Aidan O’Brien is satisfied with reports out of Sha Tin as his stable’s travelling trio Magical, Order Of Australia and Mogul wind up for Sunday’s (13 December) HK$95 million LONGINES Hong Kong International Races, but believes the task of winning will be as tough as ever.
“We don’t expect it to be easy. Those races in Hong Kong are absolutely world class standard,” O’Brien said by telephone from his Ballydoyle base. “The horses just did a canter (on Tuesday) and the lads seem happy with them at the moment.”
The master trainer has – as is usual, even in non-pandemic days – entrusted on-the-ground preparations to loyal lieutenant Pat Keating and his small team of experienced travelling staff. Unable to jet in for the big races this year due to Covid-19 travel restrictions, O’Brien will mastermind manoeuvres from County Tipperary, hopeful that his contenders will add to his famous stable’s two previous Sha Tin glories, achieved when Highland Reel took the G1 LONGINES Hong Kong Vase (2400m) in 2015 and 2017.
Magical, with three of her seven G1 wins accrued this year, is the event’s international bill-topper, while Mogul brings with him a big home reputation and a G1 success in the Grand Prix de Paris; Order Of Australia shocked America and beyond last time out with a long-odds upset in the G1 Breeders’ Cup Mile and presents as a fascinating rival to Hong Kong’s old and new star milers, Beauty Generation and Golden Sixty.
“It’s a tough place to win, which is good for competitive racing,” O’Brien said. “Unless you go there with good horses, it’s very hard to win.”
Tempo’s the key for Magical
Magical has enjoyed another profitable year in her stellar career and would become O’Brien’s most prolific G1 winner should she collect her eighth top-flight victory in the HK$28 million LONGINES Hong Kong Cup (2000m).
The five-year-old has earned her status as one of the sport’s finest race mares, her talent and her character having combined to produce an athlete capable of competing at the top level in 20 of her 27 career races, with wins achieved at home in Ireland and in Britain, and fine efforts in defeat in France and the USA, notably when a close second to Enable in the 2018 Breeders’ Cup Turf.
“Magical has travelled plenty and she likes travelling, and Pat has been happy with her since she arrived there. Everything looks perfect at the moment,” O’Brien said.
“She’s a relaxed filly with a good mind and she’s raced all the way from seven furlongs to a mile and a half. She’s a mature adult now and she’s very easy to handle, very straightforward and very genuine.”
The Galileo mare started her 2020 campaign with rolling wins in the G1 Pretty Polly Stakes (2000m) and G1 Tattersalls Gold Cup (2000m) before running a gutsy second to the world’s current top-rated galloper Ghaiyyath in the G1 Juddmonte International Stakes (2051m). But Magical avenged that reversal in style at her next outing when snaring her second G1 Irish Champion Stakes (2000m), having raced at her rival’s quarters, exerting pressure throughout and then quickening on by; her latest two efforts saw her place third in the G1 QIPCO Champion Stakes (1993m) at Ascot and second again in the G1 Breeders’ Cup Turf (2400m) at Keeneland.