It was the master Italian breeder Federico Tesio who once remarked that the existence of the thoroughbred depended on a single criterion, namely the winning post of the Derby at Epsom.
Times have changed in the subsequent decades as racing becomes ever globalised as well as favoured towards speed and precocity, yet it remains by some way Britain’s most evocative Flat race.
Because its heroes will often have been retired to stud by now, they are only usually seen in Europe, or perhaps for one final hoorah at the Breeders’ Cup in America. So the arrival of this year’s winner Anthony Van Dyck at Sha Tin is historic, in that he is the first to have ever competed at the LONGINES Hong Kong International Races.
“There you go now,” says trainer Aidan O’Brien when reminded of this fact. “Obviously he’s a horse we always thought very highly of, and he’s run some unbelievable races through the whole year.”
Despite being a son of the pre-eminent Galileo from a top-class Australian family, Anthony Van Dyck is an animal who flew a little under the radar prior to Epsom. He fared best of the O’Brien string in Britain’s seminal two-year-old race, the G1 Dewhurst Stakes, but won one of the lower-profile Derby trials at Lingfield on his reappearance.
Seemingly the third string on betting from the stable in the classic itself, he responded strongest in an epic finish where five horses were stretched across the width of the track.