In the weeks leading up to the 2019 LONGINES Hong Kong International Races, Silk Racing had three horses in three different races, all with a decent shot to take home the prize. By far, Almond Eye was getting the most attention out of the three. But with her defection, due to a fever prior to departure, the world’s eyes turned to Silk Racing’s next great hope, G1 LONGINES Hong Kong Mile contender and two-time G1 winner Indy Champ.
The four-year-old son of Stay Gold is a horse that in any other year would have been the headliner from the start.
Winning both the G1 Yasuda Kinen and the G1 Mile Championship in one consecutive season is no easy feat and one most recently done by Maurice who then went on to impressively win the 2015 G1 Hong Kong Mile.
The “Beast from the East” has cast a large shadow for most Japanese runners hoping to make a name for themselves in Hong Kong ever since. Indy Champ is no different, but unlike previous challengers, he most closely mirrors Maurice in not only his most recent successes but also his entire career: both horses slowly worked their way up the ranks and, in Indy Champ’s case, he has run more consistently from the beginning than the Beast whose legend he seeks to challenge.
Out of 12 lifetime starts, Indy Champ has never been worse than fourth place and then only twice. He was a bit of a late bloomer as a two-year-old, winning his debut on the last racing day of the year in 2017. He was back in action just two weeks later, winning an allowance by a length and a quarter.
That spring he was entered in two races that could have potentially sent him down the classic road but instead he suffered his first defeat in the 1800m G3 Mainichi Hai where he finished third and again a month later in the 1600m G3 Arlington Cup, where he ran fourth for the first time. Even though he was only a length behind the winner, his connections took that as a sign and gave the colt a break.
He came back with a nail-biting second-place finish in a winners-of-two allowance in mid-June of 2018, but the race set him up perfectly to start a three-race win steak. After minor 1600m wins in July and December, he started off his four-year-old campaign with a bang.