logo
Merchant looking to bank another big race for Highclere

Merchant looking to bank another big race for Highclere

Leader Livea day ago
Always held in high-regard by trainer William Haggas, the Highclere Thoroughbreds-owned three-year-old excelled when landing the King George V Stakes and after connections resisted the temptation of an Ascot return and a daring King George VI And Queen Elizabeth Stakes tilt, now climbs the ladder into Group Three company on the Sussex Downs.
'The Gordon was always the plan and the next logical step for him and a horse of his profile,' said Highclere's Harry Herbert.
MERCHANT takes the King George V Stakes for @TomMarquand and trainer @WilliamHaggas. Congratulations to connections. pic.twitter.com/5CcXFLkYB5
— Ascot Racecourse (@Ascot) June 19, 2025
'He comes into it – according to William – in really good form and he's been working well at home.
'It's one step at a time with him and we will see how he gets on but we would be very hopeful of a big show as he's a fast-improving horse and one we think the world of.'
The last four winners of this have gone on to contest the St Leger and although his team are refusing to rule out a Classic tilt, it could be an audacious trip to Paris that comes calling in the autumn if Merchant continues his rapid progression through the ranks.
Herbert added: 'The St Leger is certainly possible it's just whether we want to go the mile and six route or whether we stick to a mile and a half.
'It will all depend on how he progresses and if he happens to win the Gordon Stakes we would then all being well head to the Great Voltigeur (at York, August 20) and if he happened to win that then the conversation would be do you go for the St Leger or have a crack at the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe.
'I think it's wide open at this stage and of course there is a lot of water to flow under the bridge still. But William and I have been discussing it for a while and I'm not certain the St Leger would be the right move for this horse, although I hate to say that now when we're nowhere near that point.
'Hopefully all goes well at Goodwood and once that is out of the way we can go from there.'
Eve Johnson Houghton has already made her mark in the juvenile Group races this week and will bid for Super Sprint compensation with Havana Hurricane in the Markel Richmond Stakes.
The Royal Ascot winner narrowly missed out on a huge bounty when beaten a short head at Newbury but now returns to six furlongs, the distance over which he went down fighting to Charlie Appleby's reopposing Maximized in the Woodcote Stakes at Epsom.
'It would be exciting to make it a Group Two double for the week,' said Johnson Houghton.
'He's in great form, he's done nothing wrong and I think six furlongs will really suit him now we know to hold on to him for a bit longer.
'We obviously kicked too soon at Epsom, but we learned from it.'
Clive Cox has bided his time since with Coppull since finishing third in the Coventry Stakes at the Royal meeting but with the form looking smart, is hopeful he can show the required progress in a race the Lambourn handler has won with Golden Horde (2019) and Supremacy (2020).
'I was really pleased with his effort in the Coventry and I just wanted to give him a little bit of time as he's still developing,' said Cox.
'He's done nothing but please so far and this is another big step, but we really like him.
'It's nice to be heading to these races with horses in form.'
Disappointing in the Coventry was Archie Watson's Underwriter, but after being returned to Ayr for a confidence-boosting win since, attempts to go one better than owners Wathnan Racing's The Strikin Viking who was touched off in this race 12 months ago.
'We took him back up to Ayr and he was impressive there on debut and again the other day, he just had a complete blip for whatever reason at Royal Ascot,' said Wathnan's Richard Brown.
'We couldn't find any reason for the poor performance at Ascot so we went back up to Ayr with a penalty and he showed us what he could do.
'It's a step up in class, but we'll find out where we're at.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Merchant sets sail for Gordon success at rain-soaked Goodwood
Merchant sets sail for Gordon success at rain-soaked Goodwood

North Wales Chronicle

time16 minutes ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Merchant sets sail for Gordon success at rain-soaked Goodwood

An impressive winner in the King George V Stakes at Royal Ascot, William Haggas' improving son of Teofilo was sent off the 6-5 favourite to enhance his growing reputation with a Group Three success. With the threat of lightning meaning a flag start it was Gary and Josh Moore's Too Soon who led them along, with the Highclere Thoroughbreds-owned market leader among those held up at the rear of the field along with Aidan O'Brien's Galveston and Andrew Balding's recent Sandown winner Windlord. Merchant wins the HKJC World Pool Gordon Stakes 💯@TomMarquand | @WilliamHaggas — ITV Racing (@itvracing) July 31, 2025 With the runners edging over to the stands side with the two-furlong pole approaching, it appeared as though James Owen's Wimbledon Hawkeye would take some reeling in, but Merchant's jockey Tom Marquand had a brave ally when he needed him, with the colt bridging the deficit to register a nose verdict in the nick of time. Whether it proves to be at home or abroad, exciting options now await for Merchant, who was bred by Jim Bolger. Doncaster or Paris appears to be the discussion to be had regarding the autumn. Haggas said: 'Tom said he didn't enjoy the ground, but he kept going and that's what I like about him the most. 'His temperament is brilliant, he doesn't give a monkey's about anything. That is one of his great attributes for the future. 'They all had to cope with the conditions, it was going to be messy whatever happened with the flag start. He's only won a nose and James' horse ran a fabulous race. 'He really dug in well, he's a very good horse. Desert Hero won this race and then ran in the St Leger and I don't think he was ever quite the same afterwards. 'I'm worried about stretching this horse out to a mile and six too soon, I think he is really a horse for next year, too. We think he's very good. 'However, if he didn't like the ground there then he may not like the ground in France in autumn. I'm not saying the Arc is definitely not going to happen, but it's not definitely not going to happen either.' Highclere's Harry Herbert added: 'I'm not sure we'll go for the Leger, the plan – so long as he comes out of this race fine – is to go to York (Great Voltigeur Stakes) 'We'll see how that goes, if York went well and we had good ground at York we'd see what this horse can do on perfect ground. 'Tom said he was spinning his wheels the whole way, it's extraordinary that he's won. If he happened to go through York OK then the trainer has talked more about the Arc, which is quite bold. 'He's worried about going a mile and six as a three-year-old, he sees him as having a very big future. He's a master with this type of horse.'

Merchant sets sail for Gordon success at rain-soaked Goodwood
Merchant sets sail for Gordon success at rain-soaked Goodwood

South Wales Guardian

time16 minutes ago

  • South Wales Guardian

Merchant sets sail for Gordon success at rain-soaked Goodwood

An impressive winner in the King George V Stakes at Royal Ascot, William Haggas' improving son of Teofilo was sent off the 6-5 favourite to enhance his growing reputation with a Group Three success. With the threat of lightning meaning a flag start it was Gary and Josh Moore's Too Soon who led them along, with the Highclere Thoroughbreds-owned market leader among those held up at the rear of the field along with Aidan O'Brien's Galveston and Andrew Balding's recent Sandown winner Windlord. Merchant wins the HKJC World Pool Gordon Stakes 💯@TomMarquand | @WilliamHaggas — ITV Racing (@itvracing) July 31, 2025 With the runners edging over to the stands side with the two-furlong pole approaching, it appeared as though James Owen's Wimbledon Hawkeye would take some reeling in, but Merchant's jockey Tom Marquand had a brave ally when he needed him, with the colt bridging the deficit to register a nose verdict in the nick of time. Whether it proves to be at home or abroad, exciting options now await for Merchant, who was bred by Jim Bolger. Doncaster or Paris appears to be the discussion to be had regarding the autumn. Haggas said: 'Tom said he didn't enjoy the ground, but he kept going and that's what I like about him the most. 'His temperament is brilliant, he doesn't give a monkey's about anything. That is one of his great attributes for the future. 'They all had to cope with the conditions, it was going to be messy whatever happened with the flag start. He's only won a nose and James' horse ran a fabulous race. 'He really dug in well, he's a very good horse. Desert Hero won this race and then ran in the St Leger and I don't think he was ever quite the same afterwards. 'I'm worried about stretching this horse out to a mile and six too soon, I think he is really a horse for next year, too. We think he's very good. 'However, if he didn't like the ground there then he may not like the ground in France in autumn. I'm not saying the Arc is definitely not going to happen, but it's not definitely not going to happen either.' Highclere's Harry Herbert added: 'I'm not sure we'll go for the Leger, the plan – so long as he comes out of this race fine – is to go to York (Great Voltigeur Stakes) 'We'll see how that goes, if York went well and we had good ground at York we'd see what this horse can do on perfect ground. 'Tom said he was spinning his wheels the whole way, it's extraordinary that he's won. If he happened to go through York OK then the trainer has talked more about the Arc, which is quite bold. 'He's worried about going a mile and six as a three-year-old, he sees him as having a very big future. He's a master with this type of horse.'

Merchant sets sail for Gordon success at rain-soaked Goodwood
Merchant sets sail for Gordon success at rain-soaked Goodwood

Glasgow Times

time16 minutes ago

  • Glasgow Times

Merchant sets sail for Gordon success at rain-soaked Goodwood

An impressive winner in the King George V Stakes at Royal Ascot, William Haggas' improving son of Teofilo was sent off the 6-5 favourite to enhance his growing reputation with a Group Three success. With the threat of lightning meaning a flag start it was Gary and Josh Moore's Too Soon who led them along, with the Highclere Thoroughbreds-owned market leader among those held up at the rear of the field along with Aidan O'Brien's Galveston and Andrew Balding's recent Sandown winner Windlord. With the runners edging over to the stands side with the two-furlong pole approaching, it appeared as though James Owen's Wimbledon Hawkeye would take some reeling in, but Merchant's jockey Tom Marquand had a brave ally when he needed him, with the colt bridging the deficit to register a nose verdict in the nick of time. Whether it proves to be at home or abroad, exciting options now await for Merchant, who was bred by Jim Bolger. Doncaster or Paris appears to be the discussion to be had regarding the autumn. Haggas said: 'Tom said he didn't enjoy the ground, but he kept going and that's what I like about him the most. 'His temperament is brilliant, he doesn't give a monkey's about anything. That is one of his great attributes for the future. Tom Marquand celebrates after winning the Gordon Stakes (Andrew Matthews/PA) 'They all had to cope with the conditions, it was going to be messy whatever happened with the flag start. He's only won a nose and James' horse ran a fabulous race. 'He really dug in well, he's a very good horse. Desert Hero won this race and then ran in the St Leger and I don't think he was ever quite the same afterwards. 'I'm worried about stretching this horse out to a mile and six too soon, I think he is really a horse for next year, too. We think he's very good. 'However, if he didn't like the ground there then he may not like the ground in France in autumn. I'm not saying the Arc is definitely not going to happen, but it's not definitely not going to happen either.' Merchant toughed it out (Andrew Matthews/PA) Highclere's Harry Herbert added: 'I'm not sure we'll go for the Leger, the plan – so long as he comes out of this race fine – is to go to York (Great Voltigeur Stakes) 'We'll see how that goes, if York went well and we had good ground at York we'd see what this horse can do on perfect ground. 'Tom said he was spinning his wheels the whole way, it's extraordinary that he's won. If he happened to go through York OK then the trainer has talked more about the Arc, which is quite bold. 'He's worried about going a mile and six as a three-year-old, he sees him as having a very big future. He's a master with this type of horse.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store