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Shadow Of Light to shine again
Shadow Of Light to shine again

New Paper

time9 hours ago

  • Sport
  • New Paper

Shadow Of Light to shine again

ASCOT Shadow Of Light will face 21 rivals as he bids to get back to winning ways in the £725,750 (S$1.25 million) Group 1 Commonwealth Cup (1,200m) for three-year-olds at Royal Ascot on June 20. A unique winner of the Middle Park and Dewhurst Stakes at Newmarket last season, which saw him crowned champion two-year-old, Shadow Of Light returned to action this season by finishing third behind stablemate Ruling Court and St James's Palace Stakes hero Field Of Gold in the Group 1 2000 Guineas (1,600m) at Newmarket on May 3. After quickening up nicely, the son of Lope De Vega faded in the closing stages on his first start over a mile, leaving connections to opt to drop him back to six furlongs for the Commonwealth Cup. Charlie Appleby's colt is a 7-4 chance to claim further Group 1 honours, with the Ger Lyons-trained Babouche, who landed the Group 3 Lacken Stakes (1,200m) at Naas last time, the main danger according to the market. Appleby would be keen for a change of luck as it has been three years since he cracked open the champagne at Royal Ascot. Godolphin's main trainer could barely hide his disappointment after favourite Cinderella's Dream finished second to Crimson Advocate in the Group 2 Duke of Cambridge Stakes (1,600m) on June 18. Joining Babouche in the colours of Juddmonte will be Andrew Balding's Jonquil. The colt is another son of Lope De Vega dropping back to 1,200m on the back of finishing runner-up in the Group 1 French 2000 Guineas (1,600m) last time. Balding will also saddle the improving Berkshire Whisper. Aidan O'Brien is dual-handed thanks to last year's Group 1 Prix Morny (1,200m) scorer Whistlejacket and Ides Of March, while the Michael Appleby-trained Big Mojo also takes his chances. Arabian Dusk and Soldier's Heart both go for Simon and Ed Crisford, with Rayevka and Shisospicy, who represent France and America respectively, adding further international spice. Later on the card, the Francis-Henri Graffard-trained Zarigana heads 11 declarations for the £725,750 Group 1 Coronation Stakes (1,600m). Carrying the colours of his late Highness Aga Khan, the daughter of Siyouni took her record to four from five with a dramatic victory in the Group 1 French 1000 Guineas (1,600m) at ParisLongchamp on May 11. Challengers are aplenty, with Owen Burrows' impressive Listed Pretty Polly Stakes (2,000m) winner Falakeyah defending her unbeaten record for Shadwell, while Kon Tiki will also put her perfect status on the line having been supplemented by Jane Chapple-Hyam on the back of a commanding win in the Listed Sky Bet Fillies' Stakes (1,600m) at York. O'Brien's pair Exactly and January also take their chances, while the Ollie Sangster-trained duo of Flight and Simmering, who finished second and third to Desert Flower in the Group 1 1000 Guineas (1,600m) respectively on May 4, add further depth. RACING AND SPORTS

Ombudsman lays down the law in Prince of Wales
Ombudsman lays down the law in Prince of Wales

New Paper

time9 hours ago

  • Sport
  • New Paper

Ombudsman lays down the law in Prince of Wales

ASCOT Father-and-son training duo John and Thady Gosden celebrated a big-race double on Day 2 of Royal Ascot on June 18 with Ombudsman landing the £1.06 million (S$1.83 million) Group 1 Prince of Wales's Stakes (2,000m). The feat came one day after their superstar Field Of Gold destroyed his rivals in the Group 1 St James's Palace Stakes (1,600m) on the first day of the five-day meeting. Ombudsman's jockey William Buick held his nerve when looking for a gap through a wall of horses as the race reached its climax. However, the Norway-born jockey found a way round and then stormed clear to give the Gosden stable a sixth win in the race. Having endured a tough time, Buick, 36, released his pent-up emotion, punching the air in delight as he steered the $42 outsider past the post. "It has been a difficult few days," said Buick. "I have got a little bit of experience, so I try and stay level. "I have a lot of good rides. You look forward right?" John Gosden, for whom it was a 70th Royal Ascot winner, said Buick had been "patient and rewarded". Earlier the Gosdens had enjoyed a record-extending sixth win in the £225,000 Group 2 Duke of Cambridge Stakes (1,600m). Top Australia-based New Zealand jockey James McDonald swooped to win on Crimson Advocate ($38). "Absolutely delighted, pleasure to ride a winner for the group (the Emir of Qatar's Wathnan Racing for whom it was their third winner of this year's edition)," said McDonald, recording his fifth Royal Ascot winner. "I am very lucky to be jogging on the right spot at the right time. "Even when you do not have a fancied horse in a race here it is a very special, elegant and graceful place to ride at." Earlier, Aidan O'Brien ticked off one of the rare races missing from his win list, True Love winning the opening £150,000 Group 2 Queen Mary Stakes (1,000m) in fine style. It was the 55-year-old Irish master trainer's 93rd Royal Ascot winner, English multiple-champion jockey Ryan Moore's 87th. AFP

Royal Ascot still regal even against 'headwinds'
Royal Ascot still regal even against 'headwinds'

New Paper

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • New Paper

Royal Ascot still regal even against 'headwinds'

ASCOT The "headwinds" of prizemoney and rival racing festivals are even more concerning than they were last year. Nevertheless, the quality of foreign runners at Royal Ascot is "pretty positive", director of racing Nick Smith told AFP. The five-day meeting - described by Hong Kong-based Australian trainer David Hayes as "Melbourne Cup week on steroids" - which starts on June 17 is commemorating the 200th anniversary of the Royal Procession. Thankfully for the members of the Royal Family and their guests, the carriages are led by horses considerably slower than the splendid thoroughbreds that provide the day's entertainment. Mixing it with the best of mainstream European talent, there will be runners from Japan, Australia, the United States and "quirky" runners from Norway. Despite famous victories for Australian horses in years gone by from Choisir's remarkable double to superstar Black Caviar and American star Tepin, it takes both a lot of hard graft and Smith's powers of persuasion to coax their successors back. Smith concedes that being unable to compete in terms of prize money - Royal Ascot will boast at least £10 million (S$17.4 million) in 2025 - with festivals such as Dubai and Saudi Arabia makes his task that much tougher. "The headwinds are more concerning and more widespread than last year," said Smith. "None of those problems have gone away and they have even been exacerbated. It is getting harder and harder every year. "Over 50 Japanese horses went to Saudi and Dubai and those sort of numbers are not replicated in Europe. "We are doing our best in difficult circumstances. So overall I am satisfied with the situation." Smith says subsidies are offered to runners that are three-years and older as "you have to do that, you would get nowhere if you did not". Two-year-olds are excluded as "they could be anything, and if we did, there would be planeloads of them". Satono Reve, who bids to become Japan's first winner at the meeting after 10 previous challengers fell short, in the Group 1 Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Stakes (1,200m) on June 21 and America's top-rated US turf horse Carl Spackler, who is Australia-bound, in the Group 1 Queen Anne Stakes (1,600m) on the opening day are perhaps the most eye-catching. Previously trained by Chad Brown, Carl Spackler was bought by Yulong and will race at Ascot under Melbourne champion trainer Ciaron Maher and will be partnered by Sydney champion jockey James McDonald. The eight-time winner by Lope De Vega will then continue his career in Australia. "It would not be the strongest year nor the weakest," said Smith. "The numbers are not so relevant, more important is they are genuinely competitive. "Wesley Ward's two-year-old's are very strong. There are also a few quirky horses, including a Norwegian runner later in the week. "The Australian Asfoora coming back (after winning the King Charles III Stakes last year) is great, though the Aussie sprinters this year have been up and down truth be known. "Overall, though, pretty positive." Smith says of course there are names missing that would have enriched the meeting even more. "One is always wanting more," he said. "I would have liked Hong Kong stars Romantic Warrior and Ka Ying Rising but one has to accept that talent seems to spread itself around." However, there is much for Smith to enthuse about. Attendance forecast is up from 2024, and the Saturday of Royal Ascot remains the only race meeting outside of the US that NBC broadcasts on its main channel. "As ever it is a big week, a chance to be positive, show the best of British racing, advertise what Britain does best," he said. "We can get back to the politics and controversy in a week or so's time, which I am sure we will." AFP

Royal Ascot announces change to going with temperatures set to soar as ‘tropical heat dome' melts Britain
Royal Ascot announces change to going with temperatures set to soar as ‘tropical heat dome' melts Britain

Scottish Sun

time4 days ago

  • Climate
  • Scottish Sun

Royal Ascot announces change to going with temperatures set to soar as ‘tropical heat dome' melts Britain

The forecast couldn't be better HOT TO TROT Royal Ascot announces change to going with temperatures set to soar as 'tropical heat dome' melts Britain Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) ASCOT have confirmed a going change ahead of the first day of racing of the Royal festival. Temperatures are set to soar this week with a 'tropical heat dome' signalling the true start of summer. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 1 Punters, jockeys and horses will soak up the summer sun at Royal Ascot this week - with temperatures set to hit 30C by the weekend amid a 'tropical heat dome' Credit: Alamy The Berkshire track missed most of last weekend's thunderstorms and grounds workers have been busy watering the track in the meantime. With a heatwave of temperatures around 30C set to come into play it doesn't look like any rain will fall this week. And, as of Monday morning, that caused the ground to change from good, good to firm in places, to officially good to firm, good in places. The first of five day's top class racing kicks off at 2.30pm tomorrow with a blockbuster Queen Anne over a mile. And by then it is expected the ground will be good to firm all over. Punters flocking to the track can expect to sip a Pimm's or two under some dazzling sunsets, with the mercury going from a max of 26C on Tuesday to 29C by Friday. But it could push above the 30C barrier by Saturday, with much of the UK lined up for the hottest weather of the year so far. The Met Office forecast for Tuesday predicts 'another fine and very warm day, with plenty of sunshine and light winds'. And for the rest of the week the forecast reads: "Fine and increasingly hot through this period, with temperatures climbing by both day and night while winds remain light." More to follow. FREE BETS - GET THE BEST SIGN UP DEALS AND RACING OFFERS Commercial content notice: Taking one of the offers featured in this article may result in a payment to The Sun. You should be aware brands pay fees to appear in the highest placements on the page. 18+. T&Cs apply. Remember to gamble responsibly A responsible gambler is someone who: Establishes time and monetary limits before playing Only gambles with money they can afford to lose Never chases their losses Doesn't gamble if they're upset, angry or depressed Gamcare – Gamble Aware – Find our detailed guide on responsible gambling practices here.

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