Three men and their cameras faced the cold breeze that nipped along Sha Tin’s backstretch at 7.31am on Thursday (17 January) morning, all to capture on file Beauty Generation’s final gallop before Sunday’s G1 Stewards’ Cup (1600m).
As workouts go, it looked good enough: not obviously exuberant, not blow-me-down sensational, but most certainly the display of a horse in peak form, ticking along powerfully and without undue exertion into his next assignment. And what the eye could not see, the hands and legs of the work rider could feel.
“It’s the first time Romain (Clavreul), who rides him every morning, has been on him out on the grass and he just said he felt amazing,” Moore said after his “French riding boy” had delivered an entirely upbeat post-gallop assessment.
“He said he doesn’t know where he gets all this energy from,” Moore continued, “the horse just feels so good. He loves what he’s doing; he’s thriving and maybe getting better; he’s such a competitor.”
Beauty Generation started his workout at the 1800m point and galloped 800m in an easy 53.9s (28.3, 25.6) before slowing into the turn and easing down to a walk for his return along the dirt track’s back side. By the time the six-year-old reached Moore at the all-weather loop’s exit tunnel he had a swagger to his step, his head bobbing mischievously.
“That’s how we want him going into another Group 1 race,” the trainer said. “He’s going into the race in perfect shape, if not better than he’s ever been. He’s relaxed in his work, he’s a happy horse and we couldn’t be happier.
“He didn’t hang at all in that gallop; he was shod on Monday and everything went well with that,” he added.
Facing Conte