
Quinault not for passing in Criterion Stakes at York
The five-year-old has long been an admirable servant for his Newmarket handler and always capable of mixing it at a high level and proved so once again to notch his 11th career success.
A 12-1 chance for the first running of the Group Three event on the Knavesmire, Hart wasted little time taking the initiative and although plenty tried to reel Quinault in late on, he held on gamely for a length success over Kevin Ryan's fast-finishing Room Service.
Williams said: 'We're delighted and he's always been a high-class horse. We hoped he was up to winning at Group level, before he'd only won at Listed level but when he gets his own way in front he's a hard horse to get past and he's always determined to win which helps.
'Jason gave him a great ride and he had his conditions today which helped. He really likes York and funnily enough he's won three times at York now and is unbeaten at the track. He's just a really good horse basically.'
Paddy Power make Quinault a 16-1 chance for the Lennox Stakes at Goodwood, but it is more likely he returns to Yorkshire for a tilt at Group One glory in the upgraded Sky Bet City of York Stakes during the Ebor Festival on August 23.
'I think for sure we'll have a crack at the City Of York and that was the reason for coming here rather than the Chipchase at Newcastle,' continued Williams.
'We'll see what he's like at home but I would imagine the plan would be to go straight to it. If he got a bit fresh at home, which he can and he does take his racing well, we might have to look at something else in between.'
Hashtags

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

Western Telegraph
21 minutes ago
- Western Telegraph
Arc emerges as ultimate target for Map Of Stars
Francis-Henri Graffard's four-year-old had made a fine start to the new campaign, winning his first two starts before going down narrowly by a neck when up against Andre Fabre's Sosie in the Prix Ganay. Sent off 13-2 for a red-hot Group One at the Royal meeting, he was not disgraced when fourth behind Ombudsman, with his team now deciding the time is right to step up in trip with Europe's most prestigious middle-distance prize the ultimate aim in the autumn. 'We were not disappointed at all with him and with the French style of racing where they tend to go steady then sprint, he will never have gone as fast in his life as they went in the Prince of Wales's Stakes,' said Richard Brown, racing adviser for Map Of Stars' owners Wathnan Racing. 'He's done very little wrong and he will have learned a lot from Ascot. He's still a baby really and still growing up and will come forward from that mentally. 'He ran a solid race and I think we'll give him a break now, he's had four runs and we'll come back for one of the Arc trials and step him up in distance. 'He's bred for it, so we'll run him in a trial and take a look at the Arc. I'm sure he's going to get a mile and a half and I think he's going to be better over that distance. 'If he is he'll likely handle the likely soft ground and it's the obvious race to target him at. Whether he will be good enough, who knows, but he's got plenty of ability.'


Daily Mail
32 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
BREAKING NEWS Austrian Grand Prix delayed after Carlos Sainz's Williams car catches fire in Spielberg
Carlos Sainz 's Williams caught fire before the start of the Austrian Grand Prix, delaying the action by 10 minutes. The Spaniard complained about his brakes before smoke started coming out of the back of his car moments later. Marshals came scampering over immediately and doused the flames – he was lucky to be at the pit entrance close to assistance. Sainz, who was due to start 19th, remained inside the cockpit and was wheeled into his garage, his race over before it had begun with Lando Norris on pole with Ferrari's Charles Leclerc behind him. 'Game over, Carlos, jump out,' said his race engineer Gaetan Jego. Beforehand, Sainz had stalled on the grid as the formation lap began and was then jump-started by marshals. His despairing Williams boss James Vowles put his head in his hands on the pit wall. Sainz has had an underwhelming 2025 season and has not yet placed higher than eighth in any race, picking up points at just six Grand Prix so far. This after he came fifth in the 2024 driver's standings, having finished on the podium nine times, including wins in Melbourne and Mexico City.


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Carlos Sainz's car catches fire in carnage at start of Austrian Grand Prix
Carlos Sainz 's Williams ' car caught fire in a chaotic start to the Austrian Grand Prix. While pole-sitter Lando Norris led the pack away for the formation lap, 19th-placed Sainz failed to drive off his mark on the grid. Sainz said over team radio 'something is stopping the car from moving.' Eventually, the trackside marshals pushed the car, with the FW47 eventually able to get away. However, when Sainz entered the pit-lane – with the start aborted – the rear of his car suddenly caught fire due to a brake issue. A host of marshals put out the fire with extinguishers but inevitably, Williams were forced to retire Sainz from the race before it even started. Sainz left the car unscathed but had his head in his hands on a weekend to forget for the ex-Ferrari driver.