
‘The next Frankel?' – Trainers give up and admit they can't beat astonishing £1.7million horse likened to a ‘rocket'
AN AMAZING £1.7million horse is so good that rival trainers gave up and admitted they couldn't beat him.
The Charlie Appleby-trained Treanmor is by super stallion and greatest of all time Frankel.
1
Already punters are asking if it's time to start comparing him to his legendary dad after his electrifying debut at Newmarket.
Treanmor fetched the almighty sum when he was bought by Godolphin at the Goffs Orby Book 1 last October.
Sheikh Mohammed, the billionaire ruler of Dubai, snapped up the top three lots at that sale, totalling a spend of £3.3m on that trio alone.
But it was Treanmor that cost the most - and he showed exactly why at HQ.
Sent off 30-100 under William Buick, he led easily over one furlong from the post in the 6f contest and was merely ridden out to win.
Former Derby-winning jockey and now Racing TV pundit Martin Dwyer revealed the sense of excitement and expectation around the colt ahead of his debut.
Speaking on the Oddschecker Racing Weekly show, he said: "Everybody was saying we're going to see a rocket in this race.
"Even trainers that had a runner in the race were telling me, 'No, we're not going to beat this. He is a rocket'.
"And he won in great style - he really did look impressive.
"When the gates opened he was quick into his stride but William Buick restrained him and took him nearly to the back of the field.
"It was firm ground and everyone was racing on the front end at Newmarket, which can be a front-runner's track.
"But William dropped him in and gave him ground to make up because he wanted to educate the horse.
"If he'd let him stride from the gates he wouldn't have seen another horse and he wouldn't have learned enough.
"He would have done a Frankel in the Guineas."
Royal Ascot will be Treanmor's next stop - but which race is yet to be fully decided.
Appleby suggested he will go to the 7f Listed Chesham on the Saturday, for which Unibet make him 2-1 favourite.
That's a price that could look an absolute gift on the day, if this debut is anything to go by.
Remember to gamble responsibly
A responsible gambler is someone who:
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
28 minutes ago
- The Independent
Emma Raducanu not ‘overly concerned' about ongoing back issue after Queen's exit
Emma Raducanu insisted she is not 'overly concerned' about her ongoing back issues but conceded she may need to re-think her next steps after bowing out in the Queen's quarter-finals with a 6-2 6-4 loss to Chinese first-seed Qinwen Zheng. Raducanu, who officially supplants Katie Boulter as British number one on Monday, planned for next week's Berlin Open to be the next step on her quest to secure seeding at Wimbledon, but required an off-court medical time out before the second set. The 22-year-old was the last Briton standing in this new WTA 500 event, the first time women's tennis had been played at Queen's since 1973. 'I'm not overly concerned that it's something serious, but I know it's something that's very annoying and needs proper and careful management,' said Raducanu, who revealed she had been taped up for stability and took some painkillers. Quizzed about whether she was a fitness doubt for Wimbledon, she replied: 'Well, I don't know. Like it's been lingering for the last few weeks, and I have had, like, back issues before. I think it's just a vulnerability of mine. I know I need to take good care of it.' Raducanu faced her toughest test yet in the world number five and Olympic champion Zheng, who opened the match with a double fault and conceded the next point before bouncing back to hold. The home favourite saved three break points to hold the fourth game and the set remained on serve until a topsy-turvy sixth, when Zheng sealed the first break of the afternoon at the fourth time of asking. The Chinese competitor then saved two break points to hold before breaking the Briton once more to wrap up the first set. Zheng initially struggled with her serve, but came back from a double break down in the second set, eventually forcing Raducanu to serve to stay in the match. Zheng quickly went 40-0 up in the 10th game, but three successive missed service returns left open the door for Raducanu to come back into the contest, ultimately clinching her place in the semi-finals when the Briton's return went long. Raducanu also endured three interruptions during her service games – twice for problems with Zheng's racket, and another so Zheng could swap her shoes, pauses the Briton admitted were not 'necessarily ideal.' The new British number one confirmed coach Mark Petchey will be able to join her should the Berlin plan go ahead, but does not know if former coach Nick Cavaday, who stepped back in January due to ill health, will also be on the trip after joining her in London this week. Raducanu conceded that making the seeding cut for Wimbledon 'obviously helps' when it comes to swerving difficult draws in the early rounds, but added: 'I think maybe my goals have slightly shifted from being seeded to actually improving my game. 'When I play those top players, making it closer and feeling more competitive rather than just feeling, 'OK, I maybe get to the third round of a slam but then lose comfortably to one of the top'. 'I think I'd rather have a more competitive match, even if that means losing first round, second round. I think that, to be honest, is how I feel right now.' Saturday's first semi-final will see Germany's Tatjana Maria take on second seed Madison Keys, while Zheng will play American Amanda Anisimova.


The Guardian
32 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Your Guardian Sport weekend: Club World Cup, US Open golf, tennis and rugby finals
We open with what will surely be the finale at Lord's on day four. South Africa are 213-2 in their second innings, needing 69 more to win, after a wonderful partnership between Aiden Markram and an injured Temba Bavuma. Join Geoff Lemon on our over-by-over report, before he joins Ali Martin, Andy Bull and Simon Burnton to review all of the action. Bath are aiming to roll back the years by claiming their first league title since 1996 against another of the game's storied clubs at Twickenham. Under Johann van Graan the regular-season table-toppers have already enjoyed a bumper season, claiming silverware in the Premiership Rugby Cup in February and European Challenge Cup last month. What chance a treble 12 months on from their 25-21 final defeat by Northampton? Staging something of a grand farewell party are Tigers, who have a host of key figures bidding a last hurrah: Ben Youngs, Dan Cole, Mike Brown, Julián Montoya, Handré Pollard and the head coach, Michael Cheika, all bow out after the final – and signing off with English rugby's prime silverware would be quite the sendoff. Your live host Lee Calvert keeps the updates flowing while Robert Kitson and Michael Aylwin report from a sold-out Twickenham. It's women's singles semi-finals day and Sean Ingle is our reporter courtside in west London. Nine years ago, the last time Oakmont hosted the US Open, Scottie Scheffler was a 19-year-old amateur when he made an opening 69. Although he went on to miss the cut in 2016, the American world No 1 is back as a heavy favourite to win back-to-back major titles following his US PGA Championship triumph. That would give Scheffler the third leg of a career grand slam and he would join a list of Oakmont winners which includes Gene Sarazen, Sam Snead, Ben Hogan, Jack Nicklaus and Ernie Els. Scott Murray keeps you updated with rolling coverage of the third round while Ewan Murray reports from Pennsylvania. Max Verstappen will have to keep out of trouble as he chases an unprecedented fourth Canadian Grand Prix win in succession, with only a penalty point between the defending champion and a race ban. The Red Bull driver has won for the past three years in Montreal, the last time after starting alongside Mercedes's pole-sitter, George Russell – the same rival he clashed with two weekends ago – in a qualifying draw. How Verstappen will respond is an open question but others are sure to want to take whatever advantage they can of the situation at a circuit famed also for changeable weather. Yara El-Shaboury keeps track of the action with our rolling blog. Alexander Abnos is your host as Fifa's billion-dollar global club tournament gets under way in Miami. Thirty-two teams take part, with the matches staged across 11 cities in the United States, the month-long event involves the English clubs Chelsea and Manchester City. Inter Miami's involvement rests on their winning the MLS Supporters' Shield for the best performance in the regular season, even though LA Galaxy went on to win the actual MLS playoffs and were left out. That meant organisers could shoe-horn in the eight-time Ballon d'Or winner Lionel Messi as well as Luis Suárez, Sergio Busquets and Jordi Alba. Barney Ronay reports from the Hard Rock Stadium. Lee Carsley is confident there is more to come from his young squad after the holders opened their campaign with a 3-1 win over the Czech Republic. They next face Slovenia in Nitra, before their last group fixture against Germany. 'I definitely expect us to keep improving, the longer we can stay in the tournament,' says Carsley, who had seen his side fail to pick up victories in their last two warm-up matches against the Netherlands and Spain, alongside a 5-3 defeat by France in March. Rob Smyth helms our minute-by-minute coverage. Scott Murray returns to provide expert commentary on the closing stages at Oakmont where many of the big names have struggled. The tournament will come to the boil at a venue with a history of dramatic finishes, including Dustin Johnson's fraught finale in 2016, Ernie Els's three-way tussle in 1994 and Johnny Miller's barnstorming surge to victory in 1973.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Australia learn cricket's oldest lesson as South Africa turn the tables in WTC
Right from the start of the day, there was an inevitability that this match was Australia's. They started 218 runs in front, in the third innings, walking back onto a Lord's field where 28 wickets had fallen in the previous two days. They had the four-star bowling attack, their opponents had the shooting-star batting order, one that had flashed and vanished in its first sighting. Soon this would be compounded by the Temba Bavuma's hamstring injury. The lead as it stood looked a chance to be enough, and first would come the chance to increase it a smidgen more. The sense of inevitability only grew as that smidgen broadened into a big dirty smudge. There is nothing more galling for a cricket team than a long tenth-wicket partnership. Every ball is more annoying than the one before. Things had started right, Kagiso Rabada in his second over of the day trapping Nathan Lyon with only four runs added to the score. On four wickets for the innings, nine for the match, Rabada was ready to complete twin milestones. Except they didn't come. Not in his third over, nor his fourth. Not his fifth, not his sixth. Not even his seventh. When he was taken off after drinks, fading with fatigue, it must have been galling to the entire side, their champion deserving that last swipe of icing on the cake. Instead, not content with seeing off the major threat, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood just kept batting: 135 balls, 59 runs, to the stroke of lunch. Starc made a few Test fifties early in his career, including a 99, as slap-and-slash affairs. He hadn't made one in the last six years, but over that time his batting has probably been better. He has made 20s, 30s, 40s, over long periods, in tough situations, when resistance was needed. Look at the previous World Test Championship final, the last Ashes in England, some of the most difficult outings against India. Today's unbeaten 58 was one of his best, by far his slowest score of anywhere near that size, facing 136 balls, more than anyone in the Test to that point. So a session of frustration, surely a distraction for South Africa as a lead inverted its final numbers from 218 to 281. Then an early wicket for who else but Starc as Ryan Rickelton nicked an outswinger. Starc again, as Wiaan Mulder chipped to cover for 27. Bavuma's hamstrings have always popped like champagne corks on New Year's Eve, and the South African captain did another when he was on 9. It was still inevitable, it seemed. Australia were on their way to win. Sign up to The Spin Subscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week's action after newsletter promotion But there was one wrinkle. For all that the Starc and Hazlewood stand drove South Africans mad, every run they made was also an example to the same team of how much easier run-making had become. The pitch metrics showed that movement had eased through the air and off the surface. The sun was shining brightly. And while it was the fourth innings of the Test, it was also only the third day. Those who pay attention to county cricket will know there has been a Lord's trend, at least recently, of scores growing bigger as matches goes on, with surfaces easing as chases are made. A month ago, Middlesex spinner Zafar Gohar sealed a chase of 366 at eight wickets down. Most followers of the Australian Test team would find themselves short of the required standard on reaching the Zafar Gohar round of their local pub trivia night, but that is a fact with some bearing on Australian fortunes. Because over the next session and a half, that inevitability shifted. Bavuma batted on despite the injury, riding some luck with a dropped catch, injuring Steve Smith in the process, then growing into an unbeaten 65. At the other end was Aiden Markram, who had looked like a million dollars from the outset, riding the bounce and diverting the pace of Australia's celebrated quicks, using their gifts to build his score. As the runs went by, South Africa became the team untroubled, Australia the team starting to scramble, and by stumps the pairing remained intact with only 69 more to win. Markram started his career with a fourth-innings hundred against Australia, and has reached that career's peak with another here. The first time he still ended up on the losing side; this time, he mustn't. Cricket is fond of dishing out the lesson that nothing can truly be known, or in more frank terms, the lesson that you, the one making the assumptions, are an idiot, actually. No matter how many times the lesson is taught, each fresh instance of an opportunity will see some portion of us fail to remember it. Australia were going to win this, it was inevitable, until they weren't. South Africa will win it from here, that too is an inevitability. Which means it might happen. Or it might not.