The one thing we have seen of the Japanese racing in the past decade is a growing hunger to travel abroad, but while 2020 has not been kind to Japanese raiders, a strong but small team entered for the 2020 LONGINES Hong Kong International Races could change that.
Nearly a dozen horses were stranded in Dubai after the races were called off at the last minute; others interested in heading to Europe or America in the spring were unable to travel later in the year on saw long travel delays and significant risks.
Ultimately, though, the Japanese are just as determined to travel to Hong Kong for the International Races they love (and often win), this time bringing a team of six, featuring two previous HKIR winners, three other G1 winners and a G1 placegetter, all venturing to participate in their favourite year-end international meet.
The Japanese assault is headlined by Win Bright and Admire Mars, two returning HKIR champions from 2019. Both horses had much of their 2020 ravaged by the pandemic as they flew to Dubai in March, only for the Dubai World Cup meeting to be cancelled immediately after they cleared quarantine at Meydan. It took a little over a week to get them back home, leaving their late spring and early autumn in chaos.
Admire Mars was looking to make his 2020 debut in the G1 Dubai Turf (1800m) on Dubai World Cup day, but with all that prep and the two-week stint in limbo at Meydan, he lost all opportunity to race in Japan’s spring and summer months.
He made his first start of 2020 in the G1 Yasuda Kinen (1600m), a tall order for any horse making their first start of the year against the country’s best milers. He stalked the pace well early on but was overtaken by five other G1 winners to finish sixth.
The Yasuo Tomomichi-trained colt was spelled for another few months after that poor performance to start afresh in the autumn. He came back in the G2 Swan Stakes (1400m) in October, where he held on for third before going on to the G1 Mile Championship at Hanshin in late November, where he again posted a third.
“He has had two solid runs so far, so we have him set up to peak in Hong Kong. I think he is physically better this year than he was last year when he won,” Tomomichi said.