
Trawlerman and Buick move into top gear to land Ascot Gold Cup
It was quite some way for jockey William Buick to win his first Gold Cup aged 36, the winner also breaking the track record.
Norway-born Buick, who had ridden Wednesday's feature race winner Ombudsman also for the Gosdens, stood up in the saddle and saluted the crowd punching the air.
"He is a great horse, only beaten by the great Kyprios last year," said Buick.
"I did not have to put the brakes on once.
"He was on autopilot. I was just a passenger.
"My first Gold Cup, long time coming, not an easy race to win.
"I am delighted."
For the Gosdens it was their second win in the race since they teamed up but for John it was his fifth, having trained the legendary Stradivarius to three successive victories (2018-20).
"He (Trawlerman) just goes off, William said 'he can judge pace better than me'," said Gosden senior.
"We know he stays. They never got to him, simply outstayed them. He's part of the furniture, he's a favourite.
"He ran Kyprios close, it is great to come back to show he's a proper Cup horse, and he is a lovely staying horse for the future."
Gosden, 74, is usually as well informed as anyone on a plethora of subjects but the Cambridge economics graduate was caught off guard when being told it was Buick's first Gold Cup.
"Really? A fabulous jockey," purred Gosden.
The Gosdens' five winners this year are welcome after a disappointing Royal Ascot last year.
"Last year was tricky, we've aimed at this (meeting) for 4-5-6 months, great when it comes to fulfilment," he said.
"One has to be realistic there are always plenty of banana skins around the corner."
'Take him out'
Whilst Aidan O'Brien's fancied runner Illinois never landed a blow on Trawlerman the Irish master had a double earlier on the card to move to 95 Royal Ascot victories.
He made it three wins from three in the two-year-old Group races this week as the odds on favourite Charles Darwin prevailed in the opening Norfolk Stakes.
Ryan Moore had to battle a bit on Charles Darwin as the race evolved but he found a second wind and raced clear to take the Group Two contest.
"A very special horse, they came to me with two furlongs to go I asked him a question and he answered it brilliantly," said Moore, who took his Royal Ascot tally to 88.
The legendary duo struck again in the Group Two Ribblesdale Stakes -- Garden of Eden taking the honours.
Her odds of 7/1 reflected that she was not one of the stable's most fancied of runners this week.
"It is probably not the best Ribblesdale of all time," said Michael Tabor, one of the 'lads' as O'Brien's owners are referred to.
"She would not have been one to set your stall out for but she is a nice surprise."
The bookies took another battering in the King George V Stakes, favourite Merchant taking the honours after overhauling O'Brien's valiant Serious Contender in the final yards.
For trainer William Haggas and jockey Tom Marquand it was their second winner in the race, both teaming up to win the competitive handicap in 2023 with Desert Hero.
Haggas revealed that it had been a nerve wracking 24 hours -- Merchant coughed "10 times" on Wednesday and then slipped on entering the saddling box at Ascot.
"A lot of people don't understand what trainers go through," said a weary Haggas.
"He then held his leg –- the left-hind –- all through saddling, so we went out and trotted him up twice.
"He seemed alright, but I said to Tom if you're not happy with him at the start, take him out.
"We couldn't tell anyone, we've got 50 people here.
© 2025 AFP

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


France 24
6 hours ago
- France 24
Lions slump to warm-up defeat by Argentina
Bundee Aki and Tadhg Beirne both went over the Pumas line and the Lions were also awarded a penalty try but the visitors replied with three tries of their own including one for fly-half Tomas Albornoz who finished with 18 points. It was the first opening tour match loss since 1971 but the performance against the fifth-ranked side in the world will give coach Andy Farrell plenty of cause for hope as the team prepares to set off on Saturday for their three-Test tour of Australia. Seventeen players were not considered by Farrell because of their presence in domestic competitions last weekend or, in the case of Toulouse's Blair Kinghorn, this weekend. In spite of that the Lions, a team drawn from the best of England, Ireland, Wales and Scotland, produced long stretches of effective and eye-catching rugby. The Lions, however, were under pressure from the start as the Pumas went on the attack from the kick-off, Albornoz stroking over a penalty in the fifth minute. The Lions then had a try ruled out when Luke Cowan-Dickie spilled the ball forwards as he reached for the line but Fin Smith levelled with a penalty. The Pumas hit back straight away as wing Ignacio Mendy stepped in off his wing, wrong-footed Duhan van der Merwe and slid through for the try. The Lions had a second try, this time from Sione Tuipulotu, ruled out before his centre partner Bundee Aki barged through for their opener. Fin Smith added the conversion to put them into the lead 10-8. The Lions continued to throw the ball around and take the game to the Argentinians but it was the visitors who looked the better-oiled machine. Albornoz knocked over two more penalties to make it 14-10 as the clock ticked towards the red. The Lions had time to restart and had a chance to regain the lead before the half-time whistle as the Pumas coughed up possession. The Pumas, though, quickly retrieved it when Van der Merwe lost possession, allowing them to attack down the right with only full-back Marcus Smith to beat. Albornoz skittered through under the posts for their second try of the half and added the conversion to take a 21-10 lead at the break. The Lions began the second half strongly and picked up a penalty try when Puma prop Mayc Vivas came in from the side of a maul to prevent it going over the line, collecting a yellow card in the process. Shortly after, the Lions were in front, a bullocking run by prop Ellis Genge producing chaos in the Argentine defence and allowing Irish lock Tadhg Beirne to crash over. Just before the hour, the Pumas were back in front when Connacht's Santiago Cordero beat Marcus Smith in a sprint to the line. The Lions camped on the Argentine line but Beirne gave away a soft penalty to allow the Pumas to clear their lines and claim a victory that left the Puma players in tears.


France 24
13 hours ago
- France 24
Royal Ascot is 'heaven on earth' for shock winner Cercene's trainer
Cercene was at 33/1 the longest price winner ever in the Coronation Stakes, she showed real grit under Gary Carroll to battle back to overcome French favourite Zarigana. For Carroll and trainer Joe Murphy, who had only had one previous runner at the meeting, it was easily their most prestigious winner and comes on arguably the biggest stage. "This is 50 years of work, that's what it is, of love and care, and all for the owners we have, all our people, it's just a whole group of people together," said Murphy, who has been training since 1977. "This is heaven on Earth." For Carroll it was his third Royal Ascot winner but first ever Group One winner anywhere and due reward for flying back after riding in Ireland on Thursday. "Hugely good horses are very hard to come by and sometimes only one comes along in a lifetime and I guess mine has," he said. Harry Eustace has got a real taste now for Group One races at Royal Ascot, having broken his duck on Tuesday he added a second in the Commonwealth Cup with Time for Sandals, a shock 25/1 winner. "I don't know it has not landed yet," said Eustace of his astonishing week. "You have to be very careful with Ascot if you get your hopes up it can bite you back." For his father James, who Harry took over from, it was "magic". "It is so wonderful," said Eustace senior, who also enjoyed success at Royal Ascot. "We tried to get Harry to go to university, we succeeded initially and he went to Edinburgh. "He had two good years and a lot of fun before he dropped out and then took off for Australia and the racing bug bit." - 'Fantastic days' For jockey Richard Kingscote it was a seventh Royal Ascot winner, his first Group One, and ended a losing run of 67 rides at the meeting. "This means an awful lot," said Kingscote. "I have had some nice horses but this will do the world of good. "I am delighted to ride a good winner for Harry, he is a gentleman, it is a happy yard." The race had looked set up to end trainer Charlie Appleby's three year losing run at the meeting but once again it ended in disappointment -- hot favourite Shadow of Light never featured. Willie Mullins normally associated with the Cheltenham Festival winners enclosure had quite a day. The 68-year-old Irish training legend began the day in the Royal Procession, his wife Jackie presented a trophy, and then he welcomed home his 11th Royal Ascot winner. Ryan Moore recorded his 91st Royal Ascot winner as he guided Ethical Diamond home to an impressive victory in the Duke of Edinburgh Stakes, just months after he finished fourth in the County Hurdle at the Cheltenham Festival. "It is wonderful," said Mullins. "These are fantastic days. "Jackie said let us just enjoy it and to have a winner well it is the cherry on top of the cake is it not?" Venetian Sun won the first the Group Three Albany Stakes ending O'Brien's hopes of a sweep of the two-year-old races this week. Trainer Karl Burke had described the week so far as "savage" but he had a beaming smile on his face as he walked back to the winner's enclosure. "A very special filly never had a two-year-old filly like her. She has been kicking group horses out of the way at home," said Burke, who previously won the Albany in 2020 with Dandalla. Venetian Sun, co-owned by Tony Bloom owner of Premier League side Brighton, was a second Royal Ascot winner for jockey Clifford Lee. "It is very hard to get a winner here, you think you come here with a real chance and find you fall short," he said.


France 24
18 hours ago
- France 24
Kiwi sailing legend Burling joins Italy's America's Cup team
The 34-year-old New Zealander's "exact role has yet to be defined" for the Italian team as they prepare for the 2027 edition of the quadrennial yachting showpiece in Naples. There are obstacles to Burling -- who skippered New Zealand to victory over Luna Rossa in 2021 -- being on the boat itself. Under the provisional protocols for the 2027 regatta, as set out by the champions in May, no sailor can compete if they were part of a different team in the previous one. Burling, who was pivotal to New Zealand's three successive wins (2017/21/24) skippering them in the last two, became a free agent in April when he was unable to reach an agreement with Team New Zealand. "I've always loved racing against Luna Rossa and now to join this iconic team is a real honour," he said in a statement on the Luna Rossa website. "The innovation and competitiveness they bring to the Cup has always inspired me. "I'm looking forward to working hard alongside a world-class team, doing my part to help win Luna Rossa's first America's Cup." Max Sirena, CEO of Luna Rossa, said he and the team were "thrilled" to have secured his services. "Peter has been a long-time rival, and over the years we've come to deeply respect both his exceptional sailing talent and his sportsmanship on the racecourse," said Sirena. "Even though his exact role has yet to be defined, he will certainly be part of the sailing team, reinforcing Luna Rossa's core leadership group and contributing to key areas of our development program." Burling's split from Team New Zealand came, the latter said in April, because of the changing shape of the contest which is now to be contested in more regular cycles, meaning different requirements from team members. The three-time Olympic medallist's America's Cup record is astonishing. Burling was just 26 when he became the youngest-ever helmsman to win the America's Cup as challengers New Zealand beat Oracle Team USA 7-1 in Bermuda. In the 2021 victory over Luna Rossa, he became, at 30, the youngest skipper to win the event. He followed that up by skippering them to a 7-2 win over Ben Ainslie's British challengers, INEOS Britannia in Barcelona last year.