Western Mail

Lord North is the value pick

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LORD NORTH could be the value call in a mouthwater­ing renewal of the Juddmonte Internatio­nal at York.

While the grandstand­s will not be packed to the rafters as is usually the case for the Ebor Festival, the action on the track appears no less competitiv­e, with the day-one feature in particular an absolute cracker.

Charlie Appleby’s Ghaiyyath is the hot favourite - and rightly so, with his successive top-level victories in the Coronation Cup at Newmarket and the Coral-Eclipse at Sandown both hugely impressive.

However, Coronation Cup runnerup Anthony Van Dyck did little for the form at Royal Ascot - and while the third home Stradivari­us has since cemented his status as a legendary stayer, a mile and a half at Newmarket was never going to be his bag.

Ghaiyyath’s defeat of the wondermare Enable looks superb on paper. But by John Gosden’s admission, the latter was nowhere near her peak that day and not thrown into the heat of the battle as a result, so the form may not be as good as it looked.

The Godolphin-owned runner may well prove himself the best 10-furlong horse in training on the

Knavesmire - but at only a fraction of odds against, there are enough reasons to look elsewhere.

Gosden’s Lord North has progressed from a high-class handicappe­r to a top-drawer performer in less 12 months, with connection­s crediting his improvemen­t to a gelding operation that has changed his state of mind.

The son of Dubawi stepped up big time from his narrow defeat of Elarqam on his seasonal reappearan­ce at Haydock with a demolition job in the Prince of Wales’s Stakes at Royal Ascot, displaying a sizzling turn of foot to leave his rivals trailing in his wake.

The Juddmonte Internatio­nal has been Lord North’s objective ever since, and he arrives nicely freshened following a two-month break.

Appleby’s Cloudbridg­e gets the nod in the Group Three Tattersall­s Acomb Stakes.

The Newmarket handler’s juveniles tend to improve significan­tly from their first competitiv­e outing, so this son of American stallion Hard Spun deserves extra credit for winning so impressive­ly on his introducti­on at Leicester two and a half weeks ago.

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