Fownes heads into LONGINES HKIR race day fresh from a double at Sha Tin last Sunday, with a degree of confidence about two of his favourite horses Rise High and Southern Legend, but also acknowledging that the competition is tough not only this weekend but year round in Hong Kong.
“There are so many facets to training well in Hong Kong and the competition’s got a lot tougher. It’s about being sharper, about good horsemanship and identifying as quickly as possible what best suits a horse from preferred surface to training regime. And it’s a handicap system, which makes the racing very competitive and very tough.
“You have so many good, new horses coming in and you have to strike a balance with your older horses; keeping them to the level where they can perform and retire them at the right time when they’ve done their job.
“In Hong Kong, we generally do well in moving horses on at the right time which is a good thing, it’s good for everyone. The Jockey Club has a great system in place – when a horse is imported the owners have to pay about US$8000 towards their export no matter what in re-allocating that horse to another country. We’re trying to do the best for the horses, which is so important these days,” he said.
As to the future and his penchant for a bet, Fownes is refreshingly candid but perhaps unnecessarily self-effacing given his currently threatening fourth place on the trainer’s table. “I’m 52 and just keep plugging away, trying to get the stable back in top form. I’ve always been a top three, top four trainer but the last couple of seasons have been a bit tougher.
“Perhaps I need to see it more as a business and run it accordingly. I try to do the right thing by the owners, persevering with their horses. Maybe those clients appreciate it but there’s other people who probably don’t if they see you sliding down to sixth or seventh so I’ve got to run it as a business and prove to everyone that I am in the top tier where I’ve been for 80 per cent of my career.”
Fownes believes a focus on cultivating young owners should be a high priority. “A lot of bigger owners are getting older as all of us are so you want to encourage the younger people to come in and be excited by it. Show them how dad gets excited shouting for his horse or leading in a winner. They’ll remember their dads doing that and follow suit because it becomes a family tradition. We need younger members and owners to take the sport to the next level,” he said.
Fownes on his two HKIR runners:
RISE HIGH: “He’s close to my heart. I’ve predicted big things from him for quite a while. He’s got that rating there now, you know he’s 127, so we just hope he can get that big Group 1 win he deserves. He’s been prepared for this race for a long time. I’ve had this in my sights for a year so I just hope it works out. He’s there to make his presence felt and get his name up in lights. He deserves it, he’s a very good horse and I still think he’s just getting to where he should be and I think in the next one to two seasons we’ll see the best of him.
“He took time to adjust to the new environment here and had a few setbacks early on and we’ve taken our time with him. We missed his Derby year even though we still won three races in his four year old career at the end of that season. We didn’t put pressure on him early. The owners were very good. They said ‘take your time’. I said ‘he’s a very good horse so we’ve just to do it right, do what’s right for the horse. What we sacrifice now, we will hopefully get back in the future and he’s been doing that.’”
SOUTHERN LEGEND: “He’s a warhorse. He’s as hard as nails. He’s only had the two runs over 2000 (metres) and run well and I think he can handle the 2400 (metres). In the Gold Cup earlier in the year, against Exultant, he closed off really well. And then two weeks ago in the Jockey Club Cup, he was held up on the corner and still finished the race off nicely running third, again behind Exultant.
“He’s very versatile. He came to me from Australia with just pure sprinting form and we certainly made him into a very good “miler”. Obviously we were taking on Beauty Generation when he was at his absolute peak but he was running well behind him all the time, with seconds and thirds. If there was no Beauty Generation, everyone would be saying ‘wow, this is a very smart horse’.
“We struck gold in Singapore a couple of times and he’s tough, I think he’ll run the trip. His closing sectionals are always good. History tells us it (the Vase) is normally run at a sedate pace and if it is we will have him handy and if not we’ll just ride him where he’s comfortable, ride him to get the trip and you know he’s not going to be too far away. Obviously he’s up against some top class horses but it also gives us options with him in the future. Australia has opened up now and if you can have a horse to perform at International Group 1 level over 2400 metres then you’ve got big races in Australia we could seriously think about taking him to. He’s not getting any younger but he’s still a sound horse who’s racing well.
“He’s a good, happy and healthy horse and they always run well. We had him entered for all three (Mile, Cup and Vase) but I just felt, after running at the 2000 (metres), I wouldn’t want to bring him back to the “mile” and Rise High was set for the Cup. I’ve always felt Rise High was the far superior horse even though there’s only one point between them in the ratings.
“Southern Legend might find that extra gear at the 2400 metres. That’s what I’m hoping for. He’s plugged away strongly over 2000 metres and if he can handle that couple of extra furlongs then we’re seriously in business.”