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The Turf

Wednesday, 14th May 2008

Horizontal racing

Look Here, in only her second race, did not handle the downhill turn but, when she was then wisely switched to the inside rail by jockey Seb Sanders, she rallied well up the straight and was closing on the winner. Epsom might not be her obvious destination but a gutsy performance like that from a filly who will clearly come on a lot for the race makes her a quality prospect.

As for the colts, Aidan O’Brien saddled first and second in the Derby trial. But the winner Alessandro Volta, a son of Montjeu, did not handle the hill and bend either. Johnny Murtagh’s mount responded well when challenged by Frankie Dettori on Campanologist and stayed on well up the straight. He, too, has the stamina which often decides the Derby, but again the Irish version on a flatter track looks a more likely target. There is plenty more ammunition yet in Coolmore’s locker.

The one advantage of racing at home by television is that you can take in a much wider range across several tracks. We may not need to look much further, for example, for the winner of the Hardwicke Stakes at Royal Ascot than Sir Michael Stoute’s Spanish Moon, a leading fancy for last year’s Derby who had his three-year-old season cut short by injury. Nearly taken out of the Ascot race by a horse which broke down, he was forced wide yet came from last place to pass a class field in the Listed John Doyle Buckhounds Stakes. He finished like a police car on the way home for tea. All that was missing was the siren.

Four-year-olds, too, dominated the 7f Victoria Cup, which often provides clues to handicaps later in the season. First home was Barry Hills’s Zaahid, as game as you could get in holding off Al Khaleej by a neck. When he has an improving handicapper in his hands Barry does not miss opportunities and Zaahid can be backed again. So can the second and the fourth, the imposing-looking We’ll Come, who probably needs a mile. But the eye-catching performance was that of the even less experienced King of Dixie. Like We’ll Come, he reared up as the stalls opened, was left in last place, and still drove through to finish third after looking like the winner a furlong out. Follow him.

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