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Golden Sixty, Russian Emperor trial as FWD Champions Day preparations begin

Tue 22nd Mar 2022, 10:35

Francis Lui trained GOLDEN SIXTY with Vincent Ho in the saddle wins the G1 LONGINES Hong Kong MileFrancis Lui trained GOLDEN SIXTY with Vincent Ho in the saddle wins the G1 LONGINES Hong Kong Mile
© Photo Healy Racing

By Declan Schuster
The big guns appeared at Sha Tin’s barrier trial session this morning (Tuesday, 22 March) with Golden Sixty dazzling in an opening heat for Vincent Ho and Francis Lui as preparations launched for next month’s FWD Champions Day on Sunday, 24 April.

Looking to banish memories of consecutive defeats and recapture his winning thread, Golden Sixty clocked 59.20s (14.5, 22.6, 22.1) on a still morning under floodlights at Sha Tin, while Russian Emperor crossed untouched by Blake Shinn in last position.

Urged along by Ho, Golden Sixty — with his familiar blue foreleg wraps tightly fastened — stretched out swiftly over 1000m on the grass, much to the pleasure of trainer Francis Lui who, maintained a careful eye over the HK$99.29 million earner.

“He seems ok — he had a bit of a blow this morning after the trial, the plan was to push him because he has only had four runs this season — he hasn’t had too many races, so he needs the trials,” Lui said.

Entered for the HK$4.75 million G2 Chairman’s Trophy (1600m) on Sunday, 3 April at Sha Tin, Golden Sixty could face up to 13 others that day currently entered for the race, including Russian Emperor, Waikuku, More Than This and Cheerful Days.

The winner of 16 consecutive races, Golden Sixty had his streak halted in January’s G1 Stewards’ Cup (1600m) by Waikuku, before again going under in last month’s G1 Citi Hong Kong Gold Cup (2000m) to Russian Emperor.

The Medaglia d’Oro six-year-old will chase consecutive G1 FWD Champions Mile (1600m) wins at next month’s HK$65 million showcase, while Russian Emperor goes for gold in the G1 FWD QEII Cup (2000m) after first tackling the Chairman’s Trophy.

Douglas Whyte was pleased with Russian Emperor following his effort this morning.

“He was just there to have a hit out, obviously Blake (Shinn) was very conservative on him but he did come back and he was complimentary of the horse’s work, he looked good in his action,” Whyte said.

The Galileo gelding — now rated 123 locally — clocked 1m 00.06s under Shinn.

“He wasn’t there to win the trial, he was just there to have a blow out and put him in good stead for the third of April,” Whyte said. “I’m very happy, he’s progressively got better and he’s certainly a changed individual.”

Whyte is targeting the HK$25 million feature next month with Russian Emperor — a contest he won three times as jockey with London News (1997), Oriental Express (1998) and Ambitious Dragon (2011).

“That’s his target (FWD QEII Cup), he’s going to run in the mile purely because it’s too long between races, so then he’ll step up three weeks later in the FWD QEII Cup and that’s his main target,” Whyte outlined.

More Than This — twice second at Group 1 level to Golden Sixty — tuned up for fourth in the same trial, while Tourbillon Diamond and Butterfield grabbed fifth and sixth, respectively.

In the second trial, Sky Field caught the eye under Blake Shinn, clocking a fast-finishing 59.33s over 1000m on the grass for second behind only Carroll Street.

Later on, Stronger — January’s HK$12 million G1 Centenary Sprint Cup (1200m) winner — also caught the eye with a powerful effort late under Vincent Ho, clocking 1m 01.31s for 1050m on the dirt to cross the line second.

Both sprinters are entered for HK$4.75 million G2 Sprint Cup (1200m) on Sunday, 3 April at Sha Tin among the likes of Hot King Prawn, Master Eight and Wellington.