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Bin Suroor is Alert to German chance for Tornado

Bin Suroor is Alert to German chance for Tornado

The Saeed bin Suroor-trained colt finished fourth in the 2000 Guineas at Newmarket before coming home a creditable sixth in the Derby.
He then headed to Ascot to contest the Group Three Hampton Court Stakes, where he dropped back to 10 furlongs to finish runner-up behind Aidan O'Brien's Trinity College.
His next port of call is the Grosser Dallmayr-Preis, known also as the Bayerisches Zuchtrennen, a Group One event run over a mile and a quarter and a race Bin Suroor has enjoyed success in before as Kutub won it in 2001 and Benbatl prevailed in 2018.
'He is doing very well, he worked on Tuesday,' the trainer said of Tornado Alert.
'The plan is to run him in Germany at the end of the month.
'The race is on the 27th at Munich, the Grosser Dallmayr-Preis.
'It's over a mile and a quarter, which is his trip. He's been in really good form.'
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Billy 'The Kid' Loughnane shows why he can be the new face of racing as he triumphs in the Grosser Preis von Berlin - with the 19-year-old looking to follow in Frankie Dettori's footsteps
Billy 'The Kid' Loughnane shows why he can be the new face of racing as he triumphs in the Grosser Preis von Berlin - with the 19-year-old looking to follow in Frankie Dettori's footsteps

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Billy 'The Kid' Loughnane shows why he can be the new face of racing as he triumphs in the Grosser Preis von Berlin - with the 19-year-old looking to follow in Frankie Dettori's footsteps

The first of what will be many arrived with the shake of his head, a handshake and disbelieving scream. Billy Loughnane had just guided Rebel's Romance, that fantastic globetrotting gelding who has amassed career earnings close to £11million, to a gutsy victory in the Grosser Preis von Berlin, one of the most important races of the European flat racing summer. Odds of 1/5 suggested it was a formality - the prohibitive numbers, however, did nothing to explain the scale of the achievement that was immediately acknowledged by Rene Piechulek, the man who he had edged out in a driving finish at Hoppergarten Racecourse. Loughnane is known as 'Billy The Kid' and he rides with a gunslinger's cool. He is only 19 and this represented a colossal moment in his upwardly mobile career, a breakthrough at Group One level wearing the distinctive Royal Blue silks that were once Frankie Dettori 's uniform. This is the environment in which all jockeys strive to operate but only few get the opportunity. That Loughnane was entrusted for this mission by Charlie Appleby, the trainer of racing's biggest owners Godolphin, underlined how highly he is regarded. Daily Mail Sport last week published a feature about the hottest young athletes in the world and there can be little question that Loughnane deserves a place in that category - his career is climbing as steeply, and shining as brightly as one of those rockets you fire from your garden on Bonfire Night. 'It's a feeling I can't describe, a feeling of ecstasy,' Loughnane gasped. 'What a star of a horse. I'm very lucky to be riding in these colours and to have the opportunity to sit on a horse like this. He's a star of a horse. Big thanks to Will (Buick, Godolphin's number one rider). I spoke to him last night and he told me exactly what to do.' Loughnane's father Mark was at Wolverhampton, where he said on Sky Sports Racing: 'It's something he's dreamt of all his life. I had an even-money favourite in the first race (Rock N It, which finished third) but I was more watching my phone and watching Billy. As a dad I'm proud as punch.' So he should be. His son has the charisma, talent and ability to be the face of racing for a new generation. He is dedicated to his profession, with those close to him constantly impressed by his determination to spend time watching video analysis of his rides and tapping into more experienced weighing room colleagues for advice. 'We take people in all the time but he just stood out at 16, even before he had got on a horse,' says Newmarket trainer George Boughey, who retains Loughnane as his stable jockey. He stood out as a person. He is a charming, well-mannered young guy and he will speak as easily with my highest owner as any of the staff in the yard. 'It took him something like 30 rides to win for me but he always had belief that it was going to happen for him: we have tried to create a positive environment because if you are working in a place where you feel wanted, you want to give your best all the time. If you don't feel wanted, how can you feel comfortable? Together Boughey and Loughnane are going to places and that was proven last year when the pair were successful with Soprano in the Sandringham Stakes at Royal Ascot. 'Ascot was a big moment,' agrees. 'As a trainer, if something goes wrong, it's your fault. The jockey can make a mistake in the race but you are the one who has to face the owner. Danny Tudhope had originally been booked to ride Soprano but Billy is my stable jockey and I wanted him to ride her. I remember being in the paddock and giving my spiel to the Highclere syndicate about how the race would unfold. Billy came from the weighing room, with his chest puffed out, and spoke to everyone with total assurance. There were some important people in that group but he didn't flinch. And he rode the filly absolutely perfectly.' As he rode Rebel's Romance. It had been a profitable weekend for Loughnane, who had ridden another big winner for Appleby on Saturday at Newmarket, but this, you feel, is the point in which the accelerator has been applied in his trajectory. 'The relationship with Charlie is building,' Boughey said. 'He has given him a lot of chances and most of them have won. They asked him to go in and ride Rebel's Romance last week. If that would have been me at 19, I'd have been thinking it was the biggest day of my life and wouldn't have slept but it didn't phase him one bit. It's what he is meant to do.'

Rebel's Romance and Loughnane rock in Germany
Rebel's Romance and Loughnane rock in Germany

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time14 hours ago

  • Glasgow Times

Rebel's Romance and Loughnane rock in Germany

A firm favourite of trainer Charlie Appleby, the seven-year-old began his Group One haul in this very race back in 2022 and three years on he was back in the German capital to strike for the eighth time at the highest level. Keen to keep things simple Rebel's Romance was up with the pace throughout the early stages, keeping close tabs on Andre Fabre's Junko and when straightening for home he showed his class to bravely hold off the French challenger. It was in fact a fourth Group One success on German soil for the well-travelled dual Breeders' Cup Turf hero who could return to Del Mar for another crack at the season-ending showpiece, with Coral making him the 5-1 co second-favourite for a third Stateside victory. Appleby said: 'It's great for Billy, but more importantly great for the horse who keeps sparkling on all continents. 'To have him carry on at the top level is fantastic for Sheikh Mohammed and I see this as a pre-cursor for the Canadian International at Woodbine and then the Breeders' Cup.' Loughnane has ridden eight winners from 12 rides for Appleby this season and it is fitting his first success at the top table comes in Germany, having notched his first Group-race triumph at Cologne in April last year. It caps a memorable weekend for his teenage pilot who also won the Sweet Solera Stakes in the royal blue of Appleby and Godolphin aboard Dance To The Music at Newmarket on Saturday. Loughnane told Wettstar: 'This is a feeling I can't describe, it's a feeling of ecstasy, what a horse and I'm very lucky to be riding in these colours and riding a horse like this. 'He's a star of a horse and has been going for a good few seasons now. Big thanks go to William Buick and I spoke to him last night and he told me exactly what to do. He's a superstar.' Meanwhile, the 19-year-old's father Mark Loughnane was the proudest man on Wolverhampton racecourse having watched his son's finest hour from Dunstall Park. He told Sky Sports Racing: 'Words can't describe something like that and it is something Billy has dreamt about all his life, it was amazing. 'I had an even-money favourite in the first but I was more on my phone watching Billy and we can't thank Mr Appleby and George Boughey and people like that enough. His agent Tony Hind has done a super job and they've all really catapulted Billy to the next level but as a dad, I'm proud as punch. 'When it was talked about he might be riding Rebel's Romance he rang me straight away and was like a child in a sweet shop and he said 'I'm on this horse of Mr Appleby's and it's going to be great'. I told him just to relax as a lot can happen between races. 'I've spoken to him on the phone and he's absolutely elated. I was the first one on the phone and he's bouncing and for a young fellow, he's a super young man. What he's done in a short space of time, I've helped him get started, and now that's it off he goes. 'It's awesome for our house and as a family, his mum is here racing today and we're all absolutely cock-a-hoop for him.'

Centigrade return looks to be edging closer
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Glasgow Times

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Centigrade return looks to be edging closer

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