Francis Lui has the strongest hand of any trainer heading into Sunday’s (22 March) HK$20 million BMW Hong Kong Derby (2000m) but that doesn’t mean he’s counting his chickens yet.
The handler has the top-rated and seemingly brilliant Golden Sixty, successful in the Hong Kong Classic Mile (1600m) and Hong Kong Classic Cup (1800m), aiming to complete a rare clean-sweep of the Four-Year-Old Classic Series, alongside More Than This, runner-up and third in the aforementioned contests.
“I can’t compare – they’re both good – I just hope I can win the Derby this year, but I do think John Size’s horse Champion’s Way is a danger,” he said.
Champion’s Way – the top-rated three-year-old in Hong Kong last season – certainly appears to be the chief threat to his talented pair, but the manner of Golden Sixty’s lead-up wins, compiling an impressive six-race winning streak, pegs him as the clear standout so far in this year’s four-year-old crop.
And, in More Than This, Lui has a solid second string to his bow, a horse that has long been widely-viewed as being ready-made for the 2000m of the Sha Tin Derby.
The two gallopers might share the same stable space but they are different in type. Golden Sixty is a neat, athletic Australian-bred with rich North American and European roots, a dark shade of gleaming brown, a live-wire but a silky traveller with a sit-and-wait sprint; the British-bred More Than This is a 1200lb bay, lazy from the gates, unrhythmic in the run, but with a raking acceleration to the line.
A Golden gift