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Crack Field Assembled For Tenno Sho Autumn

3 minute read

Sunday’s G1 Tenno Sho Autumn in Tokyo includes three winners of G1 races outside of Japan - Maurice, A Shin Hikari and Real Steel.

A Shin Hikari
A Shin Hikari Picture: Racing and Sports

The 4YO mare Rouge Buck is expected to be neck and neck with miler Maurice at the betting windows.

The daughter of Manhattan Cafe, Rouge Buck is on a two-race roll, both wins having come at Tokyo over 1800m.

She scooped the G3 Epsom Cup by 2.5 lengths in June and followed that with a win by a neck over Ambitious in the G2 Mainichi Okan on October 9.

Maurice is seen to be her biggest rival. Although considered a miler, with six of his nine wins including the G1 Hong Kong Mile and the G1 Champions Mile, having come over 1600m and two others at 1400m, the 5YO has won at 1800m as well.

He has yet to notch a win over 2000m, but ran second at the distance last start at Sapporo in the G2 Sapporo Kinen on 21 August.

Real Steel, winner in the 1800m G1 Dubai Turf this March and runner-up in last year’s Satsuki Sho (2000m) has yet to win at the distance, but did win the 1800m G3 Kyodo News Service Hai last year at Tokyo.

Trainer Yoshito Yahagi, who had decided against running Real Steel in the Mainichi Okan, was reserved in his comment.

“I had wanted to run him in the Mainichi Okan, which would have been best, but I decided he just wasn’t in good enough shape at the time. Now, his breathing is much better and this is the next best option,” he said.

The front-running A Shin Hikari, who scooped the G1 Hong Kong Cup last year, will be returning to the track for the first time since June and running in Japan for the first time since his ninth in the Tenno Sho Autumn last year.

The Deep Impact 5YO won the G1 Prix d’Ispahan over 1800m at Chantilly in France in May then ran sixth at Ascot in the 2000m G1 Prince of Wales’s Stakes the following month.

Lovely Day captured the 2015 Tenno Sho Autumn on a four-race winning streak but he has remained winless over his next six starts.

He was third in the 2400m Kyoto Daishoten on October 10 and he’s well-suited to the fast turf of Tokyo and could well be in the running for a back-to-back if luck is on his side.

Christophe Lemaire commented on Wednesday after riding Lovely Day in trackwork, “He felt really good and was extremely fast in the stretch. I think he’s in great shape.

“I’m confident that 2000m is the perfect distance for him.”

After returning from his bid in the Hong Kong Cup, Staphanos took on two other races before running fifth in the G2 Mainichi Okan (1800m).

Though he has yet to win over 2000m, he has run second three times in G1 and G3 company.
Racing and Sports

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