
Tokyo Yushun: Race Favorite Croix du Nord Delivers Impressive Victory
Croix du Nord, piloted by Yuichi Kitamura, wins the 92nd Tokyo Yushun on June 1, 2025, at Tokyo Racecourse. (©SANKEI)
Odds-on favorite Croix du Nord validated his Hopeful Stakes (G1, 2,000 meters) victory in December 2024 by winning the 92nd Tokyo Yushun (Japanese Derby) by three-quarters of a length on Sunday, June 1.
The son of Kitasan Black had three wins in as many starts last year and kicked off the 2025 racing campaign with the Satsuki Sho (Japanese 2000, Guineas, G1, 2,000 meters) on April 20 as the heavy favorite. In that race, Croix du Nord had to settle for second, 1½ lengths behind Museum Mile.
On Sunday at Tokyo Racecourse, trainer Takashi Saito and jockey Yuichi Kitamura both claimed their first Japan Racing Association G1 title since the 2024 Hopeful Stakes with this colt. It was Saito's ninth overall G1 win and Kitamura's seventh.
While it was their first Classic title for both the trainer and jockey, owner Sunday Racing notched its fifth Japanese Derby victory — renewing the JRA record for most Derby titles won. The 92nd running of the Tokyo Yushun at Tokyo Racecourse. (©SANKEI)
Croix du Nord broke smoothly from stall 13, shifted closer to the inside and secured a prominent position around third or fourth behind Satono Shining (Yutaka Take's ride), who was rushed to the front in his bid to lead the 18-horse field. He then gave way to Ho O Atman (Hironobu Tanabe) soon after as a pacesetter entering the backstretch.
Kitamura kept his mount in good rhythm as Ho O Atman increased his lead from the rest of the field by almost 10 lengths. The 2,400-meter race began in earnest as the leader weakened 300 meters out. At that point, Croix du Nord came powerfully up the center lane to duel with Satono Shining. Croix du Nord then pulled away from Satono Shining at the furlong pole while holding off a powerful chase by runner-up Masquerade Ball (Ryusei Sakai) and third-place finisher Shohei (Christophe Lemaire) to earn a three-quarter length victory. ( Watch the full race on the JRA's YouTube channel. ) Winning jockey Yuichi Kitamura (©SANKEI)
"I felt it was my responsibility to make Croix du Nord a Derby winner ever since the colt won the Hopeful Stakes. So my feeling now is that I am relieved to have accomplished my mission," Kitamura said after the race. "The whole process since the win last year, including our runner-up effort in the Satsuki Sho, was a meaningful and precious learning experience for me."
Added Kitamura, "The colt felt great today and I was able to come into the race with every confidence, so victory itself came as no surprise to me."
How did the race unfold?
"The break was smooth and after that, I was concentrating on keeping him in a comfortable rhythm more so than what position he was sitting in," said Kitamura. "In the stretch run, he responded really well and as I've said, I had every confidence in the colt and drove him on believing that he would make it to the wire a winner." The start of the 92nd Tokyo Yushun. (©SANKEI)
Masquerade Ball secured a comfortable position in mid-field with a close view of the race favorite and eventual winner, running a few lengths in front. Giving the colt a breather along the backstretch before edging closer along the outside approaching the last two turns, Sakai guided the colt further out for a clear run into the stretch where the son of Duramente turned in a terrific turn of foot. He closed in on the eventual winner while overtaking both Shohei and Satono Shining to secure second place, although just short of reaching the winner.
Shohei made use of an inside break to sit close to the pace while saving ground along the rails before shifting out slightly coming into the straight to follow the eventual winner. And while unable to match that foe, Shohei ran gamely to overtake Satono Shining in the last strides to secure third place.
Satono Shining finished fourth, a neck's length behind Shohei.
Eighth pick Eri King (Yuga Kawada) and second favorite Museum Mile (Damian Lane) placed fifth and sixth, respectively.
The 75th Yasuda Kinen is the JRA's next G1 race on Sunday, June 8 at Tokyo Racecourse.
Read the full report , including details on each of the Tokyo Yushun entrants, on JRA News.
Author: JRA News
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Japan Forward
an hour ago
- Japan Forward
Miyuu Yamashita Stands Tall as She Tops Women's British Open
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Winnipeg Free Press
a day ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Plot twists aplenty during Manitoba's biggest horse race of the year
Massive crowds. Record wagering. And no shortage of controversy leading to an unprecedented ruling in the biggest local race of the year. Yes, the 77th running of the Manitoba Derby at Assiniboia Downs was one for the ages. 'Just when you think you've seen it all,' Darren Dunn, the track's CEO, told the Free Press. MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS Attack (checkered colours) won the 77th Manitoba Derby Monday night after Take Charge Tom (right) was disqualified. In the Derby race, there were four complaints lodged involving five different horses. MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS Attack (checkered colours) won the 77th Manitoba Derby Monday night after Take Charge Tom (right) was disqualified. In the Derby race, there were four complaints lodged involving five different horses. Late Monday night, the No. 7 horse Take Charge Tom looked every bit the dominant favourite. 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They're human. It's 45 miles an hour in a big race and things happen quickly. But it's still too bad he didn't… until he was more aware of his environment to see that he needed to be further clear on the front before coming over to save ground.' MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS Randy Howg (left) hands trophies to Attack trainer Craig Robert Smith, who won after Take Charge Tom was disqualified Monday night at the 77th Manitoba Derby. This was the first time in the running of the Derby the winner has been disqualified. MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS Randy Howg (left) hands trophies to Attack trainer Craig Robert Smith, who won after Take Charge Tom was disqualified Monday night at the 77th Manitoba Derby. This was the first time in the running of the Derby the winner has been disqualified. The ruling elevated No. 4 Attack — led by jockey N'Rico Prescod — from runner-up to Derby champion, with the Alberta-owned gelding paying a tidy $14.50 in the process. 'First time in 77 Manitoba Derby's the winner has been disqualified. So it was a little bit of a complicated experience,' said Dunn, who hosted a private reception at the end of the night with all of the owners and trainers. 'You know, the owner of the horse that was disqualified was very classy and we raised a glass to the ultimate official winner. But very unfortunate.' Dunn later arranged a do-over in the winner's circle for Attack's team, complete with trophies and photos — though the horse itself was already back in the barn cooling down. 'It was an awkward situation, but they were good about it,' said Dunn. Not as much grace was shown by some bettors who had backed Take Charge Tom and voiced their anger on social media. 'If they feel a horse was impeded, they're empowered to disqualify. And that's what they did.'– Darren Dunn 'Some people lost money out of that, and certainly natural instinct is to be upset,' Dunn acknowledged. 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'These horses are reviewed by a vet every morning, every horse gets a pre-race veterinary inspection, they're monitored in the paddock, they're monitored warming up for a race and, of course, after the race.'– Darren Dunn commenting on race horse Blackteca, who had to be humanely euthanized by the on-site regulatory vet. 'Statistically, these occurrences are rare, but they can happen. We trust in the experts. These horses are reviewed by a vet every morning, every horse gets a pre-race veterinary inspection, they're monitored in the paddock, they're monitored warming up for a race and, of course, after the race. But it's still very unfortunate.' The 2025 Derby drew one of the largest crowds in recent memory, with the biggest handle in track history for a seven-race card. The biggest payout came in the form of the Jackpot Pick 5, which began the night with a carryover pot of $465,218 and ended up just north of $2 million for winners to split — a winning 20-cent ticket paid $2,469.46. You have to wonder how many more folks would have cashed in had Take Charge Tom run a clean race. Racing continues at Assiniboia Downs through every Tuesday and Wednesday, and on select Mondays, through Oct. 8. X and Bluesky: @mikemcintyrewpg Mike McIntyreReporter Mike McIntyre is a sports reporter whose primary role is covering the Winnipeg Jets. After graduating from the Creative Communications program at Red River College in 1995, he spent two years gaining experience at the Winnipeg Sun before joining the Free Press in 1997, where he served on the crime and justice beat until 2016. Read more about Mike. Every piece of reporting Mike produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.


Japan Forward
4 days ago
- Japan Forward
In Golf, Consistency is the Ever-Present Target
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"Everyone in the hunt is playing well," Kawamoto said, according to the Japan Golf Tour website. "They have been hitting solid shots and making putts. I've been doing likewise. Otherwise, I wouldn't be in this position, too. But to pull ahead, it'll really take something special, like maybe draining one or two long putts. The player who pulls off that one great shot will probably win." A commemorative photo on July 30 before the start of the Richard Mille Charity Tournament. (©SANKEI) With a full field of 144 players, the Richard Mille Charity Tournament is staging its debut on the Japan Golf Tour. Proceeds from the tournament are earmarked for Noto Peninsula earthquake recovery efforts and continued support for junior golfers' development in Japan, according to a news release. Ryo Ishikawa (KYODO) Veteran golfer Ryo Ishikawa spoke about his enthusiasm for the new tournament before it started on Thursday, July 31. 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Japan struggled to contain world No 1 Poland's potent effort at the net. The Poles had 14 blocks, and Japan was held to three. Due to its struggles at the net, Japan won't replicate its tournament achievement from 2024, when it was the runner-up at the Men's Volleyball Nations League. "Today we could not get a good result, so we have to prepare for getting good results at the world championship," Miyaura told Volleyball World on Thursday. Up next for Miyaura, Ishikawa and their teammates: the 2025 FIVB Men's Volleyball World Championship (September 12-28), a 32-nation competition in the Philippines. Suntory Sunbirds Beat JTEKT Stings in the Men's Finals Tokyo Yakult Swallows slugger Munetaka Murakami hits a bases-empty home run to left field in the second inning against the Yokohama DeNA BayStars on July 29 at Yokohama Stadium. (©SANKEI) Munetaka Murakami, the 2022 Central League Triple Crown winner, hit his first home run of the season on Tuesday, July 29. The Tokyo Yakult Swallows slugger smacked a solo homer to left off Yokohama DeNA BayStars starter Katsuki Azuma. Yakult recorded its seventh consecutive victory, topping DeNA 5-1. A day later, the Swallows extended their winning streak to a season-best eight games, beating the BayStars 2-1. The streak ended with a 14-1 loss to the BayStars on Thursday. Murakami was sidelined for about 3½ months with an upper-body injury Batting cleanup and starting at third base, He appeared in his fifth game of the season on Friday, going 10-for-5 with three strikeouts in a 3-2 10-inning loss to the Central League-leading Hanshin Tigers at Jingu Stadium. Through games of August 2, Hanshin sat atop the CL standings with a 59-36-2 record. Yakult (32-53-5) was in last place. San Diego Padres starter Yu Darvish pitches against the New York Mets on July 30 at Petco Park in San Diego. (David Frerker/IMAGN IMAGES/via REUTERS) San Diego Padres right-hander Yu Darvish rebounded from his worst start of the MLB season with his best pitching performance of 2025 on Wednesday, July 30. The 38-year-old held the visiting New York Mets to two hits over seven scoreless innings, striking out seven in the Padres' 5-0 win. In his previous start, Darvish (1-3) was tagged for eight runs on eight hits against the St Louis Cardinals on July 24. Mets manager Carlos Mendoza was impressed with Darvish's performance against his team. "When he's throwing all of his pitches for strikes, he could be tough," Mendoza said, according to "It looked like we were guessing once he started throwing everything. … He kept us off-balance, and everything was working for him." With a dominant performance against the Mets, Darvish earned the 204th combined win of his NPB and MLB career. The victory moved him past Hiroki Kuroda as the sole leader of the most combined wins in the two leagues. And Darvish now has 111 wins in his 13 MLB seasons. A sign commemorating Yu Darvish's 204th career victory at Petco Park. (David Frerker/IMAGN IMAGES/via REUTERS) "It means a lot," Darvish said of collecting his 204th win, according to The San Diego Union-Tribune . "I'm very happy. We're talking about legends like Hideo Nomo, Hiroki Kuroda. And just to be able to get closer to these legends, it means a lot and I'm very happy about that." Kuroda won 79 games in seven MLB seasons (2008-14) and an additional 124 in NPB (1997-07, 2015-16). Nomo is the only other pitcher to win 200 or more combined games in MLB and NPB, collecting 201 victories in his trailblazing career. Liverpool's Harvey Elliott takes a bicycle kick against Yokohama F Marinos in an international club friendly on July 30 at Nissan Stadium. (Issei Kato/REUTERS) Reigning English Premier League champion Liverpool wrapped up its preseason tour of Asia by beating the Yokohama F Marinos 3-1 on Wednesday, July 30. An announced crowd of 67,032 watched a scoreless first half at Nissan Stadium before the goals came one after another after halftime. Liverpool star Mohamed Salah in action in the first half against Marinos. (©SANKEI) Asahi Uenaka gave Marinos a 1-0 lead in the 55th minute. Liverpool's Florian Wirtz made it 1-1 in the 62nd minute, and teammates Trey Nyoni and Rio Ngumoha scored in the 68th and 87th, respectively. The final goal was one to remember, with 16-year-old Ngumoha showcasing his talent. As The London Evening Standard reported on its live game blog: "The teenager has been excellent since his introduction [in the 73rd minute] and he picks out the bottom corner with ease after a rapid break." Ngumoha has lofty aspirations with Liverpool, but he recognizes it will likely take time for him to be a regular fixture in the lineup. "I'm not trying to rush because I'm still only young," he said after the match, according to Liverpool's official website. "But at the same time, I just want to show the manager what I can do and not get too complacent. I just want to do bigger and better things for me and the club." Liverpool's Wataru Endo controls the ball in the second half. (©SANKEI) Midfielder Wataru Endo entered the match as a Liverpool substitute in the 60th minute. Endo, who joined Liverpool in 2023, enjoyed the lively atmosphere at Nissan Stadium, and was moved by fans paying tribute to Liverpool's Diogo Jota, who was killed in an automobile accident in Spain on July 3. "Coming back to the city where I grew up as a Liverpool player was a special, wonderful moment," Endo was quoted as saying by Kyodo News. "I know there are lots of Liverpool fans and I'm grateful as a Japanese about their actions toward the team [about Jota]." Liverpool fans hold up a sign in memory of Diogo Jota and display support for the Premier League club before the match. (Issei Kato/REUTERS) It was Liverpool's first match in Japan since the 2005 FIFA Club World Cup. Naomi Osaka hits a return to Jelena Ostapenko in a National Bank Open women's singles third-round match on August 1 in Montreal. (David Kirouac/IMAGN IMAGES/via REUTERS) After switching coaches earlier in the week, Naomi Osaka posted three consecutive women's singles victories at the National Bank Open to reach the round of 16. The 49th-ranked Osaka defeated Jelena Ostapenko, the tourney's No 22 seed, 6-2, 6-4 in the third round in Montreal on Friday, August 1. "I went in there knowing she's a great player and if I give her a chance she's going to hit a winner on me, so I just tried to keep my pace and stay as solid as I could," Osaka was quoted as saying by BBC Sport. On Sunday, Osaka's fourth-round opponent is Latvian Anastasija Sevastova, who is ranked 386th. Tomasz Wiktorowski is Osaka's new coach. He's working on a trial basis. In other National Bank Open news, 110th-ranked Aoi Ito lost in the third round to Spain's Jessica Bouzas, 4-6, 7-5, 6-3, on Friday. Former Yamagata Wyverns forward Jawad Williams (left) in an April 2022 file photo. ( Jawad Williams retired as a player in 2022 and has spent the past few years getting established as a basketball coach. The former NBA and standout, who also experienced success in European pro leagues, finalized a deal to serve as an assistant coach for his hometown Cleveland Cavaliers, it was announced earlier this summer. In his most recent job, the University of North Carolina alum served as an assistant coach/director of player development for the Sacramento Kings. Williams, 42, said he's excited about the next chapter of his coaching career. "I grew up on the East Side from St Clair, from St Clair to North Carolina, to the NBA, to all around the world, and then back here again. It's been unbelievable," the former Alvark Tokyo star said in an interview with News 5 Cleveland, an ABC TV affiliate, in July. "To see how far I've come — and I don't take many moments to actually look back — but actually signing here as a coach, that was the one time I did look back and remember how far I've come. It's been a blessing, and I couldn't ask for a better story right now." ―Liverpool manager Arne Slot , on Wataru Endo's impact in the team's 2024 Premier League title-winning campaign and fans' appreciation of him at Nissan Stadium on July 30. Author: Ed Odeven Find Ed on JAPAN Forward' s dedicated website, SportsLook . Follow his [Japan Sports Notebook] on Sundays, [Odds and Evens] during the week, and X (formerly Twitter) @ed_odeven .