Japan’s Obamburumai and his trainer Keiji Yoshimura stunned the Australian racing world when they won the recently instituted and valuable Golden Eagle (1500m), a race worth AU$10 million (approx. HK$50.5 million), at Rosehill in Sydney last November.
Not only did he become the first international to win the race, first held in 2019, he did so with a devastating late burst at his first run outside Japan and his first in almost six months.
Now the bid is to stun Hong Kong in the G1 FWD Champions Mile (1600m) and Yoshimura’s confidence is not unduly dented despite the four-year-old’s failure to repeat his Rosehill heroics when beaten by over three lengths on his return to racing, and Australia, in the G1 Doncaster Mile (1600m) on 6 April.
Yoshimura, who arrived in Hong Kong on Tuesday, is pleased with how his horse has coped with the multinational schedule and believes he might be all the better for his most recent run.
“There was not much time between the Doncaster Mile and this race but he is a very good traveller and it was always the plan to progress from Sydney to the Champions Mile and the horse looks well.
“I think his condition will be better for this race than for the Doncaster Mile which was his first run for five months,” Yoshimura said.