Sunderland Echo

North can star on Champions Stakes day

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Lord North could be the value call in what is a mouthwater­ing renewal of the Qipco Champion Stakes at Ascot tomorrow.

The most likely winner of the 10-furlong showpiece is defending champion Magical, who has enjoyed another excellent campaign and there was no fluke about her defeat of Ghaiyyath when landing her second Irish Champion Stakes at Leopardsto­wn last month.

However, the brilliant mare’ s odds are skinny enough in such a competitiv­e event and the temptation is to look elsewhere.

Lord North actually appears the second string of two runners for John Gosden, with Frankie Dettori partnering French Derby winner Mishriff.

However, people can have short memories in racing and it was only four months ago that Lord North produced a scintillat­ing display to land the Prince of Wales’s Stakes at the Royal meeting over the course and distance.

The five-year-old has run just once since, finishing a creditable third behind Ghaiyyath and Magical in the Juddmonte Internatio­nal at York in August.

Lord North has little over a length to find with the latter on that form and returning to a track where we know he excels, it is not difficult to imagine him turning the tables under James Doyle.

Gosden also has excellent claims of landing the Queen Elizabeth II Stakes with the hitherto unbeaten Palace Pier, but at odds-on, he makes little appeal from a betting perspectiv­e.

A more attractive propositio­n is the Aidan O’Brientrain­ed Circus Maximus, who is two from two at Ascot, having won the St James’s Palace Stakes on the round course and the Queen Anne over this straight mile.

The Galileo colt is versatile in terms of go and while he has significan­t ground to make up on Palace Pier on their meeting in France earlier this season, the more demanding nature of Ascot should at least help him close the gap.

Stradivari­us is likely to be a class apart from his rivals in the British Champions Long Distance Cup.

The triple Gold Cup hero is five from seven at Ascot overall, his two defeats coming in this race in 2017 and 12 months ago when beaten a length and a nose respective­ly.

It is obviously not ideal that he ran in the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe just a fortnight ago, finishing seventh, but he did not have to hard a time in a race that effectivel­y turned into a sprint and he will be more at home back over two miles on home soil.

Art Power is given another chance to prove his top-level capabiliti­es in the Qipco British Champion Sprint.

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