08/02/2018, Meydan/Dubai: LIGHTNING AND THUNDER SNOW THROUGH #DWCCARNIVAL // Thunder Snow on top in latest Al Maktoum Challenge // Winter Lightning captures UAE 1,000 Guineas

 
 

 

LIGHTNING AND THUNDER SNOW THROUGH #DWCCARNIVAL 

Meydan Racecourse hosts fifth meeting of #DWCCarnival 2018

 

Thursday’s fifth meeting of the 2018 Dubai World Cup Carnival was highlighted by the US$250,000 Al Maktoum Challenge R2 sponsored by Gulf News (G2) over 1900m on the dirt. Won by Godolphin’s multiple G1 winner Thunder Snow, whose appropriately named half-sister Winter Lightning had landed the UAE 1000 Guineas earlier in the evening.

 

Victorious in both the UAE 2000 Guineas (G3) and UAE Derby (G2) last year, Saeed bin Suroor-trained and Christophe Soumillon-ridden Thunder Snow always looked likely to come out on top on this occasion. Second in the 1600m Al Maktoum Challenge R1 (G3) on his seasonal return last month, when seemingly outpaced by gate-to-wire victor Heavy Metal, he was settled in third behind North America, who denied doubtful stayer Heavy Metal the front with aggressive urging up the inside early from jockey Richard Mullen. North America and Heavy Metal both came under pressure at the top of the straight, whereas Soumillon always looked happy on the eventual winner. His mount gathered up the other pair in the final 200m to the delight of his jockey.

 

“Basically, I think he was the best horse in the race and I rode him accordingly,” Soumillon said. “His stamina was never an issue, whereas the other pair are quick horses who had more early speed. My horse actually wanted to go after them earlier in the back straight, but I was happy to take my time and wait until the home straight. He then won well in the style of a good horse. I actually said to Saeed he gives me a better, more natural feel, on turf whereas, on dirt, I think his class gets him home.”

 

Very rarely will you see a race meeting start with a Classic, but such was the quality of the card on Thursday evening at Meydan. The action kicked off with the US$250,000 UAE 1000 Guineas sponsored by Friday (Listed) over 1600m on the dirt and restricted to 3-year-old fillies.

 

Anyone who witnessed the 1400m trial three weeks ago could be forgiven for any sense of déjà vu because, in a virtual carbon copy of that race, only Rayya and Winter Lightning were in serious contention from a long way out.

 

Rayya and Pat Dobbs tried to make all yet again, as no other pacemaker was willing to go, which left them to be stalked by Pat Cosgrave and budding arch rival Winter Lightning. This time, though, as opposed to the Trial when they edged ahead and were forced to fight all the way to the line by Rayya, they forged clear with 200m to go and held a game Rayya at bay. To complete the symmetry from the Trial, Godolphin’s Expressiy was third.

 

“She is just a lovely filly to be involved with and makes my job very easy,” Cosgrave said. “She just gets on with things, breaks well, relaxes, travels strongly and quickens when I ask. She is improving and, if connections want, I see no reason why the extra 300m of the Oaks would be a problem.”

 

It was a tenth win in the race since its 2001 inauguration for trainer Saeed bin Suroor.

 

Rayya’s trainer, Doug Watson, was soon in the winner’s enclosure however, saddling first and second in the WHEELS Handicap over 1900m with pupil Street of Dreams besting stablemate Galvanize. Adrie De Vries was aboard the winner and he completed a double in the second 3-year-old only race on the card, the US$100,000 Meydan Classic Trial sponsored by getthat.com, a 1400m turf conditions race. Riding for his main employer, Ismail Mohammed, he was always going better than any of his 15 rivals aboard Wasim, whose sole previous career win was on debut over 1400m on the Doncaster turf last July. This was his fourth UAE outing and he had run well on each of his three previous local starts, all on dirt, but clearly relished this return to grass.

 

Having tracked the early pace, he and De Vries sauntered to the front halfway up the straight and, despite seeming to tire, were always holding the challenge from Godolphin’s favoured Zaman.

 

“I only had two rides this evening so to win on both is brilliant,” De Vries said. “This horse had been running very well on dirt, but tonight, from a good draw, he has travelled and then quickened like a good horse. He is a horse with plenty of natural pace and stays 1600m if connections want to step up.”

 

The Group 3 Al Shindagha Sprint sponsored by gulfnews.com, over 1200m on the dirt looked a particularly strong renewal being littered with Group 1 winners, but none of those factored in the procession of impressive gate-to-wire victor My Catch, trained by Watson. Dobbs was in the saddle in the easiest of winners, while race favourite Comicasclosed to pip fan favourite and 12-year-old ageless wonder Reynaldothewizard on the line for second.

 

“The last couple of weeks this horse has really come back to himself and started working much better,” Dobbs said. “That low draw really suits him because that is the way he likes to race; from the front and quickly throughout.”

 

Watson added: “When we saw the draw, in one, we were delighted because it is ideal for him. He has not ever really run a bad race, but things have transpired against him a few times. He has really started working well over the last couple of weeks, so we were very hopeful and he has not disappointed.”

 

The Watch Time Handicap, over 1000m on the turf, was won emphatically by Hit the Bid, quickly away under Oisin Murphy and never headed for trainer Darren Bunyan. Having made his UAE debut on the first night of the 2018 Carnival over the same course and distance, when giving track record holder Ertijaal a sgood fight, he was always going to be hard to beat here.

 

A first carnival runner for trainer Darren Bunyan, he has repaid his trainer’s patience in the best possible way.

 

“He needed that first run, fitness-wise, and we have just brought him along steadily,” Bunyan said. “That said, it was a very good effort a month ago and, to be honest, we would have been disappointed if he was beaten here. We still have something to work on, regarding fitness, so it is very exciting.”

 

Murphy added: “This is a big win for a small team and, all credit to them, they have brought him along slowly and been very patient. He is probably still not 100% fit, so you hope there is more to come. He has shown in Ireland he is just as good at 1200m so stepping him up in trip is not likely to be an issue.”

 

In the nightcap, the REACH by Gulf News Handicap, bin Suroor-conditioned Leshlaa was a dominant winner of the 2000m turf event under Cosgrave. The chestnut son of Street Cry completed a 1-2-3 for Team Godolphin, as Appleby-trained Blair House closed resolutely under William Buick to edge yardmate Banksea.

 

“He’s a very smart horse,” Cosgrave said. “Saeed had him spot on for tonight. He’s quite a smart horse, like I said. He definitely has the ability to be a Group horse.”

 

Caption: Thunder Snow pounds his way into the Dubai World Cup picture with a Al Maktoum Challenge R2 victory (Picture credit: Dubai Racing Club/ Andrew Watkins)

 

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fonte : DRC

 

Review

Thunder Snow on top in latest Al Maktoum Challenge

Thunder Snow stayed on strongly to win the G2 Al Maktoum Challenge Round Two over an extended nine furlongs at Meydan, UAE, on Thursday, 8 February.

The four-year-old, trained by Saeed bin Suroor and partnered by regular rider Christophe Soumillon, raced in third on the outside for much of the six-runner contest on dirt.

He was asked to improve in the straight and joined Heavy Metal and North America over a furlong out and soon went second.

Thunder Snow nosed ahead of North America passing the half-furlong marker and ran on to score by a cosy neck in a time of 1m 57.89s, with Heavy Metal four lengths further back in third.

Thunder Snow, runner-up to Heavy Metal in the mile G2 Al Maktoum Challenge Round One on 11 January, has now won three of his four starts on dirt at Meydan.

Saeed bin Suroor, celebrating his 11th success in the Al Maktoum Challenge Round Two, said: “I don’t think the trip suited Thunder Snow last time when he ran over the mile and the nine and a half furlongs today is a better distance for him. Going up further in trip

to a mile and a quarter will suit him even better.

“After he last ran in England, we gave him a break for three months to prepare him for this Dubai campaign. Thunder Snow has improved from his last race and he looked in good shape and was ready to run tonight.

“Mentally, he has always been nice and relaxed, but physically we thought he had improved and he looked better than ever.

“We will take him to the third round of the Al Maktoum Challenge (G1, 10f, dirt, 10 March, Meydan) on Super Saturday and then Sheikh Mohammed will make the decision where to go after that.

“He looked good today and won well so I am happy.

“Thunder Snow is a tough horse, who always does well and is a professional. He handled the dirt well – he won the UAE 2000 Guineas and the UAE Derby last year. We are looking forward for a better result in the future.”

It was a big race double for Godolphin and Saeed bin Suroor, who had earlier sent out the three-year-old half-sister to Thunder Snow, Winter Lightning, to capture the UAE 1000 Guineas.

Christophe Soumillon said: “Thunder Snow is a better horse than his rivals tonight and also stays quite a bit better than them.

“They showed that they have much more speed than him in the first part of the race, although when we came into the back straight, my horse was a little bit keen and trying to go.

“This is his second start of the year and a preparation race, so I did not want to give him a hard time. He came very well on the turn, then took a big blow in the straight and after that kept going the whole way.

“He is very funny because he knows the big screen here in the straight. Last year he did something funny at 250 metres from the line and today he didn’t, which is good progress, but you still feel that he is looking for something.

“He is learning after each run and the one thing I know with him is to be ready to see something new because of what happened in the Kentucky Derby and Prix Jacques Les Marois. You have to really concentrate and never give him the chance to do something wrong.

“Like I said to Saeed, I love Thunder Snow on the turf. I don’t feel the same energy on the dirt – he doesn’t have the same turn of foot – but he has run four times on dirt for three wins and one second.

“You cannot say that is bad. On turf he has given me a great impression and in Europe I am sure he is probably in the top three milers and mile and a quarter horses on turf.

“But horses who run and train a lot on dirt can improve also and that is what I hope for him.”

Asked whether Thunder Snow would have a chance in the G1 Dubai World Cup Sponsored by Emirates Airline (10f, dirt, 31 March, Meydan), the jockey replied: “It depends on which draw he has and how he jumps out of the gate.

“If you are on the outside and turn four wide, it would be very difficult. He doesn’t have the speed to go to the front so he would have to be handy, sitting third or fourth. It depends who is coming for the race – Gun Runner isn’t so it is much more open.

“I am sure that Thunder Snow will improve a lot. Saeed has a magical record and I am sure he knows how to train the horse if we target that race.

“He would be suited back in Europe by the Juddmonte International at York, though Enable and Winx could be going for the race. I am sure at a mile and a quarter, he will be great. We will see how he goes.”

 

Review

Winter Lightning captures UAE 1,000 Guineas

Three-year-old filly Winter Lightning continued her impressive start to the 2018 Dubai World Cup Carnival with an excellent victory in the Listed UAE 1,000 Guineas over a mile on dirt at Meydan, UAE, on Thursday, 8 February. 

The daughter of Shamardal, a half-sister to Thunder Snow and representing trainer Saeed bin Suroor, broke smartly and disputed the early running before being covered up a close fourth of the eight runners by Pat Cosgrave. 

Winter Lightning moved up powerfully to go second leaving the back straight and challenged the front-running Rayya a furlong and a half out and soon led, quickening well to triumph by an easy two lengths in 1m 38.19s. 

Rayya finished second with Expressiy (Charlie Appleby/William Buick) staying on to come home third, a further two and a half lengths back, as the first three from the UAE 1,000 Guineas Trial over seven furlongs on 18 January filled the same positions in the UAE 1,000 Guineas.

Saeed bin Suroor, gaining his 10th victory in the UAE 1,000 Guineas, commented: “Winter Lightning looked like she needed further when she won the trial. She has always shown some class, but it can be hard to judge them until they run on dirt. 

“She is a half-sister to Thunder Snow and both horses can do well on both turf and dirt. Thunder Snow won two G1 races on turf in France and was also successful on dirt in the UAE 2,000 Guineas and the UAE Derby. 

“We kept Winter Lightning until the end of last season to run her at Newmarket because she was weak and we ran her just to make her learn how to race. 

“The family has always done well in the past and Winter Lightning is a strong filly. She looks better physically compared to last year and the way she finished her race today shows that she can stay further in the future.

“We will aim her at the UAE Oaks (G3, 9.5f, Meydan, Thursday, 1 March) and plans from there will depend on how she gets on in that race. We will talk to Sheikh Mohammed about further plans but we will keep the options open regarding the UAE Derby (G2 9.5f, Meydan, Saturday, 31 March). 

“Winter Lightning is a filly for the future. She is a big, strong filly who can show something this year and during her four-year-old campaign. We can keep her in training for the future because she didn’t do much as a two-year-old. 

“She always shows her class and we need to think about the 1,000 Guineas at Newmarket (G1, 1m, Sunday, 6 May, turf). We will see how she gets on in the UAE Oaks first.”

Pat Cosgrave added: “Winter Lightning has got pretty much everything. She has a good temperament – she relaxes, jumps and travels nicely without over racing – and handles the surface well. 

“She picked up nicely and put the race to bed when I asked her to. I thought that she had improved from her last run, she looked more of a sharper, grown-up filly, and I think she will get better again. 

“It was her first time under the lights and on the surface in the trial – she was getting a little bit of kickback in behind, which she had never experienced before. She expected it more today and is just a very good filly. 

“I think she is going to keep progressing onwards and I don’t see any reason why she wouldn’t stay the UAE Oaks trip. She relaxed nicely and ran to the line good.”

fonte : Godolphin