the Temple Stakes at Haydock, finishing second by half a length, before returning to the same track to come home fifth when stumbling out of the stalls in the Listed Achilles Stakes.
At Sandown, he lined up for the Coral Charge on soft ground and was unable to dominate as he often does, resulting in a fourth-placed run when beaten three lengths by Ed Walker’s Makarova.
Conditions were more favourable at Goodwood, with the track good to firm for Jason Hart’s first ride on the horse since 2021 following the replacement of former go-to jockey Sean Kirrane.
Though the King George Qatar Stakes is a Group Two, the assembled field gave the race Group One quality, as King Charles III Stakes heroine Asfoora and Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint winner Big Evs lined up.
From stall nine, Live In The Dream raced behind the leaders, one of whom was the evidently uncatchable Big Evs, but West’s horse ran a solid race to finish fourth, when beaten a length and three quarters.
“We’re very happy after Goodwood, he probably didn’t quite handle the track as well as others did,” the trainer said.
“I think it sets us up to be a nice thorn between Big Evs and Asfoora for the Nunthorpe, and Bradsell.
“If we could have a four-way battle, that would be brilliant.
“The Czech horse (Ponntos) came across him a bit and he hung a little left under the camber, but he showed his tenacity after that.
“Ironically, there was still a bit of a headwind as the race started, but we won’t be splitting hairs over that.
“The Nunthorpe has always been what Steve (De’Lemos, owner) has asked me to train for, we’ve got enough in the tank to go there with the same chance as we did last year.
“Albeit everyone already knows our style of racing and we’ve suffered a bit from that this year.”
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Jason Hart has received the call-up to ride Live In The Dream in the King George Qatar Stakes at Goodwood next Friday, as Adam West searches for the missing link that will return his star sprinter to the peak of his powers.
The five-year-old provided West with his first Group One victory when landing the Nunthorpe in blistering fashion last year and then took his connections on a dream trip to Santa Anita, where he was a gallant fourth in the Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint.
The man in the saddle both at York and in America was Sean Kirrane, who has partnered Live In The Dream in 15 of his 23 starts and has played a key part in the gelding’s journey to the top of the sprinting ladder.
However, having failed to strike in three outings this term, West is keen to find out if there is a piece of the puzzle he is missing in his quest to return Live In The Dream to winning ways and has turned to an experienced hand for assistance.
The Epsom-based trainer stresses Kirrane “hasn’t done anything wrong” aboard the son of Prince Of Lir, but it will be Hart in the saddle on the Sussex Downs as West taps into his wealth of knowledge acquired from previously steering the likes of King George rival Big Evs and multiple Group One scorer Highfield Princess.
West said: “Sean hasn’t done anything wrong and is still a part of our team. We love using Sean when we can and he is mainly based up north, so it can be difficult to use him as regularly as we like.
“With this horse in particular, Sean knows him very well, but we just want to make sure we are not missing anything and want the advice of a jockey who has ridden in these races and ridden against Live In The Dream and who can advise us if we are missing anything or can improve on anything.
“Jason is coming in to ride him on Monday and will ride him on Friday, all being well. He’s won big races on Big Evs and with Highfield Princess, who was behind us in the Nunthorpe.
“He knows the pace the horse can do and has actually ridden him as a two-year-old as well, so we’re just looking for some advice.”
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Adam West remains focused on Live In The Dream’s Nunthorpe defence after a change in tactics ended in defeat in the Coral Charge.
The chestnut worked his way rapidly through the sprint ranks last season, placing in the Palace House and the Temple Stakes before stepping up to Group One level at York in August.
There he ran away with the Nunthorpe after making the running, prevailing by a length under Sean Kirrane to book his ticket to Santa Anita for the Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint.
In America he was fourth when passed in the closing stages, a run that inspired connections to experiment with less aggressive tactics this season as it was felt that he may benefit from biding his time a little more.
Second in the Temple Stakes on debut, the gelding was then fifth in the Achilles Stakes when almost tripping out of the gate on his next start.
At Sandown he had a less dramatic exit from stall nine and was held up to preserve his turn of foot for later in the race, but on soft ground and with a headwind to contend with he could only come home fourth when beaten three lengths.
West was not disheartened by the run, which he feels proved educational, and still intends to proceed on the same path to a Nunthorpe return.
“We’ve trotted him up this morning and he’s been out in the paddock, he’s very well,” the trainer said.
“We weren’t in a position to dominate with the headwind, the ground and the draw.
“Since the Breeders’ Cup we’ve been a little bit conservative, he did a little bit too much going into the bend.
“He’d come to hand and we were seeing if his maturity would allow him to run his races another way but to be at his best he does need to be ridden aggressively with conditions right.
“It’s setting us up for that later in the year now. He can’t run like that in a headwind and on soft ground, had we tried to do that at Sandown he would have been going forward and getting beaten.
“That isn’t good for his head, he’s better being held up and running on late like he did, it gives us a little hope for the stiffer tracks next year and it’s also better for him mentally.”
Live In The Dream is entered in the King George Stakes at Goodwood and also has the option to head out to Deauville for the Prix du Cercle, where he was fourth last year, but the Nunthorpe remains the ultimate target and could pave the way to the Breeders’ Cup again.
“He’s got an entry there (at Goodwood), it’s only three weeks before the Nunthorpe so we’ll get closer to the race and see,” West said.
“There is also the Deauville Listed race he was fourth in last year on the same weekend, it just depends on the ground and the conditions.
“I do want to try and help his confidence a little bit because we haven’t had the same success going into the race as last year, but those are probably our emotions rather than his, the Nunthorpe is our big goal this year to try and get out to the Breeders’ Cup.”
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Live In The Dream bids to put his Haydock mishap behind him and return to his blitzing best in the Coral Charge at Sandown.
Speed out of the stalls is the trump card of last season’s shock Nunthorpe winner, but Adam West’s stable star was down on his nose as the gates opened in the Achilles Stakes which left him with a mountain to climb, while also racing into a strong headwind.
Having been gone through his paces at West’s Epsom base since, connections are hopeful they can now draw a line through Haydock as they continue to tighten the screw ahead of a return to York for his Nunthorpe defence next month.
West said: “We’ve jumped him out of the stalls since he fell on his nose last time and he didn’t have any hesitations over that, which I was grateful for, and we are excited to put Haydock and the Achilles behind us and get back to the positive feeling of the Temple Stakes run.
“The really strong headwind wouldn’t have helped him anyway in the Achilles and I’m not sure we would have beaten some of the six-furlong horses there with it being so testing into the wind as it was.
“I think a lot more mature people than me have said you can’t fight the things you can’t change, so that’s kind of what we had to swallow, but no one wants to see their early-speed sprinter fall on their nose coming out of the stalls.
“This is still not D-Day and the end goal is still the Nunthorpe. The Achilles didn’t really change anything (in terms of plans), but it does sort of feel like it with the emotions that came with the run there. We’re almost starting again and we will see where we end up.”
Live In The Dream has appeared twice over the course and distance, winning in handicap company before finishing second to Mitbaahy at Listed level.
Since then he has become one of the best speedsters in Britain over the minimum distance and 5lb clear of his nearest rival on ratings here, his team are confident he has the class and ability to deal with a wide draw.
West continued: “He’s drawn nine of 10 and I think Jack Channon’s improving horse has been given the best draw in four. However, that is not really a bother when we have the style of running that we do.”
The aforementioned Jack Channon horse is Desperate Hero who makes the move into Pattern company having won two on the bounce in handicaps.
Ed Walker’s Markova was second to Czech speedball Ponntos in France before not being disgraced in the King Charles III Stakes at Royal Ascot, while a place ahead of him at the Royal meeting was Henry Candy’s Twilight Calls who is now tried in first-time cheekpieces.
He will be ridden once again by Ryan Moore, who is hoping that new headgear will help him exit the stalls in a timely manner having been sluggish at the start of his races of late.
Moore told Betfair: “What I said about him before Royal Ascot stands, and that is he is in with an excellent chance if he can get out of the stalls even adequately well.
“The starts are costing him dearly at the moment – hopefully the first-time cheekpieces could help him there – but he has still run very good races at Newmarket and Ascot this season, and a stiff five furlongs on decent ground really should suit him.”
Defending champion Equality finished last at Ascot, but is a winner this season and has to be respected on his return to Esher, with Clive Cox’s Unbreak My Heart another to shape nicely here recently.
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Live In The Dream will head to the Coral Charge at Sandown on Eclipse day next after returning from his disappointing Achilles Stakes showing at Haydock with bruising.
Adam West’s Nunthorpe hero was a 5-4 favourite for the Listed event on Merseyside having gone close on his seasonal return at the track only two weeks previous.
However, he stumbled leaving the stalls and had to be picked off his nose by jockey Sean Kirrane, with West believing that is where the five-year-old suffered his knocks and ultimately put paid to any chance of winning the race.
“He’s been checked out thoroughly and he’s got a bit of bruising on his off-side and lower rib cage,” said West.
“He actually hit the deck quite hard (leaving the stalls) and he had grass stains up to his knees when he jumped, when he caught the stalls or maybe one of the other horses caught him with a foot down the off-side.
“He’s not too sore, but it would have been enough to scupper a bold show like we had hoped.
“It’s just unfortunate that these things happen in racing. The headwind wouldn’t have helped but ultimately his confidence was shot – even though his class got him back to the front, you can’t win a sprint race after falling on your nose at the gates.”
With the injury not set to keep Live In The Dream on the sidelines for any significant time, West is keen to scrub a line through Haydock and continue with the course mapped out back to York for the defence of his Nunthorpe Stakes title in August.
That will see him head to Esher on July 6, where the son of Prince Of Lir will bid to go one better than his Scurry Stakes second over the course and distance back in 2022.
West continued: “He will come through it and he will be fine. The plan will still be to go to the Coral Charge.
“There is enough time to recover from that (before Sandown) but of course we will just take things sensibly.
“We’re hoping to go to Sandown and then on to York. It’s racing unfortunately and sometimes things like Saturday happen.”
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Believing posted a commanding performance to win the Betfred Passionate About Sport Achilles Stakes at Haydock.
All eyes were on 5-4 favourite Live In The Dream, winner of the Group One Nunthorpe Stakes last season, but it was the George Boughey-trained 5-1 shot Believing who proved the class act on the day.
Settled in behind by Danny Tudhope as Live In The Dream blazed an early trail with Democracy Dilemma, Believing was travelling incredibly well with a couple of furlongs to run and when shot to the front when asked.
Believing extended away to post a comfortable two-and-three-quarter-length victory over Commanche Falls in the five-furlong dash, with Korker keeping on for third place and Live In The Dream only fifth.
The Highclere Thoroughbred Racing-owned winner was last seen when disappointing in Hong Kong and Boughey was delighted to see her back to her best on quicker ground.
“That was very impressive,” he said.
“I was really disappointed after Hong Kong when nothing really went right for her, but the key to her is good ground.
“There was a strong headwind today and the favourite was running into the teeth of it, but we weren’t sat that far behind.”
Believing is now a 12-1 chance from 33s with Coral for the five-furlong King Charles III Stakes at Royal Ascot, and 16-1 from 25-1 for the Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Stakes over six furlongs.
The King Charles on day one is her primary target, but Boughey would not be opposed to shooting for both.
“She’ll definitely run in the five-furlong race,” he said.
“It wouldn’t be the biggest surprise in the world if she also ran on the Saturday over six as well.
“She’s a very easy filly to train so if she’s OK after Tuesday’s race, she could then run on the Saturday.”
Tudhope was impressed with the winner, adding: “They went quite hard up front and there was a strong headwind, but I was able to get a nice bit of cover from the wind.
“She travelled super and she did it quite easy. She’s a good filly on her day.
“I won on her at Pontefract over six furlongs and she did it easily that day as well. She’s versatile, but she’s getting better and a lot quicker as well.
“There’s some lovely races for her to target and George is doing a great job with her.”
Live In The Dream weakened into fifth at the line and his owner Steve de’Lemos was struggling to figure out what he had just witnessed.
“I’m shocked and can’t believe he’s run that badly,” he said.
“Maybe it’s a bit of a City Of Troy moment in the Guineas. He was a short-priced favourite and he was stuffed.
“He’s been doing some great work at home and we feel he’s matured and is a better horse than last year. Everything was perfect.
“The only thing against us today was a 40mph headwind, but nobody really slipstreamed him. He did peck as he came out the stalls, so I don’t know if he’s hurt himself.
“There’s something not right, but Adam (West, trainer) will get to the bottom of it.”
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With two previous Temple Stakes placings over course and distance, Live In The Dream will start a hot favourite in the Betfred Passionate About Sport Achilles Stakes at Haydock on Saturday.
The five-year-old was beaten by half a length by Kerdos on his seasonal debut late last month at the Merseyside venue, improving from his third in the same race 12 months earlier.
However, he will drop down in grade as he seeks a first return to the winner’s enclosure since impressively claiming the Nunthorpe Stakes last August.
Live In The Dream will have seven rivals for the Listed contest over five furlongs and trainer Adam West is confident he can build from his reappearance run.
“I would hope so (a strong showing). It’s a strong field and I’m counting on him coming on nicely from the Temple Stakes,” West said.
“He enjoys his racing, he should be a strip fitter for it and it will be nice to open the throttle up a bit more.”
One of the main challengers for top honours is the George Boughey-trained Believing.
The daughter of Mehmas came third in the Sprint Cup at Haydock in September before finishing down the field on Champions Day at Ascot and on her first start of 2024 in the Group One Chairman’s Sprint Prize in Hong Kong.
“Well it is an interesting one really, I think it is a very good entry from George,” said Harry Herbert of owners Highclere Thoroughbred Racing.
“She ran two disappointing races on her last two starts, both of which have been on very soft ground and she just can’t handle that. So rather than just going to Royal Ascot blind, if you like, we need to see where we are with her.
“This is a proper sighter as to how the filly is, whether she is quick enough for five or whether we should be going back to six and by having horses like the favourite in the race, we should have a very good idea.
“I’m looking forward to watching her run. She’s a very smart filly and she’s much stronger, physically really progressed from three to four, so lets hope she can show her true colours on ground she hasn’t had for her last two runs.”
The Karl Burke-trained Korker, who finished sixth in last year’s renewal, is among the declared runners alongside stablemate Marshman.
Democracy Dilemma, second in the Epsom ‘Dash’ last week, goes for Robert Cowell, with Michael Dods’ Commanche Falls shouldering top weight after winning York’s Garrowby Stakes last September.
Pink Crystal makes her seasonal reappearance for William Haggas, while Adrian Nicholls’ Tees Spirit completes the line up with the trainer’s daughter, Mia, aboard.
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Adam West is considering a swift return to Haydock with star sprinter Live In The Dream following his encouraging seasonal debut at the Merseyside circuit on Saturday.
Making his first appearance since finishing fourth at the Breeders’ Cup in November, last year’s surprise Nunthorpe hero showed all of his customary dash in the Group Two Temple Stakes before being edged out in a tight finish by the Clive Cox-trained Kerdos.
Prior to the weekend, West had been eyeing the Coral Charge at Sandown on July 6 as a likely next port of call, prior to defending his Nunthorpe crown at York the following month, but the Epsom-based handler is now eyeing another run in the meantime back at Haydock on Saturday week.
“He was out in the sunshine yesterday and this morning and he looks fantastic. We couldn’t have asked for a better start to the season really,” he said.
“I think Sean (Kirrane, jockey) showed a lot of maturity. He took him through the gears nicely and wasn’t hard on him, he just said in the last 50 yards he’s got a tiny bit leg weary, but he absolutely felt the best he’s ever felt and the maturity level of the horse has come on since last year, so we’re delighted.
“We’re still looking at Sandown, but we are actually going to throw a curveball in and look at the Achilles Stakes back at Haydock first.
“The dates have worked out so well for us and despite being a Group One winner in a Listed race, because the Nunthorpe was before the end of August he’s able to run, so it would be silly of us not to consider it.
“He’s run so well there on Saturday without being knocked about. The Coral Charge is about getting some confidence into him before the Nunthorpe, but we can go to the Achilles first, as I’d only be working him at home anyway. We’ll enter him and see what the ground is like.”
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Charlie Fellowes expects conditions at Haydock to bring out the best in his star sprinter Vadream when she lines up in the Betfred Temple Stakes.
The six-year-old has produced the keynote performances of her career so far when the mud has been flying, with victories in the Bengough Stakes at Ascot, the Cammidge Trophy at Doncaster and the Palace House at Newmarket all achieved on soft or heavy ground.
She notably inflicted a half-length defeat on the reopposing subsequent Nunthorpe hero Live In The Dream in the Palace House at Newmarket last spring – and having come within a head of successfully defending her crown last time out, Fellowes is confident she will make her presence felt on Saturday.
“She’s had a really good start to the year. She normally takes two or three runs to really get into a rhythm, but she’s already run two really good races this spring,” said the Newmarket handler.
“I said before her seasonal debut at Bath I felt like we’d had a really good preparation and she’s put in two big runs on ground that she’s absolutely fine on, but if you are a mudlark and handle those testing conditions it’s such a big advantage, and it looks like she’s going to get them this weekend.
“She beat Live In The Dream last year on this ground, she goes there in cracking order, we’ve got a top jockey on board (Danny Tudhope) and when she gets this ground, she is very, very, very good.
“It was a massive shame that last year she never got her ground in the big ones. Bar the King’s Stand, we sidestepped all the big ones over five furlongs, which I’m convinced is her best trip, because the ground was just too quick in all of them – the Nunthorpe, the Flying Five and the Prix de l’Abbaye.
“One of them has got to come up on soft ground this year and if they do, she’ll be very dangerous.”
Live In The Dream is set to make his first competitive appearance since finishing fourth at the Breeders’ Cup in November for Epsom-based trainer Adam West, who said: “Touch wood, everything has been going really well, I’m very happy with him and he looks the most mature he’s been, so we’re hopeful for another big year.
“We’ve trained him this year with the Breeders’ Cup down the line in mind. He’s going to Haydock with the best amount of ability that I’ve seen him with, but maybe this race will bring him on.
“He’s the best I’ve ever seen him mentally and physically, but fitness-wise sprinters will normally need a run, especially at this top level.”
Australian challenger Asfoora brings an international flavour to proceedings as she warms up for an appearance at Royal Ascot next month.
Trainer Henry Dwyer said: “She’s terrific, she’s been here three and a half weeks now. We’ve given her a fair bit of breathing space since she’s been here, we haven’t really tightened the screws yet, and I couldn’t be any happier with how she looks, how she is and how her work’s been.
“We’re pretty adaptable, she’s a good mare who has won races on pretty firm tracks but her best ground in my opinion is what we’d call a soft five or a soft six.
“She broke the track record at Sandown (in Australia) one day early on in her career on a soft six, which is pretty much unheard of. Your track records here are usually set on flint-hard tracks, but she really appreciates getting her toe in.
“Her best asset is, to state the obvious, she’s a fast horse, but she’s not one of the hard-going sprinters that you see that gets tired late. She’s a sprinter that can sit on a really high cruising speed and she can either take a seat or she can lead, it doesn’t really matter.”
Further strength in depth is added by Tom Clover’s Rogue Lightning, who will carry the Wathnan Racing colours for the first time after being bought for £1million from former owners The Rogues Gallery at the Goffs Qipco Champions Day sale in October.
The four-year-old won two handicaps and a Listed prize prior to finishing a close-up fifth in the Prix de l’Abbaye last season and remains in training with Clover, who is looking forward to his return.
He said: “He’s trained lovely this spring and he won on reasonably testing ground at Doncaster in what was the Scarbrough Stakes, so I think he handles soft ground OK.
“Ideally, I’d love to be running him on good to firm ground because you can use the speed he has, he’s a very fast horse, but at the same time I think he’ll handle this ground and it shouldn’t be a problem.
“He’s done some lovely work at home and has just improved each week. He’s coming to hand nicely now and I would hope he’ll be peaking through the summer, but I hope he’s straight enough to go to Haydock and run a really nice race.”
Adam West is keen to get Live In The Dream’s season under way in the Betfred Temple Stakes at Haydock on Saturday.
The five-year-old gave the Epsom-based trainer and his owners Steve and Jolene De’Lemos quite a ride in 2023, with his surprise Group One victory in the Nunthorpe at York in high summer followed by an American adventure which ended with him finishing a close-up fourth at the Breeders’ Cup.
Following a well-earned winter break, Live In The Dream is set to make his eagerly-awaited reappearance on Merseyside this weekend – and while underfoot conditions may be softer than ideal, West views the Group Two contest as a suitable starting point to what he hopes will be another memorable year.
“You can never be 100 per cent certain, but the intention is to run,” he said.
“We considered the entry at Chantilly for next week as a back-up, but I think the general feeling from everyone at Haydock is that they’ve reached the worst it’s going to get and the ground took it better than expected.
“He was only just beaten in soft ground in the Palace House last year and Newmarket is a stiffer track than Haydock. I would prefer it softer than harder for his first run anyway, so we can get a little bit more stuck into him.
“We’re looking forward to starting his campaign.”
Saturday’s five-furlong contest is viewed as a stepping-stone for Live In The Dream, with a defence of his Nunthorpe crown and a return to California in the autumn his two primary objectives.
West added: “The Nunthorpe is the main focus and his runs up to the Nunthorpe will be about producing the horse at his best on that day.
“We could have a dart at the Abbaye if we need to, but as soon as we’ve amassed enough prize-money to pay for ourselves, or we’ve got a free ticket, we’ll be saving ourselves for the Breeders’ Cup.
“The plan after Saturday is to run on home turf at Sandown (Coral Charge) just down the road in six weeks’ time, that will be more pressure for me than the Temple Stakes.
“I think this will bring him on nicely and hopefully we can get some confidence into him at Sandown.”
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Vandeek will have to “pull his finger out” to maintain his unbeaten record on his eagerly-awaited reappearance at Haydock this weekend.
A dual Group One winner at two for Simon and Ed Crisford, he is one of 11 entries for the Group Two Betfred Supports Jack Berry House Sandy Lane Stakes, with some smart rivals potentially lying in wait.
“He’s wintered well, he’s had a good preparation up to now, so we hope the rest of the week goes well. We’re very much looking forward to getting him back on the track,” said Chris Wall, racing manager to owners KHK Racing.
“He’s done well physically over the winter, so we hope that brings about a bit of improvement as well. He’s in good heart so it’s all systems go.
“Last year he won Group Ones on heavy ground and fast ground, so it wouldn’t really matter what it was but I think he’d prefer some nice ground. There is a bit of rain around later in the week but not heavy so it should just be nice for all.
“Obviously he’s making his seasonal debut and we could be taking on some very capable horses who have had a run, like Jasour and Inisherin, but he’s in good heart.
“I know Simon and Ed have left a bit to work on, but he’s plenty fit enough for his debut.
“He’ll have to pull his finger out here taking on Jasour and Inisherin, capable horses in their own right, with a 3lb penalty to carry as well. You want him to have a race to bring him forward but you don’t want him to have too hard a race that puts him back.”
Clive Cox’s Jasour, a Group Two winner last term, returned to action with a victory at Ascot while Kevin Ryan’s Inisherin led the 2000 Guineas field for much of the way before fading into sixth.
Richard Fahey’s Airman is another fascinating contender having won both his starts to date, with David O’Meara’s Greenham winner Esquire, smart all-weather performer Pandora’s Gift and Orne also in the field.
Last year’s Nunthorpe winner Live In The Dream is one of 13 in the Betfred Temple Stakes.
Not seen since a creditable fourth in the Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint, he will be aiming to go two places better than last year.
Sprint Cup winner Regional, Rogue Lightning and Beautiful Diamond are others engaged.
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Adam West is targeting a Nunthorpe repeat with sprint star Live In The Dream.
The chestnut gave connections a day to remember last season when taking the York Group One at 28-1 at the height of the summer.
That win was the pinnacle of a successful season in general, with the gelding progressing from handicaps to then place second in the Palace House and third in the Temple Stakes.
After a break, he returned to go down by only a length in a Listed event at Deauville, following which he moved onto his famous Nunthorpe victory and booked himself a ticket to Santa Anita for the Breeders’ Cup.
In preparation, he ran in the Woodford Stakes at Keeneland and came home fourth, the same spot he would then gain in the Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint when beaten a length and a quarter.
This season, he is likely to be aimed at the Knavesmire feature again, with a view to gaining a place at the Breeders’ Cup, though his campaign will focus on quality over quantity now he is proven at the top level.
“It took him a bit of time to unwind from the Breeders’ Cup, he was physically quite tired from the journey on the way back,” West said.
“It took a lot longer for him to be able to switch off but now he’s been able to do that, he has really benefited from it.
“We split the season last year to get more racing out of him, but now we’re hoping for loftier targets and less racing – obviously we can’t go to Lingfield and Pontefract anymore!
“He spelled at Hen Knight’s and he’s come back really well, in my opinion he is the best physically and mentally that I’ve ever seen him.
“There’s a good bit of condition on him that still needs to come off, and we’re hoping to start him out in the Temple Stakes in May.
“The main aim will be the Nunthorpe and he’s probably going to be campaigned with that in mind, hopefully with the added bonus of going to America.”
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It has been a year of discovery for Adam West, who has his sights set on more international assignments in 2024 after a phenomenal season that culminated in a fairytale trip to the Breeders’ Cup with star speedster Live In The Dream.
The four-year-old more than lived up to his name when providing his trainer, regular pilot Sean Kirrane and owners Steve and Jolene De’Lemos with a first Group One success in the Nunthorpe, but their ambitious quest to conquer America ultimately ended in gallant defeat at Santa Anita.
With the dust now well and truly settled on a magical journey from Lingfield handicaps in the spring to California in November, West is keen to ensure his Breeders’ Cup adventure is not the end of an underdog story that has captured the hearts and minds of the racing public.
“I would love to tick off a few more worldwide options,” said West.
“I would be really excited to go to Hong Kong, I would love to tick that one off, and everything from the Pardubice all the way round, there are so many races across the world and I would love to spread the wings, as it were.”
Although Live In The Dream failed to deliver a Hollywood ending to his box office campaign in the shadows of the picturesque San Gabriel Mountains, his handler is confident he will have thrived for the cross-Atlantic experience when he returns to the track in 2024.
“He came out of the Breeders’ Cup really well and we’re just looking forward to next year and seeing what we can do,” said West.
“With sprinters, you hope they can improve strength on strength – and with that little bit of maturity after his eventful year, you would hope he is more amenable to different things.
“I definitely think it will make him mature a hell of a lot. He has a great head on him anyway and he has probably learnt more than I have this year!”
It is, of course, not just Live In The Dream who will have learnt from his forays Stateside, with his handler wide-eyed after experiencing the draining nature of long-haul travel for the very first time.
“I realised that both times I flew, that I don’t take the travel as well as the horse and that took it out of me,” explained West.
“I was quite sick both times towards the end of it and that’s me coming from a bit of a humble background and never having been on a flight longer than an hour and a bit, so it was a bit of a shock to the system.
“It’s all things that I can learn from for next time to make sure I’ve got the best of me out there, rather than a sick version of me.
“They are absolutely incredible people and the Americans couldn’t do enough for us and have a real passion for their racing. The individuals you meet were really enthusiastic and it makes you look forward to getting out there again, when I can.”
Live In The Dream’s Breeders’ Cup challenge only became a possibility after his devastating Nunthorpe success during the height of summer, when the four-year-old bounced out and made every yard of the running in breath-taking fashion.
Although sent off a somewhat unfancied 28-1 shot, there was no fluke about the result, with top-class speedsters Highfield Princess and Bradsell unable to deal with the blistering early pace shown from West’s stable star.
“We went there with no pressure and just happy to be there,” continued West.
“We always thought York would suit him but when he ran over the five and half before, he didn’t quite perform as we thought, so you kind of don’t expect too much.
“Everything was right that day, it’s sprinting isn’t it, you could run it 10 times and it might be different – if something had broken a little better, or there had been a headwind or something, then it wouldn’t have been our day, but luckily it was and we really enjoyed it.
“It is something that will be etched into everyone’s heads for the rest of time.”
West’s meteoric rise in the second half of 2023 serves as a reminder of the fickle nature of training racehorses, and although enjoying some of the biggest days of his career, there is also relief that it has allowed him to continue operating in a sport where the price of triumph often comes at a premium.
He said: “In one term, it (this year) has meant survival. It has secured enough support and momentum to carry on and there were questions with the way racing is going whether it is a viable thing.
“When you have success like that, you are able to stick your head above water for a little bit and take a breath, ready to go in and do it all over again. If you can do that once in 10 years, I suppose it is enough to keep you going.
“I don’t think it has changed anything initially and we haven’t had a huge influx of owners or anything like that. But it is on the CV now and it has proven that given the ammunition, we have shown we can do it.”
However, the past six months have also brought the best of racing’s fabled camaraderie to West’s door, as he went from quietly plying his trade on the daily racing treadmill to hot property due to his rags to riches tale.
It was something the handler admits caught him by surprise, as he reflects on his spell in the spotlight and also the wealth of good wishes that came his way.
“I would never have expected the amount of support from the UK and when you are at an international event like that, it was not something I had ever encountered before,” said West.
“I enjoyed all of that and I got to meet so many people who were going through all of the same things – and it was great and really warming.
“You can become quite isolated as a trainer, as you are competing against each other all the time, but when things like that happen, you do realise the industry does support each other in its own unique way.”
The generosity of the tight-knit racing community saw West grow close to fellow Breeders’ Cup rookie Mick Appleby, as they both prepared for the trip of a lifetime.
It was a friendship formed over a makeshift starting bell prior to the journey to California and the Epsom handler hopes their bond stands the test of time once Live In The Dream and Big Evs start locking horns on the sprinting scene next season.
“It brought me and Mick Appleby closer together and getting Live In The Dream and Big Evs up against each other is surely going to happen,” said West.
“I think that will be a great rivalry, as long as I can swallow the odd defeat!
“I would look forward to that, as they both race in such a tenacious way and have similar styles, I will really look forward to that.
“We might have the edge on him next year, being a five-year-old against a three-year-old, but if he stays in training the following year, it could be some battle.”
He went on: “I know you get the jumpers and how the support for them builds each year as they come back, well there is a chance that this horse could be coming back three years in a row and he could be a bit of a star name – and if the rivalry is there too, then so be it.”
If winning that scintillating sprint showdown is high up on West’s 2024 wish list, then so is making his mark in the National Hunt sphere, with the Epsom handler daring to dream of smashing another glass ceiling in the near future.
He said: “The next ambition is a Grade One and I really want to push the jumping – I’ve actually got some great jumps stats!
“We’ve done the Group One, so now I want to win a Grade One as well, so watch this space.”
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Adam West is already looking forward to a trip to next year’s Breeders’ Cup with Live In The Dream after his stable star rounded off a memorable campaign at Santa Anita on Saturday.
Following a narrow victory on the all-weather at Lingfield on his first start of 2023, few could have envisaged the meteoric rise the rapid chestnut would enjoy through the remainder of the year.
A shock Group One victory in the Nunthorpe at York left West and owners Steve and Jolene De’Lemos eyeing an American adventure – and having shaped well on his first start Stateside at Keeneland last month, he headed to the west coast as a major contender for the Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint.
It is testament to Live In The Dream’s eyewatering pace that even the American speedballs were unable to land a glove on him during the early stages of the five-furlong contest, but he paid for his early exertions late on and in the end was beaten just over a length into fourth place.
Both West and his pride and joy landed back on home soil on Monday evening – and while the trainer admitted to feeling the effects of the long journey home, he reports Live In The Dream to be none the worse for his experience.
“I got home late last night and so did the horse,” said the Epsom-based trainer. “He almost ran away with me this morning, so he’s obviously feeling good.
West feels the magnitude of the occasion in California may have contributed to Live In The Dream’s defeat, adding: “We put our best plan forward to give him every chance and I think we had him spot-on, but he just got a bit buzzy and ran a tiny bit free and that’s ultimately cost him.
“The day he won the Nunthorpe, there was a huge atmosphere, but Keeneland and the Breeders’ Cup are even bigger. It’s a lot more intense at Santa Anita and I think that just saw him go a stride too quick into the bend and that was it really.
“As he matures next year, I think he’ll settle into those big events a bit better. He was taking on the best of the best and we look forward to working back from the Breeders’ Cup at Del Mar next year.”
With a winter trip to Dubai ruled out, West will give his charge a well-earned break prior to preparing for major prizes in Europe in 2024, before ultimately heading back across the Atlantic in the autumn.
He said: “I’ve spoken to Steve about ambitions and he’ll get a nice, long holiday now and we’ll probably start off a bit later next year.
“Ultimately, the main aim will be to defend the Nunthorpe title, but we might take in some other options internationally as well.
“We’ve got this lovely horse and we want to take in as much as we can and get those experiences – and that he can provide us.”
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Adam West has left no stone unturned in his quest to ensure Live In The Dream plays a starring role in their once-in-a-lifetime shot at Breeders’ Cup glory.
The Epsom-based trainer of course shares his name with the actor most famous for portraying Batman and it is perhaps fitting that Live In The Dream’s blockbuster rise to the top of the sprinting tree reaches its climax a stones throw away from Hollywood in Santa Anita.
Owned by the charismatic Steve and Jolene de’Lemos, the four-year-old started the season with a pair of victories in the handicap ranks before his stock slowly rose throughout the season.
Placed efforts in both the Palace House Stakes and Temple Stakes served notice of Live In The Dream’s potential, but he announced himself as a star of the sprinting ranks with a thrilling all-the-way victory in the Nunthorpe at York – incredibly the first time his handler had saddled a runner in Group One company.
That Knavesmire rout secured Live In The Dream’s ticket to the Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint and having shown all the right signs during an exploratory visit to Keeneland, the thriving gelding now has the burden of being the big-race favourite for a contest won just the once by a British raider.
“We’re very happy and we’ve come here at the perfect time to get the best of the atmosphere,” said West.
“I think the ground and the track are so important to our horse. In the Palace House it was too stiff and five and a half furlongs at Keeneland didn’t suit him either, but this is ideal. He is all five – one yard further and that’s it! York was always going to be his best chance at home.
“The pressure is on now, I’d rather we were 28-1, but it’s justified given his form. If we were to have any chance it is here.”
Live In The Draw will break from stall five, with defending champion and one of the big dangers Caravel not far away in three.
It is a spot West is delighted to be in as he attempts to put the historic training centre of Epsom back on the world map.
He added: “They have done so well with the track and we were blessed with a cracking draw, with Caravel two down from us who can give us a lead. I didn’t want to be out wide or stuck on the rail.
“Caravel is so tenacious; she’s been brought into this race well. Credit is due, she’s looking like she’s about to hit her best form, so she’s respected with her speed and the way she runs. If we end up going head-to-head with her it could be a real ding-dong battle.
“Epsom has done its time and hopefully we can now focus on getting good horses back there. I hope he can show on Saturday that the job can be done.”
Also happy with Live In The Dream’s position in stall five is his big-race jockey Sean Kirrane who has become an integral part of the story.
Having also tasted Group One glory for the first time at York in the summer he has played a key role in preparing the son of Prince Of Lir for his moment in the Californian sun and is backing his charge to hit the right note when the bell sounds and the gates ping open.
Kirrane said: “I suppose you are in a position where if you do miss half a beat you are able to recover and not get swamped early on booting in from a wide draw. That is one of the positives about being drawn a bit further off the fence.
“The horse shouldn’t miss the kick, he was electric out of the stalls at Keeneland. It was something I didn’t expect, I thought he might be half a step slower away than the American horses but he was right on terms with them and then ultimately a lot quicker than them in the early part of the race.
“We expect him to do the same again and we’re very happy with the draw. There are some useful horses drawn inside him, the likes of Caravel, and he has to get away on terms with them and the Japanese horse outside looks very fast. But we’re happy and the horse goes there in great form.”
The European challenge was dented when Royal Ascot hero Bradsell was scratched from the contest on Wednesday evening, but joining Live In The Dream in the line-up is Aidan O’Brien’s Aesop’s Fables fresh from a welcome return to form in the Prix de l’Abbaye.
The Ballydoyle hopeful was beaten a length in third behind Highfield Princess at ParisLongchamp and the mount of Ryan Moore will once again be wearing the blinkers which sparked him into life in the French capital.
“The time Ryan rode him before the Abbaye he said this guy is stuck in second gear and not doing a stroke, he’s just cruising along,” said O’Brien.
“We put the blinkers on him at home and Seamus (Heffernan) jumped him out of the stalls in blinkers and said he felt a totally different horse. That’s why the blinkers are on him.
“Ryan felt in France that if he had challenged the winner earlier he might have finished even closer and it was a huge run out of him and probably back to the best of his two-year-old form or even above it.
“We’re looking forward to it, he’s drawn out a little bit, but there’s speed on his inside so he will slot in and see what will happen.”
Joining the defending champion Caravel at the heart of the American challenge is Live In The Dream’s Woodford Stakes conqueror Arzak who represents Michael Trombetta, while Philip D’Amato’s Motorious is interesting having improved significantly on what he achieved in Britain when trained by Stuart Williams.
Christophe Clement is double-handed with Roses For Debra and Royal Ascot also ran Big Invasion, with Hideyuki Mori’s Jasper Krone adding a further international flavour to the contest having made the trip over from Japan.
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