Bow Echo all guns blazing ahead of Guineas bid George Boughey’s Betfred 2000 Guineas favourite Bow Echo has had a “totally faultless spring” as he builds up towards his day of destiny. Boughey, who won the 1000 Guineas with Cachet in 2022, decided against running the Royal Lodge winner in a trial in preference of a racecourse gallop on the Rowley Mile. Having come through that with flying colours, confidence in the camp is high ahead of the first Classic of the season. “To have a colt who’s favourite for the Guineas is very special. I think we’ve done it with some fillies so far, and he’s been the best colt we’ve had. I’ve been pretty clear to say that. It’s exciting,” said Boughey at a media morning organised by the Jockey Club. “We had him ready pretty early and realised that he doesn’t actually need a huge amount of work, he just does one canter on a daily basis and breezes once a week, so we’ve been kind of freshening him up. I think the fact that he’s been so straightforward has afforded us that luxury. “I think when Cachet won the Guineas, she had a totally faultless spring and so has he.” Reflecting on his racecourse gallop before the Craven meeting Boughey said: “It was good. It was a more end-to-end gallop, and Billy (Loughnane) was in the middle of a two-week ban and possibly had a few days on holiday, so he might have been carrying a few extra pounds. Billy was happy, I was happy and it was backed up by the clock. It’s only a very small part of the puzzle but it’s certainly a part of the puzzle.” Loughnane is the rising star of the weighing room but he is still searching for a first British Classic. “I can’t remember how many times I’ve said it, but Billy is the full package really for me,” said Boughey. “We work very well together. As well as being a brilliant jockey, he’s got a great mind and I consider him to be a friend. He talks to me about anything and that I think gives him the freedom to ride with complete confidence. “We walked the track the other night and it was more than anything to give him the confidence that he can ride the horse as he finds him. I won’t tie him down to any instructions, he’s unbeaten on the horse, he’s ridden him in all of his work this year, no one knows him better. “Whether it’s Wolverhampton or Newmarket he’s a pretty cool customer.” One person who sadly will not be able to see Bow Echo line-up on Saturday is his late owner-breeder Sheikh Mohammed Obaid Al Maktoum, who died at the end of 2025. Paying tribute, Boughey said: “It was a life-changing thing when he sent us 10 homebreds and enabled us to go after winning the Guineas. “I’m sure he’ll be watching and it’s just something that sometimes, when the year after someone passes, you know they have an amazing year. We saw it with the Aga Khan, we saw it with Sheikh Hamdan, and he’s got a lovely team of horses all around the country this year.”