Kings Shield put his rivals to the sword with an authoritative all-the-way win in the Class 2 Hebe Hill Handicap (1650m, dirt) at Sha Tin on Wednesday, 4 November.
The former British-trained import has developed into a force to be reckoned with on the dirt in Hong Kong: this latest win, his third over the course and distance, was achieved off a rating of 98 and will lift him to a triple-figure mark.
But with high class dirt races a rare commodity in Hong Kong, trainer Frankie Lor may have to consider overseas options at a time when international travel is uncertain.
“We’re planning to go to Dubai but we don’t know, with the virus, whether we can go or not, but in Hong Kong there’s not too many dirt races, so I still need to race him on the turf to keep him fit,” Lor said.
Lor’s first overseas sortie as a trainer came in the 2019 KOR G1 Korea Cup (1800m, sand) with Glorious Artist, who finished fourth in Seoul but went one place better tonight for third behind his stablemate, while the Tony Cruz-trained Star Performance split the pair in second.