Aethero worked solo down the turf track’s back straight at Sha Tin this morning (Thursday, 5 December) in a manner which left John Moore satisfied that Hong Kong’s rising sprint star could well make history this weekend.
“He went without a work mate because he’s a very fit horse, ready to go into Sunday’s big one,” the trainer said.
“His work has gone to plan and everything has shown he has the talent. Now he’s got to prove that he’s a world class sprinter.”
The Sebring gelding will on Sunday (8 December) attempt to become the first Southern Hemisphere-bred three-year-old to win the G1 LONGINES Hong Kong Sprint – only two others have tried.
“He’s very exciting, he has an engine,” Moore said as the tall chestnut circled post-workout on Sha Tin’s floodlit grass to the soundtrack of clicking camera shutters.
“He looks like he could go on to be a champion. He’s got everything about him – appearance, stride, the athleticism, it’s very exciting,” he added.
Moore has been often quoted making comparison with his past champion, the similarly coloured and conformed Able Friend. Aethero is ahead of even that great gelding’s curve in terms of his precocity, and while it has been a rapid ascent from his April debut, through six races, to arrive at one of the world’s biggest sprints, Moore believes his charge can handle it.
“He was beaten first-up this season when things went wrong at the start but that was only greenness, it was him being a work in progress and you expect those things to happen when they’re not yet the finished product. You’re going to see inexperience come out in races when things don’t go right at the start,” he said.
“But last race, when everything went right and he got there to the front and just blitzed them. If not for headwind he’d have probably broken the track record.”