More Than This heads into Sunday’s (26 April) HK$20 million G1 FWD Champions Mile in the midst of an identity crisis of sorts but reunited with Karis Teetan, the man with a perfect record on the Francis Lui-trained four-year-old.
Reel back to early December and the British import had just completed a hat-trick of wins under Teetan, a perfect start to a campaign that held the tantalising hope of BMW Hong Kong Derby triumph. His victories had come at 1400m and a mile but his dogged style, dour at times, suggested 2000m in mid-March might be right up his street.
“I’m happy to be on him back over the mile – I’d always thought he’d be better over further but to be honest when he was winning those races, he was doing it the hard way,” Teetan said, recalling runs such as his wide, battling passage to land a storied 1600m Class 2 handicap on the LONGINES Hong Kong International Races undercard – a contest that has fallen to the likes of Able Friend and Werther in recent years.
Beside the visual muddle of his racing style stands his pedigree: his sire, Dutch Art, did not win beyond 1200m, was G1-placed at a mile and has not sired anything of elite quality capable of winning beyond that distance; his dam did however place third in a modest 10-furlong Windsor handicap, and she is a half-sister to both the talented sprinter-miler Wannabe Grand and the smart Wannabe Posh, G3-placed over a mile and six furlongs – the noted stamina influence Shirley Heights looms large on that side of the family.