
There has been more than whiff of
cordite about the way the current Flat turf season has burst into life
and further fireworks can be expected at Newmarket on Guineas weekend.
Jim Bolger s unbeaten Teofilo should fill more than the eye as he bids
to extend his unbeaten run in the 2,000 Guineas on May 5 and banish the
temporary blues that greeted the news of a recent training setback for
the short-priced favourite for the first colts Classic.
The imperious Teofilo has been given a clean bill of health by
connections and remains the one they all have to beat but the
opposition has grown more potent by the day and includes Sir Michael
Stoute s formidable colt Adagio, an nonchalant winner of the Craven
Stakes and arguably the greatest threat to Bolger s mighty star.
On Sunday May 6 Newmarket hosts the 1,000 Guineas and the first fillies
Classic is a demonstrably less competitive heat than the colts
counterpart. Once again that man Bolger holds all the aces courtesy of
his star filly Finsceal Beo, a dual Group 1 winner last autumn and a
worthy favorite to land the fillies prize.
Reported in the best of form by her astute handler, she should take the
world of beating after the failure of Sander Camillo, her main market
rival, to run any sort of race at Newmarket in the Nell Gwyn Stakes. It
will take something special to stop the 1,000 Guineas crossing the
Irish Sea while on the same day Sixties Icon, the 2006 St Leger winner,
should begin his season on a high note by lifting the Jockey Club
Stakes for trainer, Jeremy Noseda.
Chester s prestigious three-day meeting follows hot on the heels of
Newmarket and the Derby hopefuls will be on show in the Chester Vase on
May 10 where John Gosden s easy Epsom winner Raincoat could bid to put
flesh on the bones of his Classic challenge while in the Cheshire Oaks
on May 9 the fillies will seek to do the same for their Classic
aspirations. Barry Hills boasts a superb record on this turning track
and any horse he runs in the aforementioned two races should be worth
close inspection.
On Wednesday May 9 the Chester Cup is the meeting s big betting race
and Philip Hobbs may well let the irrepressible Fair Along, his dual
purpose National Hunt star, bowl along in front on the Roodeye in a
race where four-year-olds often run well. Queen s Vase runner-up
Galient represents this age group while smart northern challengers
Halla San and Admiral, a winner in 2006, stir the pot even thicker.
The run of Classic trials continues at Lingfield on May 12 with the
Lingfield Derby Trial and the similarly-titled Oaks Trial for the
fillies on the same day while over at Haydock the Lancashire course
stages the valuable Swinton Hurdle, a 2m handicap that invariably draws
a high-class field. This year backers should look no further than
Charlie Swan s Empatt for the winner. He comes here bidding for a
hat-trick following impressive victories at Fairyhouse and Ayr.
Over in France on the following day, May 13, the European Flat season
steps up a gear with the Poule d Essai des Poulains (French 2,000
Guineas) and the Poule d Essai des Pouliches (French 1,000 Guineas) on
the same card at Longchamp. Ballydoyle and Godolphin have both targeted
these prestigious prizes in recent seasons and their runners should be
closely inspected while the talented Darjina flies the flag for France
in the Pouliches .
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Malcolm Heyhoe writes weekly horse racing articles for the UK horse racing betting site UK horse racing betting | news | free bets