20-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Khaleej Times
How Sheikh Mohammed's Kentucky Derby triumph was built on vision, patience and resolve
This year, in the pre-dawn quiet of Dubai, as the city lights shimmered in the inky sky, a man whose passion for horses began on the sands of Jumeirah watched history and a lifelong ambition unfold far away at Churchill Downs racecourse in America.
At 2.01am Dubai time, the royal blue silks of Godolphin, worn with pride and passion by Venezuelan jockey Junior Alvarado, flashed across the finish line first — marking not just a victory, but the culmination of years of ambition and strategy. The horse, Sovereignty, had crossed the threshold of history, securing Godolphin's first-ever Kentucky Derby win.
For Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, it was a moment suspended in time — surreal, yes, but also the culmination of everything he'd built as Godolphin claimed its first-ever Kentucky Derby (G1) victory. It was Sheikh Mohammed's crowning achievement in his three-decade pursuit to conquer the last great frontier in elite international racing.
Few victories carry the weight of history. Godolphin's breakthrough at the Kentucky Derby last weekend was one of them.
The Kentucky Derby — a race that holds a singular place in the world of horse racing, not just for its prestige but also for its unmatched mythology, spectacle, and cultural resonance — had eluded Sheikh Mohammed for 25 years. Despite decades of dominance across Great Britain, Europe, Australia, Japan, and the Middle East, the Churchill Downs showpiece remained the one glaring omission in an otherwise glittering, global trophy cabinet.
In a way, it symbolised the Everest of Sheikh Mohammed's racing ambitions — not because of the prize purse or prestige, but because of what it symbolised: global mastery, American validation, and the realisation of a dream born in Dubai.
His critics warned that America posed unique challenges — the Kentucky Derby, in particular, demanded a lot more than pedigree and preparation. It was different to all other races. For years, Godolphin sent contenders with huge aspirations, but they returned with disappointment. Horses like Essential Quality (third in 2021) and Frosted (fourth in 2015) came close, but the iconic garland of 'roses', a lush symbol of triumph, was still out of reach.
But Sheikh Mohammed was not done. Like the legendary king Sir Robert the Bruce who drew resolve from a spider's persistence, he returned to the drawing board with fresh focus. If the Derby could not be claimed with European imports or a global shuffle of horses, perhaps the answer lay in building success from within.
Why fly contenders halfway across the world and ask them to adjust to unfamiliar conditions, surfaces, and systems when you could breed the horse in America, train it in America, and ride it with an American-based jockey who knows every inch of Churchill Downs?
The idea seemed straightforward, but behind it lay years of introspection, recalibration, and a stubborn refusal to give up. The disappointment of recurring defeats did little to spoil Sheikh Mohammed's American dream — instead, it they marked the beginning of a strong-willed new chapter. Rather than retreat, he responded the way visionaries often do: by planting deeper roots.
In 2001, Sheikh Mohammed established a permanent breeding and training base in the heart of American thoroughbred country. Jonabell Farm in Lexington, Kentucky, became the foundation of his stateside strategy. This 440-acre property would serve not only as the American home of his Darley stallions but as the launchpad for his new, long-term plan: to breed a Derby winner on American soil.
More than just a satellite operation, Jonabell Farm was a declaration of intent — a bold foothold on American soil that signalled Godolphin was here to stay. It marked a shift in strategy: the road to the Run for the Roses would no longer wind solely through Dubai or Newmarket, but begin right in the heart of Kentucky.
The moment of victory
That vision came full circle with Sovereignty, the 2022 foal bred and raised at Jonabell Farm — conceived with one singular purpose: to win the Kentucky Derby. The colt was the embodiment of a strategy over two decades in the making — a homegrown champion for America's greatest race, born of patience and precision. And when the moment finally arrived, it came not as a solitary triumph, but as the centrepiece of a historic weekend that shook the racing world.
In an unforgettable 48-hour stretch, Godolphin accomplished what no other stable ever had: a clean sweep of all four spring classics across the UK and the US.
On Friday, Good Cheer, another Godolphin homebred filly, claimed the Kentucky Oaks (G1) with grace and dominance. Just hours later on Saturday morning in Newmarket, Ruling Court stormed to victory in the 2,000 Guineas (G1) — the very race a young Sheikh Mohammed first witnessed in 1967 as a student in the UK, and one that sparked his lifelong pursuit of excellence in racing.
Mere hours later, Sovereignty seized the Derby, and then on Sunday, Desert Flower added an exclamation mark claiming the 1,000 Guineas (G1), and with it a legacy secured — not just in the record books, but in the hearts of everyone who chased this dream with him.
That weekend, for Sheikh Mohammed, was not about trophies. It was about proving that faith and patience can shape destiny.