Golden Sixty and More Than This please Lui, Victory In Hand aims for a hat-trick

David Morgan

11/02/2020 15:47

Golden Sixty wins the Hong Kong Classic Mile last time.
Golden Sixty wins the Hong Kong Classic Mile last time.

Francis Lui edged to the positive side of caution regarding Golden Sixty’s chances of making the Hong Kong Classic Cup (1800m), after leading his Classic Mile winner home from exercise at Sha Tin this morning (Tuesday, 11 February).

Word rattled around the racecourse during Saturday’s meeting that the handler’s rising star was laid low with a high temperature, and that the second leg of Hong Kong’s Four-Year-Old Classic Series, on 23 February, was likely off the agenda.

“He’s still a chance,” Lui said. “His temperature is back to normal but we still have to monitor him for these few days. If he’s okay we will work him next week.

“We’ll see how he is and check his blood and if everything is normal we might carry on. Everything depends on how he works in his track work – he looks okay because he trotted in the trotting ring and he was fresh, but we’ll see.

“We will gallop him next week and that will decide whether or not he runs.”

Not long afterwards, Lui watched from the trainers’ stand as his other star four-year-old, More Than This, put in a smart barrier trial under his new big-race pilot Zac Purton. The exciting bay was a ground-devouring second to Golden Sixty in last month’s Hong Kong Classic Mile.

More Than This trials under Zac Purton

Purton was pleased with the workout in which the British import passed the post third behind Baltic Success in a time of 1m 11.87s.

“I’ve trialled him twice now recently and he’s begun well both times. That trial was run at a strong tempo and it was over 1200 metres, which is short enough for him,” the champion jockey said.

“I was happy with the way he moved during the trial; I was happy with the way he lengthened stride and improved into it around the corner into the straight; I was happy with the trial overall.

“He’s looking at going beyond a mile now so you wouldn’t expect him to be travelling that strongly in a trial run like that at that distance but he began really well,” Purton added.

More Than This, for all that he has performed impressively this season, has looked lazy at the start of his races. And, in his recent runs, the Dutch Art gelding has straightened his tail when his rider has got busy, before closing off soundly nonetheless. This morning, the bay stopped at the top of the ramp, waited and looked around before moving on to the track.

“He’s a very quirky horse,” Purton said. “It took us a long time to get him to start showing us anything. I rode him for months and months in work when he first came here and he had no interest early. Some mornings he tried to half-bite his work partner and it was common for him to want to have a kick at them as well.

“He’s just got a playful character – you wouldn't notice it to see him in a race, you'd think he’s quite laid back but he’s a thinker. He just likes to do his own thing.”

Victory goes for three at the Valley

Victory In Hand wins at the course and distance.
Victory In Hand wins at the course and distance.

Lui has more immediate business on Wednesday night (12 February) at Happy Valley when Victory In Hand (117lb) will be one of three horses seeking a hat-trick in a cracking finale to the eight-contest card, the Class 3 Fo Tan Handicap (1200m), a race which also features the impressive first-up winner Californiadeepshot (133lb).

Karis Teetan partnered Victory In Hand to his two previous wins, in Class 4, but has jumped ship, leaving the way open for Alexis Badel to take the ride.

“Karis is riding Tony Cruz’s horse, Californiadeepshot,” Lui said. “He thinks that’s a better horse but I’d planned to go for this race. I’m not sure he can win this race but when you compare the race times, they are nearly the same so he’s in there with a chance in a strong field.”

Californiadeepshot carried 125lb and clocked 1m 09.75s when making all from gate 12 on debut; Victory In Hand’s latest winning time was 1m 09.46s under 129lb, having stalked the leader from gate nine, the same draw as he has for Wednesday’s test.

“I watched Victory In Hand’s last two victories and he’s been a solid winner,” Badel said. “I hope he can repeat something similar because he has a light weight and he seems to be confident with himself. He also gave me a good feeling in the morning so he still has a chance.

“He’s quick enough to get across and get a good position – he just needs to keep rolling. Californiadeepshot must be a good horse because he won on debut – it’s a tough race so let’s hope.”

Californiadeepshot impresses on debut

Teetan, though, was clearly taken with Californiadeepshot’s debut success and is happy to be on the three-year-old again, even though he shoulders top-weight this time after a nine-point hike in the ratings.

“I like this horse a lot and on his first win I think he’ll go very close again,” the Mauritian ace said.

“Before his first run he did show some good trials so I was pretty confident that he was going to do very well in his first start. He won pretty impressively, I think there’s a bit of quality about him – from a wide draw, to get a win like that, it shows you that he’s something decent.”

The rider is not going in complacent though, and knows the challenge the Deep Field colt faces, with the likes of Shouson (118lb) and What A Legend (118lb) also gunning for three wins on the bounce. But he is banking on the chestnut’s sharpness at the off.

Karis Teetan wins on Californiadeepshot.
Karis Teetan wins on Californiadeepshot.

“He does have lots of speed out of the gate,” he said. “You could see last time, how quick he got to the front. He’s got actual speed to get across – there’s some speed on my inside and it’s a different situation because there are stronger horses in the race, so I’m going to have to be very positive again and let him use his speed. But also, I’ll have to get him into a comfortable position where he can finish again.”

And while Badel rates Californiadeepshot as a big threat, so too Teetan considers his past ally Victory In Hand to be a potential block to his mount’s chances of maintaining a perfect record.

“You have to respect Victory In Hand because he’s done so well and even before his last win I told Francis the horse had turned a corner – it was a very good win so he’s a danger,” Teetan noted.

Wednesday’s action starts at 7.15pm with the Class 4 Sai Kung Handicap (1200m).