
Courage Mon Ami camp still aiming to reclaim Gold Cup
John and Thady Gosden's six-year-old helped establish his owners Wathnan Racing when tasting Gold Cup glory at the Royal meeting in 2023.
Having since seen his progress curtailed by a series of setbacks, missing the whole of 2024, he was due to make his comeback after a 631-day absence at Newbury.
However, the son of Frankel's misfortune continued with a late withdrawal from the Group Three event, with his team admitting time is now at a premium before attempting to recapture Flat racing's premier staying prize.
Richard Brown, racing adviser to the owners, said: 'He's absolutely fine and this horse has never had a serious issue, it is always niggles.
'He took a bad step and was just a little off behind. We're always super careful so didn't run in the Aston Park and we'll have an investigation and see how he comes out of it.
'There's a chance he might just have to go straight to Ascot. He's been moving brilliantly and I saw him at John and Thady's earlier this month and he has never moved better, he trotted past like a show horse, so it was very frustrating to get that call, but these things are sent to test us.
'We'll get him through the next week and it may well be that it is a racecourse gallop before Ascot. Sandown (Henry II Stakes) is there as well, but we'll just have to see how he is and how the timings fit.'

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The Guardian
2 hours ago
- The Guardian
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Wales Online
3 hours ago
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Daily Mirror
3 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
The Derby tips, full field, horse by horse guide, latest odds and 1-2-3
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Damysus (12-1) - An important first Derby runner for the emerging Wathnan Racing, owned by the Emir of Qatar. Was picking up the pieces late on when second in the Dante and should give another good account of himself. Midak (14-1) - Connections paid £75,000 to add the unbeaten Aga Khan Stud-owned colt to the field of a race this year named in honour of the late Aga Khan. On the upgrade but still has more to find. Stanhope Gardens (16-1) - Intriguing challenger who warmed up for the Derby in a minor event over 1m at Salisbury after missing the trials. The stablemate of Pride Of Arras is rated in a similar bracket at home as the Dante winner. Nightwalker (25-1) - Another colt doing his best work late on in the Dante in which he finished fifth. Cheekpieces are added but a likely outsider. Tornado Alert (25-1) - Trainer Saeed Bin Suroor last won the Derby 30 years ago and is a diminished force in the top races yet is keen on the prospects of the 2,000 Guineas fourth who gets the services of Oisin Murphy. Tennessee Stud (33-1) - Trained by Joseph O'Brien but owned by the Coolmore partners. Finished well behind Delacroix in May so has plenty to find. New Ground (50-1) - France's second supplementary entry has been exposed in lesser company and difficult to see him taking a hand. Tuscan Hills (66-1) - Ambitious Amo Racing came close to winning with King Of Steel but Tuscan Hills will need to step forward from his Dante seventh. Lazy Griff (80-1) - Christophe Soumillon will need to deploy all his skills to lift the Chester Vase runner-up into contention but rain softened ground will at least be to his advantage. Al Wasl Storm (100-1) - Derby fanatic Ahmad Al Shaikh has had two horses finish second at 50-1 and 150-1 and this year's two runners are also big prices. Plenty to prove having only won a maiden. Sea Scout (100-1) - The only runner to have already won over the track in April, when he took the Blue Riband Trial, he was well beaten in the Dante. Nightime Dancer (150-1) - Won over the distance at Southwell but limitations exposed in the Lingfield Derby Trial Green Storm (200-1) - Ahmad Al Shaikh's second runner is notable as he will be 19-year-old Billy Loughnane's first Derby ride. Rogue Impact (250-1) - Beaten ten lengths in the Lingfield Derby Trial and a probable social runner for his enthusiastic owners. VERDICT: With a near maximum field of 19 and lots of big outsiders to get in the way, this could be an eventful Derby likely to feature plenty of hard luck stories. In 2003, when there were 20 runners, Kris Kin beat a line-up in which the 2,000 Guineas winner Refuse To Bend was 13th and Aidan O'Brien's first string, Brian Boru, only 16th. There could be a similar outcome this year and it is worth giving THE LION IN WINTER another chance. He is bound to improve from the Dante, which he went into off a rushed preparation, and jockey Colin Keane is well equipped to navigate his tricky draw. He can turn the tables on Pride Of Arras with Damysus underlining the status of the York race as the Derby's number one trial. 1 The Lion In Winter, 2 Pride Of Arras, 3 Damysus