With so many opportunities throughout a racing calendar which stretches across the world, it has been only the very hardiest of Aidan O’Brien’s string which have been able to make an impact at the LONGINES Hong Kong International Races (HKIR).
Few visited more places than the magnificent Highland Reel, who signed off in 2017 with his second victory in the G1 LONGINES Hong Kong Vase (2400m) while Magic Wand, defeated by just a short head in the 2019 G1 LONGINES Hong Kong Cup (2000m), had barely stopped during a year which saw her travel to Australia, America and the Gulf.
The Irishman’s three candidates this year have already demonstrated their hardiness and his strength appears to lie again in the Vase, a race he also claimed in 2020 with Mogul.
Stone Age, a beautiful-looking son of the late super-sire Galileo, began the year as his stable’s best contender for the G1 Derby (2405m) at Epsom and although it was not to work out there, he was a commendable third in the G1 Belmont Derby Invitational Stakes (2000m) in New York just a month later and was still at the peak of his powers in last month’s G1 Breeders’ Cup Turf (2400m), throwing down a stern challenge before finding only Godolphin’s Rebel’s Romance too good.
“We were delighted with him in the Breeders’ Cup, he ran a very good race and had progressed from his previous run at Ascot,” O’Brien said. “We’ve been happy with everything we’ve seen from him since then. It had been on my mind to go to Hong Kong since after the Breeders’ Cup, we thought the track, trip and ground should all suit him fine, we’re all looking forward to it.”
As Stone Age is only three, the best could be yet to come, and O’Brien continued: “We think and hope he will [stay in training], obviously we think he’s progressing and he definitely could progress again from three to four.”