It was Hayes first Group 1 victory since his return to the Hong Kong training ranks four years ago – and his first since All Thrills Too in 2002.
Hayes said he was proud because Purton said everything went wrong really.
“The start wasn’t perfect and he got pressure when he normally gets a bit of cover, so I think it was a better win than it looked,” he said.
“You’re never confident going into international Group 1s because there’s so many unknowns, but I was as confident as you could be.
“Probably not as confident as the market, but in market terms I thought $1.80, not $1.10.”
Hayes will wait to see how his rising star recovers before deciding on his next assignment.
“We’ll see how he pulls up, but the initial one will be the Group 1 sprint in late January, six weeks between the runs and then after that, we’ll make a decision whether we go to the (Hong Kong Classic) mile (1600m) or not,” Hayes said.
Hayes said it had been the first time in his past three runs that Ka Ying Rising didn’t get everything his own way and didn’t relax.
“He was going to relax, Victor (The Winner) came up to him and really eyeballed him,” he said
“So, I think when he relaxes, we all know he’s more explosive. That was probably the least exciting to the eye, but I know that was a great win because he did pull.”
Hyped for weeks as closing in on the title of the world’s leading sprinter, Ka Ying Rising will continue his path to the world’s richest turf race, the HK$100 million G1 The Everest (1200m) at Randwick next October.
Such was the dominance of Ka Ying Rising’s lead-up races to the sprint that opposition trainers and jockeys had all but conceded defeat and were hoping at best to share some of the minor money in the HK$26 million prize pool.
Drawn in barrier 11 in the 14-horse field, the only pre-race worry for Hayes was whether the gelding could be caught wide.
Japan’s three-pronged attack of Toshin Macau, Satono Reve and Lugal was aiming to break Hong Kong’s stranglehold on the race.
They had hoped to emulate Japanese horses Lord Kanaloa (2012 and 2013) and Danon Smash (2020) as the only internationals to stop the local horses from saluting in the past 12 editions of the race.
Britain, was also hoping to break the trend with Ralph Beckett’s Starlust.
Coming off a last start win in the Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint (1000m) but he finished second last, in front of Victor The Winner.
The other international in the field, Australia’s Recommendation finished 12th.