Fownes will start Senor Toba and Rocket Spade in blinkers, encouraged by New Zealand Derby winner Rocket Spade’s emphatic trial win over 1200m at Sha Tin last week when sporting head gear.
“He has raced in most of his races with blinkers on, he won the New Zealand Derby with the blinkers and I’ve basically given him a good preparation leading into the Derby and now we just hope that he gets a good draw and he can give us a nice run,” Fownes said. “Senor Toba is also a nice horse and his best racing is ahead of him.”
Attempting to emulate Derby success with Sky Darci (2021) and Super Satin (2010), Fownes continued a potent mid-season push when Bullbars gelding Kokushi Musou prevailed on Wednesday night.
“The draw helped tonight and he’s done his job,” Fownes said. “He’s quite a nice horse and he will get a little bit further as he strengthens and matures.”
Moreira will reunite with Fownes after a pivotal display. Purton started the meeting promisingly by notching his 90th win of the season when he drove Richard Gibson-trained Viva Mama to success in the Class 5 Selkirk Handicap (1000m). It was Gibson’s 12th victory of the campaign.
Trailing Purton by nine wins after the first race on Wednesday night, Moreira responded in devastating fashion to reduce the margin to five – 90-85.
Diamond Star extended late under the four-time champion rider to claim the Class 5 Wiltshire Handicap (1650m) for John Size. A son of Sweet Orange, the six-year-old broke his Hong Kong maiden status at his 24th attempt.
The Brazilian then upped the ante with success aboard Danny Shum’s Packing Famous in the Class 4 Renfrew Handicap (1800m), with the Press Statement gelding accelerating powerfully after a rails-hugging ride by Moreira.
Formerly known as Marcher Sur L’Eau when a runaway winner for Tom Dabernig and Ben Hayes in Australia, Packing Famous has scope for improvement, according to Shum.
“He’s only lightly-raced and I think he’s getting better,” Shum said. “He’s a consistent horse.”
Moreira continued a fine display aboard Like That for Frankie Lor in the second section of the Class 4 Hereford Handicap (1200m), dictating the tempo from the front to win comfortably.
Moreira’s fourth success came atop three-year-old Eason, whose dominant victory in the first section of the Chester Handicap (1200m) gave Lor a double – and a prospect to be excited about.