“My horse usually has a good start, but this time he hit his head in the
“We always believed in him. He won his last race very easy giving two kilos
|
Owned by Yoshimi Ichikawa and trained by Katsuhiko Sumii, Victoire Pisa had
previously earned his biggest victories at Nakayama. Over that right-handed
course, he captured the 2010 Satsuki Sho (Japanese Two Thousand Guineas)
(Jpn-G1) and Arima Kinen (Jpn-G1), defeating Japanese Horse of the Year and
World Cup rival Buena Vista (Special Week) in the latter, and he opened 2011
with a comprehensive success in the February 27 Nakayama Kinen (Jpn-G2). But
Victoire Pisa had failed to shine in his previous foreign mission to France last
campaign, and he was also attempting a synthetic surface for the first time
here. Answering any lingering question marks with a resounding affirmative, the
four-year-old presented Japan with its first World Cup trophy.
The confirmed front runner Transcend quickly took up his position at the head
of affairs, stalked by Coolmore’s Cape Blanco (Galileo [Ire]), and Godolphin’s
Monterosso (Dubawi) tracked them in a ground-saving spot. A fracas ensued
farther back in the field on the first turn, as Fly Down (Mineshaft) was checked hard on the
fence, and several others were jostled around.
Victoire Pisa, after his poor beginning, was dead last until the field settled in on the
Staying on resolutely, Victoire Pisa put his head in front in the lane.
“The horse was shying with the track but he did a very good job,” said Shinji
Monterosso found his best stride in the final yards to grab third, missing
“I’m really delighted with his run,” jockey Mickael Barzalona said,
A one-paced Cape Blanco was the same margin back in fourth,
|
Jamie Spencer was pleased with Cape Blanco’s effort in his seasonal
reappearance.
“I was on the right side of a slow
pace,” Spencer recapped. “I could have done with holding up a little bit longer, but he really stuck
his neck out at the finish. He really tried. Bear in mind, it was his first run
of the year and there will be more to come from him for sure.”
Several other riders were lamenting the way the World Cup unfolded.
“The only two times I can remember (Gio Ponti) being strong with me was last
year here and today,” jockey Ramon Dominguez said. “It’s very unfair they’re
going extremely, extremely slow and I feel my horse was taken out of his game.
Turning for home his kick, of course, isn’t going to be as effective. Everybody
was kind of sprinting home.”
“It’s a go-cart race, not a workout,” summed up Christophe Soumillon, who
rode Musir.
“The race played out terribly,” Ryan Moore said of his trip aboard Buena
Vista.
“It was a messy race for everyone and
I never got into it at any stage,” said Tom Queally, the rider of Twice Over.
“They went very slowly early and that
didn’t suit him,” Twice Over’s trainer Henry Cecil observed. “He broke well and was up there but couldn’t get back in. The
next minute they slowed it up and he got shuffled back through the field. He
never got anywhere and it is disappointing, but that is the way it goes. Tom
said he was pushed wide and out of the back. It is such a shame as he was very
well.”
With the $6 million bonanza in his account, Victoire Pisa has amassed
$12,891,734 in earnings from his 13-8-1-2 mark. The hero of the 2009 Kyoto Nisai
S. and Radio Nikkei Hai Nisai S. as a juvenile, the dark bay also claims a win
in the 2010 Hochi Hai Yayoi Sho (Jpn-G2) at Nakayama and placings in last
season’s Tokyo Yushun (Japanese Derby) (Jpn-G1) and Japan Cup (Jpn-G1) at Tokyo.
In between those top-level races at home, he had embarked upon a French
adventure, finishing a well-beaten fourth in the Prix Niel (Fr-G2) and a
creditable seventh in the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe (Fr-G1).
Bred by Shadai Farm in Japan, Victoire Pisa is a half-brother to
Yasuda Kinen (Jpn-G1) winner Asakusa Den’en (Singspiel [Ire]) and a
three-quarter brother to Grade 3 victor and Grade 1-placed Swift Current (Sunday
Silence). Their dam, English/Irish highweight older mare Whitewater Affair
(Machiavellian), is herself a half-sister to Group 2 hero Little Rock (Warning
[GB]) and multiple Group 3 queen and classic-placed Short Skirt (GB) (Diktat). Victoire Pisa hails from the family of Irish St Leger (Ire-G1) winner Arctic Owl
(Most Welcome [GB]) and Sydney Cup (Aus-G1) scorer Marooned (Mill Reef).