Bow Echo bravely holds off Gstaad to stay unbeaten in thriller at Royal Ascot
Guineas winner fights hard for feature race successSussex Stakes at Glorious Goodwood next stop for winnerFive races and two Group Ones into his career, Bow Echo remains unbeaten – just. He had only a short-head to spare over Gstaad at the line in the St James’s Palace Stakes, ha
Bow Echo, nearside, narrowly held off Gstaad in a grandstand finish to the St James’s Palace Stakes at Royal Ascot. Photograph: Maureen McLean/ShutterstockView image in fullscreenBow Echo, nearside, narrowly held off Gstaad in a grandstand finish to the St James’s Palace Stakes at Royal Ascot. Photograph: Maureen McLean/ShutterstockBow Echo bravely holds off Gstaad to stay unbeaten in thriller at Royal Ascot Guineas winner fights hard for feature race successSussex Stakes at Glorious Goodwood next stop for winnerFive races and two Group Ones into his career, Bow Echo remains unbeaten – just.
He had only a short-head to spare over Gstaad at the line in the St James’s Palace Stakes, having briefly looked likely to canter to victory passing the two-pole, but it was enough to secure a first Royal Ascot Group One for both George Boughey, Bow Echo’s trainer, and his 20-year-old rider, Billy Loughnane, whose best season yet just keeps getting better.On the face of it, perhaps, this was a slightly scrambled success, given Bow Echo’s winning margin of nearly three lengths over Gstaad in the 2,000 Guineas at Newmarket last month, and the apparent ease with which it was achieved. But Ascot is a very different track, with a sterner climb to the finish, and Bow Echo is hardly the first colt to find that it has different demands.
Shergar’s sad demise has racing fans hoping famous colours sparkle at Royal Ascot Read moreThe favourite was also involved in some early scrimmaging as the half-dozen runners looked for a good early position, interference that was enough to see Ryan Moore, Gstaad’s jockey, pick up a three-day suspension from the stewards for “careless riding for allowing his mount to edge left-handed without correction, causing Bow Echo and [third-favourite] Talk Of New York to become short of room and awkwardly placed.”As a result, Bow Echo can be forgiven for needing the line at the other end of the race, against a rival who enjoyed a perfect, ground-saving trip up the rail.“The first furlong was crucial and I got squeezed out early,” Loughnane said.
“There were five of us in a line and I slightly lost my position and Bow Echo got lit up. It was then a case of trying to manage things. The Amo horse [Power Blue] came back into our lap and it meant I had to move probably sooner than ideal, but his guts got him through.
He’s a very determined horse with a great turn of foot and fantastic ability.“You have to adapt, and it was a case of getting him back relaxed, breathing again and into his rhythm. Once he found that, he was powerful.”
Goodwood, where Bow Echo is likely to head next for the Group One Sussex Stakes in late July, is a different challenge again, but this time a speedier track that should play to his strengths. He is favourite at around 7-4 to extend his streak to six if he lines up for what would be his first race against all-aged competition.“I think that was the first time Bow Echo got into a proper battle,” Boughey said.
“It was quite a scrap early doors [but] I think we’ll see a better horse now that he’s been in a scrap like that. He has done everything we’ve hoped. It’s fine margins in this game and luckily he was on the right side of it.”
Bow Echo and Gstaad’s memorable duel in the feature event was matched for excitement by a three-way conclusion to the King Charles III Stakes, as Mission Central edged out Rayevka by a head with the Australian-trained favourite, Overpass, three-quarters of a length away in third.Mission Central, something of a rarity as an Aidan O’Brien-trained sprinter, was off the pace early but came with a powerful run towards the stands’ side to grab victory in the final strides.Having seen off one of the southern hemisphere’s top sprinters at Ascot, Mission Central may now be tasked with repeating the trick on Australian soil in the Everest, the world’s richest turf race, in October.
“We have a slot in the Everest,” Tom Magnier, from the Coolmore syndicate that owns Mission Central, said. “It’s a great race and one we’d love to win. We will see how the horse pulls up, but it would definitely be a race that you could put on the radar for him.”
View image in fullscreenKieren Shoemark (orange cap) riding Ten Bob Tony to victory in the Queen Anne Stakes at Royal Ascot. Photograph: Steve Bardens/Getty Images for Ascot RacecourseThe first day crowd was stunned into near-silence by the opening race of the meeting, as Ten Bob Tony, at 50-1, accelerated from last to first in the closing stages of the Group One Queen Anne Stakes. Ed Walker’s gelding was the longest-priced winner of the race for 76 years.
“It is just an amazing story,” Walker said. “Ten Bob Tony won a Group Three [at Epsom] 10 days ago and then turned up here and did that.“Kieran [Shoemark] gave him an absolute peach of a ride [and] the miracle happened.
We’d agreed we’d sit last and try to pass as many as possible.”Hopes for a winner in the royal colours in the Ascot Stakes Handicap proved to be wildly optimistic as Rea
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