
Saba Desert swoops for Superlative strike
Plenty of his rivals began to hang to the left and Saba Desert was inclined to follow them, but still his class came to the fore and he was a length and a quarter ahead of the 4-6 favourite Italy when crossing the line.
Wild Desert, who like the winner is trained by Charlie Appleby, was a further neck back in third and as the first three got close in the finish, a stewards' inquiry was called, although the placings were left unchanged.
Saba Desert was a debut winner at Sandown and Appleby said: 'It was an interesting race and Saba Desert is a horse we've liked from the get-go.
'We were pleased with the way he did it at Sandown, he naturally progressed from Sandown to here and as everyone knows this is a race we try to find the right one for.
'I know he fluffed his lines at the start but I don't mind that, I'd rather that than them hit the lids and then you're up there being forced up on the pace. He's done it all the right way round and the most important part is when you hit the rising ground you're finishing and he's done that with class, I feel.'
Appleby now has his sights set on the Group One Dewhurst Stakes at Newmarket in the autumn with Saba Desert.
He added: 'He's by Dubawi, so you're starting with the right product, and we'll work back from the Dewhurst with him now. Whether we decide to go down the National Stakes route or whether we go to the Champagne (Stakes at Doncaster) and then the Dewhurst we'll see, but he'll get a break now.
'He's more of a Guineas type (than a Derby horse) for next year. There's plenty about this horse, he's a true Dubawi and I think he'll only get better.'
Of Wild Desert, Appleby added: 'I'm delighted with the third horse, he was the one that probably got the most interrupted run and he might go to Goodwood for the Vintage.
🔵 Saba Desert continues a fine Debenhams July Festival for @godolphin with victory in the @bet365 Superlative Stakes pic.twitter.com/mbkW04wZqw
— Newmarket Racecourse (@NewmarketRace) July 12, 2025
'He's a hard horse to gauge as he's not a work horse at home, whereas the winner is push button – if you want to win a gallop by 10 lengths, you just push the button and he will, but we don't need to do that, we can wait until we come here.'
O'Brien was satisfied with Italy's effort and will now likely head to the Curragh next month for a Group Two assignment.
He said: 'We're very happy, he was a bit babyish and a bit green, as we thought he might be.
'He'll go back to the Futurity Stakes probably now. If he'd won today he'd have had to go into a Group One next, so in a way it's better (that he got beaten).
'He came for experience and he hasn't been woke up at all really. We're very happy and we'll look forward to him the next time.'
Hashtags

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

Rhyl Journal
7 minutes ago
- Rhyl Journal
Rain – or lack of it – remains a pain for connections of Anmaat
Last season's Champion Stakes hero has only been seen twice this season, pushing Los Angeles close in the Tattersalls Gold Cup in Ireland before finishing best of the rest behind Ombudsman in the Prince of Wales's Stakes at Royal Ascot. Having since sidestepped the Coral-Eclipse at Sandown, trainer Owen Burrows and owners Shadwell are keen to run him at York, but underfoot conditions could again scupper his participation. 'We're desperate to run him, but he won't be there if it's very fast ground and it doesn't sound like there's a lot of rain around,' said Shadwell's racing manager Angus Gold. 'I was going to talk to Owen before confirmations. He says the horse is bouncing and he really wants to run him, but we've got the autumn ahead of us and at some stage the weather must turn. 'I fear we may not be there next week.' Should Anmaat miss York, his next option appears to be be the Irish Champion Stakes at Leopardstown next month ahead of the planned defence of his Champion Stakes crown at Ascot in October. Definitely on course for York, however, is Delacroix, with Aidan O'Brien still gobsmacked by the manner of his Sandown victory, where he reeled in Ombudsman from a seemingly impossible position. 'It was the most amazing thing I ever saw, I think. He could not win at the two-furlong marker, everything had gone sideways on him, and when Ryan (Moore) got him out he still had too much ground to make up,' the Ballydoyle trainer told Sky Sports Racing. 'I think his times suggested no horse has ever covered the last two furlongs in an Eclipse the way he did and he won with his ears pricked. 'In the Derby he got taken out at the top of the hill and Ryan said it was race over straight away. We found it very easy to put a line through it, we thought a mile and a quarter was his distance and he'd two lovely runs before the Derby over a mile and a quarter.'


North Wales Chronicle
7 minutes ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Lambourn still ‘definitely' in the Voltigeur mix, says O'Brien
The Australia colt emulated his sire by striking Classic gold at Epsom and the Curragh in June and is now ready to step up his preparations for a major autumn target. For a long time another Classic bid in the St Leger at Doncaster seemed likely, but with stablemate Scandinavia throwing his hat into that particular ring with victory in the Goodwood Cup, Lambourn may instead be bound for Paris and a tilt at the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe. Lambourn digs deep in the closing stages to become a dual Derby winner for @Ballydoyle Ryan Moore | Aidan O'Brien — The Curragh Racecourse (@curraghrace) June 29, 2025 When asked whether Lambourn could step back to Group Two level on the Knavesmire, O'Brien told Sky Sports Racing: 'He could, we've a lot of horses kind of ready for the Voltigeur, some are just about ready and some are probably not going to make it. 'Lambourn definitely could. We'll see how he is and his next target then can be either the Leger or the Arc. I think the lads are thinking Scandinavia is going to be trained for the Leger now – if the ground was nice he would go there and Lambourn wouldn't go there, but if it was the other way Lambourn would go there. 'Lambourn probably needs a race between now and the Leger or the Arc and it (Great Voltigeur) is a race that could suit him. 'He's a straightforward, honest, no-nonsense horse. He does what he has to do and doesn't do any more.' Another Ballydoyle inmate with Arc aspirations is last year's third Los Angeles, who made an excellent start to his campaign with successive wins at the Curragh but could finish only fifth as a hot favourite for the Prince of Wales's Stakes at Royal Ascot. Having since enjoyed a mid-season break, he is set to return to competitive action in the Newbridge Silverware Royal Whip Stakes at the Curragh on Saturday. 'We were thinking he could go to the Royal Whip and go and improve a lot,' O'Brien added. 'He's had a break since Ascot and we were thinking if he went to the Curragh this weekend he could go to the Prix Foy as an Arc trial or he could go to the Irish Champion Stakes as an Arc trial. 'All those things are open, but he's just starting back and he'll be running with no pressure win, lose or draw (this weekend). We'd just like to get a run into him to get him ready for the autumn. 'The Arc has been his target all the time. We tightened him up a bit too much in the Prince of Wales's Stakes and because of that he just had to have a little rest. He's come back happy, but will progress a lot before the Arc.' O'Brien also had news of Henri Matisse, last seen finishing third in the Sussex Stakes behind shock 150-1 winner Qirat. O'Brien said: 'He'll go probably for the Prix du Moulin. Goodwood was a little bit of a disaster – it was really only a four-furlong dash in the second half of the race. 'It was one of those races that is hard to work out, but we were very happy with the run, Ryan (Moore) was very happy with him and we think he's still progressing. 'We haven't seen the best of him yet, we think.'


North Wales Chronicle
8 minutes ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Diego Velazquez sold ahead of Jacques le Marois start
He will remain in training with Aidan O'Brien for the remainder of the 2025 season, with a view to retiring to the National Stud in Newmarket at the end of the year. He will wear the famous silks of the late Robert Sangster in the Marois. A Group-race winner at two, three and four, most recently in the Minstrel Stakes at the Curragh, Diego Velazquez will bid for a first Group One success at Deauville this weekend, where he will be ridden by Christophe Soumillon. Purchasing the horse for a 'high-profile' syndicate, Sangster said: 'He is a horse that leaves little to the imagination, he is the stamp of his father and a top-class racehorse to match. 'He's done it at Group Two level across three seasons and was Classic-placed (fourth in the French 2000 Guineas), which gives him a rare depth of form and longevity. 'The Jacques le Marois is the immediate target, and from there we have a number of exciting Group One races to consider, we are in world-class hands in that respect. 'With the strength of the ownership group and the National Stud behind him, this horse has every chance of being a major success both on the track and at stud we believe he will be very well received by European breeders.' Diego Velazquez will join the stallion roster at the National Stud for the 2026 breeding season, with further details to be announced in due course, and Sangster said: 'We've been on the hunt for a horse like this for some time, and I'd like to thank the team at Coolmore for giving us the opportunity to get involved with a colt of his calibre.' Soumillon's mount is one of 10 left in the Marois, with O'Brien also responsible for former Derby favourite The Lion In Winter and Rosallion (Richard Hannon), Notable Speech (Charlie Appleby) and Dancing Gemini (Roger Teal) representing British interests. Sangster added: 'He'll be running in the Sangster family colours, which will be one for the old romantics and it is very exciting, that is for sure. 'It will be a very exciting weekend for us with Rashabar running in the Prix Guillaume d'Ornano on Saturday and Christophe Soumillon is booked to ride both.' The Lion In Winter has raced over a variety of distances this season, finishing sixth on his belated reappearance in the Dante Stakes at York over a mile and a quarter before coming home 14th of 18 over a mile and a half in the Derby. He performed far better when a close-up third in the Prix Jean Prat over seven furlongs last time and O'Brien is looking forward to seeing him tackle what he feels could be his optimum trip. 'Everything seems good with The Lion In Winter. Obviously he started back this year late, we just tried to get a run into him for the Derby and he ran in the Dante and looked pacey,' he told Sky Sports Racing. 'You're never sure and he obviously went to the Derby and it was very apparent very quickly that he was probably a miler the way he went through the race. 'We had our eye on this race, but we felt we had to get a run into him over a shorter distance before he went and the Deauville race was perfect. It was three-year-olds only, we knew he wouldn't be fully primed up for it as it was first run back after going back a mile and a half over seven furlongs, so we were delighted with the run. 'He ran a lovely race, we've been very happy with him since and we're looking forward to running him over the mile as it's a distance that's going to really suit him we think. 'We weren't expecting him to run that well on his first run back at a shorter distance, but we felt to go to the race on Sunday he had to have a run like that.' Of Diego Velazquez, he added: 'He hasn't really had the rub of the green, little things have held him up. 'We always felt that he was a miler, we were very happy with his run the last day over seven furlongs which we thought was tight enough for him. 'He's very well and has made great progress since his last run. We're looking forward to seeing what he can do as the track and the trip and ground should suit him.'