
Key events
5m ago
1.55 ASCOT RESULT:
19m ago
1.40 NEWMARKET RESULT:
2h ago
Preamble
2.27 ASCOT, GROUP TWO SUMMER MILE, 7F 213YD
Two of the principals from the Queen Anne Stakes that opened the Royal meeting last month are back in action here, as More Thunder, second home behind the shock winner, Ten Bob Tony, renews acquaintance with the fourth, Zeus Olympios. There was a lot of pace on that day – Ten Bob Tony came from last to first to win as it collapsed – and I think the steadier gallop that is likely on the round course could well help Zeus Olympios to turn around the form. Docklands, the Queen Anne winner in 2025, is also a big runner at a track that suits him so well (although he was only seventh in this year’s renewal) while Christophe Ferland’s No Lunch, unbeaten in his last six starts, is an interesting contender from France.
SELECTION: ZEUS OLYMPIOS.
1.55 ASCOT RESULT:
1. DUBAI BLING 12-1, 2. Behike, 3. Fandom. 15 ran.
Off and running in the 1.55 at Ascot…
Schrodinger’s Cat away well, Toca Madera prominent early …
Behike coming stands side, Dubai Bling coming through far side, into the final furlong already .. two in it, well apart on the track, it’s a photo between Dubai Bling and Behike …
The sprint handicap at Ascot is next on the whistle-stop agenda: Behike is a solid favourite at 100-30 but Schrodinger’s Cat is in to around 8-1 second-favourite with King Of Light and Havana Hurricane next in on 9-1.
JULY CUP CONTENDER: DOUBLE RUSH
Age: 4. Career: 11 races, 5 wins. Group One wins: 0. Trainer: Andrew Balding. Timeform rating: 118p.
There is not always the biggest of gaps between the top handicappers and the Group One sprinters and Andrew Balding’s Wokingham winner is the latest to try to take the step up to the highest level in his stride.
Double Rush had the benefit of a high draw at Royal Ascot but still deserves huge credit for lugging 9st 9lb to victory in a strong time, and in Timeform’s view, the performance was pretty much on a par with the Jubilee Stakes won by Almeraq earlier in the afternoon. He is young, lightly-raced, improving and definitely right in the mix.
That’s a big tip for Abraham Lincoln in the Superlative Stakes here later, as Haffner was less than two lengths behind his stable companion on debut at the Curragh last month.
1.40 NEWMARKET RESULT:
1. HAFFNER 5-4 fav, 2. Al Wathba, 3. Velociraptor. 7 ran.
Off and running in the 1.40 at Newmarket!
Haffner and Subscription both break well …
Al Wathba making ground towards the lead on the near side … the first three in the betting now 1-2-3 …
Haffner still leads narrowly at halfway, Subscription being asked for an effort, Al Wathba looks a bigger danger to the favourite …
Haffner leads into the final furlong … Al Wathba running on again but he won’t get to the favourite … Haffner wins at 5-4 favourite. Al Wathba second, Subscription in a photo for third.
Ok, we’re almost off and running at Newmarket. As expected, Haffner is a warm favourite at around 11-10, but the best-backed horse in the race is Andrew Balding’s Subscription, an impeccably-bred son of Night Of Thunder, who is down to around 11-4. Al Wathba, though, is easier to back, at 7-2.
JULY CUP CONTENDER: ALMERAQ
Age: 4. Career: 7 races, 4 wins. Group One wins: 1. Trainer: William Haggas. Timeform rating: 120.
William Haggas’s colt arrives as one of the most lightly-raced runners in the field, having been off the track for 258 days after suffering a horrible fall in a race at York in September 2025. Jim Crowley, his rider there, has yet to return to the saddle, but Almeraq made a successful four-year-old debut in May and then followed up as a 25-1 shot in the Group One Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Stakes at Royal Ascot last month.
He stayed on to lead in the final strides there, needing every yard of the stiff uphill finish, but is clearly a hugely talented young sprinter who may still have his best days in front of him.
Satono Reve, incidentally, would be following an illustrious and historic compatriot onto the July Cup’s roll of honour if he can triumph this afternoon, as Agnes World’s win in 2000, with the equally legendary Yutaka Take holding the reins, was the first ever Group One win for a Japanese-trained runner in the UK.
JULY CUP CONTENDER: SATONO REVE
Age: 7. Career: 19 races, 9 wins. Group One wins: 2. Trainer: Noriyuki Hori. Timeform rating: 123.
No horse has gone closer than Satono Reve to giving Japan its first ever win at Royal Ascot, as Noriyuki Hori’s sprinter has finished second in the Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Stakes over six furlongs for the last two years.
His latest defeat was particularly agonising, as he did everything right bar getting his nose down on the line as Almeraq finished fastest of all to deny him the win.
His overall form stacks up impressively in this field and the easier finish on the July course may well suit Satono Reve better than the stiff climb to the line at Ascot.
The punters certainly seem to think so, as he has been backed all morning to currently stand at 2-1 favourite and a repeat of his form earlier this year behind the legendary Hong Kong-trained sprinter, Ka Ying Rising, might well be more than enough.
2.15 NEWMARKET, FILLIES’ HANDICAP, 7F
The nine runners in this fillies’ handicap are all priced up at between 7-2 and 16-1 at present so no outcome would be an entire surprise. Machadadorp, though, looks like a worthy favourite for the Andrew Balding/Oisin Murphy combo, as the form of her narrow win last time was franked when the second went in next time up, and her opening mark of 86 looks more than fair on that basis. True Test, sixth of 30 from an iffy draw in the cauldron of Royal Ascot last time, is a serious rival, though, while from among the older, more experienced competitors, Song N Dance and Shallow both have distinct chances on their best form.
SELECTION: MACHADADORP
1.55 ASCOT, HANDICAP, 5F
The high-numbers had by far the best of it at the Royal meeting last month and while the stalls are in the centre rather than spread right across the course, the near side still appeals as the likeliest source of the winner here. Horses that race up with the pace also tend to be favoured over the minimum trip at this track, and for me at least, the speedy Schrodinger’s Cat, who is drawn in stall 13, fits the bill at around 10-1. He is two stalls away from Regal Envoy, one of the few horses in the race that might give him a lead, and showed that he remains in top form when edged out by a short-head at York last month. Behike, who had little chance from his draw at the Royal meeting last time, has a better pitch today and every hope of success if he is back to his earlier winning form at Lingfield, while Havana Hurricane has a track-and-trip win to his name in the Windsor Castle Stakes last June although his hold-up running style is not ideal.
SELECTION: SCHRODINGER’S CAT
1.40 NEWMARKET, MAIDEN STAKES, 2YO, 7F
A rare appearance for a maiden event on the ITV schedule and while it’s not a race to be betting in, it has a strong back-catalogue of winners and runners that went on to better things. Constitution River, this year’s leading three-year-old, was beaten a short-head in last year’s race – it remains the only defeat on his record – while Field Of Gold, a multiple Group One winner last season, was the winner two years ago.
There’s an obvious favourite in Aidan O’Brien’s Haffner, who was second behind stable companion Abraham Lincoln, the current second favourite for next year’s 2,000 Guineas, in a similar race at the Curragh on Irish Derby weekend, but it would be no surprise at all if one of the unraced runners if either Al Wathba (Charlie Appleby/William Buick) or Subscription (Andrew Balding/Oisin Murphy) were up to the task of winning this on debut. Appleby is looking for his fifth success in the last decade and his overall record at the July Festival is second to none.
SELECTION: AL WATHBA.
JULY CUP CONTENDER: VENETIAN SUN
Age: 3. Career: 8 races, 6 wins. Group One wins: 2. Trainer: Karl Burke. Timeform rating: 118.
Karl Burke’s three-year-old filly gave her owner, Tony Bloom, his biggest win since deciding to invest heavily in the Flat game when she took the Commonwealth Cup at Royal Ascot last month.
She has a leading chance on that form and was a solid favourite for today’s feature event after the final declarations on Thursday morning, but has been drifting steadily this morning after doubts were raised about whether she will line up on the increasingly quick ground.
The going has been good-to-firm for both of Venetian Sun’s Group One wins – she also took the Prix Morny against the colts, including Gstaad, this year’s Irish 2,000 Guineas winner, at Deauville last summer – but Burke believes she is better with some cut in the ground and is particularly sensitive ahead of his star filly’s first run in all-aged company.
It may still be a while before her participation, or otherwise, is confirmed, as Sean Graham, Bloom’s racing manager, may opt to see how the jockeys feel the ground is riding after the first race at 1.40 before reaching a final decision.
Preamble
Good afternoon and welcome to the Guardian’s live coverage of Flat racing’s annual “Super Saturday” – the busiest and most wide-ranging afternoon of action in the calendar.
There are a dozen races from three different tracks – Newmarket, Ascot and York – on the ITV Racing schedule, including the Group One July Cup – the midsummer sprinting championship – at 4.35, and two of the sport’s most historic and popular handicaps: the Bunbury Cup at Newmarket (3.25) and the John Smith’s Cup at York (3.45).
Along the way there’s also a chance to see the current second-favourite for next season’s 2,000 Guineas, Abraham Lincoln, in action in the Superlative Stakes (Newmarket 4.00), while the second and fourth from the Group One Queen Anne Stakes at Royal Ascot last month take each other on again over the same track and trip at 2.27.
The action at Newmarket is underway at 1.40, after which it is all going to be a bit of a blur until the Group Three Silver Cup closes out the televised action at 4.55, so I’ll be teeing up the main contenders for Group One glory in the July Cup with video form, ratings and pen-pics before it all kicks off.
There will be race-by-race previews too through the afternoon, though there’s a summary of my picks for the dozen ITV races here. So, leap into the saddle, shake the reins and hang on tight: it promises to be quite a ride.
View original source — The Guardian ↗


