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Tornado Alert enjoying well-deserved break

Tornado Alert enjoying well-deserved break

Tornado Alert is on a break before some lucrative targets in the Middle East beckon.
Saeed bin Suroor's latest Group One winner had been asked four stiff questions in the first half of the season, running in the 2000 Guineas, Derby and at Royal Ascot before his success in Germany.
The Godolphin trainer now has his sights set on Bahrain before taking him out to Dubai and potentially Saudi Arabia.
'He's fine, in good form, but I've given him a break. It's likely that I'll keep him back for the race in Bahrain (International Trophy, November 14),' said Bin Suroor.
'I just want to give him an easy time and miss York as he had been very busy, he ran in the Guineas, then the Derby, then Royal Ascot.
'I'll get him started on some light exercise, then in September we can start working him before going to Bahrain, he'll be ready for it. He needed a break.'
He added: 'After Bahrain I'll take him to Dubai and if he's good enough, I'll take him to Saudi Arabia. We'll see how good he is on the dirt first and if not he can run in the turf race, I'll have to see.'
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Richard Hughes no stranger to Nunthorpe success as he readies Sayidah Dariyan
Richard Hughes no stranger to Nunthorpe success as he readies Sayidah Dariyan

North Wales Chronicle

time21 minutes ago

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Richard Hughes no stranger to Nunthorpe success as he readies Sayidah Dariyan

Often content to bide his time in the plate, patience has again been the Irishman's watchword in the training ranks, ending his long wait for an elusive first Group One success as a trainer when No Half Measures won the July Cup earlier this summer. And ahead of Sayidah Dariyan's attempt to quickly double his tally at the highest level, the 52-year-old remembers delivering Edward Lynam's Sole Power with aplomb in the 2014 Nunthorpe, a ride which is often referred to as Hughes at the height of his powers. A shock winner when surging home at 100-1 four years previously, the seven-year-old was an established name in the spiriting division and fresh off victory at Royal Ascot when Hughes entered the stalls aboard the 11-4 favourite. What would ensue in the following 57.92 seconds was a display of calculated decision making as Hughes weaved his way to the front in the nick of time in an exhibition of horsemanship which was a hallmark of his decorated career in the saddle. 'It was really straightforward and I always felt it was a race you needed to get your fractions the same every furlong,' said Hughes 'It looked like Sole Power was quickening but he was going the same speed from the two-furlong pole to the one as he did from the one-pole to the winning post, I would say, and it was the others which stopped. Sole Power 🚀 Watch the 2025 Ebor Festival live on Racing TV next week @yorkracecourse 📺 — Racing TV (@RacingTV) August 13, 2025 'I had no choice for four furlongs as I was flat to the bat, I know I was sitting on him but I couldn't go any quicker. 'It was only then when the pace finally collapsed – and it took a good while but it eventually did – and they were all in a bit of a heap and collapsed at a similar time that I got going, and I had a bit of luck along the way to get through the pack. 'It does give you some extra satisfaction when you win like that and I enjoyed it, that's for sure.' There are many ways to get a job done and while Sole Power's daring late dash is the showreel finish any jockey would be proud to wax lyrical about, in stark contrast, Hughes' first Nunthorpe triumph aboard Oasis Dream in 2003 was a mere formality as the outstanding sprinter of his generation blew away his rivals. Majestically handled by John Gosden, he was an impressive winner of the July Cup before dropping back to five furlongs to prove equally spellbinding on the Knavesmire, leaving Hughes with little doubt where he stands in the pantheon of sprinting greats. He said: 'He was very, very fast and able to maintain it. He was a young horse at the time so he was exuberant. 'He would be one of the best sprinters I rode, he was third at Royal Ascot but won a July Cup and a Nunthorpe and not many do that, he was very good.' With triumphs in the saddle now confined to the memory bank and perhaps the odd photographic reminder on a wall, attentions turn to the next chapter in Hughes' Nunthorpe history book when Sayidah Dariyan takes her place in the showpiece sprint event. Successful over the course and distance in her most recent outing, Hughes is confident the talented daughter of Dariyan is coming to the boil at just the right time, as the Weathercock Stables handler looks to cap a breakout year in the training ranks at the scene of some of his finest hours on horseback. One of the better rides you will see from @loughnane_billy, steering Sayidah Dariyan to victory in the Group Three @WilliamHill Summer Stakes, the filly staying on strongly to the line 👏 — York Racecourse (@yorkracecourse) July 11, 2025 'It would be lovely to win as a trainer,' continued Hughes. 'It might be a bit harder than when I was a jockey but we hope we have a great chance. 'Sayidah Dariyan really is going the right way and last time when she won at York, it was the first time she was ridden the way I like. 'She was covered up and ridden for a turn of foot by Billy (Loughnane) and she just exploded. We were able to see the best of her ridden that way. 'I don't think coming back to five furlongs will be too much of a hindrance to her, she's quite fast. 'I wouldn't swap her for anything and with No Half Measures as well, we know we have two nice fillies.'

Richard Hughes no stranger to Nunthorpe success as he readies Sayidah Dariyan
Richard Hughes no stranger to Nunthorpe success as he readies Sayidah Dariyan

South Wales Guardian

time21 minutes ago

  • South Wales Guardian

Richard Hughes no stranger to Nunthorpe success as he readies Sayidah Dariyan

Often content to bide his time in the plate, patience has again been the Irishman's watchword in the training ranks, ending his long wait for an elusive first Group One success as a trainer when No Half Measures won the July Cup earlier this summer. And ahead of Sayidah Dariyan's attempt to quickly double his tally at the highest level, the 52-year-old remembers delivering Edward Lynam's Sole Power with aplomb in the 2014 Nunthorpe, a ride which is often referred to as Hughes at the height of his powers. A shock winner when surging home at 100-1 four years previously, the seven-year-old was an established name in the spiriting division and fresh off victory at Royal Ascot when Hughes entered the stalls aboard the 11-4 favourite. What would ensue in the following 57.92 seconds was a display of calculated decision making as Hughes weaved his way to the front in the nick of time in an exhibition of horsemanship which was a hallmark of his decorated career in the saddle. 'It was really straightforward and I always felt it was a race you needed to get your fractions the same every furlong,' said Hughes 'It looked like Sole Power was quickening but he was going the same speed from the two-furlong pole to the one as he did from the one-pole to the winning post, I would say, and it was the others which stopped. Sole Power 🚀 Watch the 2025 Ebor Festival live on Racing TV next week @yorkracecourse 📺 — Racing TV (@RacingTV) August 13, 2025 'I had no choice for four furlongs as I was flat to the bat, I know I was sitting on him but I couldn't go any quicker. 'It was only then when the pace finally collapsed – and it took a good while but it eventually did – and they were all in a bit of a heap and collapsed at a similar time that I got going, and I had a bit of luck along the way to get through the pack. 'It does give you some extra satisfaction when you win like that and I enjoyed it, that's for sure.' There are many ways to get a job done and while Sole Power's daring late dash is the showreel finish any jockey would be proud to wax lyrical about, in stark contrast, Hughes' first Nunthorpe triumph aboard Oasis Dream in 2003 was a mere formality as the outstanding sprinter of his generation blew away his rivals. Majestically handled by John Gosden, he was an impressive winner of the July Cup before dropping back to five furlongs to prove equally spellbinding on the Knavesmire, leaving Hughes with little doubt where he stands in the pantheon of sprinting greats. He said: 'He was very, very fast and able to maintain it. He was a young horse at the time so he was exuberant. 'He would be one of the best sprinters I rode, he was third at Royal Ascot but won a July Cup and a Nunthorpe and not many do that, he was very good.' With triumphs in the saddle now confined to the memory bank and perhaps the odd photographic reminder on a wall, attentions turn to the next chapter in Hughes' Nunthorpe history book when Sayidah Dariyan takes her place in the showpiece sprint event. Successful over the course and distance in her most recent outing, Hughes is confident the talented daughter of Dariyan is coming to the boil at just the right time, as the Weathercock Stables handler looks to cap a breakout year in the training ranks at the scene of some of his finest hours on horseback. One of the better rides you will see from @loughnane_billy, steering Sayidah Dariyan to victory in the Group Three @WilliamHill Summer Stakes, the filly staying on strongly to the line 👏 — York Racecourse (@yorkracecourse) July 11, 2025 'It would be lovely to win as a trainer,' continued Hughes. 'It might be a bit harder than when I was a jockey but we hope we have a great chance. 'Sayidah Dariyan really is going the right way and last time when she won at York, it was the first time she was ridden the way I like. 'She was covered up and ridden for a turn of foot by Billy (Loughnane) and she just exploded. We were able to see the best of her ridden that way. 'I don't think coming back to five furlongs will be too much of a hindrance to her, she's quite fast. 'I wouldn't swap her for anything and with No Half Measures as well, we know we have two nice fillies.'

Richard Hughes no stranger to Nunthorpe success as he readies Sayidah Dariyan
Richard Hughes no stranger to Nunthorpe success as he readies Sayidah Dariyan

Rhyl Journal

time21 minutes ago

  • Rhyl Journal

Richard Hughes no stranger to Nunthorpe success as he readies Sayidah Dariyan

Often content to bide his time in the plate, patience has again been the Irishman's watchword in the training ranks, ending his long wait for an elusive first Group One success as a trainer when No Half Measures won the July Cup earlier this summer. And ahead of Sayidah Dariyan's attempt to quickly double his tally at the highest level, the 52-year-old remembers delivering Edward Lynam's Sole Power with aplomb in the 2014 Nunthorpe, a ride which is often referred to as Hughes at the height of his powers. A shock winner when surging home at 100-1 four years previously, the seven-year-old was an established name in the spiriting division and fresh off victory at Royal Ascot when Hughes entered the stalls aboard the 11-4 favourite. What would ensue in the following 57.92 seconds was a display of calculated decision making as Hughes weaved his way to the front in the nick of time in an exhibition of horsemanship which was a hallmark of his decorated career in the saddle. 'It was really straightforward and I always felt it was a race you needed to get your fractions the same every furlong,' said Hughes 'It looked like Sole Power was quickening but he was going the same speed from the two-furlong pole to the one as he did from the one-pole to the winning post, I would say, and it was the others which stopped. Sole Power 🚀 Watch the 2025 Ebor Festival live on Racing TV next week @yorkracecourse 📺 — Racing TV (@RacingTV) August 13, 2025 'I had no choice for four furlongs as I was flat to the bat, I know I was sitting on him but I couldn't go any quicker. 'It was only then when the pace finally collapsed – and it took a good while but it eventually did – and they were all in a bit of a heap and collapsed at a similar time that I got going, and I had a bit of luck along the way to get through the pack. 'It does give you some extra satisfaction when you win like that and I enjoyed it, that's for sure.' There are many ways to get a job done and while Sole Power's daring late dash is the showreel finish any jockey would be proud to wax lyrical about, in stark contrast, Hughes' first Nunthorpe triumph aboard Oasis Dream in 2003 was a mere formality as the outstanding sprinter of his generation blew away his rivals. Majestically handled by John Gosden, he was an impressive winner of the July Cup before dropping back to five furlongs to prove equally spellbinding on the Knavesmire, leaving Hughes with little doubt where he stands in the pantheon of sprinting greats. He said: 'He was very, very fast and able to maintain it. He was a young horse at the time so he was exuberant. 'He would be one of the best sprinters I rode, he was third at Royal Ascot but won a July Cup and a Nunthorpe and not many do that, he was very good.' With triumphs in the saddle now confined to the memory bank and perhaps the odd photographic reminder on a wall, attentions turn to the next chapter in Hughes' Nunthorpe history book when Sayidah Dariyan takes her place in the showpiece sprint event. Successful over the course and distance in her most recent outing, Hughes is confident the talented daughter of Dariyan is coming to the boil at just the right time, as the Weathercock Stables handler looks to cap a breakout year in the training ranks at the scene of some of his finest hours on horseback. One of the better rides you will see from @loughnane_billy, steering Sayidah Dariyan to victory in the Group Three @WilliamHill Summer Stakes, the filly staying on strongly to the line 👏 — York Racecourse (@yorkracecourse) July 11, 2025 'It would be lovely to win as a trainer,' continued Hughes. 'It might be a bit harder than when I was a jockey but we hope we have a great chance. 'Sayidah Dariyan really is going the right way and last time when she won at York, it was the first time she was ridden the way I like. 'She was covered up and ridden for a turn of foot by Billy (Loughnane) and she just exploded. We were able to see the best of her ridden that way. 'I don't think coming back to five furlongs will be too much of a hindrance to her, she's quite fast. 'I wouldn't swap her for anything and with No Half Measures as well, we know we have two nice fillies.'

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