Portsmouth News

Coltrane is backed for success on Trials Day

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Coltrane can make a successful start to his campaign in an intriguing renewal of the Longines Sagaro Stakes at Ascot.

The Group Three contest traditiona­lly gives some of the country’s top stayers an early sighter for the Gold Cup in June and is one of the highlights on what is an excellent Royal Ascot Trials Day card.

The class horse in the field is undoubtedl­y the Alan Kingtraine­d Trueshan, who has not yet lined up for a Gold Cup due to unsuitable ground, but has won the Goodwood Cup, the Prix du Cadran and three successive­renewalsof­Ascot’s Long Distance Cup over the past few years.

However, King himself admitted his stable star may not be the force he once was after he was beaten on his reappearan­ce at Nottingham three weeks ago and while he may still be good enough to lift this Group Three prize, backing a horse on the decline is rarely a smart move.

Andrew Balding’s Coltrane, on the other hand, rose through the ranks last season, progressin­g from a mark of 95 tohiscurre­ntloftyper­chof116.

The six-year-old beat Trueshan by a neck when lifting the Doncaster Cup in September and was beaten just a head by the same rival on Champions Day over this course and distance, so they are clearly closely matched.

Coltrane’s fitness does have to be taken on trust on his seasonal debut, but Balding is unlikely to have left him short for what is a prestigiou­s contest in its own right.

Bradsell is a tentative pick in the British Racing School 40th Anniversar­y Commonweal­th Cup Trial.

The Tasleet colt was hugely impressive on his racecourse debut at York last spring before successful­ly stepping up in class to lift the Coventry Stakes at the Royal meeting.

He was a hot favourite to complete his hat-trick in the Group One Phoenix Stakes in August, but could finish only fourth behind Aidan O'Brien’s Little Big Bear, after which it emerged he had suffered a season-ending injury.

Bradsell’s York success proved he handles an ease in the ground and he is taken to make a successful return to action in what looks a strong Group Three.

The best bet on the card is My Prospero, who should take some stopping in the Howden Bloodstock Paradise Stakes.

The Iffraaj colt won a Newbury maiden, a Listed prize at Sandown and a Group Two in France last season for William

Haggas, but it is his most recent run in defeat that is most noteworthy.

My Prospero faced a significan­t rise in grade for the Champion Stakes at Ascot in October, but proved he can mix it in Group One company with an excellent effort to finish third behind Bay Bridge and Adayar, beaten just half a length.

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