
Top-quality International line-up a timely morale boost for British racing
Last year's
Juddmonte
International,
memorably won by City Of Troy
, was officially judged the best race run in the world in 2024. It was the third time in a decade it achieved such status and come the time when such handicapping tots are done again this winter, it's no long shot that a similar ranking will emerge again.
The gong is essentially decided by averaging the peak rating of the first four horses in the most illustrious and valuable races on the planet. A year ago, City Of Troy beat Calandagan, Ghostwriter and the subsequent Arc heroine Bluestocking in a vintage renewal.
There were 13 runners in that Juddmonte and there will be only six this time, including a pacemaker. Among the other handful, however, lies the potential to have post-season handicap calculators whirring.
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Rarely has the International title looked more apt.
Aidan O'Brien
is pursuing a record-extending eighth success with his Eclipse hero Delacroix, while Godolphin will be confident their Ombudsman can reverse that Sandown form. France supplies the unbeaten Daryz and Japan's Danon Decile is the ultimate unknown quantity.
Even See The Fire, who won by a dozen lengths on her last York run and whose owner won this with a 50-1 shot a decade ago, can hardly be dismissed.
It's a showpiece event that brings top global talent to what is perhaps Britain's finest and fairest racecourse at the peak of a summer campaign. Unlike comparative 'coronation' renewals, such as when Frankel or Sea The Stars won this race, this is a competitive prospect to relish.
That makes for an opportune confidence boost to a cross-channel sector facing into a self-imposed blank day on September 10th. That is due to deep unease at the prospect of UK government tax harmonisation between sports betting and casino-type gambling.
It is a dry technical argument that may, in the eyes of the general public, look like a sport and industry with an elitist image making the case for bookmaker corporations paying less tax. Hardly a recipe for widespread sympathy.
William Buick after riding Ombudsman to victory in the Prince Of Wales's Stakes at Royal Ascot in June. Photograph: Justin Tallis/AFP via Getty Images
In comparison, elite competition is an easy sell, whatever the sport, and come 3.35pm on Wednesday that's the prospect around the historic Knavesmire.
Just a neck separated Delacroix and Ombudsman at the end of a dramatic Eclipse last month, when neither had anything but a straightforward passage through the race.
Ombudsman, who previously enjoyed a dream set-up in Royal Ascot's Prince Of Wales's Stakes, was always doing just that little bit too much at Sandown. Despite that, he still looked the winner until getting dramatically nabbed inside the final 50 metres by Delacroix.
That represented a major step-up in performance level by the Ballydoyle colt. A Derby flop at Epsom, nothing he'd previously done suggested a talent capable of overcoming events that conspired to leave him last with just over a furlong to go.
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That he ultimately still swept home suggested an exceptional talent contained within a superb physique and belied any nagging doubts about temperament issues. If Delacroix can repeat that level of form, or improve on it, he could wind up ranking high among O'Brien's best ever.
The Ombudsman team were left ruing the absence of a pacemaker at Sandown and won't repeat the blunder this time. But even if Birr Castle wasn't in the line-up, last year's Japanese Derby hero Danon Decile probably would force the pace issue anyway.
His Dubai defeat of Calandagan and Rebel's Romance is a form tie-up to the best in Europe. Japan's global dominance of recent years means Danon Decile will only be underestimated by the foolish.
Francis-Henri Graffard's rapid ascent to the top of the tree in France has been underlined by major success in England, including with Calandagan in last month's King George. His decision to pitch Daryz into such hot company looks significant.
The Aga Khan Studs colt is unbeaten in four this season including at Group Two level last time. As of now, he's something of a dark horse. By the end of this race to relish, he could be anything but.
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Irish Daily Mirror
5 hours ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
York Ebor Festival day 1 full race card and tips - list of runners on Wednesday
York's Ebor Festival kicks off on Wednesday and the Juddmonte International looks a fascinating contest. Delacroix has the chance to confirm his Coral-Eclipse form with Ombudsman in what promises to be a thrilling renewal. The richest race of the four-day Ebor Festival has a tough act to follow, as last year when City Of Troy beat Calandagan it was once again rated as the best race globally. Aidan O'Brien's Delacroix may have disappointed as a 2-1 favourite for the Derby in early June, finishing ninth behind stablemate Lambourn, but he turned that form around when coming from a challenging position to beat his elders in an exhilarating Eclipse at Sandown in early July. Prince of Wales's Stakes winner Ombudsman was the horse he pipped at the post that day and while John and Thady Gosden's runner is the slight favourite to get his revenge, O'Brien is content with his charge ahead of the rematch. Adding an international touch is the Japanese Derby winner Danon Decile, who has been in Newmarket for a couple of weeks. He hasn't raced since defeating Calandagan in the Dubai Sheema Classic in early April, but that form looks solid given the runner-up has since won twice at Group One level. Calandagan's trainer Francis-Henri Graffard chose not to send his King George hero to York this time, but does field an intriguing contender for the Aga Khan Studs in the unbeaten Daryz. Both parents of Andrew Balding's See The Fire won this race, for those who appreciate their pedigrees. The offspring of Sea The Stars and Arabian Queen delivered her career-best performance over this course and distance when she triumphed in the Middleton Stakes earlier in the season, and has since secured third place in both the Prince of Wales's Stakes and the Nassau. Here's a full list of the runners and riders, as well as a tip for each race: 1.50pm: 5½f (5f89y) Hong Kong Jockey Club World Pool Handicap (Heritage Handicap) (Class 2) (3yo+) 1 Roman Dragon Oisin Murphy2 Jordan Electrics Paul Mulrennan3 Vintage Clarets Ethan Tindall (7)4 Tees Spirit Jack Nicholls (5)5 Tatterstall (IRE) Connor Beasley6 Bergerac (IRE) Tom Eaves7 Trefor (IRE) Kieran Shoemark8 Squealer (IRE) Rowan Scott9 Azure Angel Callum Rodriguez10 The Man (IRE) David Egan11 Kendall Roy Colin Keane12 Brazen Bolt Warren Fentiman (5)13 Vantheman (IRE) Kevin Stott14 Marty Hopkirk (IRE) Rossa Ryan15 Mon Na Slieve (IRE) Sam James16 Curious Rover (IRE) William Pyle (3)17 Spring Is Sprung (FR) Jason Hart18 Air Force One (IRE) P J McDonald19 Cuban Grey Hollie Doyle 20 Copper Knight (IRE) Duran Fentiman Newsboy's tip: The Man 2.25pm: 7f Tattersalls Acomb Stakes (Group 3) (IRE-Incentive Race) (Class 1) (2yo) 1 Distant Storm William Buick2 Gewan P J McDonald3 Goodwood Galaxy David Probert4 Italy Ryan Moore5 May Angel Oisin Murphy6 Oceans Four Non Runner7 Rochfortbridge (IRE) Connor Beasley 8 Sovereign Ocean (IRE) Andrew Mullen Newsboy's tip: Italy 3.00pm: 1m4f (1m3f188y) Sky Bet Great Voltigeur Stakes (Group 2) (Colts & Geldings) (Class 1) (3yo) 1 Lambourn (IRE) Ryan Moore2 Carmers (IRE) Colin Keane3 Pride Of Arras (IRE) Rossa Ryan4 Arabian Force (IRE) Tom Marquand5 Mount Kilimanjaro (FR) William Buick6 Stay True (IRE) Wayne Lordan 7 Thrice (IRE) Dylan McMonagle Newsboy's tip: Lambourn Ryan Moore rides Lambourn to victory in The Dubai Duty Free Irish Derby (Image: ©INPHO/Morgan Treacy) 3.35pm: 1m2½f (1m2f56y) Juddmonte International Stakes (Group 1) (Class 1) (3yo+) 1 Birr Castle (FR) Robert Havlin2 Danon Decile (JPN) K Tosaki3 Ombudsman (IRE) William Buick4 See The Fire Oisin Murphy5 Daryz (FR) Mickael Barzalona 6 Delacroix (IRE) Ryan Moore Newsboy's tip: See The Fire 4.10pm: 2m½f (2m56y) Sky Bet Stayers Handicap (Heritage Handicap) (GBBPlus Race) (Class 2) (3yo+) 1 Wise Eagle (IRE) Warren Fentiman (5)2 Artistic Star (IRE) Rossa Ryan3 Santorini Star (IRE) Tom Marquand4 Charging Thunder Ashley Lewis (7)5 Align The Stars (IRE) Joe Fanning6 Dancing In Paris (FR) Saffie Osborne7 Spirit Mixer Rob Hornby8 Alphonse Le Grande (IRE) William Buick9 Fireblade James Doyle10 Almuhit (IRE) Wayne Lordan11 Maghlaak P J McDonald12 Artisan Dancer (FR) Andrew Mullen 13 Terrorise Hollie Doyle Newsboy's tip: Alphonse Le Grande Alphonse Le Grande (Image: Getty Images) 4.45pm: 5f IRE-Incentive, It Pays To Buy Irish Fillies' Handicap (Heritage Handicap) (Class 2) (3yo+ 0-105) 1 Star Of Mehmas (IRE) Ryan Moore2 Saratoga Special (IRE) Shane Foley3 Over The Blues (IRE) Clifford Lee4 Ruby's Profit (IRE) Kieran Shoemark5 Queen's Guard Andrew Mullen6 Fluorescence Callum Rodriguez7 Nad Alshiba Green (IRE) Tom Marquand8 Sarahmae (IRE) Joseph Sheridan9 Jumbeau Jack Nicholls (5)10 Woolhampton (IRE) P J McDonald11 Eclairage (IRE) Colin Keane12 Luna A Inbhir Nis Jason Hart13 Mademoiselle David Egan14 Novamay Rhys Elliott (5)15 Lady Roxby Tom Eaves16 Galaxy Zoo Richard Kingscote17 Tiva (IRE) Mark Winn18 Forager Warren Fentiman (5)19 Fantasy Obsessor Saffie Osborne20 Eternal Sunshine Shay Farmer (7) 21 Woohoo (IRE) Amie Waugh (3) Newsboy's tip: Eclairage 5.20pm: 6f Sky Bet Nursery Handicap (Class 2) (2yo) 1 First Legion (IRE) Shane Foley2 Rogue Supremacy Daniel Tudhope3 Amorim Billy Loughnane4 Old Is Gold (IRE) James Doyle5 Utmost Respect (IRE) Oisin Orr6 Shaman Champion (IRE) Ryan Moore7 River Spey Oisin Murphy8 Saucy Jane Taryn Langley (5)9 Mo Of Cairo Sam James10 Blue Orbit (IRE) Hollie Doyle11 Chairmanfourtimes (IRE) Ashley Lewis (7)12 Temple Of Athena Shay Farmer (7)13 Ecclefechan Jack Dace (5)14 Go Vince Go (IRE) Duran Fentiman15 A'ali G Warren Fentiman (5)16 Ruby's Angel (IRE) Saffie Osborne17 Dacres Cross (IRE) Rowan Scott18 Awraad (IRE) Rhys Elliott (5)19 Veiled Truth Joe Fanning20 Dublin Bay (IRE) Harry Bentley21 Believeinmenow (IRE) Faye McManoman 22 Goldie Bear (IRE) Laura Coughlan (3) Newsboy's tip: Utmost Respect


RTÉ News
6 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Preview and verdict: Juddemonte International Stakes
It may be called the Ebor Festival, but the eponymous handicap can't lay claim to occupying the mantle as the four-day meeting's most prestigious race. That honour normally falls to the Juddmonte International. With a long odds-on favourite in Thursday's Yorkshire Oaks and Friday's Nunthorpe Stakes comprising a field lacking a standout sprinter, it's this afternoon's feature that is again shaping up as the race of the week. Eclipse winner Delacroix and runner-up Ombudsman dominate the market. There was just a neck to split the pair at Sandown and they are disputing favouritism here. An argument can be made that it's Delacroix that should be the clear favourite. Ryan Moore's mount came from a most unpromising position, in a slowly run race, after enduring a troublesome passage and still managed to get his head in front in the shadow of the post in Esher. While the time of the race was unexceptional, Delacroix clocked a scorching final furlong, and that warrants a significant upgrade. Now for the caveats, and there are a few of them for a horse vying for top spot in the betting. Of Delacroix's three other runs this term, two of them came over 10 furlongs at Leopardstown and the other was his dismal Derby run, where he was somehow sent off favourite, based on his connections and little else. Disregard that Epsom run. Delacroix has a very impressive engine, but his chassis is not one of a Derby winner. His stride is far too short and his stride rate far too high to have had a leading chance in a Classic over 12 furlongs. This is likely his optimal trip, but his rider has previously intimated that he feels more like a miler than a 12-furlong horse. While Delacroix's first two runs of the season at Leopardstown resulted in visually striking victories, they might not be quite as impressive as they seemed at the time. On the first of those runs, Delacroix was only a smidgen faster in a steadily run affair than runner-up and subsequent dual Derby winner Lambourn. Delacroix remains shrouded in a degree of mystery, but we know exactly what Lambourn is, namely a middle-distance horse who is stamina-laden and who will certainly stay further, if required to do so. Lambourn isn't an animal that quickens, he lengthens and he grinds and there is an attritional quality to how he wears his opponents away. It took two very aggressive rides to score those Derby victories. Delacroix's (above) second start of the campaign in the Leopardstown Derby Trial wasn't totally satisfactory either. In a race run at an even more sedate pace than his seasonal reappearance, Delacroix readily outpaced Tennessee Stud, who is basically in the same mould but a slightly inferior version of Lambourn. Runner-up Purview, making his first start of the year, was slightly quicker than Delacroix over the last three furlongs. That run earned Dermot Weld's charge plenty of plaudits, but two subsequent outings have yielded two defeats. One other potential negative for both Delacroix and Ombudsman from Eclipse is the proximity of Camille Pissarro. The fourth-place finisher at Sandown sustained a career-ending injury during the contest, with that hairline fracture to a fetlock hardly aiding his cause. Camille Pissarro also came from well back off a moderate gallop that day, not ideal for a horse that would prefer a stronger pace over the trip. Prior to his Sandown run, he landed the Prix du Jockey Club at Chantilly. However, his rider got his fractions pretty much spot on that day, and the form of that race doesn't look particularly strong for the grade. If Ombudsman is sent off favourite, it's likely because he could just be a shade more versatile than his chief market rival and his form is easier to interpret. John and Thady Gosden's charge was beaten by Almaqam on his seasonal reappearance, but it was a perfectly respectable reintroduction against a race-fit rival. Ombudsman then enjoyed his career nadir when scoring in the Prince of Wales's Stakes at Royal Ascot. He won impressively that day, but he was a beneficiary of sitting well off a fast early pace. Perhaps it's written in the stars that See The Fire (above) scores here. It would be a happy coincidence for trainer Andrew Balding if the daughter of Sea The Stars and Arabian Queen could emulate her parents by claiming this Group One. See The Fire loves it on the Knavesmire and two of her three career victories have come here. She claimed the Group Three Strensall Stakes at last year's Ebor meeting with swift closing sectionals off a slow early pace. Her win in the Group Two Middleton Stakes this year was even more emphatic, scoring by 12 yawning lengths. However, she was favourably placed in rear off an unsustainable early gallop. Danon Decile's summer has been focused on this one contest. A winner of last season's Japanese Derby, the son of Epiphaneia added a second Group One to his CV with victory in the Sheema Classic in April. Racing in Japan is very different to the major jurisdictions in Europe. For a start, there are no six-runner Group One contests. All their top races are numerically strong. Their middle-distance stars meet over distances ranging from 10 furlongs to two miles, while we would regard the latter contests as the preserve of stayers. Their foreign raiders have been successful all over the globe, even if they've yet to land the holy grail that is the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe. As a population of horses, fast ground does seem a prerequisite to many of their best horses, which makes sense. They're bred that way as the majority of Japanese turf races take place on such a surface. Danon Decile should get his optimal ground conditions this afternoon, if not his optimal trip. That Sheema Classic win came over 12 furlongs, but the race turned into a test of speed. Calandagan, who admittedly wasn't quite so well positioned as the winner, was among Danon Decile's (above) victims that day, and we know that he'd be disputing favouritism if he had turned up here. The dark horse in the field has to be Francis-Henri Graffard's Daryz, who only made his racecourse debut in April. His form is vastly inferior to the four horses ahead of him in the betting, with his sectional times only painting him in a slightly more favourable light, but there is reason to think he's open to the major improvement required to figure in this company. Daryz has exhibited greenness in three of his runs to date, only really exhibiting professionalism last time out at Saint-Cloud. That was a weak Group Two contest, and in keeping with his earlier victories, the time was modest. However, there was the distinct sense that his superiority was far greater than a winning margin of three-quarters might imply. With data now dictating betting markets, does backing a horse such as Daryz based on nebulous intangibles constitute an act of blind faith? Perhaps not. Daryz's pedigree suggests he wants fast ground, a strong pace and possibly 12 furlongs to bring out the best in him. He won't get the chance to race at 12 furlongs this afternoon, but the ground will suit him ideally and he'll contest a race that at least won't be run at a crawl for the first time in his life. That brings us to the final runner in the field in the form of supplemented pacemaker Birr Castle, who could just decide this contest, while running unplaced. Getting pacemaking duties just right isn't easy. It's not just a matter of getting to the front and leading the field along. Go too fast, and the pacemaker is often ignored, go too slow, and the pacemaker fills the role in name only. York is a flat course, meaning many consider it a speed-favouring track, but the field often get racing quite a way from home over this distance. In a slowly run affair, we could well see a repeat of the Eclipse, with Ombudsman and Delacroix performing as the market suggests they will run, while See The Fire can also go well at a track she loves. However, if Birr Castle can inject proper pace into the contest, it's the long-striding pair of Danon Decile and Daryz that could threaten an upset at far bigger odds, with preference - just - for the latter in a market that looks a little lopsided. This trip may be shorter than ideal for both, but that didn't stop two genuine 12-furlong horses in City Of Troy and Clandagan fighting out the finish of last year's renewal.


Irish Times
7 hours ago
- Irish Times
Seán Moran: The FRC set out to save football but may also have rescued referees
We are now less than two weeks from the start of the wild bird hunting season. Soon, shots will ring out, portending existential danger for, among others, red grouse, mallards, gadwalls, shovellers and tufted ducks. And traditionally, referees, who have come to regard this time of year with much the same trepidation as a golden plover. In October 2022, then president Larry McCarthy launched a protection programme, Respect the Referee. The backdrop was almost weekly bulletins on spectator and team official outrages directed at referees. To attend the launch, I had to reschedule a coffee morning. When I explained that I would be attending a new initiative to assist referees, my deferred appointment helpfully suggested something that might also be of interest to game birds: 'Arm them?' In its crusade to save football, however, the Football Review Committee (FRC) may well have provided less lethal measures to rescue refereeing. The impact of the various rule changes or enhancements has been well publicised, especially the solo and go with its tidying up of the flashpoints that occur when a free is awarded. READ MORE The penalties for disrespecting refereeing decisions are also severe – including the 50-metre advancement of disputed frees – and have had the predictable effect of discouraging and vastly reducing dissent and gamesmanship in interactions with referees, allowing match officials clearer minds and greater bandwidth to deal with the primary tasks of upholding rules. There is, though, more to the FRC's impact than the obvious starting point of penalising bad behaviour to the extent that it becomes unprofitable. There were also the methods by which the proposals were formulated in the first place. Speakin g to The Irish Times on Saturday , Tyrone All-Ireland referee Seán Hurson strongly made this point. 'We've seen changes in the past where there was no consultation with officials and then, rules were maybe not implemented the way that some people thought they should have been implemented,' Hurson said. 'But this time, both FRC and the officials seem to be happy, based on our last meeting there a few weeks ago. They also took to heart different recommendations through the season, which was probably a direct result of some of the meetings. 'So, we felt as referees that we were being listened to, and issues that we were having were being addressed.' Coincidentally, on the same day Monaghan intercounty referee Martin McNally was making the same point to Colm Keys in the Irish Independent. Referee Martin McNally said referees have been able to bring concerns and recommendations to the FRC. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho 'We have had Jim Gavin [FRC chairman] present at nearly every referees' meeting. We have had input and have been able to bring concerns and recommendations to the FRC. It's not a case that these things were being dictated to us,' he said. The easy-going give and take between the committee and referees allowed issues to be resolved without difficulty. This was useful in implementing the stipulation that only captains could speak with the match official. Hurson felt that restriction was a bit of a straitjacket because he valued talking to players, arguing that all referees knew instinctively the difference between genuine queries, particularly given the experimental nature of the rules, and backchat. Having sought clarification from Gavin, he was told that 'the communication was still okay'. [ Four-point goals and handpass restrictions: My experience of playing with football's latest experimental rules Opens in new window ] Maurice Deegan, the former All-Ireland referee and FRC member, who took charge of intercounty practice matches and wrote about for The Irish Times , observed that the knowledge of the new rules on the part of players was very good, often better than in respect of the original rule book. Deegan also said that the two-way communication illustrated genuine interest in the new rules and making sure they were properly grasped. This collaborative approach – administrators, match officials, players and management all pulling together – has been central to the success of the rules and their positive impact. It is true that the new measures are currently under the spotlight during club matches and a season of championships at those levels have yet to be concluded and analysed. It is also true that perhaps the full ordnance of managerial and coach analysis of the new dispensation has yet to be devised with a view to pressurising referees in whatever grey areas can be identified. Neither of these potential vulnerabilities have yet come to pass and the goodwill and co-operation that marked the first six months of the FRC framework have set a positive precedent, but there will be anxious eyes on how it is all progressing. Should the optimal evolution of either game be held back simply to bolster uniformity? Club players are, by most accounts, equally as happy with the FRC rules as their intercounty colleagues and that enthusiasm can help them to bed in this club season. One issue that is coming under strain is the growing disparity between football and hurling rules. Were the four-point goal, which was again trialled recently after being dropped at the start of the year, to re-emerge it would drive in the wedge between the games that little bit deeper. This is not altogether new. After all, in the late Joe Lennon's exhaustive 2000 study, Towards a Philosophy for Legislation in Gaelic games, he states: 'Since these games are completely different in form, it is not surprising that the first sets of rules were also quite different...' The hurling field of play (200 yards x 150) was more than three times the size of a football pitch (120 x 80) and the goals considerably larger (20 x 10 compared with 15 x 8) and playing time was 80 minutes, compared to an hour. Back on planet 21st century, the problem is practical. As Donal Smyth, Croke Park's manager of match officials put it, 'we have 40 per cent of our referees that do dual hurling and football, so one game going away from the other can be a big problem'. Nonetheless, should the optimal evolution of either game be held back simply to bolster uniformity?