The Citizen (Gauteng)

Life is good for DWC hopeful

US STAR LIKELY TO FACE 10 RIVALS IN $12M DUBAI WORLD CUP Total stakes at meeting in excess of R455-million.

- dubairacin­gclub.com

American superstar Life Is Good headlines a likely field of 11 for the 26th running of the Grade 1 Dubai World Cup (sponsored by Emirates Airline) on Saturday.

Winner of the Grade 1 Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile and Pegasus World Cup on his last two starts, the Todd Pletcher-trained Life Is Good faces stiff opposition from three of his compatriot­s. They are Doug O’Neill’s Hot Rod Charlie, who has been based in Dubai since January and took the Grade 2 Maktoum Challenge Round 2 last time, as well as Bob Baffert’s Country Grammer and the Steve Asmussen-trained Midnight Bourbon, second and third in the Grade 1 Saudi Cup three weeks’ ago.

An internatio­nal line-up also sees participat­ion from Uruguay, with Grade 1 Premio Latinoamer­icano winner Aero Trem taking his chance for trainer Antonio Cintra, while last year’s second and third return; Chuwa Wizard for Japan and Magny Cours, trained in France by Andre Fabre.

There are three UAE-based runners. Grade 2 Zabeel Mile winner Real World represents trainer Saeed Bin Suroor, a ninetime winner of this race, while Hypothetic­al and Remorse, who finished first and second in the Grade 1 Maktoum Challenge Round 3 last time out, go for Salem Bin Ghadayer and Bhupat Seemar. The sole UK raider is the William Haggas-trained Grocer Jack.

“We are delighted with the strength of the entries for the 26th Dubai World Cup meeting,” said Major General Mohammed Essa Al Adhab, General Manager of Dubai Racing Club. “We have strength and depth across all

nine races and it’s wonderful to have so many different countries represente­d.

“We are also extremely happy to be able to welcome back a capacity crowd for the first time since 2019 and we hope that everyone will enjoy a superb evening of racing.”

Horses and jockeys coming from across the globe will compete in the nine races, which have a combined purse value of $30.5 million (about R455.4 million) including the $12 million for the

Dubai World Cup. All of the races have secured at least $1 million in prize money.

The main supporting race is the $6million Longines Dubai Sheema Classic, which has attracted a likely field of 14, including Group 1 winners Glory Vase and Shahryar, from Japan, as well as Yibir, impressive winner of the Grade 1 Breeders’ Cup Turf for Charlie Appleby.

A strong turnout from the UK includes William Muir’s Grade 1 Coronation Cup winner Pyledriver,

as well as Haggas’ Dubai Honour and Alenquer and Hukum, trained by Owen Burrows.

The UK also has strong representa­tion in the Grade 1 Dubai Turf over 1800m, in which the John Gosden-trained Lord North will defend his title but faces opposition from popular threetime Dubai winner Lord Glitters, trained by David O’Meara, as well as Japanese raiders Schnell Meister, Vin De Garde and Panthalass­a.

The card has a pair of fasci-* nating sprints, including the 1200m dirt Grade 1 Dubai Golden Shaheen which sees US Grade 1 winners Dr. Schivel and Drain The Clock go up against Japanese stars Copano Kicking, Chain Of Love and Red Le Zele.

The Grade 1 Al Quoz Sprint over 1200m on turf, sees an intriguing clash between three of Appleby’s stars, the Grade 1 Ascot Champion Sprint winner Creative Force and rapid improver Man Of Promise, successful three times over the track, as well as Grade 2 Al Fahidi Fort winner Naval Crown.

They are up against European Group 1 winners Emaraaty Ana and A Case Of You, while Bill Mott sends out Casa Creed, a narrow second in the 1351 Turf Sprint in Saudi last time out.

The card also stages three Thoroughbr­ed Grade 2s. Defending Champion Secret Ambition takes on a strong bunch of locals, including his stablemate Al Nefud, in the Godolphin Mile.

Later on, Argentine Derby winner Irwin is among a cosmopolit­an cast for the UAE Derby which also includes Baffert’s Grade 1 Del Mar Futurity winner Pinehurst who narrowly held off the reopposing Sekifu in the Saudi Derby.

Also successful in Saudi was Stay Foolish and Yoshito Yahagi’s star takes on a formidable field in the G2 Dubai Gold Cup, over 3200m on turf. His rivals include Appleby’s Manobo, unbeaten in all five starts including in the Grade 3 Nad Al Sheba Trophy over this course.

The traditiona­l curtain-raiser to the day is the Grade 1 Dubai Kahayla Classic for Purebred Arabians, which is worth $1 million. An internatio­nal field includes defending champion Deryan, trained in France, as is as fellow Grade 1 winner Hadi De Carrerre. A strong home challenge is headed by Grade 1 winners RB Rich Lyke Me, Rajeh, Brraq and Jugurtha De Monlau. –

 ?? Picture: Thoroughbr­ed Daily News ?? TOP FORM. American entry Life Is Good looks the horse to beat in the $12-million Dubai World Cup over 2000m at Meydan on Saturday.
Picture: Thoroughbr­ed Daily News TOP FORM. American entry Life Is Good looks the horse to beat in the $12-million Dubai World Cup over 2000m at Meydan on Saturday.

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