Horse Racing
Season
Champions Day at Sha Tin draws Group 1 talent from east and west

11/04/2018 14:53

Champions Day at Sha Tin Racecourse on 29 April will for the first time bring together on one race day the Chairman’s Sprint Prize, Champions Mile and Audemars Piguet Queen Elizabeth II Cup, three world class Group 1 races worth a combined HK$58 million.

Mr. Andrew Harding, Executive Director, Racing at the Hong Kong Jockey Club, said: “This year, the APQEII Cup will be one of three Group 1 races on the inaugural Champions Day, and the quality of selected runners places this fixture near the top of the international calendar.

“Champions Day will be an exciting event with high-class runners from Japan, Ireland, the UAE and Hong Kong, 12 of them Group 1 winners already. The Chairman’s Sprint Prize is set to feature some of the world’s very best sprinters; the Champions Mile is shaping to be the season’s championship decider for Hong Kong’s strong crop of milers; and the QEII Cup looks like being one of world racing’s 10-furlong highlights. We are excited to welcome horsemen, media and racing fans from around the globe to Sha Tin for Hong Kong’s first Champions Day.”

Chairman’s Sprint Prize

Hong Kong Sprint winner Mr Stunning is a major local hope in the Chairman’s Sprint Prize.
Hong Kong Sprint winner Mr Stunning is a major local hope in the Chairman’s Sprint Prize.

The HK$16 million Chairman’s Sprint Prize (1200m) is in its third year as a Group 1 contest and last year ranked 34th in World’s Best 100 Group 1 Races, making it Hong Kong’s highest-rated race.

A field of 12 top-class sprinters is slated to go to post, including the best from Hong Kong and Japan, and leading speedsters from Europe.

Hong Kong’s Mr Stunning was runner-up to Lucky Bubbles in this race last year and has gone on to win the G1 Hong Kong Sprint (1200m) this term. A rematch is on the cards, with both among the selections, alongside G1-placed Beat The Clock and the exciting rising talent, Ivictory.

Mr Stunning, Beat The Clock and Ivictory, as well as Amazing Kids and Thewizardofoz, hail from the stable of Hong Kong’s champion trainer, John Size. Beat The Clock registered the second-fastest final 400m split of all-time at Sha Tin when he landed the G2 Sprint Cup at the course and distance on 8 April.

Fine Needle ascended to the top of Japan’s sprint ranks with victory last month in the G1 Takamatsunomiya Kinen (1200m), defeating Let’s Go Donki. That breakthrough elite win augmented the five-year-old’s success last year in the G2 Centaur Stakes (1200m).

Takamatsunomiya Kinen victor Fine Needle (No. 9) heads to the Chairman’s Sprint Prize.
Takamatsunomiya Kinen victor Fine Needle (No. 9) heads to the Chairman’s Sprint Prize.

Godolphin’s Blue Point has placed three times in G1 company and was among Europe’s top bracket last term. Having beaten subsequent champion sprinter Harry Angel at G3 level last May, the Charlie Appleby-trained colt rounded out the 2017 campaign with a G3 win over six furlongs at Ascot, and posted a smart effort first-up this season when second in the G2 Meydan Sprint (1000m) in Dubai.

Godolphin’s Blue Point is among Europe’s top bracket.
Godolphin’s Blue Point is among Europe’s top bracket.

Ireland’s champion trainer Aidan O’Brien is set to send G1-placed Washington DC. The five-year-old G1 winner has twice placed at G1 level, including when less than a length second to Marsha in the 2016 G1 Prix de l’Abbaye (1000m). The bay was a good fourth in the G1 Al Quoz Sprint (1200m) at Meydan last month.

Peniaphobia, winner of the 2015 G1 Hong Kong Sprint, Winner’s Way and Not Listenin’tome complete the Chairman’s Sprint Prize entries.

Champions Mile

The 12 selections for the HK$18 million Champions Mile feature Hong Kong’s best milers and Ireland’s Lancaster Bomber from the O’Brien stable.

Lancaster Bomber has placed second five times at G1 level.
Lancaster Bomber has placed second five times at G1 level.

Lancaster Bomber has placed second five times at G1 level, including when behind World Approval in last season’s Breeders’ Cup Mile at Del Mar.

The line-up also includes the current Hong Kong season’s two in-form G1 milers: the John Moore-trained Beauty Generation secured the Hong Kong Mile in December and followed up with an elite win in the Queen’s Silver Jubilee Cup (1400m); Seasons Bloom snared the Stewards’ Cup for the Danny Shum stable in January under Joao Moreira.

Hong Kong Mile hero Beauty Generation has the highest international rating among the Champions Mile field.
Hong Kong Mile hero Beauty Generation has the highest international rating among the Champions Mile field.

Last season’s Champion Miler and Champions Mile runner-up Beauty Only bounced back to form on 8 April with a win in the G2 Chairman’s Trophy (1600m).

Also among the selections are a clutch of exciting horses on the cusp of a G1 breakthrough: the high-class greys Fifty Fifty and Pingwu Spark, as well as Southern Legend and Western Express, and a leading light from the four-year-old division, Hong Kong Classic Cup (1800m) winner Singapore Sling.

Two-time G1 winner Helene Paragon, the talented sprinter/miler Blizzard and the G1-placed Joyful Trinity complete the entries.

Audemars Piguet QEII Cup

The 11 APQEII Cup selections feature three overseas runners, Japan’s 2017 G1 Satsuki Sho (2000m) winner Al Ain and third-placed Danburite, as well as G2 winner War Decree from the Aidan O’Brien stable in Ireland.

Time Warp, winner of the G1 Hong Kong Cup and G1 Hong Kong Gold Cup at the course and distance this term, and sensational Hong Kong Derby hero Ping Hai Star, head the home contingent for the HK$24 million feature. The enigmatic talent Pakistan Star is also among the entries.