Vincent Ho shifts his weight to his left foot – the fingers of his right hand flick the outside seam of his thigh and for but a fleeting instant his steady lo-fi monotone stalls, intruded upon by what appears to be a prickling of self-consciousness.
Ho is not a natural in front of a TV camera. He is a professional though, in whatever he does; his discomfort is brushed off as he faces broadcaster Edward Sadler’s microphone with his usual measured responses, answering routine questions about weekend runners before barrier trials begin.
The rider is Hong Kong’s great ‘local’ hope. At Sha Tin on Sunday (22 March), he will hop aboard the circuit’s latest equine superstar-in-waiting, the dashing Golden Sixty, and, despite the burden of a city’s expectations upon his honed shoulders, he will forget the media hoopla and be at ease with leather in hands as he heads to post for the HK$20 million BMW Hong Kong Derby (2000m) – no ‘homegrown’ jockey has taken the prize in 25 years.
“Everything he does is about winning the race – he doesn’t think about not winning,” Golden Sixty’s handler Francis Lui says of him.
Trainer and jockey have forged a sit-up-and-take-note partnership in recent times. Last season they teamed for 20 wins and this year the running tally is 18. Golden Sixty has delivered nine of those in an irresistible run to the BMW Hong Kong Derby that has included successes in the Hong Kong Classic Mile (1600m) and Hong Kong Classic Cup (1800m).