
All eyes on Ali Shuffle in smart renewal of Hilary Needler
The Karl Burke-trained Ali Shuffle, Ollie Sangster's Artista and Saucy Jane for Jack Morland have all carried the black and white colours of Nick Bradley Racing to victory over the same track and trip prior to this prestigious £50,000 contest.
Ali Shuffle has since claimed the Lily Agnes at Chester and Saucy Jane was a creditable fourth in the Listed Marygate at York, while both of Artista's runs have been at Beverley.
'Ali Shuffle is three from three and (jockey) Sam (James) is adamant her best days are still ahead of her, I'm sure he's right,' said Bradley.
'I'm not sure where she'll go after this, but she's come out of the race at Chester well and it's all systems go.
'Saucy Jane ran a good race in the Marygate, I thought it would be slowly-run race but it wasn't, it was quickly run.
'We probably went a stride too fast and potentially set it up for the horses behind. Having said that, I don't think we would have won but we may have finished a place or two closer.
'Artista is another course and distance winner, she's a very smart filly and her work at home has been very good.
'She has already won at Beverley, beating our other filly (Homestrait). She's going to run here and then we'll potentially look at something like the Prix du Bois.'
Jamie Insole and Dr Richard Newland head north with a nice prospect in Angel Numbers, who travelled strongly throughout when scoring on her first start at Chelmsford, despite showing some signs of greenness.
'It was a really nice debut at Chepstow, we haven't really seen how good she is yet because she never came off the bridle,' said Insole.
'But she's got a good draw in one and she goes there with a nice, live chance.
'We obviously had the option of going for the National Stakes next week or going straight to Ascot, but with the rain potentially coming in and other factors, we thought we'd take our chance on Saturday.'
Tim Easterby's Argentine Tango was second to Ali Shuffle here on her racecourse bow and then prevailed at Pontefract before chasing home a smart type in Venetian Sun at Carlisle.
Burke backs up the entry of Ali Shuffle by saddling comfortable Musselburgh scorer Meelaf and Craig Lidster's Arduis Invicta is far from out of it judged on two spins in similar company.
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The Guardian
7 hours ago
- The Guardian
‘People were repressed into silence': the Spanish artist creating a visual memory of fascism's horrors
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The author is after an emotional tour.' Although memory is the thread that runs through all Roca's work, some of his most famous journeys have led him into the still controversial realms of historical memory. His most recent book, The Abyss of Forgetting, co-written with the journalist Rodrigo Terrasa, is about a woman's struggle to find remains of her father, who was murdered after the Spanish civil war ended. 'Reconstructing the testimonies of people who couldn't talk about things when they were happening – for different reasons – is a creative and personal challenge,' he said. 'People were repressed into silence during the dictatorship and they couldn't talk about the tragedies in their lives for 40 years. And it's even complicated in democracy because as soon as somebody talks about something that happened, you get these voices saying: 'Come on! What do you want to remember all that for?'' Roca is also driven to use those testimonies to create a visual memory where none exist. 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He also knows that some have accused Spain's socialist-led government – whose democratic memory ministry is organising the exhibition at the Instituto Cervantes – of playing politics with the past. But then political polarisation, he added, was hardly a problem unique to Spain. 'In Germany, you have parties that are questioning things that everyone had thought had been settled and you have these nationalist movements erupting in Europe and the US and you have [Javier] Milei attacking historical memory in Argentina,' said Roca. 'It's a bad time for society, but it allows authors to reflect on this and to find stories that had been consigned to oblivion.' And that, said the artist, was what it was all about: the odd individual trying to give the voices of the past a decent, if belated, hearing. It can sometimes be a lonely business – and solitude is another of the exhibition's themes. Roca pointed to a glass-topped cabinet that held an old pencil drawing of a boy in jeans and a T-shirt crouching over a desk. 'I found this sketch that my drawing teacher did of me in 1980,' he said. 'I'm still in that same position, alone and hunched over a piece of paper.'


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BBC News
19 hours ago
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