The Sunday Telegraph

A Classic upset

10-1 shot Kameko stuns odds-on favourite Pinatubo at Newmarket

- Marcus Armytage RACING CORRESPOND­ENT

All good things come to those who wait. A month late it may have been but, on a June day usually put aside for the Derby, racing hailed a potential new champion when Kameko stayed on strongly up the hill to triumph in the Qipco 2,000 Guineas, the first Classic to be run behind closed doors, at Newmarket yesterday.

A first Classic for jockey Oisin Murphy, a first for Sheikh Fahad Al Thani, the colt’s owner and the race’s sponsor, and a first Guineas for trainer Andrew Balding, Kameko, a 10-1 shot, wore down Wichita, the irresistib­le combinatio­n of Aidan O’Brien and Frankie Dettori, to win by a neck.

Pinatubo, the 5-6 favourite, was a length further back in third but, if body language counts for anything, William Buick, his jockey, never looked overly confident. Maybe a higher juvenile rating than Frankel added a metaphoric­al few pounds to the colt’s weight cloth.

Buick was one of the first to start nudging his mount along at halfway, but the Godolphin colt appeared to come back on the bridle going into the Dip. However, Pinatubo was not able to reproduce the superiorit­y he showed as a juvenile.

He is not the first champion juvenile to look a little more ordinary at three but, a bit like the junior school allrounder who is captain of every team but cannot get in a first team at secondary school, his peer group have caught him up and, in the case of Kameko and Wichita, overtaken him.

Alas, one of sport’s “I was there” moments it was not. In the two-and-aquarter century history of the Classics, never can one have been run in front of fewer people and the victor hailed by so small a number.

Balding, 47, had his horses in flying form in the first five days of 2020’s truncated season. Ever since he was born in 1972, he has lived in the shadow of Mill Reef, his father Ian’s champion, who won the Derby a year earlier.

But in that year’s Guineas, Mill Reef bumped into Brigadier Gerard, the other great champion of his era. “The biggest regret of Dad’s career was not winning the Guineas. It’s good to have it on the CV,” said Balding, who also trained the jockey, who went through the trainer’s apprentice academy.

“We’ve been looking forward to the race for a long time, but the Guineas is the Guineas whenever it is run. I’m thrilled for Oisin, the Qatar Racing team and everyone at Kingsclere.

“He won a Group One last year [Vertem Futurity], which has a good record of producing Guineas winners. The first half of the race went to plan but I’m not sure what Oisin was doing in the second half! The horse got a bit disorganis­ed, but I loved the way he finished off so strongly.

“Oisin is an amazing asset. For him to get his first Classic for us is special and I hope Jason Watson [also champion apprentice when attached to the Balding yard] does the same today [on Quadrilate­ral in the 1,000 Guineas].”

Kameko is now the new 3-1 favourite for the Derby. “My current thoughts are that Ascot will come too soon, so that’s out of the equation,” Balding said. “There is only one Derby and he’s the best three-year-old around. There’s a stamina doubt but there’s only one way to find out. I think his optimum trip will be a mile and a quarter but, for one day only, he might stay a mile and a half.”

Speaking about being the only man in the winners’ enclosure to greet the winner, Balding said: “It’s bizarre. But,

I promise you, I feel no less elation than I would have done had there been 500,000 people here.”

Murphy, 24, the reigning champion jockey, echoed those sentiments. “There’s not the same atmosphere,” he admitted. “In fact, there’s no atmosphere, but it means the same to me. There were only two people shouting towards the end of the race; Frankie and me. Frankie was shouting at me and I don’t know what I was shouting at. But when I look back I won’t remember there was no one there.

“To do it in these colours [for his employer Sheikh Fahad’s Qatar Racing], for Andrew Balding, who I started with, by the same sire [Kitten’s Joy] as Roaring Lion [the horse that launched him into the big time though, ironically, he came up short in the Guineas] – you couldn’t make it up.

“For me, this is near the top. I’ve always said the Arc and the Derby were my favourite races, but this is a stallionma­king race and, taking myself out of the equation, it is a very important win for Sheikh Fahad and Andrew.”

For Dettori, it will go down as a near miss. “I thought I had it, when I saw Pinatubo off the bridle, but then I saw a shadow on my outside,” he said.

Buick, meanwhile, put a brave face on it. “No excuses,” he said. “He was beaten by two better horses on the day.”

 ??  ?? Closing in on glory: Kameko, ridden by Oisin Murphy, stretches out to win the 2,000 Guineas, the first Classic of the Flat season, behind closed doors at Newmarket
Closing in on glory: Kameko, ridden by Oisin Murphy, stretches out to win the 2,000 Guineas, the first Classic of the Flat season, behind closed doors at Newmarket
 ??  ?? Behind closed doors: Kameko, ridden by Oisin Murphy (left), wins the Qipco 2,000 Guineas ahead of Wichita and Pinatubo in front of the empty main stand at Newmarket
Behind closed doors: Kameko, ridden by Oisin Murphy (left), wins the Qipco 2,000 Guineas ahead of Wichita and Pinatubo in front of the empty main stand at Newmarket
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