logo
Dwyer not feeling the pressure as Asfoora defends Ascot title

Dwyer not feeling the pressure as Asfoora defends Ascot title

Some in Dwyer's homeland had scoffed at his ambition to join compatriots like Paul Perry, Chris Waller and Peter Moody on the Royal Ascot roll of honour.
However, Dwyer had spotted a vacancy at the top of the European sprinting scene and he was not let down by his horse of a lifetime, who provided the Ballarat handler with the ultimate thrill when storming to King Charles III Stakes glory.
Asfoora stormed to victory in 2024 (David Davies/PA)
'It was completely bonkers, just madness and I was very nervous before the race as it was the biggest day of my racing life,' said Dwyer.
'I train horses in Australia, I've got 40-odd horses and won a couple of Group Ones, but that whole thing about travelling a horse and the risk and reward factor brought a lot of pressure.
'A lot of people in Australia thought we were ill-founded coming over here and it was more relief when she won. I didn't care if she won, lost or drew as long as she didn't embarrass herself and it was just important she ran well.
'As they walked into the gates I was, for want of a better phrase, s******* myself. Thankfully she ran well and at the 200-metre mark when she ran past us in the grandstand, she was clearly going to win and that's the last I saw of the race.
'I had 30 people jumping on top of me cheering and I didn't get chance to even see the last part of the race until half an hour after when I watched the replay and it was just an extraordinary moment.'
One for Australia! 🇦🇺 Asfoora wins the King Charles III Stakes at Royal @Ascot! pic.twitter.com/QmVXaTLF2A
— At The Races (@AtTheRaces) June 18, 2024
After embarking on a mammoth 40-hour return journey to the UK encompassing Hong Kong, Doha and the glamorous end destination of Stansted, Asfoora and her charismatic handler are embracing being back in their second home at Southgate Stables on Newmarket's Hamilton Road.
And if Asfoora were to become the first horse trained outside Europe to win the same race at consecutive Royal meetings, then it would give Dwyer the opportunity to meet the King again after his crash course in royal protocol last year.
Dwyer explained: 'I had a chat with the King before the race which was completely unscripted and I had no etiquette lessons beforehand, so it was very unannounced and I was very unaware. I would have loved an etiquette lesson as I had no idea what to call him and the rest, but we had a good chat.
'He asked me about the horse and I said 'this is an amazing experience meeting you Sir, but I would love to be speaking to you again after the race picking up the trophy'. He said 'let's see if we can make that happen' and then afterwards he had a big smile as he said 'I told you I could make this happen' and it was an amazing life experience.
'Racing takes you all round the world and introduces you to so many new people and that's one of the amazing things about the sport. It's not all about winning, it's about the memories and meeting new people along the way and I guess the King is not someone I expected to meet, but there we are!'
Asfoora is on course for an Ascot repeat (Adam Morgan/PA)
It is 22 years since Paul Perry and Choisir opened the floodgates for raiders from the southern hemisphere and although Dwyer joined some of Australia's most decorated names when striking at Europe's showpiece meeting, it is his stock in the northern hemisphere that has risen rather than at home.
'I've met a lot of great people over here and I've got a number of owners from Europe now,' explained Dwyer.
'I think people over here have seen me have one runner and one winner at Royal Ascot and have me down as a John Gosden, but at home it's a one swallow doesn't make a summer scenario.
'I train 45 horses and it is what it is. We don't really want many more than that and we enjoy having a nice, boutique stable without driving ourselves mad and Asfoora is obviously the flagbearer.'
With preparations complete, Dwyer can now embrace his star performer's bid for Ascot immortality safe in the knowledge no one can erase the memories of 12 months ago.
'I feel like there is less pressure this year as she has been there and done it,' said Dwyer.
'It's an expensive trip and there's huge costs involved, but she was able to repay us last year and the money is in the bank now. This year is a bonus, she owes us nothing and we're just here for the experience and the fun of it.
'The novelty may have worn off a little bit, but there's still a job to be done and she seems well. We're happy with with her and hopefully she runs well.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jamal Musiala hits hat-trick as Bayern Munich put 10 past Auckland
Jamal Musiala hits hat-trick as Bayern Munich put 10 past Auckland

Glasgow Times

time36 minutes ago

  • Glasgow Times

Jamal Musiala hits hat-trick as Bayern Munich put 10 past Auckland

Vincent Kompany's Bundesliga champions led 6-0 at half-time of the Group C contest in Cincinnati thanks to braces from Kingsley Coman and Michael Olise, plus finishes from Sacha Boey and Thomas Muller. Having been unable to add his name to the scoresheet against the outclassed New Zealand part-timers, England captain Kane was replaced by Musiala with 29 minutes remaining. The substitute claimed Bayern's next three goals, with his second coming from the penalty spot, before Muller completed the biggest win in the competition's history by doubling his tally late on. Champions League winners Paris St Germain thrashed Atletico Madrid 4-0 in their Group B meeting at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena. First-half goals from Fabian Ruiz and Vitinha put Luis Enrique's side in control. Atletico were reduced to 10 men 12 minutes from time when defender Clement Lenglet was dismissed for a second bookable offence before Senny Mayulu stretched PSG's lead and fellow substitute Lee Kang-in added a late penalty. The current European Champions start their #FIFACWC campaign with a win. 🇫🇷 — FIFA Club World Cup (@FIFACWC) June 15, 2025 Lionel Messi was denied by the crossbar in added time as Inter Miami were held to a goalless draw by Egyptian side Al Ahly in the tournament opener. With Sir David Beckham among a crowd of 60,927 for the Group A match at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Argentina captain Messi saw his late cross-shot pushed onto the frame of the goal by Al Ahly goalkeeper Mohamed El Shenawy. Former Aston Villa forward Trezeguet had a first-half penalty saved by Miami keeper Oscar Ustari.

Tax changes ‘threaten future of horse racing'
Tax changes ‘threaten future of horse racing'

Times

time38 minutes ago

  • Times

Tax changes ‘threaten future of horse racing'

The future of British horse racing is at risk unless the government urgently rethinks new gambling policies, according to a cross-party parliamentary group. In a report released on Sunday night, the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for Racing and Bloodstock warned that a combination of tax changes, strict affordability checks designed to stop problem gambling and a failure to reform racing's main funding system could cause lasting damage to one of the UK's most popular sports. The APPG, made up of MPs and peers, is not a parliamentary select committee. All funding comes from within the racing industry, with the British Horseracing Authority leading on organisation as the secretariat. Racegoers at Aintree during Grand National week this year MICHAEL STEELE/GETTY IMAGES Horse racing supports more than 85,000 jobs and contributes in excess of £4 billion a year to the economy, according to a House of Commons Library report. It is Britain's second largest spectator sport after football, with high-profile events such as Royal Ascot this week. In April, the Treasury launched a consultation process calling for stakeholders in the sport betting sector to submit their views on how best to consolidate the current three-tier system for remote gambling to create a single tax, called the Remote Betting and Gaming Duty. Betting companies currently pay different tax rates: the Remote Gaming Duty, set at 21 per cent of operator gross profits; the General Betting Duty, which is set at 15 per cent; and the Pool Betting Duty at 15 per cent of net stake receipts. The consultation process runs for 12 weeks until July 21. The APPG claims this could raise the cost of betting on racing, pushing gambling firms toward more profitable, but riskier, online games such as slots and roulette, potentially meaning less investment in racing and a push away from a relatively low-risk form of gambling. Racing gets a chunk of funding from a special tax called the Horserace Betting Levy so some betting profits are reinvested in the sport, but the APPG says the government has not updated it, so it is not keeping up with what other countries give their racing industries. Dan Carden, Labour MP for Liverpool Walton and co-chair of the APPG, said: 'The message from this report is clear: British racing needs this Labour government to be on its side. Racing is part of our national story and its enjoyment and support extends all the way from rural to urban working-class communities.' Brant Dunshea, chief executive of the British Horseracing Authority, said: 'The cultural, social and economic value of racing is huge for towns and rural areas across Britain. It is those communities that will suffer the job losses, the decline in community pride and the loss of identity that will come if racing is allowed to fail.' A government spokesman said: 'We recognise the huge importance of horse racing to the British sporting calendar and the significant contribution it makes to the economy every year. 'We have recently launched a consultation on the tax treatment of remote gambling and are actively engaging with the sector, so are grateful to the APPG for their contributions and will consider the report fully.'

Maxwell details Scottish FA decision over Rangers takeover
Maxwell details Scottish FA decision over Rangers takeover

The National

time42 minutes ago

  • The National

Maxwell details Scottish FA decision over Rangers takeover

The Ibrox club had to submit paperwork to Hampden bosses before the takeover could be given the green light due to dual interest legislation. Andrew Cavenagh and 49ers Enterprises had to go through the legal process due to the investment wing holding shares in English Premier League club Leeds. The Scottish FA has granted permission for the takeover deal to go ahead without any issue, subject to written undertakings signed by club officials and the investing party. The agreement means the investing party's interest in any other club does not preclude Rangers from participating in any UEFA competition they qualify for, among other commitments. Chief executive Maxwell said: 'No, they've not been particularly complicated. To be honest, we've definitely been more open. Multi-club ownership is here. It's part of football. 'When you look across Europe, the number of clubs that are involved in some multi-club structure is growing by the day. We need to be part of that, why would you limit that investment? 'When you think about it was actually interesting when you start to think through the process and we had dual interest regulations, which meant that, when you're involved in a club, you can't get involved in a Scottish club unless we say yes. 'But someone like Tony Bloom, for example, is getting involved in Hearts and he has a track record at Brighton, understands football and already has Union SG and those other clubs. 'We actually make it harder for him to come into Scottish football than we do for someone who's just sold a company for £10 million that's got no understanding of the Scottish game. So when you actually get into it, you go that probably doesn't make a lot of sense. 'So our board are looking at it from two perspectives. Does it grow and develop the game? Will it generate financial investment into Scottish football? Does it give us an integrity issue? 'The integrity issue falls away because that would only happen if it was two Scottish teams playing under our jurisdiction, which it's not. 'The jurisdictional matter becomes a UEFA point and we've been clear in all the dual interests. 'All the multi-club investment models that we've done, we've been very clear that if there was, similar to a Crystal Palace scenario at the moment where there's a question mark about which one's going to play in Europe, it can't be the Scottish club that's the unintended consequence or has to step aside from European competition. Read more: Rangers follow Hibernian, with Black Knights investment, and Hearts, with Tony Bloom's prospective backing, as the latest club featuring in a multi-club ownership model. For Maxwell, it's an overwhelming positive that new investors have experience across a number of clubs. He added: 'The good thing is, because the vast majority of clubs that have came into Scotland have got other multi-club ownership models, they're used to that and when you speak to the guys involved in the Hearts deal they're very aware of what UEFA need and what UEFA want and how that structure needs to look to make sure we don't get ourselves those problems. 'So I think it's here, we can't ignore it and why would you want to step away from it? Why would you want to block investment coming into the game if it's going to be good for our clubs? 'The trick is that the club need to then go and spend that money as wisely as possible. 'We don't get involved in that bit, but from a board perspective there's definitely a willingness to look at anything that generates more investment into Scotland.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store