
The French 1,000 Guineas Call Was Correct. It Shows The Need For Global Standards
What's in a name? Why there's a new Beauty Generation but can't be another Golden Sixty
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South China Morning Post
5 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Soul Rush back at the races for the first time since humbling Romantic Warrior
Soul Rush (outside) pips Romantic Warrior in the Group One Dubai Turf (1,800m) at Meydan in April. Photo: Kenneth Chan Two months after humbling Romantic Warrior in the Group One Dubai Turf (1,800m), Soul Rush headlines the 75th running of the Group One Yasuda Kinen (1,600m) at Tokyo Racecourse on Sunday, contesting the prestigious contest for the fourth time. Third behind Romantic Warrior in last year's Yasuda Kinen, Soul Rush has posted two wins, two seconds and a third from his past five races and looks like he is improving with age. The seven-year-old son of Rulership will be ridden by Suguru Hamanaka. The 36-year-old jockey breezed the horse over 1,200m on May 29 in a time of 1 minute 21.5 seconds with a final 200m of 10.5 seconds. On June 4, under a trainer's assistant, Soul Rush worked solo up the Ritto hill course over 800m, switching gears to extend powerfully over the final 200m. His overall time over the slightly heavy going was 52.3 seconds with a final 200m of 11.8 seconds. 'He was pretty much ready last week,' trainer Yasutoshi Ikee said. 'So, I figured working alone up the hill this week was sufficient. His movement was good and it looks like he's in about the same condition as he has been for his races up to now.' Oh, my .... 𝐒𝐎𝐔𝐋 𝐑𝐔𝐒𝐇 dramatically lowers the colours of 𝐑𝐎𝐌𝐀𝐍𝐓𝐈𝐂 𝐖𝐀𝐑𝐑𝐈𝐎𝐑 in the @DPWorldUAE Dubai Turf! 🇯🇵#DWC25 | @emirates — Dubai Racing Club (@RacingDubai) April 5, 2025 Ikee, who won the Yasuda Kinen with Satono Aladdin in 2017, added: 'I really want him to win over the Tokyo 1,600m, which would help spur on his career at stud. He's in excellent shape – nowhere is he coming up short.' Seen as one of Soul Rush's biggest rivals is Jantar Mantar, a two-time Group One winner over 1,600m with victories in the 2023 Asahi Hai Futurity Stakes for two-year-olds and the 2024 NHK Mile Cup for three-year-olds. Like runner-up Soul Rush, he contested the 2024 Group One Hong Kong Mile and, with added traffic problems in the stretch, finished 13th of 14 runners behind Voyage Bubble. HK Racing News Get updates direct to your inbox Sign up Best Bets Racing News By registering you agree to our T&Cs & Privacy Policy Error: Please enter a valid email. The email address is already in use. Please login to subscribe. Error, please try again later. THANK YOU You are one the list. On June 4, under an assistant to trainer Tomokazu Takano, Jantar Mantar clocked 11.7 seconds over the final furlong of his work. 'He looked fantastic and he used his body extremely efficiently,' Takano said. 'He has proven himself over the Tokyo 1,600m and it's a venue where he can run with confidence. No Golden Sixty this year! 😏 Second in the 2023 renewal, Voyage Bubble takes the @LONGINES Hong Kong Mile with @mcacajamez for Ricky Yiu! #HKIR | #HKracing — HKJC Racing (@HKJC_Racing) December 8, 2024 'There was too much time off before he went to Hong Kong and I've been putting the pressure on myself to help him get the results he deserves.' Three-time Group Two winner Sixpence returns from a seventh-placed finish in the Group One Osaka Hai (2,000m) under Takeshi Yokoyama. With all of the colt's five victories coming over 1,600m and 1,800m, the Osaka Hai proved a stretch at 2,000m and a return to 1,600m bodes well. The Kizuna colt looked in excellent condition in trackwork on May 28 working under Christophe Lemaire and, in final work on June 4, he worked with another horse on the flat. 'His movement was good,' trainer Sakae Kunieda said. 'He was in good shape for his last race too but he wasn't able to keep something in reserve for the finish. Lemaire knows this horse very well and they work well together.' Lemaire has ridden four of Sixpence's five career wins.


South China Morning Post
6 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
This week in PostMag: a queer-friendly football team, Innsbruck and Michelin
Throughout my life, I've been lucky to feel like I belong – at least as much as anyone can hope to. I grew up on the central coast of California, where ethnic ambiguity didn't raise any eyebrows. I was never made to feel different or like an outsider. 'People saw me as white, so that was how I felt,' wrote my colleague, and fellow half-Asian, Shea Driscoll, in a recent essay exploring his own evolving sense of identity. That hit home. And though I didn't explicitly think of myself as white, I certainly was never forced to think of myself as 'different'. I could just be. It was a privilege I didn't realise I had until I moved to the United States' East Coast. There, where the racial demographics are different from California, I started getting the question, 'But where are you really from?' for the first time. I met friends who looked like me but had spent their lives feeling like they didn't fit in. This issue's cover feature brought these memories flooding back. At its core, it's a story about making a space yourself when the world won't allow you one. Sarah Keenlyside spends a day on the pitch with Baes FC – a women- and queer-friendly football team in London founded by members of the Asian diaspora off the back of discrimination at other clubs. They've made a home and community for people who felt like outsiders elsewhere. There are so many ways a sense of home can be created. Off the pitch and inside three very distinct Hong Kong flats, Peta Tomlinson investigates the trend of wood as a way for interior designers to evoke a sense of warmth. It's a transformative effect on the city's usual cold, characterless residential spaces. As Michelin continues its march towards world domination, Gavin Yeung explores what it means to be the only Michelin-starred restaurant in your region as he stops at two establishments in Thailand in a delicious adventure. The Old World beckons to Peter Neville-Hadley as he finds himself wandering Innsbruck's history-laden streets in Austria. In what is mostly known as a ski destination, he discovers excitement off the powdered slopes in the city's palaces, churches and treasure-filled museums. For our loyal readers of Then & Now, I regret to inform you that this will be the last for a while. After more than two decades of columns, our dear Jason Wordie will be taking a (much-deserved) break. We look forward to his return – but until then, we'll miss it dearly as I expect you all will, too.


South China Morning Post
20 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Ex-girlfriend who blackmailed K-pop idol with sex video gets suspended sentence
The former girlfriend of a 26-year-old South Korean pop star has been given a one-year suspended sentence for threatening to release a sex video of them together in a bid to end his career. The Seoul Eastern District Court sentenced the woman to one year in prison, suspended for two years, for her threats to the K-pop singer, who is still active in the scene. She was sentenced under the Act on Special Cases Concerning the Punishment of Sexual Crimes (coercion using video recordings) and for property damage, according to legal platform LawTalk News on Wednesday. The woman was also ordered to complete 40 hours of sexual violence counselling and barred from working at institutions involving children, teenagers and people with disabilities for four years. The woman had escalated threats to the singer and also damaged his phone during an argument. Photo: Shutterstock The couple dated from November 2020 to March 2022, according to celebrity news website Kbizoom. As the relationship started deteriorating, the woman began blackmailing her boyfriend with sex videos filmed during their time together. Her first threat was on December 10, 2021, when she created a social media account using the singer's image and texted him the link along with a portion of a sex video involving the two, saying: 'Quit being an idol. The only path left for you is the military.'