logo
Sajir shines for Murphy and Fabre in Prix Maurice de Gheest

Sajir shines for Murphy and Fabre in Prix Maurice de Gheest

James Doyle had attempted to keep things simple by sending his mount forward, but a furlong from home the challengers were gathering on either side with the eye drawn to Murphy aboard Sajir.
Sajir springs a shock in the Group One Prix Maurice de Gheest! 🏆 pic.twitter.com/JEJqGTe1b7
— At The Races (@AtTheRaces) August 10, 2025
Lazzat could soon give no more and it was left to Sajir to surge to glory, with Francis-Henri Graffard's Prix Jean Prat winner Woodshauna unable to close the deficit despite also finishing strongly to take second. Lazzat would finish an honourable third.
Fabre said: 'This is the first time I've had him 100 per cent, he was in great condition.
'Prince Faisal is a great breeder, a great owner and a great person.'
The son of Prince Faisal's Make Believe now looks set for an appearance at ParisLongchamp on Arc weekend, with Fabre adding: 'Obviously, like his father, the Prix de la Foret will be his path.'
Oisin Murphy tasted Group One glory at Deauville (PA)
It was Murphy's third Group One win of the year after Lead Artist's Lockinge win and striking aboard Tornado Alert in Germany recently.
He was delighted to make a successful visit to the Normandy coast to reclaim the mount on Sajir and said: ''He was brilliant today. Andre had him spot on and he travelled beautifully for me.
'He relaxed very well. I was a little bit behind but I tried not to get there too soon.
'I think the horse improved 7lb on any form he'd shown before and he delivered.
'Today he switched his leads and powered to the line. The way he bends his knee he feels like a horse that will handle juice. I'm so happy for Prince Faisal.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dancing Gemini all set to bounce back in Prix Jacques le Marois
Dancing Gemini all set to bounce back in Prix Jacques le Marois

Rhyl Journal

time35 minutes ago

  • Rhyl Journal

Dancing Gemini all set to bounce back in Prix Jacques le Marois

After laying down an early-season marker with impressive wins at Doncaster and Sandown, momentum has been checked slightly for Roger Teal's stable star with a narrow defeat in the Lockinge followed by a disappointing showing at Royal Ascot. However, given plenty of time to recover since the Queen Anne Stakes, Teal is confident of a revival at Deauville where he will recommence rivalries with what are becoming familiar faces. Teal said: 'He travelled over on Thursday and he had a little hack canter around the track on Friday morning. He was quite perky apparently, so all is good. 'It was just a farce of a pace at Ascot and if you take that run out of it he's bang there, isn't he? 'There's a few coming in off disappointing runs, it's not just him. Notable Speech has had a couple of disappointing runs and Docklands last time didn't perform like he did at Ascot. It's the nature of the beast in these big races I'm afraid – it sometimes comes down to how the dice rolls on the day. 'The Japanese horse (Ascoli Piceno) looks pretty strong, so it's going to be a good race and we're there to do our best and we'll see what happens. 'We only know about our horse, we don't know how the others are performing or training. Our horse seems to be in good form and what will be will be. Whoever wins it is going to have to put up a very good performance and hopefully it goes in our favour.' The Group One event has been a happy hunting ground for British and Irish raiders down the years, with the last French-trained winner coming in 2017. Another on the comeback trail is Notable Speech, with Charlie Appleby quickly abandoning the sprinting experiment that saw him contest the July Cup most recently to return to the distance over which he scooped the 2000 Guineas last season. Speaking on the Godolphin website, Appleby said: 'Notable Speech goes into this in good order and we feel that stepping back up to a straight mile is going to suit. 'He looks very competitive in this field and can hopefully get his head back in front at this level.' Meanwhile, Aidan O'Brien will rely on both one-time Derby hope and Prix Jean Prat third The Lion in Winter and Minstrel Stakes scorer Diego Velazquez in search of just his second-ever win in the race, with the latter sporting the famous silks of the Sangster family having transferred ownership mid-week. 'He's incredibly exciting and a horse we had been keeping our eye on,' said Sam Sangster on the purchase, with sights set on Group One honours this term. 'There's plenty of racing in him for the rest of the year starting on Sunday and I don't think a Group One is out of his reach at all and it's in Aidan we trust. 'He's done enough for a place at stud already in my opinion and he has a fabulous pedigree as well, but if we can get that Group One it will boost him even more and that will be the aim for the rest of the year.'

Dancing Gemini all set to bounce back in Prix Jacques le Marois
Dancing Gemini all set to bounce back in Prix Jacques le Marois

The Herald Scotland

time3 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Dancing Gemini all set to bounce back in Prix Jacques le Marois

However, given plenty of time to recover since the Queen Anne Stakes, Teal is confident of a revival at Deauville where he will recommence rivalries with what are becoming familiar faces. Teal said: 'He travelled over on Thursday and he had a little hack canter around the track on Friday morning. He was quite perky apparently, so all is good. 'It was just a farce of a pace at Ascot and if you take that run out of it he's bang there, isn't he? 'There's a few coming in off disappointing runs, it's not just him. Notable Speech has had a couple of disappointing runs and Docklands last time didn't perform like he did at Ascot. It's the nature of the beast in these big races I'm afraid – it sometimes comes down to how the dice rolls on the day. 'The Japanese horse (Ascoli Piceno) looks pretty strong, so it's going to be a good race and we're there to do our best and we'll see what happens. 'We only know about our horse, we don't know how the others are performing or training. Our horse seems to be in good form and what will be will be. Whoever wins it is going to have to put up a very good performance and hopefully it goes in our favour.' The Group One event has been a happy hunting ground for British and Irish raiders down the years, with the last French-trained winner coming in 2017. Another on the comeback trail is Notable Speech, with Charlie Appleby quickly abandoning the sprinting experiment that saw him contest the July Cup most recently to return to the distance over which he scooped the 2000 Guineas last season. Speaking on the Godolphin website, Appleby said: 'Notable Speech goes into this in good order and we feel that stepping back up to a straight mile is going to suit. 'He looks very competitive in this field and can hopefully get his head back in front at this level.' Meanwhile, Aidan O'Brien will rely on both one-time Derby hope and Prix Jean Prat third The Lion in Winter and Minstrel Stakes scorer Diego Velazquez in search of just his second-ever win in the race, with the latter sporting the famous silks of the Sangster family having transferred ownership mid-week. 'He's incredibly exciting and a horse we had been keeping our eye on,' said Sam Sangster on the purchase, with sights set on Group One honours this term. 'There's plenty of racing in him for the rest of the year starting on Sunday and I don't think a Group One is out of his reach at all and it's in Aidan we trust. 'He's done enough for a place at stud already in my opinion and he has a fabulous pedigree as well, but if we can get that Group One it will boost him even more and that will be the aim for the rest of the year.'

Dancing Gemini all set to bounce back in Prix Jacques le Marois
Dancing Gemini all set to bounce back in Prix Jacques le Marois

South Wales Guardian

time4 hours ago

  • South Wales Guardian

Dancing Gemini all set to bounce back in Prix Jacques le Marois

After laying down an early-season marker with impressive wins at Doncaster and Sandown, momentum has been checked slightly for Roger Teal's stable star with a narrow defeat in the Lockinge followed by a disappointing showing at Royal Ascot. However, given plenty of time to recover since the Queen Anne Stakes, Teal is confident of a revival at Deauville where he will recommence rivalries with what are becoming familiar faces. Teal said: 'He travelled over on Thursday and he had a little hack canter around the track on Friday morning. He was quite perky apparently, so all is good. 'It was just a farce of a pace at Ascot and if you take that run out of it he's bang there, isn't he? 'There's a few coming in off disappointing runs, it's not just him. Notable Speech has had a couple of disappointing runs and Docklands last time didn't perform like he did at Ascot. It's the nature of the beast in these big races I'm afraid – it sometimes comes down to how the dice rolls on the day. 'The Japanese horse (Ascoli Piceno) looks pretty strong, so it's going to be a good race and we're there to do our best and we'll see what happens. 'We only know about our horse, we don't know how the others are performing or training. Our horse seems to be in good form and what will be will be. Whoever wins it is going to have to put up a very good performance and hopefully it goes in our favour.' The Group One event has been a happy hunting ground for British and Irish raiders down the years, with the last French-trained winner coming in 2017. Another on the comeback trail is Notable Speech, with Charlie Appleby quickly abandoning the sprinting experiment that saw him contest the July Cup most recently to return to the distance over which he scooped the 2000 Guineas last season. Speaking on the Godolphin website, Appleby said: 'Notable Speech goes into this in good order and we feel that stepping back up to a straight mile is going to suit. 'He looks very competitive in this field and can hopefully get his head back in front at this level.' Meanwhile, Aidan O'Brien will rely on both one-time Derby hope and Prix Jean Prat third The Lion in Winter and Minstrel Stakes scorer Diego Velazquez in search of just his second-ever win in the race, with the latter sporting the famous silks of the Sangster family having transferred ownership mid-week. 'He's incredibly exciting and a horse we had been keeping our eye on,' said Sam Sangster on the purchase, with sights set on Group One honours this term. 'There's plenty of racing in him for the rest of the year starting on Sunday and I don't think a Group One is out of his reach at all and it's in Aidan we trust. 'He's done enough for a place at stud already in my opinion and he has a fabulous pedigree as well, but if we can get that Group One it will boost him even more and that will be the aim for the rest of the year.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store