Gulf Today

Japanese quartet bid to land Arc ‘Holy Grail’

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PARIS: A record four Japanese horses will line up for Sunday’s Prix de l’arc de Triomphe with one of the quartet’s jockeys Christophe Lemaire saying Japan winning the race widely regarded as the greatest in Europe would be the “Holy Grail”.

The 43-year-old Frenchman, who has been crowned Japan’s champion jockey on multiple occasions since moving there in 2015, rides the outsider of the four in veteran Stay Foolish.

He, Deep Bond, who was tailed off last in the 2021 Arc, and the more fancied duo Japanese Derby winner Do Deuce and serial Group One winner Titleholde­r will battle it out with 16 of Europe’s finest thoroughbr­eds at Longchamp.

Germany’s defending champion Torquator Tasso returns with the formidable presence of Frankie Detori on board -- bidding for a recordexte­nding seventh win -- but has a difficult draw on the outside.

Vadeni and Westover, winners of the French and Irish Derby’s respective­ly, also feature with the former’s jockey Christophe Soumillon facing a long time on the sidelines later in the month.

The apologetic Belgian ace received a 60 day ban for causing the fall of Rossa Ryan on Friday at Saint Cloud.

Luxembourg, who beat Vadeni in the Irish Champion Stakes, is likely to start favourite to give trainer Aidan O’brien his third win in the race.

The tough as teak Alpinista is seeking her sixth successive Group One win and would be a popular victory due to her 74-year-old English trainer and raconteur Mark Prescot.

Prescot compares his job to that of a school master and normally prefers to stay at home when his horses run abroad -- save for an occasion when he had a runner in the Japan Cup but when it was unable to run he ended up being taken to an Eric Clapton concert.

He confessed to the Thoroughbr­ed Racing Commentary he had never heard of Clapton but found it all rather fun -- Sunday though he will be on his best behaviour.

“I’ll have to go to Longchamp, Miss Rausing (the owner) is insistent,” he told the Racing Post.

“It’s a bit of a waste of time when one could be training horses.”

The Japanese, though, are not in the least bit intimidate­d by their European rivals and are bullish about their chances of winning the Arc at the 18th atempt.

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