logo
Royal Dress scores in fine fashion at Pontefract

Royal Dress scores in fine fashion at Pontefract

James Tate's mare won at Listed and Group Three level last season and kicked off the current campaign by finishing third behind See The Fire in the Middleton Stakes at York.
Having since placed fourth in the Princess Elizabeth Stakes at Epsom on Derby day, Royal Dress was a well-backed 85-40 favourite dropping back to Listed class in West Yorkshire and after being coaxed into contention by a confident Clifford Lee from the home turn, she finished off strongly once given her head to score by a widening three and a quarter lengths from Cheshire Dancer.
Tate told Racing TV: 'We reinvented her last year as a mile/mile and one (furlong) filly with a hood and I just felt after her first two runs back maybe we didn't need the hood any more, I think that really helped her in the last furlong or two.
'Cliff is a really good jockey, we always do really well together and he gave her a great ride. He made all the right decisions, to take her back a little bit early because they were going a strong pace, to angle out wide rather than riding for luck because he felt he was on the best horse in the race and we enjoyed the last furlong when he had a cheeky look round!'
Paddy Power cut Royal Dress to 16-1 from 25-1 for the Nassau Stakes at Goodwood on July 31 and Tate is not ruling out a tilt at Group One glory on the Sussex Downs.
'Do we try to win a Group Two or a Group Three, or do we try to go for an each-way run in one of the big races and say we finish in the first three that would be worth it for value, because she's obviously a valuable, well-bred broodmare,' he added.
'I think we'll just take each race as it comes and see how she is.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Eclipse one-two all set for International rematch at York
Eclipse one-two all set for International rematch at York

Rhyl Journal

time3 hours ago

  • Rhyl Journal

Eclipse one-two all set for International rematch at York

The richest race of the four-day Ebor Festival has a hard act to follow, as 12 months ago when City Of Troy beat Calandagan it was again rated as the best race anywhere in the world. Aidan O'Brien's Delacroix may have failed to fire as a 2-1 favourite for the Derby in early June, trailing home ninth behind stablemate Lambourn, but he proved that form all wrong when coming from an uncompromising position to beat his elders in an pulsating Eclipse at Sandown in early July. What. A. Race. This. Was. 🫨 DELACROIX GETS UP TO BEAT OMBUDSMAN AND WIN THE CORAL-ECLIPSE 🏆 — ITV Racing (@itvracing) July 5, 2025 Prince of Wales's Stakes winner Ombudsman was the horse he nabbed in the shadow of the post that day and while John and Thady Gosden's runner is the marginal favourite to gain his revenge, O'Brien is happy with his charge ahead of the rematch. 'He seems in good form since Sandown, so I'm looking forward to it,' said the Ballydoyle handler. 'What he did at Sandown after the passage he had there was unusual (the way he quickened up), so we hope he runs well again.' City Of Troy went to the Breeders' Cup Classic last year and whoever wins the International will again be guaranteed a starting berth, should they wish to tackle the Del Mar dirt on November 1. To ensure a true-run race at York after the sedate pace of the Eclipse, Godolphin supplemented the Andre Fabre-trained Birr Castle to help Ombudsman. John Gosden said: 'The Eclipse was a muddling race and we didn't want the prospect of a repeat, so Godolphin have kindly provided us with a nice horse to use as a pacemaker and he arrived on Thursday.' Adding the international flavour is the Japanese Derby winner Danon Decile, who has been in Newmarket for a couple of weeks. He has not run since beating Calandagan in the Dubai Sheema Classic in early April, but that form looks strong given the runner-up has since won twice at Group One level. Calandagan's trainer Francis-Henri Graffard decided against sending his King George hero to York this time around, but does saddle a fascinating contender for the Aga Khan Studs in the unbeaten Daryz. 'Maybe this will all be too soon for him in his career, but I know Francis just felt the horse is in great form, he's worked him for this race and when the horse is well he doesn't like not running them because you never know what might happen,' said the the owners' French stud manager Nemone Routh. 'We'll take our chance and see where he ends up in the grand scheme. It helps that there's a pacemaker as he's a big horse with a big, long stride.' She went on: 'On paper you'd imagine he'll stay a mile and a half when you stand in beside him but for the moment he's been running well over a mile and a quarter. A strongly-run 10 furlongs should suit him. 'There's no excuses, it's a level playing field with a long straight at York, it should be a guide as to where we fall among his generation.' Both of the parents of Andrew Balding's See The Fire won this race, for those who like their pedigrees. The daughter of Sea The Stars and Arabian Queen produced her career-best over this course and distance when winning the Middleton Stakes earlier in the season and has since finished third in both the Prince of Wales's Stakes and the Nassau. 'The Juddmonte is always, in my opinion, the strongest race of the year,' said Balding. 'It's where the three-year-olds will always turn up against the older horses and you get that wonderful mix of perhaps horses stepping up from a mile to a mile and a quarter and horses dropping back from a mile and a half. 'I think this year it's very strong, as you'd expect. There are a couple of exciting unknowns in there, the Japanese horse and the French horse. But the thing about See The Fire is we know she loves York. She's unbeaten at the track. She was very impressive winning the Strensall last year and she was absolutely electric winning the Middleton this spring. 'I think certain horses favour York and she's certainly one of those – it's got to be to her advantage. I'm not saying that means she's going to win the race, but it should make her very competitive. 'She seems to have come out of Goodwood very well, but you never really know until you run again. I hope she's going there in really good form.'

‘A big player' – Distant Storm brewing in Acomb Stakes
‘A big player' – Distant Storm brewing in Acomb Stakes

Rhyl Journal

time3 hours ago

  • Rhyl Journal

‘A big player' – Distant Storm brewing in Acomb Stakes

The Godolphin team went to €1.9million to secure the colt's services at the Arqana breeze-up sale in May and he gave them an immediate return on their investment when making a successful start to his career, albeit narrowly, at Newmarket's July Festival. That form could hardly have worked out better, with not only the runner-up Constitution River and the third Catullus winning since, but also the fifth, sixth, seventh, ninth and 10th home. 🔵 Winning debut 1.9 million guineas buy Distant Storm (Night Of Thunder) gives @godolphin, Buick & Appleby yet another win on the July Course — Racing TV (@RacingTV) July 11, 2025 Couple that with the fact Distant Storm is bred in the purple as a son of Night Of Thunder out of Date With Destiny, who was the sole foal produced by the brilliant George Washington, and it is no surprise Appleby is expecting a bold showing from his charge on the Knavesmire. 'I'm very pleased with the way he has come out of Newmarket, he ran as we expected and has always shown himself up as a nice horse,' the Moulton Paddocks handler told Tattersalls. 'The Acomb was a race we had in mind once he broke his maiden. The way he's done since his maiden means we're going with confidence that he will be a big player. 'He's a horse that's developing all the time and hopefully looks as though he has got a bright future.' The biggest threat to Distant Storm appears to be the Aidan O'Brien-trained Italy, who landed cramped odds on his Leopardstown introduction before finishing second to Appleby's Saba Desert in the Group Two Superlative Stakes on the July course. O'Brien said: 'He ran well at Newmarket. The race was a bit messy but he ran well, he was still green. 'We think and hope he should have come on a bit and we're expecting a nice run.' Other contenders include Andrew Balding's Newbury winner Gewan and David Menuisier's Goodwood Galaxy, who won on his debut at Salisbury before placing a highly creditable fourth in Goodwood's Vintage Stakes. 'He ran a good race at Goodwood and it makes sense to run here,' said Menuisier. 'I think he'll be better over a mile, but there's no ideal mile race coming up right now so it makes sense to go for the Acomb and then we'll probably step him up in trip. 'He was slowly away at Goodwood and without that he could have finished even closer, but that is all in the past now and we're looking to the future.'

Horse racing tips: ‘Her trainer is in absolutely flying form' – Templegate's 5-1 NAP to relish conditions at York
Horse racing tips: ‘Her trainer is in absolutely flying form' – Templegate's 5-1 NAP to relish conditions at York

Scottish Sun

time4 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Horse racing tips: ‘Her trainer is in absolutely flying form' – Templegate's 5-1 NAP to relish conditions at York

Scroll down for our in-form tipster's best selections TEMPLEGATE'S TIPS Horse racing tips: 'Her trainer is in absolutely flying form' – Templegate's 5-1 NAP to relish conditions at York TEMPLEGATE tackles a massive day of racing at York hellbent on smashing the sorry bookies to bits. You'll find all his tips for day one of the Ebor Festival below. Bet £10 get £50 in free bets for racing with Tote - CLAIM HERE York Ebor Festival best free bet offers - CLICK HERE SANTORINI STAR (4.10 York, nap) Can shine for William Haggas. This Golden Horn filly has been brought along nicely this term, winning at Brighton and Goodwood before running with credit in a Group 3 over 1m6f. She finished off strongly there, suggesting this step up to 2m will unlock further improvement. Proven on quick ground, she's tactically versatile, and with her yard in flying form, she can progress again. ITALY (2.25 York, nb) Aidan O'Brien's colt oozed class when unlucky not to land the Group 2 Superlative at Newmarket last time, staying on strongly after being squeezed up when it mattered. That was only his second start and he's bred to thrive over 7f on fast ground. With a smoother run, he's the one to beat. CARMERS (3.00 York, treble) Can put himself in the St Leger picture by upsetting the dual Derby winner. Paddy Twomey's unbeaten colt has done nothing but improve, and his gritty success in the Queen's Vase at Royal Ascot marks him out as a serious contender. That was over 1m6f and, while he drops in trip today, York's long straight suits strong stayers. Templegate's TV verdicts YORK 1.50 FOLLOW THE MAN in the opener after he routed 21 rivals over course and distance in May. He looked a different beast after a wind op and being gelded – travelling strongly and putting the race to bed with authority. Back from another break and drawn nicely in stall 4, he has the look of a well-treated improver. Trefor has hit new heights this summer and ran a cracker at Windsor last time. He's consistent, handles the ground, and looks sure to give backers a run for their money at a price. Vintage Clarets relished the drop to 5f at Ascot and has strong course form to his name, while Jordan Electrics, runner-up in this race last year, is building back towards peak form. Spring Is Sprung has racked up a hat-trick and is thriving. 2.25 ITALY can rule the roost in the Acomb Stakes. Aidan O'Brien's colt oozed class when unlucky not to land the Group 2 Superlative at Newmarket last time, staying on strongly after being squeezed up when it mattered. That was only his second start and he's bred to thrive over 7f on fast ground. With a smoother run, he's the one to beat. Main rival Distant Storm looked the part when getting up late at Newmarket on debut and the form is working out superbly but he had to dig deep to win, and this will ask more. Goodwood Galaxy posted a solid fourth in the Vintage Stakes and should be in the mix again, while Gewan impressed at Newbury and looks a strong type for Andrew Balding. John Gosden's May Angel bounced back on the all-weather but still has turf questions to answer at this level. 3.00 CARMERS can put himself in the St Leger picture by upsetting the dual Derby winner. Paddy Twomey's unbeaten colt has done nothing but improve, and his gritty success in the Queen's Vase at Royal Ascot marks him out as a serious contender. That was over 1m6f and, while he drops in trip today, York's long straight suits strong stayers. He showed heart and gears at Ascot, kicking early and fending them all off. Blinkers stay on and he'll be tough to pass. Dual Derby hero Lambourn is clearly the one to beat on form, but he's had two hard races and had to dig really deep at The Curragh. Stay True looked a real stayer when just denied in the Lingfield Derby trial and is open to any amount of improvement after only two runs. Pride Of Arras won the Dante here before hating Epsom and should do better. 3.35 OMBUDSMAN can reverse Eclipse form with Delacroix. The Gosden colt was coming back just 17 days after winning the Prince Of Wales's at Royal Ascot and was sent for home a good way out at Sandown and was there to be shot at. A stronger gallop on York's galloping track will play more to his strengths. Delacroix is the obvious danger again. He came home impressively in the Eclipse to erase all memory of his Derby flop. This is his trip and it should be a good battle. Japan's Danon Decile brings global Group 1 form, including a win in the Sheema Classic, but I worry about his rider seeing this track for the first time. See The Fire was ultra-impressive here in May and has run with credit in deeper waters, while French hope Daryz was an impressive Group 2 winner latest. 4.10 SANTORINI STAR can shine for William Haggas. This Golden Horn filly has been brought along nicely this term, winning at Brighton and Goodwood before running with credit in a Group 3 over 1m6f. She finished off strongly there, suggesting this step up to 2m will unlock further improvement. Proven on quick ground, she's tactically versatile, and with her yard in flying form, she can progress again. Chief danger may be Dancing In Paris, who brings top-class staying handicap form into this, including a near-miss in the Northumberland Plate and a strong second at Goodwood. He stays well and handles quick conditions. Fireblade is another serious threat. He's on the upgrade and beat several of these last time with a well-judged front-running ride. Templegate's tips FREE BETS - GET THE BEST SIGN UP DEALS AND RACING OFFERS Commercial content notice: Taking one of the offers featured in this article may result in a payment to The Sun. You should be aware brands pay fees to appear in the highest placements on the page. 18+. T&Cs apply. Remember to gamble responsibly A responsible gambler is someone who: Establishes time and monetary limits before playing Only gambles with money they can afford to lose Never chases their losses Doesn't gamble if they're upset, angry or depressed Gamcare – Gamble Aware – Find our detailed guide on responsible gambling practices here.

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