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Magical beats Ghaiyyath to win the Group One Irish Champion Stakes in September.
Magical beats Ghaiyyath to win the Group One Irish Champion Stakes in September. Photograph: PA Wire/PA
Magical beats Ghaiyyath to win the Group One Irish Champion Stakes in September. Photograph: PA Wire/PA

Talking Horses: European raiders line up for Breeders' Cup cash bonanza

This article is more than 3 years old

The Breeders’ Cup’s unusual funding model has helped ensure that its big prize money pot will be unchanged from 2019

Around two-dozen horses will make the trip from Europe to run at the Breeders’ Cup meeting at Keeneland on 6 and 7 November, when prize money across the event’s 14 races will be maintained at last year’s total of $28m (£21.2m).

Previous Group One winners due to line up in Lexington, Kentucky include Magical, Tarnawa, Lord North, Mogul and Kameko, this year’s 2,000 Guineas winner, while both James Fanshawe and Nigel Tinkler will field their first runners at the meeting.

The grandstands at Keeneland will be empty when the meeting gets under way on Friday week, just as they are across much of Europe.

Yet with prize money for marquee events in Britain – including Royal Ascot, the Ebor meeting at York and Champions Day at Ascot – cut by as much as 55% while racing continues behind closed doors, the Breeders’ Cup funding model has helped to ensure that its purses will be unchanged from 2019.

Breeders pay fees to ensure their foals are eligible to run at the meeting if – and it is a big if – they are good enough, two, three or even more years down the line. As a result the Breeders’ Cup Classic on 7 November will still be worth a total of $6m (£4.55m), while the five European-trained runners in the Turf will be aiming for a share of $4m (£3m).

Irish stables lead the way in terms of entries, with Aidan O’Brien sending seven runners to the two-day meeting and Jessica Harrington fielding three, while John Gosden, Britain’s champion trainer, has entered Lord North, a Royal Ascot winner in June, and Mehdaayih in the Turf, and Terebellum in the Filly & Mare Turf.

But smaller yards will also have representatives, among them Tinkler’s colt Ubettabelieveit, the 40-1 winner of the Flying Childers Stakes at Doncaster’s St Leger meeting, who runs in the Juvenile Turf Sprint on Friday week. John Quinn will send Safe Voyage to the Mile the following day while a three-strong challenge from Yorkshire stables is completed by Kevin Ryan’s Glass Slippers, in the Turf Sprint.

“Everyone’s gone out of their way to make it feasible for us,” Gosden said on Wednesday. “It’s not easy, but my staff all had Covid-19 tests yesterday and they were all negative, so they will fly tomorrow [Thursday] as they’re not allowed on the horse plane, and then meet the horses when they get to Keeneland.

“I know that jockeys are not allowed into the barns so that will stop Mr Dettori trying to train them all, we’ll have to meet him outside. But we’re living in this strange world now and we’ll just have to get on with it.”

O’Brien had two winners at Keeneland when it made its debut as a Breeders’ Cup venue in 2015, including Found’s memorable defeat of Gosden’s colt Golden Horn, that year’s Derby and Arc winner, in the Turf.

Five years later Found’s first foal, the War Front colt Battleground, will be in Kentucky as part of O’Brien’s team for the meeting and he is the early favourite for the race at a top price of 4-1 despite having been absent from the track since winning the Vintage Stakes at Goodwood in July.

“He was prepared to run in the National Stakes [in September] but he coughed getting off the box so we withdrew him,” O’Brien said on Wednesday. “Ten we prepared him for the Dewhurst [at Newmarket] but, with the ground the way it was, we said we’d wait.

“He’s been prepared for two races that he didn’t run in, so we think that his fitness levels are high and he seems to be in good form. The experience will do him good and we’ll learn a lot about him for next year.”

O’Brien already holds the record for the most winners in the Turf with six since 2003 and five of the last nine, and will field Magical – already a winner of seven Group Ones – and Mogul, who took the Grand Prix de Paris in September before being denied a run in the Arc in bizarre circumstances – in search of a seventh success.

Irish-trained runners dominate the betting for the Turf, with Magical the narrow favourite at 11-4 and Mogul alongside Dermot Weld’s Tarnawa, a dual Group One winner already this season, on 7-2.

Kameko, who bypassed Champions Day at Ascot this month in search of better ground, is 4-1 favourite for the Mile, while Ubettabelieveit is a 16-1 shot to give Nigel Tinkler a Breeders’ Cup winner at the first attempt.

Quick Guide

Greg Wood's Thursday tips

Show

Stratford 12.35 A Perfect Gift 1.06 Harry Senior 1.36 Larch Hill 2.06 Aintree My Dream 2.36 Galice Macalo 3.06 When You’re Ready 3.36 Summit Like Herbie 4.06 Soyouthinksoagain

Lingfield 12.45 Fame N Fortune 1.15 She’s A Lion 1.45 Nikulina 2.15 Oh This Is Us 2.45 Cloak Of Spirits 3.15 Jacinth 3.45 Sorrel 4.15 Come On Girl

Newton Abbot 1.28 Memphis Bell 1.58 Sastruga 2.28 Metier 2.58 Breffniboy 3.28 Momella 3.58 Clondaw Rigger 4.28 Bucko’s Boy

Southwell 4.45 Gorgeous General 5.15 Native Silver (nap) 5.45 Barbaroma 6.15 Exalted Angel (nb) 6.45 Grand Pianola 7.15 Arzaak 7.45 Curtiz

Chelmsford 5.00 Indian Pursuit 5.30 Boy In The Bar 6.00 Beauty Choice 6.30 Zayriyan 7.00 Rockesbury 7.30 At Ease 8.00 Calvinist 8.30 Systemic


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Greg Wood’s tipping guide

Jump racing will be front and centre for much of the next five months but the all-weather Flat campaigners will be chipping in too and there are two more Fast-Track qualifiers for next spring’s All-Weather Championships on the card at Lingfield this afternoon with some very useful runners in opposition.

The Listed Fleur De Lys Stakes even has some Classic and Group One form in the mix, as Cloak Of Spirits (2.45) finished second behind Love in the 1,000 Guineas back in June and also made the frame in the Sun Chariot last time out. She looks a cut above her field today and while she is making her debut on an artificial surface, 11-8 still looks like a very fair price.

Aidan O’Brien took the River Eden Fillies’ Stakes 12 months ago and is back for more with Elizabethofaragon but she has struggled in better races since winning a handicap off 78 in July and Sorrel (3.45) will be a tough opponent.

Elsewhere on the day’s schedule, a couple catch the eye on the Fibresand at Southwell. Native Silver (5.15) is a drifter in the betting this morning, which is a slight concern, but he is back at Southwell for the first time since winning a course-and-distance handicap off today’s mark of 70 in February, his second win in three tries on Fibresand.

Exalted Angel (6.15) is 2-2 at Southwell after an impressive win a fortnight ago in a time that suggests even today’s 10lb rise won’t stop him, while Clondaw Rigger (3.58) and Aintree My Dream (2.06) look best on the jumps cards at Newton Abbot and Stratford respectively.

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