The Borneo Post (Sabah)

What now for racing? Lessons learned from Royal Ascot

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LONDON: Ascot took a financial hit by putting on Royal Ascot behind closed doors and lessons were learned for the Epsom Derby and Oaks, the next highlights of the racing calendar.

Royal Ascot went ahead without its crowds and well-dressed punters but the final winner's name, Who Dares Wins, seemed apt as most commentato­rs concluded it had been a success in difficult circumstan­ces with stringent health constraint­s.

A winner for Queen Elizabeth II, Stradivari­us's third successive Ascot Gold Cup and Nando Parrado -- at 150/1 the longest-priced winner in Royal Ascot's history -- were some of the ontrack highlights.

The organisers of the Epsom Derby and Oaks have won permission to stage both races without spectators on July 4 as part of a seven-race card.

AFP Sport asked personalit­ies from different walks of racing life what Ascot had proved to them, as England emerges from the coronaviru­s lockdown.

Ascot director of racing Nick Smith and his team added six races to the five-day programme and set up a super Saturday with three Group One races, switching two of them from earlier in the week.

He said: "It has been a great, if strange week.

"Running six extra races seemed like the right thing to do in the environmen­t we faced and were well supported

"Two wins for lady jockeys (Hayley Turner and Hollie Doyle) and a win and three seconds for America were amongst the many landmarks of the week."

Richard Morecombe, co-founder of Chelsea Thoroughbr­eds which has around 20 horses with a limit of 10 investors per horse, says potential owners may be put off buying horses if they are not allowed on the racecourse. It is not all doom and gloom though. "What would be good news going forward is if the extending of the programme at Royal Ascot is something they would keep," he said.

"By doing so it gives owners like us the opportunit­y of a genuine chance of a Royal Ascot winner.

"I don't think it dumbs down Ascot by having extra handicaps. Goodwood and York have non-championsh­ip races and they work very well."

Mark Johnston admitted he had a frustratin­g week but at least came away with his first win in the Royal Hunt Cup.

The 60-year-old -- the all-time record holder for training winners in the United Kingdom -- is a firm advocate of allowing owners back onto the racecourse.

"The only lesson we can take forward is, could we have more people at the racecourse? And that stable staff can stay overnight."

Although Johnston was himself laid low with coronaviru­s for a fortnight earlier this year, he believes the risk to staff being at a course is low.

"It is all about perception but the risk of catching it (Covid-19) is so negligible there is no reason not to have more people on the racecourse," he said.

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