Connections of Mostahdaf may target the Breeders’ Cup Turf at the end of the year should he continue to sparkle this summer.
The John and Thady Gosden-trained colt took his earnings to over £1million with a seven-length demolition of a strong Neom Turf Cup field in Riyadh on Saturday.
Jim Crowley’s mount was one of the easiest winners over the two-day Saudi Cup meeting and following his eighth victory in 13 career starts, the son of Frankel may now head to Dubai for the Sheema Classic.
Angus Gold, racing manager to owners Shadwell Estate Company, said plans for Mostahdaf could involve working back from the Breeders’ Cup Turf at Santa Anita in November.
“He hasn’t got back to England yet, so we haven’t sat down to discuss plans,” said Gold. “Obviously, we want to see that he is in good shape and take it from there, but the Sheema Classic is the obvious route.
“I’d be silly if I said anything other than I was very impressed by him. On his day, he is a pretty high-class horse. He seems to go well fresh.
“I thought they did brilliantly to prepare a horse like that through an English winter, to go out and run a race like that first-time out.”
Very soft conditions did not suit when last of 20 in the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe at ParisLongchamp in October.
Yet the five-year-old looked in great shape ahead of the Group Three Neom Turf Cup and from an ideal draw at the King Abdulaziz Racecourse, Crowley had the race won turning for home, before he was eased down at the end of the extended mile-and-a-quarter race.
“He was in a perfect spot and all went his way,” said Gold.
“The one thing we do know about him is he loves proper fast ground. He moved beautifully on that fast ground on Saturday.
“Jim said to me that something like aiming him backwards at the Breeders’ Cup at the end of the year on fast ground, the mile-and-a-half race, might be an option.
“We haven’t sat down to make any long-term plans, though. With these sort of horses, it is fairly obvious sort of races. If he goes back to the Sheema, he is going to need a break then, so there will be nothing early.
“Depending on how he comes out of it all, you’d obviously look at Royal Ascot.
“I would say anything mid-summer onwards, anything from a mile and a quarter to a mile and a half would suit.
“He had plenty of speed on Saturday, but we know he stays a mile and a half.
“The options are varied, but we know he goes well fresh and so I think we will pick and choose our spots, but get him through Dubai first in one piece, hopefully.”
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Chantal Sutherland is relishing the chance to enjoy the autumn of her career and insists she is “finally in a good place” as she prepares for the International Jockeys Challenge on the first day of the Saudi Cup meeting.
The Canadian-born rider had little time to celebrate turning 47 on Thursday, as she focussed on the four handicap races – worth $400,000 apiece, with a further $100,000 prize fund for the challenge itself – which form part of Friday’s card at the King Abdulaziz Racecourse.
Sutherland is now based in Florida, having decided to resurrect her career after retirement, a painful divorce, injury and an enforced Covid hiatus.
Model, TV personality, pilot and poster girl, she once plied her trade at the Southern California tracks.
Time may have moved on, but her talent still remains. Her riding remains as crisp, efficient and ruthless as ever. More importantly, she is enjoying life again.
Sutherland became the first woman to win the Santa Anita Handicap when Game On Dude struck in 2011 and she led down the stretch on the same colt in that year’s Breeders’ Cup Classic, only to be pipped by Drosselmeyer, ridden by her former boyfriend Mike Smith.
Sutherland married businessman Dan Kruse in May 2012, but the marriage broke down in 2016.
“I was second in the Breeders’ Cup Classic and I thought that was around the time to maybe have a child,” said Sutherland.
“I stopped racing and took about four years out and didn’t ever get to have a kid. The marriage didn’t work out either, so I went back to racing, got injured, then got back from the injury, then Covid happened.
“It has been stop-start, but now everything, with the flow, I feel there is an alignment in my life and everything is going well.”
Sutherland’s decision to return to the track was prompted by a move to the Sunshine State.
“I was going to ride just before Covid. I was going to ride Turfway (Park) and that was freezing,” she said.
“I’d frozen for I don’t know how long in my career – in Canada, at Aqueduct. I thought, ‘I’m going to Florida,’ and I just loved it. It felt like home.
“It is pretty close to California-style, if a little more humid. The Hispanic community down there has been outstanding, they have been super awesome. I’m trying to learn Spanish and I’m so grateful to them. I’ve done really well there and I love them. I love the track and Gulfstream Park has been amazing.
“When you are away from the sport for so long, you really find out how much you love it. No matter what happens in the future, I always want to be in racing. It is just an incredible sport and it brings so many people so much happiness.
“I’m very happy in Florida and very happy to be doing what I’m doing again.”
Sutherland will pit her talent against the likes of Frankie Dettori, Joao Moreira, Yuga Kawada and Joanna Mason in the jockeys challenge with the jockeys receiving 15 per cent of prize-money won in each of the four races.
“It has been an honour to be invited to be invited to Saudi. I love it here,” she added.
“It is my first time in Saudi Arabia and I’m actually blown away by the hospitality and the kindness people have shown.
“I’m really looking forward to the jockeys challenge. I’ve already worked out the races, watched all the replays and I’ve spoken to some key handicap people who have put the races together. I feel I am ready, physically, mentally and preparation-wise. I’ve done my homework. It’s going to be exciting.”
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Frankie Dettori is saying all the right things. No desert storm over the latest whip rules, no sign of annoyance at the umpteenth question about his retirement.
He is on autopilot in Riyadh. His smile is almost forced. He looks tired, yet somehow leaner as he sits before the waiting press conference ahead of the fourth edition of the Saudi Cup.
Country Grammer will be his partner in the big one. And there are $20million reasons why the latest pit-stop on this long-goodbye tour matters.
The Saudi Cup came calling, of course. They want star power to promote the event and while much of the King Abdulaziz Racecourse still looks like a building site 48 hours before the big race itself, there is no better salesman than Dettori.
On Friday, he will ride in the International Jockeys Challenge – a series of four handicap races, each run for an eye-watering $400,000 – alongside five other international male riders, two locals and seven international female jockeys. All 14 jockeys will ride in each of the dirt and turf races.
“I’m looking forward to it. Tomorrow is the appetiser for the big one,” insists Dettori.
“I’ve been coming here for 30 years. I’m part of the furniture and I know most of the trainers and I’m riding with some great jockeys, so I was honoured to be asked.”
The dirt track, which surrounds the lush, green Riyadh turf course, is considered by many riders to be the best in the world.
“Back in the day we used to race at a track in the city centre and this track has been built about 15 years, and it is very much like the footprint of Belmont in New York,” says the Italian, who will make his 11th seasonal appearance in Saudi Arabia, where he has ridden six winners from 72 rides.
“I’d say this is the best dirt track I have ever ridden. It is kinder than other dirt tracks I’ve ridden throughout the world.
“For example, you saw Mishriff, a turf horse, win the Saudi Cup a few years ago, so it does open things up a bit for turf horses and I really enjoy riding here.
“Basically this (event) is getting bigger and bigger. The Saudi Cup has found a good slot in the international racing calendar.
“It just shows you with the kind of (quality) horses we will ride this weekend.”
A couple of months spent in America have appeared to have done him the world of good. The positivity is genuine enough and certainly a far cry from the angst of a public fall-out with John Gosden, whose thinly veiled criticism of the jockey’s work ethic surfaced after a run of bad luck and a smattering of unfortunate rides at Royal Ascot in the summer. Bridges were quickly mended, lessons learned.
Dettori has since been riding out of his magnificently tanned skin, helped by his old friend and ally, trainer Bob Baffert.
His recent stint at Santa Anita has reaped rich rewards and while not exactly fresh from a fabulous four-timer at Santa Anita on Saturday, one gets the feeling that he has surprised himself a touch.
“It has been overwhelming,” Dettori adds. “I didn’t expect to do so well, especially some great rides at Santa Anita and I’ve really enjoyed it. I’ve been getting all sorts of support from a variety of trainers, so it is going well.”
Dettori announced this will be his last season in the saddle in December. Riyadh was the first place the international media had gathered in numbers to get his thoughts. Taken aback, he ticked the boxes, fielded the same questions he has faced – and will certainly continue to bat back – with the courtesy they demanded.
Prodded by a Japanese correspondent about the decision to retire, Dettori replies: “It is only just sinking in, now that I’m stopping, that I have thought about it.
“Since I announced my retirement, I have been overwhelmed by the warmth of the people in and out of racing. That is the bit I will miss.
“I only started off as a young kid with a dream to be a jockey and I think I’ve pretty much succeeded, and the last few months have been a great journey and everyone has been very nice. That’s all I have to say.”
Another prod to expand, produced another straight bat. ”I gave myself a year to give myself a last farewell.
“I’ve been at Santa Anita because I was asked to – I would usually spend my winters in Dubai.
“I will do the European programme and then Ascot should be my last one in England (British Champions Day) and then possibly the Breeders’ Cup will be my last (meeting), or a Melbourne Cup or something else will materialise, but basically this year is my last. I will be 53 in December and I will finish at the top.
“It’s very hard to choose the right moment. My heart wants to carry on , but I want to have another life after this.”
What that constitutes appears to be more than a little fluid or simply unknown.
For now, he states: “I will keep my eye on working in the media side, in racing obviously.
“That is the road I am thinking of taking, possibly doing other things, buying a few horses, being a bloodstock agent, something like that. At the end of the season, I’ll have a couple of months to sit back and look at the whole picture.”
The irony is that in this land of sand and dust, Dettori’s plans for a future after race-riding are not set in concrete. Father Time is knocking, yet what if a special horse should emerge?
America has served him well. A Kentucky Derby is still missing form the Dettori CV.
There will be a temptation for an encore. For now, he will just keep saying all the right things.
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Charlie Johnston is used to injuries. A red baseball cap helped shield his bruised and cut left eyebrow as he watched Subjectivist stretch his legs ahead of sunrise at the King Abdulaziz Racecourse on Wednesday.
His own injury was sustained by the rigours of playing for rugby for Wensleydale. He suffered similar scarring last year. “One day, I’ll learn,” quipped the 32-year-old.
There is no hiding for Subjectivist, however. The injury sustained by this glorious stayer was far more extreme.
He will make his comeback in Saturday’s Group Three Longines Red Sea Turf Handicap, having been off the track since cantering all over his rivals in the 2021 Ascot Gold Cup.
The son of Teofilo will take on 12 rivals, including the John and Thady Gosden-trained Ebor winner Trawlerman, Ian Williams’ Meydan handicap hero Enemy, Karl Burke’s Prix Chaudenay scorer Al Qareem and Nate The Great from the Andrew Balding yard in the one-mile-seven-furlong contest.
Johnston’s relief that the yard’s latest superstar looked plenty fit enough for his return was palpable.
“It has been a very long road, 20 months since this horse saw the racecourse,” said Johnston.
“It has been a long journey for the team and one where we’ve trodden on egg-shells for the most of it.
“So, to see him back in this kind of environment is fantastic.”
He added: “Horses like him don’t come around very often. It was getting to that point where you don’t really care about the opposition.”
Subjectivist had excelled in the Middle East when winning the Dubai Gold Cup en route to his Ascot victory, yet misfortune befell him after beating the likes of Princess Zoe, Spanish Mission and Stradivarius at Ascot.
“About two weeks after the Ascot Gold Cup, he had an injury to his superficial flexor tendon – an injury which can be career-ending, basically – and to get horses back is no given,” added Johnston.
“We had the best stayer in the world and it was just a case of getting him on his ‘A game’.
“We left Ascot with Goodwood, Ascot, France, Dubai, Saudi (in mind) – you were just picking the races you wanted to win.
“To have that and to lose it was a huge blow to the yard. We are just hoping we can have him back to somewhere near his former glory.”
Nine months on a water-walker, a summer in the field and brought along slowly since he returned to work in September, including a pleasing piece of work at Newcastle two weeks ago, have primed Subjectivist for his first start in 618 days.
After flexing his muscles on the turf, Johnston hopes he can answer the $2.5million question under Joe Fanning, who himself has had to overcome a lengthy spell on the sidelines.
“We wouldn’t be here if we didn’t think we were ready,” Johnston added. “But at the same time any prep is difficult, but in particular in a situation when when you come back from such a serious injury.
“We took him to Newcastle and that was a pretty serious workout. That was the key point, to feel he was in shape to be ready to come here.
“What he did here today was to see him stretch his legs, see that he is fit and well and that he has taken the journey OK.
“The hard work has been done at home and now it is a case of keeping him wrapped up until Saturday.
“It is very much one day at a time with this horse. Every morning he canters up the gallop, he goes into his box and we check that his leg is still OK.
“I’ve barely allowed myself to think about Saturday, never mind think beyond Saturday.”
The yard have a rich history with stayers such as Double Trigger and Royal Rebel, yet Subjectivist could quickly help the young handler emerge from the long shadow of his father, Mark, having recently taken over the licence.
“The only horses that he has mentioned in the same breath as Subjectivist are Attraction and Shamardal, because they are the three horses where we don’t care about the opposition,” said the trainer.
“These horses were just better than anything else and it was just a case of getting them there on their A-game.
“This horse has suffered a serious injury and it is a serious ask to get him back to that level. We have done everything we can and we will find out on Saturday.
“He has worked a mile and a half round Newcastle. We haven’t worked him over the distance he’s going to run over, we haven’t put him into the red zone and we wouldn’t do that for any horse, but in particular a horse like this coming back from injury.
“Yet any of those three last runs in France, Dubai or Ascot is way ahead of what anything else in the field has achieved and it is just a case of how close to that level can we get a horse back after a tendon injury. It is a big ask, but we have done everything we can.
“We have had a runner in this race in all four renewals, so we are well used to it now. The ground tends to be quick.
“Again, that is a variable that doesn’t matter to us with this horse. He won in a swamp in France and on very quick ground out in Dubai. It is a beautiful track. It is fairly tight on the turf track but again, that should suit a horse like him – he’s not a slow horse by any stretch.
“Everything should suit him, really.”
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Songline will spearhead a strong Japanese challenge at the Saudi Cup meeting this weekend, with jockey Christophe Lemaire confident she can retain her 1351 Turf Sprint title.
Trained by Toru Hayashi, she won the Group Three seven-furlong contest last year, part of a fantastic four-timer for the French-born rider, who is a multiple champion in Japan.
Songline will take on 10 rivals on Saturday, including the Richard Hannon-trained Happy Romance and the Charlie Hills pair of Pogo and Garrus.
Yet after partnering the five-year-old in morning work at the King Abdulaziz Racecourse on Wednesday morning, Lemaire says it will take a good one to beat her.
“I rode her this morning and she looks in great condition, “ he said.
“I am very happy with her and so is her trainer. She will be the one to beat again this year, I think.”
The daughter of Kizuna went on to win the Grade One Yasuda Kinen at Tokyo in June, but has not run since disappointing in a Grade Two in September.
Lemaire thinks she can return to her true form and added: “Songline has shown some good form and some bad since winning here last year.
“Coming back from Saudi, she produced some very good results. In the autumn she had an issue and could not perform well. It looks like she is all fine from what I have seen and I hope she will race as well as last year.”
Though a four-time winner at last year’s meeting, Lemaire has just two booked rides this time, with Geoglyph his big-race mount in the $20 million Saudi Cup.
Trained by Tetsuya Kimura, Geoglyph took the scalp of stablemate and subsequent dual Grade One winner Equinox at Nakayama last April and while he takes on the might of Country Grammer and Emblem Road in the feature, Lemaire feels he will hold a major chance if he takes to a dirt surface, which he faces for the first time.
“He has a lot of potential. It is hard to predict how he will react on this new surface, but in terms of quality, he has a good chance,” said the rider.
“I have not ridden him on dirt yet and will not until Saturday. I give all my trust to the trainer and the staff.
“He is by Drefong, an American horse, so we expect him to run good and to adapt to the surface.
“It is always a big change for the horses. He is a Grade One winner in Japan and he beat Equinox, which is the new superstar in Japan, so it shows how good Geoglyph is and if he likes the ground, the surface, I think he will cause a big surprise.”
Sixth in the Hong Kong Cup on his last start in December, Geoglyph did not get a clear run under William Buick, yet Lemaire feels the experience of travelling will stand him in good stead.
He added: “He travelled to Hong Kong, so it is always a good experience for horses to travel. It will be his second travel in a couple of months, but he is an easy horse and can adapt.
“In Hong Kong he was a bit unlucky in the race and he did not show his best, but hopefully on Saturday he will show people what he is able to do.”
Lemaire feels there will be no excuses for either the American or Japanese horses in the big race, despite modifications to the dirt track.
“I agree that this is the best dirt track in the world,” added Lemaire.
“There was a little change between the first edition of the Saudi Cup three years ago.
“It looks like the ground is now a little bit deeper than it was before, but the quality of the sand is still good. It is a little bit different.
“It looks a little bit tougher for the horses to finish quick. The Saudi Cup winner came from behind last year. I think it looks like more of a front-runners’ track now.
“It is a little between the very quick American dirt and the deeper dirt track in Japan for example. We are somewhere in the middle. Both American horses and Japanese horses can adapt to this track.”
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