Wednesday, 4 June 2025

Dubai World Cup Carnival


Formerly known as the Dubai International Racing Carnival, the Dubai World Cup Carnival consists of a series of nine meetings staged at Meydan Racecourse in Dubai, United Arab Emirates between January and March each year. The Dubai World Cup Carnival is staged in preparation for Dubai World Cup Night, in the late March, the highlight of which is the Dubai World Cup, a Group 1 race run over 2,000 metres, or approximately a mile and a quarter, on dirt and worth $12 million in prize money.


Inaugurated Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Ruler of Dubai, in 1996, the Dubai World Cup was originally run at Nad Al Sheba before being transferred to Meydan in 2010. In its recent history, the Dubai World Cup has vied with the Pegasus World Cup, staged at Gulfstream Park, Florida in January, as the most valuable horse race in the world. However, since the inauguration of the Saudi Cup, at King Abdulaziz Racetrack in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, which is worth $20 million, the Dubai World Cup has been only the second most valuable race in the world.


Nevertheless, the Dubai World Cup Carnival builds to a major milestone in the form of so-called 'Super Saturday', typically staged on the first Saturday in March. Super Saturday is the official 'dress rehearsal' for Dubai World Cup Night, intended to allow trainers from home and abroad with their eyes on the major prizes on the single most valuable raceday anywhere in the world to fine tune their chages.



Tuesday, 13 May 2025

Which horse was beaten favourite in the 2009 World Hurdle?

By way of clarification, the three-mile hurdling championship, previously and subsequently known as the Stayers' Hurdle was, between 2005 and 2016, sponsored by Ladbrokes and Ryanair and renamed the World Hurdle. Nevertheless, the Grade 1 contest was still run over 2 miles, 7 furlongs and 213 yards on the New Course at Cheltenham, where, alongside the Ryanair Chase, it formed one of the feature races on the third day of the Cheltenham Festival, staged annually in March.

The 2009 renewal of the World Hurdle was significant insofar as it featured the first appearance of Big Buck's, trained by Paul Nicholls, who would not only win at the first time of asking, but again in 2010, 2011 and 2012, during a then-record winning streak of 18 races. Originally campaigned over fences, Big Buck's unseated his rider, Sam Thomas, at the final fence in the Hennessy Gold Cup at Newbury on his seasonal debut in 2008/09 and the decision to send him on a retrieval mission, back over hurdles, ultimately proved to be a stroke of genius.

Favourite for the 2009 World Hurdle, though, was the Kasbah Bliss, trained by Francois Doumen, who was making his third appearance in the race, having finished fifth behind Inglis Drever in 2007 and second, beaten just a length, behind Iris's Gift in 2008. Fresh from an impressive, 8-length victory in the Rendlesham Hurdle at Haydock Park the previous month, the 7-year-old was sent off at 10/11 to follow up at the Festival.

However, having been held up at the rear of the field, Kasbah Bliss made headway to challenge at the second-last flight, but was outpaced on the run to the last and weakened on the run-in, eventually finishing fourth, 20½ lengths behind Big Buck's. That provded to be his last appearance at the Cheltenham Festival and, indeed, over hurdles anywhere. 

Thursday, 3 April 2025

When was the Winter Derby established?

Not to be confused with the historic Derby Stakes, which is, of course, run over a mile and a half at Epsom on the first Saturday in June, the Winter Derby Stakes is run over a mile and a quarter on the essentially sharp, left-handed all-weather track at Lingfield in February or March. Unlike the Derby proper, which is restricted to three-year-old colts and fillies, the Winter Derby is open to horses of both sexes, including geldings, aged four years and upwards. The all-weather track at Lingfield, which was originally Equitrack, but has been Polytrack since 2001, is not dissimilar to Epsom, insofar as it is undulating, with a downhill turn into the straight, reminiscent of the famous Tattenham Corner.

The Winter Derby was established, as a conditions stakes race, in 1998, but was promoted to Listed status the following year and, again, to Group 3 status in 2006, such that it is now the first Group race in the British Flat racing calendar and one of just four run on synthetic surfaces. The 2023 winner, Lord North, who justified odds-on favouritism with a ready, 3¼-length win, was the highest-rated horse ever to compete in the Winter Derby. Unsurprisingly, though, his winning prize money, of £56,710, was just a fraction of the £885,781 taken home by the Derby winner, Auguste Rodin.

The inuaugural winner of the Winter Derby was the four-year-old Running Stag, trained by Philip Mitchell, in Epsom, and ridden by Ray Cochrane. The son of Breeders' Cup Mile winner Cozzene won comfortably, by 3½ lengths, from Refuse To Lose and Mitchell later reflected on his success, saying, 'That was a serious coup. He was a Group horse racing against good handicappers.' Later that season, Running Stag competed in Germany, France and the United States, finishing seventh in the Breeders' Cup Classic at Churchill Downs.

Wednesday, 5 March 2025

Generally speaking, how have fillies fared in the Derby?

Of course, the Derby Stakes was famously founded by Sir Charles Bunbury and Edward Smith-Stanley, the Twelfth Earl of Derby, in 1780 and reputedly named in honour of the latter after a (probably apocryphal) coin toss between the pair. The race has always been run at Epsom Downs Racecourse in Surrey, but the first four renewals were staged on a straight, one-mile course; the wide, sweeping, left-handed turn into the straight, known as Tattenham Corner, did not become a feature of the Derby course until 1784, when the distance was extended to a mile and a half. Similarly, the Derby has always been open to three-year-old thoroughbred colts and fillies, although nowadays the race conditions stipluate 'entire' colts only; geldings have been excluded since 1904.

The Derby is the most prestigious of the five British Classics – the other four being the 2,000 Guineas, 1,000 Guineas, Oaks and St. Leger – and, with the winner collecting £892,160, at the last count, far and away the most valuable. Despite being run on the famously undulating, switchback track at Epsom, the Derby is supposed to produce a winner that is the outstanding middle-distance performer of a generation, whose name is, accordingly, etched into the annals of racing history. Nevertheless, for all the prestige and value of the 'Blue Riband' event, the names of winning fillies on the Derby roll of honour are few and far between, especially since the turn of the twentieth century.

In fact, the last filly to contest, never mind win, the Derby was Cape Verdi, way back in 1998. Owned by Goldolphin and trained by Saeed bin Suroor, the daughter of Caerleon, from the family of Nijinsky, justified joint-favouritism in the 1,000 Guineas when hacking up by 5 lengths on her first outing in the now-famous royal blue silks. Consequently, she was sent off as clear 11/4 favourite at Epsom, ahead of Grand Criterium winner Second Empire, trained by Aidan O'Brien, but, in truth, never really figured. Held up early, she met trouble in running on the descent into Tattenham Corner, but looked a non-stayer as she weakened inside the final quarter of a mile, eventually finishing ninth of 15, 12 lengths behind the eventual winner, High-Rise.

Overall, in 244 runnings of the Derby, so far, including the substitute races run at Newmarket between 1915 and 1918, during World War I, and between 1940 and 1945, during World War II, just six fillies – or, in other words, less than 0.25% of all the winners – have been victorious. The first of them was Eleanor, owned by the aforementioned Sir Charles Bunbury, in 1801 and she followed, in chronological order, by Blink Bonny in 1857, Shotover in 1882, Signorinetta in 1908, Tagalie in 1912 and Fifinella in 1916. The last-named, trained by Richard 'Dick' Dawson, won the so-called 'New Derby Stakes' at Newmarket on May 30, 1916 and followed up in the 'New Oaks Stakes', over the same course and distance, two days later. Thus, the last filly to win an 'authentic' Derby, over the traditional course and distance on Epsom Downs, was Tagalie in 1912.

Notwithstanding the existence of the Oaks Stakes, run over the same course and distance as the Derby, the dearth of fillies in the principal Classic essentially boils down to the commercial realities of the bloodstock industry. A colt that wins the Derby can command eye-watering stud fees as a stallion and, potentially, cover hundreds of mares a year. The 2009 Derby winner, Sea The Stars, for example, is currently standing at the Gilltown Stud, in Kilcullen, Co. Kildare for €200,000. By contrast, a filly that wins the Derby can only produce one foal a year as a broodmare and, as such, is a much less valuable commodity.

Wednesday, 12 February 2025

Which is more difficult to win, the British or American Triple Crown?

For the uninitiated, the British, or English, Triple Crown consists of the 2,000 Guineas Stakes, run over a mile at Newmarket in early May, the Derby Stakes, run over a mile and a half at Epsom Downs on the first Saturday in June, and the St. Leger Stakes, run over a mile and three-quarters at Doncaster in September. The American Triple Crown, on the other hand, consists of the Kentucky Derby, run over a mile and a quarter at Churchill Downs on the first Saturday in May, the Preakness Stakes, run over nine and a half furlongs at Pimlico two weeks later, and the Belmont Stakes, run over a mile and a half at Belmont Park three weeks after that.

In both cases, all three constituent races are open to three-year-old colts and fillies so, aside from obvious disparities in terms of distance and timing, the main difference is that the British series is contested exclusively on turf, whereas the American series is contested exclusively on dirt. Chronologically, the British Triple Crown pre-dates the American Triple Crown by 66 years, by virtue of the fact that the constituting races have co-existed since 1809, as opposed to 1875.

The first horse to win the British Triple Crown was West Australian in 1853 and, since then, a total of 15 horses have done so. However, it is important that the most recent of them was Nijinsky in 1970 and, since then, only three horses – Nashwan, in 1989, Sea The Stars, in 2006, and Camelot, in 2012 – have won both the 2,000 Guineas Stakes and the Derby Stakes; the first two named were not even entered in the St. Leger Stakes, emphasising the preference for speed over stamina in the modern bloodstock market. On the other side of the Atlantic, a total of 13 horses have won the American Triple Crown, the most recent being Justified in 2018.

Notwithstanding the declining popularity of the British Triple Crown, which series is more difficult to win is, largely, a matter of opinion. However, the general consensus is that the British Triple Crown, which requires a horse to reproduce its form over a matter of months, rather than weeks, over a wider range of distances, is the more demanding.

Wednesday, 8 January 2025

Which was the last filly to win the St. Leger Stakes?

Run annually over 1 mile, 6 furlongs and 115 yards on Town Moor, Doncaster in September, the St. Leger Stakes is the final British Classic of the season. The race is open to three-year-old colts and fillies and, as such, forms the final leg of the Triple Crown and the Fillies' Triple Crown, although the latter has not been won since 1970 and the latter not since 1985.

In the better part of two and a half centuries since the inaugural running of the St. Leger, on Cantley Common, Doncaster on September 24, 1776, a total of 42 fillies have won. However, since the St. Leger returned to Town Moor following World War II, just seven fillies – namely Meld (1955), Cantelo (1959), Dunfermline (1977), Sun Princess (1983), Oh So Sharp (1985), User Friendly (1992) and Simple Verse (2015) – have been victorious. The last named was unusual insofar as she did not contest the Oaks, run over a mile and half at Epsom in late May or early June, whereas the other six fillies all did, and all bar Cantelo won the second fillies' Classic.

Owned by Qatar Racing Limited, trained by Ralph Beckett, in Kimpton, Hampshire and ridden, for most of her three-year-old campaign, by Andrea Atzeni, Simple Verse was unraced as a juvenile, but made the transition from handicaps to Pattern level when winning the Group 3 Lilly Langtry Stakes at Goodwood in July, 2015, on the sixth career start. She did not race again until the St. Leger, for which she was supplemented, at a cost of £50,000.

At Doncaster, she was sent off 8/1 fourth choice of the seven runners and won by a head in a driving finish, only to be disqualified for causing repeated interference to the eventual runner-up Bondi Beach, the 2/1 joint favourite, trained by Aidan O'Brien. However, her connections appealed the decision and, 11 days after the race, Simple Verse was reinstated by a British Horseracing Authority (BHA) panel.