
Thirty years on and Bin Suroor will never forget Lammtarra
Saeed bin Suroor had not held a licence for long when he saddled the chestnut on that first Saturday in June.
In fact, he did not even train Lammtarra when the flashy colt made a winning debut in a Listed race in August 1994, his only run at two. That honour went to Alex Scott, who was tragically shot dead by a groom at his stud in Newmarket just a month later.
Lammtarra was transferred to the care of the little known at the time Bin Suroor and the rest, as they say, is history.
In a classy renewal, Walter Swinburn delivered his inexperienced partner late to deny Tamure and a certain Frankie Dettori, who would go on to have a long and successful partnership with Bin Suroor.
The history of the Turf is long and illustrious. But there have been few careers like that of Lammtarra. In just four lifetime starts he won the Derby, the King George and the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, the three most prestigious mile-and-a-half races in Europe.
Bin Suroor has since been champion trainer four times and trained 12 further Classic winners – but he knows he owes a massive debt to Lammtarra.
His string is much smaller these days, but he proved when Mawj won the 1000 Guineas just two years ago that given the right ammunition he is still capable of winning the biggest races.
He had runners in both the 1000 and 2000 Guineas this year, in Elwateen and Tornado Alert respectively, and both outran their big odds to finish fourth. Tornado Alert now tries to win him a second Derby.
'It is 30 years since Lammtarra which seems a long time, it would be great to win it again, it's the biggest race so it makes me want to win it more,' said Bin Suroor.
'The reason it is so special is because it is very hard to win, only one horse can win it every year.
'I remember Lammtarra well. We got him at the end of his two-year-old season and we obviously knew he was good as he won a Listed race on his debut.
'We took him out to Dubai to train and he was working very well. He was not a big horse, he was quite small, but he had a big engine with a big heart and a good turn of foot.
'He used to work with all our good horses and I never saw him lose a gallop.'
Of course one of the quirks of the racing and breeding industries is the more successful a colt is on the track at three, the less chance there is of them racing on at four as they become so valuable, and that was the case with Lammtarra.
'Once he had won the Derby we felt we only wanted him to run in the biggest races,' Bin Suroor went on.
'We took him to the King George and the Arc, the toughest races, but every time he held his form.
'He was a rare horse because what he showed you in the morning he also showed you on the track, they don't always. He was so special.'
Bin Suroor went on to train Dubai Millennium, who failed to stay when tried in the 1999 Derby won by Oath. But that was his only defeat in 10 races, being at his best over a mile and 10 furlongs.
'Lammtarra was the best I trained over a mile and a half. Dubai Millennium didn't stay in the Derby, but we had to try. Over 10 furlongs Dubai Millennium would have been the best,' he said.
'To win the Derby, the King George and the Arc, the three biggest mile-and-a-half races tells you he was the best at that distance – on any ground, too, as he won the Derby on fast ground and the Arc on heavy.
'I owe him a lot, he came early in my career and achieved so much.
'The Derby is the best race in the world, it is so hard to win, for me to win it not long after starting meant so much. The winner is the best and to win it is very special for the horse, the owner and the trainer.
'I would love to win a Derby for Sheikh Mohammed and Godolphin now.'

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South Wales Guardian
11 minutes ago
- South Wales Guardian
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Daily Mirror
24 minutes ago
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The Guardian
2 hours ago
- The Guardian
Winner takes it all: Pride of Arras channels spirit of 70s for the Derby
Lord Derby and Sir Charles Bunbury, who flipped a coin in 1779 to decide whose name would be attached to a new race at Epsom, would still recognise the Derby's switchback route around the Surrey downs if they could somehow be spirited along for the latest renewal of the Classic on Saturday. While so much else has changed at Epsom since Bunbury's colt, Diomed, was the first winner nearly a quarter of a millennium ago, they would see a kindred spirit in Vimy Aykroyd, the owner of Pride Of Arras, one of the favourites to be the 246th. Enthusiastic owner-breeders, mating the best with the best and then hoping for the best, were the bedrock of thoroughbred racing from its earliest days. For the first 200 years of Classics at Epsom, the typical winners were three-year-olds that had been bred and raced by owners with a lifelong passion for both sides of the game. Breeding a Derby winner was as much of an achievement, if not more so, than having it race in your colours. The old way of doing things was swept aside by new money and sovereign wealth from the end of the 1970s as owners such as Sheikh Mohammed of Dubai and his three brothers compiled huge strings of horses and other major players were forced to compete. The small-scale owner-breeder, driven by the dream of striking it lucky at Epsom in early June, was suddenly an endangered species and as the big-money operations – Godolphin and Ireland's Coolmore Stud in particular – dominated the Derby, it even seemed possible that they might be extinct. As a result, there is a distinct sense of a 70s revival about the sudden emergence of Pride Of Arras as a leading contender. He raced once as a two-year-old, winning a minor race at Sandown in mid-August, and was an 18-1 outsider – and a 66-1 chance for the Derby – when he cantered to post for the Dante Stakes at York last month. One brisk dispatch of a useful field later he was down to 5-1 for Epsom. Aykroyd, who bred Pride Of Arras with her husband, David, has four broodmares at her base in Yorkshire, including Parnell's Dream, a mare who was also born and raised there and raced in her colours. She produced Pride Of Arras, her fourth foal, in 2022 after a mating with New Bay. While the first three were all winners, her latest ticket in the genetic lottery of thoroughbred breeding is a potential jackpot. Pride Of Arras's two-and-a-half minute run for glory is the result of many years of planning, patience and enthusiastic optimism. 'We bought his grand-dam, Kitty O'Shea, privately from Coolmore, and she had several foals and we kept Parnell's Dream,' Aykroyd says. 'She's bred quite a few winners already but nothing of his calibre and we're just incredibly lucky to have bred a horse with enormous potential.' 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'I was brought up with Ralph's father as a child, so I've known the family for years and when he started, I decided to have a horse with him. It's gone on ever since,' she says. 'I'm very lucky to have a very good trainer and I'm a bit what will be, will be [about Saturday's race]. I've been in racing since I was born so I've seen all the ups and downs and I'm just very excited about it all.' Epsom 1.00 Sirona 1.35 Docklands 2.10 Ruby's Profit 2.45 Tees Spirit (nap) 3.30 Pride Of Arras (nb) 4.15 Small Fry 5.00 Meblesh 5.40 Circe Musselburgh 1.20 Blackcurrent 1.55 Code Purple 2.30 Alaskan Light 3.10 Jabaara 3.50 Regalian 4.25 Luna A Inbhir Nis 4.55 Top Gun Tina Worcester 1.50 Greenrock Abbey 2.25 Somespring Special 3.05 Leading Force 3.45 Son Of Tyran 4.20 Romany Brown 4.50 Madajovy 5.25 I'm A Starman 5.55 Dollymount Chepstow 5.30 Level Up 6.00 Wateen 6.30 High On Hope 7.00 Ultramarine 7.30 Marisitta 8.00 Eye Of The Water 8.30 You Are Everything 9.00 Doncaster 4.00 Raft Up 4.35 Papa Don't Preach 5.10 Court Of Stars 5.45 Equity Law 6.15 Way Of Stars 6.45 Remmooz 7.15 Superposition 7.50 La Cadalora Hexham 4.05 Present Fair 4.40 Carnet De Stage 5.15 Sean Og 5.50 Mancero 6.20 The Navigator 6.50 Kilmore Rock Lingfield 5.34 Motabaah 6.07 Spirit Of Albion 6.37 Salamanca City 7.07 Momaer 7.40 Fulford Cross 8.10 Amathus 8.40 Queen Of Good News There is an Abba tribute band on the schedule for Epsom's popular music nights later in the year and the back-to-the-70s theme could be a winner on Saturday as well although Aykroyd will not get carried away. 'I don't think ahead [from the Derby],' she says. One step at a time, you can get carried away by thinking ahead and then you get disappointed. I can't see the point of that.' The Derby looks as open as any running this century, with three horses vying for favouritism on Friday afternoon. The strong possibility of rain on Saturday adds a further layer of uncertainty as 19 lightly raced colts – the biggest field for 22 years – prepare for their one and only chance to win the sport's most famous Classic. It is a race with obvious potential for an upset, all the more so if significant rain gets into the ground, when even an 80-1 shot such as Lazy Griff, the Chester Vase runner-up, might suddenly become an each-way proposition. It is a contest where at least two of the three market leaders have significant questions to answer. On the face of it, Delacroix, the Leopardstown trial winner, has plenty to recommend him. He quickened well in his trial, is the chosen ride of Ryan Moore, Aidan O'Brien's stable jockey, from three possibles. Unlike Ruling Court, the 2,000 Guineas winner, it is fair to expect him to get the trip, even if it may not bring much improvement in a colt who is seven races into his career. On the minus side, his last race had little depth, the runner-up has been steered around Epsom and Moore seemed unsure about his ride until late in the day. The view at Ballydoyle seemed to be that The Lion In Winter was their prime contender until his defeat behind Pride Of Arras in the Dante at York, which suggests in turn that the Dante may have been the strongest of the trials. If so, then Damysus, the runner-up, and Nightwalker, who ran on well into fifth from some way off the pace, deserve to enter the conversation, but there is no compelling reason why either colt – with three and five starts respectively – should improve past the twice-raced winner. Pride Of Arras has more scope for progress than any of the beaten horses at York. He is the son of a strong-staying mare with few concerns about stamina and is expected to handle the conditions if the going turns soft. His stable companion, Stanhope Gardens, and the unbeaten French challenger Midak could be significant threats, but at around 9-2, Pride Of Arras (3.30) can emerge from the pack as the 246th winner of the Derby. Epsom 1.00: David Menuisier's Sirona had decent form on an easy surface last autumn and Ryan Moore, who was aboard for her sole win in 2024 in a Listed race at Newmarket, is back in her saddle. Epsom 1.35: The versatile Docklands has not added a win to his record since the Britannia Handicap at Royal Ascot two years ago, but he has been impressively consistent much better company. Sardinian Warrior, who beat him by half a length at Ascot last time, was a length away from a Group One win next time and Harry Eustace's five-year-old faces nothing of that standard here. Epsom 2.10: The high numbers are generally favoured on the straight course when there is ease in the ground and the front-running Ruby's Profit, who made all to win well at Goodwood last time, has a perfect pitch in stall 19. Epsom 2.45: Tees Spirit landed this speed test three years ago, goes on any ground and has a fine draw in stall 16 as he bids for a repeat.