
Frankie Dettori names the horse ‘I'd put my fiver on' at The Derby this weekend
The world famous jockey, who won the Epsom Classic twice when based in Britain, has his say on the likely outcome of the 2025 Betfred Derby
Frankie Dettori has named the horse once-a-year punters should 'have a fiver on'. During a 35 year career in Britain, Dettori established himself as the most recognisable figure in the sport, replacing the legendary Lester Piggott as the 'housewives' choice' at Derby time.
He was crowned champion jockey three times and rode the winners of 23 British Classics, including two in the Derby on Authorized in 2007 and Golden Horn in 2015. Dettori quit Britain for good after riding at British Champion's Day in October 2023, an occasion sealed by victory on King Of Steel in the Champion Stakes.
Now based in the United States, Dettori has mounts at Saratoga on Saturday, but has been keeping an eye on the field for the £1.5 million Derby the same day. He has shared his thoughts on the race in an interview for betting site Stake, for whom he is a brand ambassador.
Dettori said Ryan Moore's mount Delacroix is "guaranteed to stay and he seemed very straightforward to handle."
He added: "The Lion In Winter came from a long lay-off and was perhaps too fresh on his reappearance after The Dante. He looked a bit hot at the start and he's got to come back from that.
'Of course, Aidan (O'Brien) is a genius at doing things like that, bringing the horses back from bad runs, like with City Of Troy, for example, last year. But don't forget you still have to take the horse all the way around the mile and a half.'
But he nailed his colours to the Ralph Beckett-trained winner of York's Dante Stakes, Pride Of Arras, who will be ridden by Rossa Ryan.
"Pride Of Arras won in the style of a Derby winner in the Dante. The only thing that might muddle him is the size of the field. I suspect it will be a maximum field and he's only run twice, so it won't be easy.
"He'll have to manage his way through the traffic. He does have a good cruising speed, though, and a good turn of foot. He's the one which has impressed me the most in the Derby trials. It's just the lack of experience which disadvantages him. It's very hard to win this race on only your third start, so that's the one thing which puts me off a bit.
"Ruling Court is a serious horse. What he showed in the Guineas was very impressive, but it's that massive question mark, will he get a mile and a half?
"We know that a mile and quarter is within his reach because he hit the line very strongly at Newmarket, but this is another two furlongs. He's an amazing, talented horse, but he's got a massive question mark to me.
"Damysus looks a very solid horse, but to me Pride Of Arras was much better than him in the Dante and we expect him to improve a bit here, so the gap is looking a bit too far to bridge to me.
"Pride Of Arras would be the one I'd put my fiver on. It's a very exciting race and it is wide open. We've already made a case for a good number of them, and it's very interesting."
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Telegraph
38 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Meet the owner aiming to take down down racing's Goliaths in the Derby
If the Ralph Beckett trained Pride of Arras becomes the 246th winner of the Derby on Saturday, bloodstock experts will pore over the nuances of his ancestry to work out how the colt attained the perfect mix of speed and stamina to win the world's greatest flat race. However, the colt's pedigree is nothing compared with that of his 80-year-old owner-breeder, Lavina 'Vimy' Ackroyd, who, should he win, would realise the eternal dream upon which racing sells itself; David beats Goliath and how a small-time owner-breeder with four mares and just six horses in training can occasionally conquer the sport's behemoths in its biggest race. Ironically, though, it is the Grand National for which Ackroyd's paternal grandfather, Harry Beasley, was famous. He trained and rode the 1891 National winner Come Away. With his three brothers (Tommy, Willie and Johnny), between 1877 and 1892, they won the race four times, had six seconds and two thirds from 34 rides. Skip forward a generation and her cousin, Bobby Beasley, won the 1961 National on Nicolaus Silver. Though Tommy won the National three times, Harry was considered the better rider, winning the Grand Steeplechase de Paris twice. At the age of 72, he won over obstacles at Punchestown on the original Pride of Arras after whom this colt is named. Despite being born with Aintree coursing through his veins, her father, Rufus, was a successful flat jockey winning the St Leger on Boswell in 1936 and, a year later, the Ascot Gold Cup on Precipitation. He was Irish but, having been educated at Ampleforth, developed a love for Yorkshire and when he turned to training, he did so in Malton. When preparing Bounteous for the 1961 Derby he hired a local brass band to line his gallop and play as the colt galloped to ensure he was not unsettled by the din at Epsom – (come on Aidan, that's one stone you seem to leave unturned). Bounteous was unplaced but went on to finish second in the St Leger. Vimy's mother was Lady Alexandra Egerton, daughter of the sixth Earl of Wilton who had come within a week of owning the 1920 St Leger winner, Caligula, and he was partial to a bet. 'I don't think much money actually changed hands in those days, they bet farms,' says Vimy of an era when many of the great estates were partly dismantled at the card table. In the summer of 1920 Lord Wilton's financial problems had 'worsened' and his creditors said 'enough'. Caligula was sold for 8,000 guineas a week before the Classic. 'My parents came for lunch on the odd Sunday' Aged three, Vimy was fostered out to the Grimthorpes, the Yorkshire racing family, until she was eight and she was effectively brought up as a 'sister' to William Beckett. 'My mother didn't get on with nannies and the Grimthorpes were able to share a nanny so I lived with them,' she recalls. 'It was strange. I can't say I took it all in my stride but you can't let it affect you when you reach my age. My parents came for lunch on the odd Sunday when they weren't too busy.' Back then it was probably not a unique arrangement but it is crucial in the Pride of Arras story – when William Beckett's son, Ralph, started training in 1999, Vimy was one of the first owners to send him a horse. From eight onwards she attended a variety of convent schools which she either did not like or was expelled from, was sent back from a finishing school in Paris after three weeks with jaundice and did a Deb season which did not agree with her rebellious nature. 'It was ghastly,' she recalls. But she wound up at a secretarial college before going to work for the Anglo-Indian big band jazz leader Confrey Phillips, eventually marrying him. Four years later, the marriage over, she returned to Yorkshire to ride out for her father. In 1972 the Jockey Club let females ride on the Flat for the first time by setting up a series of 12 ladies only amateur races. Riding a horse called Old Cock, she won the race at Doncaster in 1972 and another at Haydock in 1973. 'Hardly Hollie Doyle,' she says modestly and yet it was the first baby step on the road subsequently travelled by Gay Kelleway, Hayley Turner and Doyle. 'But I suppose it did set the ball rolling.' She then married Richard Ackroyd and they lived a bucolic life looking after a few animals and chickens in Spain for 20 years. 'When Richard died in 1997 from cancer it took me two years to sell the place but I came back to London in 1999 which is when I had my first horse with Ralph.' She then returned to Yorkshire and 20 years ago married her late husband's brother David who was much more into racing. 'He was very entrepreneurial,' she explains. 'He made money, he lost money.' Pre-Vimy, he had been a partner with Robert Sangster in Ballydoyle's first incarnation. Tragically David, who lived for racing, is now in a care home with dementia unaware that his wife's horse is going to Epsom on Saturday. Her first good horse with Beckett was Puff who won the Fred Darling in 2010 and was the catalyst for her to have a crack at breeding. 'She was an utter failure as a broodmare,' she remembers. 'We sent her to very good stallions but Patrick Cooper [David's nephew and her bloodstock adviser] said we couldn't keep bad mares and she had to go. It's a good job I didn't live at Copgrove Stud where we keep them – if I'd seen her out in the paddock every day I'd have been too attached to sell.' About 15 years ago to up the breeding ante, Cooper added Pride of Arras's granddam Kitty O'Shea, bought privately from Coolmore, to her broodmares. The colt's dam, Parnell's Dream, was sent to New Bay, who cost just £20,000 at the time – he is now 10 times that. By any owner's standards Vimy had a good May. Old Cock, the horse she has in training with Ed Bethell which was named after the horse she won the ladies' races on, won at York on the same day as Pride of Arras. A week later Amiloc, a gelding, won the Cocked Hat Stakes at Goodwood and if Pride of Arras does not win the Derby then compensation could await at Royal Ascot, where she has never had a winner but her father had many, with Amiloc. This week, though, it is all about Pride of Arras. 'Initially we were very enthused when he won his maiden at Sandown,' recalls his owner-breeder. 'But subsequently the horses he beat did nothing and he had a small issue. The plan was to run again in the autumn but the ground got very heavy so we decided to leave it. 'Ralph began saying we'd start this season off in a novice. He wasn't ready for that so he said: 'We'll have to go straight to Dante.' Then he said that he was only going there because the owner lives in Yorkshire!! Thanks, Ralph! He keeps his cards close to his chest and, actually, that suits me, I don't want him telling me in January I'm going to win the Derby. 'But I was amazed with the way he won the Dante. When Old Cock won earlier in the afternoon I thought:'That's my luck for the day.' Two furlongs out he was boxed in and when Rossa [Ryan] went for a very small gap I thought: 'That's a bit brave.' But he didn't hesitate. You hear others were unlucky, something stumbled out of stalls, another pulled too hard. But you would hope his trajectory, after just two runs, is steeper. Ralph says he's tightened up. Obviously we're very hopeful. 'The National may be in the background but now we want a Derby! Flat is my thing, father was flat. Ernie Halifax came up to me at York and said: 'Shirley Heights [the last Yorkshire owned and bred Derby winner] won the Dante – you've got it Vimy.'' Of course people with blank cheques have made approaches for Pride of Arras. 'Patrick says you're not selling,' she explains. 'It's taken all this time to get a horse this good and what do you do if you sell it? You buy a lot of bad horses instead. He's got a point.'


Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Ryan Moore rates his ride in the £1.5m Derby race and picks out the main dangers
The world-renowned jockey has won the Derby four times and bids for a hat-trick in the historic race after victories on Auguste Rodin and City Of Troy Ryan Moore has rated his prospects of completing a hat-trick of wins in Britain's richest race, the £1.5 million Betfred Derby on Saturday. The world-renowned jockey has won the iconic race four times including the last two editions on Auguste Rodin and City Of Troy. As the retained jockey of the powerful Coolmore-Ballydoyle axis he has the pick of the best talent to come out of the Aidan O'Brien stable. Moore has the choice of three colts in the 19-runner Epsom Classic and while opting to partner Delacroix, he admitted there is little to choose between him and stablemates The Lion In Winter and Lambourn. Speaking on his World Pool blog, Moore said: 'Delacroix has form with give in the ground, so should handle a bit of ease, but we don't know how much we're going to get. The closer it is to good ground, the more it will suit everyone, while soft ground means some horses will struggle in it. 'He's had a very good preparation for this, having won nicely on both his starts this season and he has plenty of experience on his side. Everything has gone very smoothly with him, we think he's in good shape and we expect him to run a big race.' On O'Brien's other two runners, Lambourn and The Lion In Winter, Moore commented: 'Lambourn will stay well and he's an uncomplicated horse that can probably handle most types of going, while we're not sure about The Lion In Winter. 'He's never run on anything slower than good ground, but I don't see any reason why he wouldn't go on it, he's a good moving horse. At York, he was only just about ready to start back, so he should take a big step forward, and going up to a mile-and-a-half shouldn't be a problem based on his pedigree. 'There's very little to separate the three of them to be honest. They're all there to run their race and I just have to hope that it pans out well for me.' Delacroix heads the betting from Dante Stakes winner Pride Of Arras and Ruling Court, the Godolphin colt who captured the 2,000 Guineas. Moore went on: 'For me, the Guineas winner, Ruling Court, has the best form in the race. Stepping up markedly in trip does raise a big question mark, but he's by Justify out of a High Chaparral mare, so there's a chance he'll stay. If it got very wet, you wouldn't be sure if he'll handle that. 'Both of the Frankel horses for the Gosdens, Damysus and Nightwalker, look like improving for the step up in trip, while Pride Of Arras is an obvious challenger having won the Dante well and it looks like he'll stay. 'Midak is an interesting runner, having won a trial in France. The late Aga Khan has a good record in the race, and it would be fitting for him to run well with the race named in his honour this year.'


Scottish Sun
3 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Derby hit by yellow weather warning with thunderstorms and hail set to smash Epsom track for biggest race of the year
DESTRUCTION DERBY Derby hit by yellow weather warning with thunderstorms and hail set to smash Epsom track for biggest race of the year Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) THE Derby has been hit with a yellow weather warning - as the Met Office predict thunderstorms and hail are set to smash the Epsom track. Tomorrow's £1.5million race - the most famous Flat contest in the world - will see 19 of the most awesome three-year-old colts on the planet go to post. 2 Epsom Derby racegoers are set to be under a yellow weather warning on Saturday - when the world's most famous Flat race is run Credit: - 2 The yellow weather warning is in place for Epsom racecourse on Saturday But the thousands of punters set to pour into the Surrey track may be forced to watch from under their umbrellas. A downpour on Thursday changed the ground for Friday's racing on Ladies' Day to good to soft, good in places, and there is more rain set to fall overnight. The Met Office has issued a yellow weather warning for the racecourse on Saturday, starting at 9am and finishing at 6pm. The Derby itself, worth £900,000 to the winner, is due off at 3.30pm. A statement on their website read: "Heavy showers and thunderstorms may lead to some disruption to transport and infrastructure. "There is a good chance driving conditions will be affected by spray, standing water and/or hail, leading to longer journey times by car and bus." The warning covers most of the south of Britain and extends to mid-Wales in the west, up to Birmingham and down to Exeter. A Met Office spokesperson told Sun Racing: "There are still some uncertainties in the forecast for Saturday regarding the exact track and speed of the weather system impacting our weather that day. "However, we are confident that it will be a very showery day, with some heavy showers accompanied by thunder and small hail. "The uncertainty lies in where exactly the heaviest rain will fall. "That said, we can be pretty confident that it'll be an unsettled day with some heavy showers and thunderstorms, which could have an impact on conditions for the race." While an update from the track on Friday morning read: "There was 3.4mm rain on Tuesday afternoon. It was dry on Wednesday with 7mm rain on Thursday up to 8pm. "After some rain this morning (1mm) it is forecast to clear to a brighter, breezy afternoon with temperatures in the mid to high teens." More to follow. 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.