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Race 1 CASTLE PEAK HANDICAP

Race 1 CASTLE PEAK HANDICAP

Race 1
CASTLE PEAK HANDICAP
Class 5 - 1600M - C
Course: ST Cloudy Going: g
Finish Time: 1:35:45
Sectional Time:
24.46 22.85 23.89 24.25

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Britney Wong doubles up again at Sha Tin as Cheval Valiant leads them a merry dance
Britney Wong doubles up again at Sha Tin as Cheval Valiant leads them a merry dance

South China Morning Post

time7 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Britney Wong doubles up again at Sha Tin as Cheval Valiant leads them a merry dance

Britney Wong Po-ni landed consecutive Sha Tin doubles headlined by Cheval Valiant's all-the-way win in the Class Four Lai On Handicap (1,000m) at Sha Tin on Sunday. The 26-year-old smashed out of the gates on the Charm Spirit galloper and never looked back, crossing over to the stands rail from gate nine and setting comfortable fractions on the front end. When the pair were faced by a myriad of challengers in the final 200m, Wong galvanised her willing partner and gamely fended off $57 roughie Straight To Glory and $6.8 second favourite Lahore by a neck. It was the second straight double for Wong and the fourth consecutive winning meeting for the 10lb apprentice, who was teaming up with the horse that provided her with her first Hong Kong win back in September. Britney Wong grabs a double! ✌️ Cheval Valiant was the apprentice's first winner in Hong Kong last year and today she's back aboard @DJWhyteTrainer's galloper successfully at Sha Tin... #SummerSeries | #HKracing — HKJC Racing (@HKJC_Racing) June 8, 2025 'He was my first win and I know him very well,' said Wong of the Douglas Whyte-trained Cheval Valiant. 'Thank you to Mr Whyte for putting me back on because I had to chase this ride, actually, and I'm happy that everything has gone well today and I have had another win. I'm very happy.' There was a huge sting in the tail post race, however, with Wong copping a three-day ban and HK$15,000 fine for careless riding in the early stages. Earlier, Wong got the card off to the perfect start in combination with Manfred Man Ka-leung for the second consecutive Sha Tin meeting when Ruby Sailing was another gate-to-wire winner in the Class Five Chak On Handicap (1,200m). Ruby Sailing is not for catching! 🔥 Apprentice Britney Wong drives the Starspangledbanner gelding to a first win for Manfred Man at Sha Tin... #SummerSeries | #HKracing — HKJC Racing (@HKJC_Racing) June 8, 2025 It was a maiden victory at the 20th attempt for the son of Starspangledbanner, who showed tremendous early speed to lead from gate eight and never looked in danger of being caught. Wong got serious at the 400m pole and the pair surged into an unassailable lead, winning by one and a quarter lengths from fast-finishing $2.4 favourite King Oberon. Elsewhere, French ace Antoine Hamelin notched another timely winner thanks to Sky Prophet's upset win at $19.2 in the Class Five Chung On Handicap (1,400m). The Casper Fownes-trained four-year-old was made to work hard to get to the lead from barrier 13, but once there Hamelin controlled the fractions to a tee. Sky Prophet won't quit! 💥 Tough first win for the Caspar Fownes trainee at Sha Tin with @AntoineHamelin as he narrowly denies a rampaging Only U in a thriller... #SummerSeries | #HKracing — HKJC Racing (@HKJC_Racing) June 8, 2025 The pair looked vulnerable to Lapras turning in, but after fending off that rival in a protracted duel, they had just enough to scramble home ahead of the desperately unlucky $1.8 favourite Only U, who lashed home and only missed by a head after a torrid passage. 'It's nice to get a winner today – it's hot, but it's less hot when you win,' said Hamelin. 'I think the horse was in good form and didn't deserve to be so long in the odds. I believed in him [and] I thought he was a chance, the only concern was the draw. 'But he had a good start, he led, he controlled the race and he held that to the line.' Hamelin will depart Hong Kong and return to France at the end of this season, but he will be giving his all until the end of the season. 'I will just do my best to the end. It's hard to plan a target a month before I leave but I will just do my best and try to get as many winners as I can before I leave,' said the jockey.

Coco Gauff admits French Open final win over Aryna Sabalenka ‘wasn't pretty'
Coco Gauff admits French Open final win over Aryna Sabalenka ‘wasn't pretty'

South China Morning Post

time17 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Coco Gauff admits French Open final win over Aryna Sabalenka ‘wasn't pretty'

'I was, like, 'this is going to be a tough day', and I knew it was just going to be about willpower and mental. 'It was super tough when I walked on the court and felt the wind because we warmed up with the roof closed,' she said. It was Gauff who coped better with the conditions to add the Roland Garros title to her 2023 US Open crown, also against the Belarusian. A stiff breeze swirled around Court Philippe-Chatrier and contributed to a combined total of 100 unforced errors and 15 breaks of serve. The 21-year-old American, seeded second, came from a set down to beat world No 1 Sabalenka 6-7, 6-2, 6-4. Coco Gauff said her first French Open title win 'wasn't pretty' after she battled Aryna Sabalenka and the elements to reign on the Paris clay. 'It really came down to the last few points, but overall I'm just really happy with the fight that I managed today. 'It wasn't pretty, but it got the job done, and that's all that matters.' It was the first time the top two women's seeds had contested a Roland Garros final since Serena Williams defeated Maria Sharapova in 2013. Sabalenka edged a tiebreak to win the opening set, which at 77 minutes lasted nine minutes longer than the entire match the last time Gauff was in the Roland Garros final, a chastening 6-1, 6-3 defeat by Iga Swiatek three years ago. Coco Gauff celebrates with US director Spike Lee after her win. Photo: AFP But Gauff won back the final two sets, and victory over the 27-year-old Belarusian put to rest the bad memories of that 2022 loss, when, as an 18-year-old, Gauff felt overwhelmed even before stepping onto Court Philippe-Chatrier. 'It was a tough time, I was doubting myself,' Gauff recalled. 'I was crying before the match, and so nervous, literally couldn't breathe and stuff.' Gauff said the lopsided loss rocked her confidence to such an extent that she was left 'in a dark place' and feared she was not cut out for winning major titles. 'I thought, if I can't handle this how am I going to handle it again?' she said. She handled it just fine on Saturday and after the match said: 'I think [the US Open victory] was more emotional but this one was harder.' After she had won, Gauff greeted Sabalenka at the net with a warm hug and thanked the umpire, then screamed out with joy and relief, got to her knees and crouched forward, continuing to cry as she savoured the win. She later hugged film director Spike Lee and celebrated with her entourage in her box before thanking the fans. Aryna Sabalenka was an uncharacteristically ungracious loser. Photo: Xinhua 'You guys were cheering for me so hard,' she said. 'I don't know what I did to deserve so much love from the French crowd.' Sabalenka, a vivacious presence throughout the fortnight both in person and via her social media output, was an uncharacteristically ungracious loser. 'I mean, honestly, sometimes it felt like she was hitting the ball from the frame,' she said. magically, the ball lands in the court, and you're kind of on the back foot. 'It felt like a joke, honestly, like somebody from above was just standing there laughing, like, 'let's see if you can handle this'. 'I was just making unforced errors. I think she won the match not because she played incredible; just because I made all of those mistakes, kind of like from easy balls.' Advertisement

French Open final: Jannik Sinner says rivalry with Carlos Alcaraz the tonic tennis needs
French Open final: Jannik Sinner says rivalry with Carlos Alcaraz the tonic tennis needs

South China Morning Post

timea day ago

  • South China Morning Post

French Open final: Jannik Sinner says rivalry with Carlos Alcaraz the tonic tennis needs

Jannik Sinner said his battle for supremacy with fellow French Open finalist Carlos Alcaraz could become the defining rivalry of their era and is something the sport needed with its golden generation of players calling time on their careers. Sinner beat Novak Djokovic 6-4, 7-5, 7-6 in a generational battle on Court Philippe Chatrier to deny his Serbian opponent a record 25th grand slam and left him unsure whether he would ever return to Roland-Garros, where he has won three major trophies. The 23-year-old Italian, who is seeking his fourth grand slam title, booked a mouth-watering meeting on Sunday with his main rival Alcaraz, who will aim to retain his crown at Roland-Garros and add a fifth major crown to his trophy cabinet. With Djokovic now the only active member of tennis' 'Big Four', which also included Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Andy Murray and yielded a collective 69 major titles in more than two decades, Sinner sensed an opportunity for him and Alcaraz. 'It takes time to compare us with the Big Three or Big Four, no? Only time can tell, to be honest,' Sinner said. Novak Djokovic lost his semi-final against Jannik Sinner in straight sets. Photo: Xinhua 'For sure, from my point of view, he's a player who makes me a better player. He pushes me to the limit. We try to understand where we have to improve, for the next times I play against him.

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