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Delacroix denies Ombudsman in Eclipse thriller

Delacroix denies Ombudsman in Eclipse thriller

Ombudsman was the 6-4 favourite to supplement his brilliant success in the Prince of Wales's Stakes at Royal Ascot and quickened up to lead inside the final furlong – but having looked to be struggling at the rear of the field early in the straight, Derby disappointment Delacroix (3-1) came with a wet sail under a power-packed Moore drive to get up by a neck.
What. A. Race. This. Was. 🫨
DELACROIX GETS UP TO BEAT OMBUDSMAN AND WIN THE CORAL-ECLIPSE 🏆 pic.twitter.com/mqPO9MWSBP
— ITV Racing (@itvracing) July 5, 2025
'It wasn't the first or the second or the third plan! He began OK, but nobody really wanted to make the running and there was three of us in a line,' Moore told ITV Racing.
'Me and William (Buick, on Ombudsman) wanted the same position and I had to give way. He was on an older, bigger horse so I thought we'd wait and go around.
'They got first run on me and he's obviously a very good horse with a good turn of foot. He quickened up really well.
'I think 10 furlongs is fine and if anything he could probably run over shorter. He's a horse we've always held in high regard and he was the only horse in this race that hadn't won a Group One, but he'd threatened to and he's obviously out of a great racemare (Tepin) and by Dubawi.'
Delacroix returns to the winner's enclosure (Molly Hunter/PA)
O'Brien said: 'Incredible, I thought Ryan was going to make the running on him. Obviously you don't tell Ryan what to do, but you listen to what he's saying, so when I saw it all changing I didn't know what would happen or what to make of it.
'He ended up where he did and it just kept ringing in my mind that during the week Ryan said to me 'Aidan, I think this horse is a miler', and I always thought he was a mile-and-a-quarter horse.
'As the race went on that was what was ringing in my head, is he a miler or is he a mile-and-a-quarter horse, but obviously Ryan stuck to his judgement because he kept calm and had one go.
'What he did in the last two furlongs looked very different. It was a very good race, the second horse is a very good horse and when you get a four-year-old rated as high as that, you need a three-year-old that's a bit different to beat them.
'Ryan said he changed plans four times in the race today. He found himself where he was but he was calm and collected and clinical.'
Paddy Power cut Delacroix's odds for the Juddmonte International at York to 5-1 from 16-1, with Ombudsman a 4-1 shot and Field Of Gold the 5-4 favourite.
While plans for Delacroix remain up in the air, he looks set to either stick to a mile and a quarter or even drop back in trip.
'He's hardy so you shouldn't be afraid to race him, but the lads (owners) will decide what they want to do,' O'Brien added.
'They stacked them up in front today and he came with a deadly run, it was incredible what he did – mind-blowing.
'I don't think going back to a mile would worry him, but if they decide to keep him at a mile and a quarter I would be delighted.
'When you can relax like that and quicken like that over a mile and a quarter, it's very potent and a brilliant thing to have up your sleeve.'
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Delacroix win must not just be glorious wave of racing's ebbing tide
Delacroix win must not just be glorious wave of racing's ebbing tide

Times

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Delacroix win must not just be glorious wave of racing's ebbing tide

Forgiveness can be beautiful, and in Delacroix and Ryan Moore's last-strides' victory over the favourite, Ombudsman, in this Eclipse Stakes at Sandown, desperately dramatic too. The last time we had seen the pair, they had started favourites for the Derby, but after being bumped around at the top of the hill, they trailed in a disappointing ninth. The irony of Saturday is that for a long while it looked as if they had got themselves impossibly trapped once again. After jumping out fast and securing a good position on the rail behind the French horse Sosie, and the Irish raider Hotazhell, Moore found himself imprisoned as Oisin Murphy and the hard-pulling Ruling Court came up his inside and then William Buick moved Ombudsman outside to block any escape. As Maxime Guyon set steady, full 12½-second sections on an ears-pricked Sosie up front, with all five rivals poised behind him, the analogy of a horse race as a high-speed version of an Agatha Christie crime mystery has never been more exact. All the possibles were in the dining room, we thought we knew their potential, but in 40 seconds rather than 200 pages, we would know the result. And for a long time, it looked the least expected. For while the chief suspect, Ombudsman, came up to lead at the quarter-mile pole, Delacroix had been denied every exit and was now on the outside and plum last. Some sharp soul snapped up 170-1 on the exchanges as last month's Derby flop set out for atonement. It looked impossible, but this is a talented horse, a master jockey, and of course the Sandown hill always takes a toll on the leaders. So Ombudsman clocked the last two furlongs in 11.93sec and 12.77sec while Delacroix closed sharply in 11.91sec and 12.39sec. The differences may seem innocuous on the page, but out on the still-green Sandown turf they made for a cheetah-like burst on a fleeing prey. Half a furlong out Delacroix could surely not do it, but as the post flashed towards them, Moore and he made certain of their kill. Ruling Court and the wrong headline maker, Murphy, ran on after a troubled passage to be a length and half away in third, just pipping Delacroix's stable-mate, Camille Pissarro, for third, with Hotazhell and Sosie completing the file. It was Moore's fifth win in the Eclipse and Aidan O'Brien's ninth, but a first success at group one level for Delacroix. He is a long way from the greatest Eclipse winners, but being by the super sire Dubawi out of the brilliant mare Tepin, he is one of the best bred. For Coolmore this is crucial, but for the racing game the thrill of this galloping mystery's solution is what mattered most. For this million-pound event was well worthy of the 150-year history which Sandown Park is celebrating this summer. But whether the course, or the sport, can maintain such a position is very much another question. The big stand, opened to much acclaim in 1973, is now showing its age, and the likelihood of the money being available for its refurbishment will recede even further into the distance if the government raises the 15 per cent tax on racing bets to the 21 per cent levied on totally dissimilar wagers on casino and slots. With the number of horses in training in decline, and betting in freefall because of the well-intentioned but dumbly implemented 'affordability checks', it is no exaggeration to say that racing in Britain faces an existential crisis. All this is easy to forget amid the glamour of Eclipse Day, so it's good to welcome a short video that beautifully captures the warmth at the heart of the game. Shot by Arena Racing it features the legendary hurdler Paisley Park and his heroic unsighted owner Andrew Gemmill, and all those associated with the horse in trainer Emma Lavelle's stable. It is entitled Thanks To The Thoroughbred, and the script features the lines of Ronald Duncan's famous An Ode to the Horse, spoken consecutively by everyone from owner to groom to box driver to vet. The poem starts with the great question: 'Where in the world can man find nobility without pride, friendship without envy, beauty without vanity?' Not always in Westminster, perhaps, but it is to be hoped that our legislators might take note of how much the thoroughbred game can still give. If they don't, what Delacroix did at Sandown would just be a glorious wave of an ebbing tide.

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Delacroix denies Ombudsman in Eclipse thriller
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Rhyl Journal

time4 hours ago

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Delacroix denies Ombudsman in Eclipse thriller

A quality field of six runners went to post for a Group One contest that traditionally gives the Classic generation a first chance to meet their elders and this year's renewal was no exception, with four three-year-olds taking on two top-class older horses in Ombudsman and Sosie. Ombudsman was the 6-4 favourite to supplement his brilliant success in the Prince of Wales's Stakes at Royal Ascot and quickened up to lead inside the final furlong – but having looked to be struggling at the rear of the field early in the straight, Derby disappointment Delacroix (3-1) came with a wet sail under a power-packed Moore drive to get up by a neck. What. A. Race. This. Was. 🫨 DELACROIX GETS UP TO BEAT OMBUDSMAN AND WIN THE CORAL-ECLIPSE 🏆 — ITV Racing (@itvracing) July 5, 2025 'It wasn't the first or the second or the third plan! He began OK, but nobody really wanted to make the running and there was three of us in a line,' Moore told ITV Racing. 'Me and William (Buick, on Ombudsman) wanted the same position and I had to give way. He was on an older, bigger horse so I thought we'd wait and go around. 'They got first run on me and he's obviously a very good horse with a good turn of foot. He quickened up really well. 'I think 10 furlongs is fine and if anything he could probably run over shorter. He's a horse we've always held in high regard and he was the only horse in this race that hadn't won a Group One, but he'd threatened to and he's obviously out of a great racemare (Tepin) and by Dubawi.' O'Brien said: 'Incredible, I thought Ryan was going to make the running on him. Obviously you don't tell Ryan what to do, but you listen to what he's saying, so when I saw it all changing I didn't know what would happen or what to make of it. 'He ended up where he did and it just kept ringing in my mind that during the week Ryan said to me 'Aidan, I think this horse is a miler', and I always thought he was a mile-and-a-quarter horse. 'As the race went on that was what was ringing in my head, is he a miler or is he a mile-and-a-quarter horse, but obviously Ryan stuck to his judgement because he kept calm and had one go. 'What he did in the last two furlongs looked very different. It was a very good race, the second horse is a very good horse and when you get a four-year-old rated as high as that, you need a three-year-old that's a bit different to beat them. 'Ryan said he changed plans four times in the race today. He found himself where he was but he was calm and collected and clinical.' Paddy Power cut Delacroix's odds for the Juddmonte International at York to 5-1 from 16-1, with Ombudsman a 4-1 shot and Field Of Gold the 5-4 favourite. While plans for Delacroix remain up in the air, he looks set to either stick to a mile and a quarter or even drop back in trip. 'He's hardy so you shouldn't be afraid to race him, but the lads (owners) will decide what they want to do,' O'Brien added. 'They stacked them up in front today and he came with a deadly run, it was incredible what he did – mind-blowing. 'I don't think going back to a mile would worry him, but if they decide to keep him at a mile and a quarter I would be delighted. 'When you can relax like that and quicken like that over a mile and a quarter, it's very potent and a brilliant thing to have up your sleeve.'

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