December 22, 2024

First City just foils Mahbooba in Cape Verdi

Last updated: 1/20/12 4:50 PM








First City (outside) surprised Mahbooba to earn her first stakes win
(Andrew Watkins/Dubai Racing Club)





English Group 1-placed First City had finished first in just two of
23 starts in Europe, but wasted no time in opening her Dubai account
with a photo-finish upset of Mahbooba in Friday’s Group 2, $200,000 Cape
Verdi at Meydan. Making her first start in the colors of Saeed Hamad al
Ahbabi, and for champion U.A.E. trainer Ali Rashid al Raihe, First City
deployed a sharp turn of foot to nip the favorite by a slender nose.

Mahbooba, a course record-setting winner of the Al Rashidiya Trial
here on January 5, was cutting back about a furlong to a metric mile.
The Mike de Kock mare was expected to let her stablemate Reem take up
the front-running role, but jockey Christophe Soumillon called an
audible. When Reem got off to a lackadaisical start, and Mahbooba was
already in front, Soumillon decided to set the pace.

As Mahbooba dictated the tempo, First City was reserved in the latter
part of the field by new rider Royston Ffrench. She had only two rivals
behind her as they rounded the turn, but First City quickened smartly
down the stretch.

Mahbooba began to kick away from her longtime stalkers, only to have First
City rally to join her in an all-out war to the line. It was a battle between a
powerful galloper and a specialist miler, and First City’s extra gear made the
narrow difference. First City stopped the teletimer in 1:38 1/5 on the good turf
course to earn her first career stakes coup after five placings, all at the
Group level.

Another 4 1/2 lengths behind the duelists came Reem, who edged Hurricane
Havoc for third. Al Sharood, Marvada, Rhythm of Light and Sooraah completed the
order of finish.

“We were hoping for a big run,” Ffrench said of First City, “as she was going
nicely at home in the mornings and her form in Europe was very good. She has
finished very strongly to get there in the last strides and I was not sure we
had won when we flashed past. It is great that we did, and I assume we will
probably come back for the Balanchine Stakes (Group 2 on February 17) and take
it from there.”

After another tilt in distaff company in the Balanchine, First City plans to
take on males.

“We will look at the (Group 1) Dubai Duty Free on World Cup night (March 31)
long term,” al Raihe said, “perhaps after the Balanchine and Super Saturday (the
Group 1 Jebel Hatta on March 10).”

First City boosted her bankroll to $288,814 from her 24-3-4-4 line. Formerly
based in Newmarket with trainer David Simcock, the bay had placed in the Group 3
Nell Gwyn Stakes as a sophomore in 2009 and in the Group 3 Supreme Stakes in
2010.

She showed improved form as a five-year-old in 2011, finishing second in the
Group 3 Princess Elizabeth and third in both the Group 2 Windsor Forest at Royal
Ascot and the Group 1 Falmouth during Newmarket’s July meeting. Subsequently
fourth to Goldikova in the Group 1 Prix Rothschild, First City was shelved
following a subpar fifth in the Superior Mile at Haydock September 3, and
reappeared off a four-month layoff on Friday.

Bred by Darley in Great Britain, First City is by Diktat and out of the
unraced Carson City mare City Maiden. The winner’s second dam is Grade 2
victress Marble Maiden, who comes from the extended family of Grade 1 queen
Dreams Gallore and current Kentucky Derby hopeful Union Rags.







Prince Bishop impressed in a handicap over the World Cup course and distance
(Andrew Watkins/Dubai Racing Club)





Godolphin’s Prince Bishop propelled himself back into the Group 1 Dubai World
Cup picture with a tremendous victory in a Tapeta handicap, spearheading a
one-two finish for Saeed bin Suroor.

Parked just off the early leader by Frankie Dettori, Prince Bishop delivered
the coup de grace and dispatched his rivals with alacrity. The son of Dubawi was
much the best by 5 1/4 lengths from the belatedly-closing Spring of Fame, and
completed the about 1 1/4-mile distance — the same as the World Cup — in 2:04
1/5.

Prince Bishop was an underachiever in Dubai last winter, finishing fifth in
the Group 2 Maktoum Challenge Round 3 and only 10th in the World Cup. The
chestnut had fallen some way off his sparkling form of 2010, when he won four in
a row for Andre Fabre. During that sophomore year, he beat the likes of Cirrus
des Aigles in the Group 2 Prix du Conseil de Paris and Rajsaman in the Group 3
Prix du Prince d’Orange.



In light of his lackluster efforts over the course of 2011, Prince Bishop was
gelded last fall, and his form immediately turned around. Showcasing his new and
improved attitude in the November 2 Floodlit Stakes over Kempton’s Polytrack, he
bolted up in course-record time. Prince Bishop, two-for-two as a gelding, sports
a mark of 13-6-1-0, $318,540.

“Prince Bishop has improved a lot from last year and he looks much better
physically,” bin Suroor told the Godolphin website. “He was 85 percent fit today
but he has won easily and I think that he will improve for this run.

“We will keep the options open for him at the moment and see how he comes out
of the race, but he could take his chance in one of the remaining rounds of the
Maktoum Challenge (Round 2 on February 9 and Round 3 on March 10).”

De Kock had better luck elsewhere on the card with new recruit Mutahadee, a
slashing four-length winner of a turf handicap in his Dubai debut. Under
Soumillon, the Sheikh Mohammed bin Khalifa al Maktoum colorbearer swept past
tiring pacesetter War Monger and drew off to finish about nine grassy furlongs
in 1:49 4/5.

Rounding out the all-de Kock exacta was Viscount Nelson, another first-time
starter for the yard. The ex-Aidan O’Brien campaigner, who is being leased from
Coolmore, lumped top weight of 132 pounds and got up for second over Alrasm and
War Monger.







Mutahadee romped in his debut for Mike de Kock, who was also pleased with runner-up Viscount Nelson (far left)
(Andrew Watkins/Dubai Racing Club)





“Both have run very well and I am delighted with the pair,” de Kock said. “We
expected Mutahadee to come out on top of our pair, but perhaps not win first
time out, and we thought Viscount Nelson would need the run, and further, so we
could not be happier.”

Back in December, de Kock had told his website that Viscount Nelson had “more
problems than the Greek economy but has some great early form and he’s sound
now. He could be anything, and we’re quite excited about him.”

This encouraging start bodes well for his Carnival prospects.

Mutahadee, a lightly-raced four-year-old, also has upside. The Encosta de
Lago colt had shaped with promise in Ireland, where he was in the care of Tommy
Stack. A winner over the Dundalk Polytrack in his only start at two, Mutahadee
missed in a three-way photo to veterans Taameer and Duff in his sophomore debut
at Naas.



He reported home third to the crack filly Banimpire and the useful Dunboyne
Express in the Group 2 Royal Whip, and ended his abbreviated season with a
fourth to onetime Melbourne Cup prospect Galileo’s Choice in the Group 3
Kilternan on September 3. Interestingly, Viscount Nelson was also last seen in
the Kilternan, bringing up the rear in seventh.

Mutahadee, whose resume now reads 5-2-0-2, $118,287, is a half-brother to
Grade 1 hero Subtle Power. Their dam, the unraced Shirley Heights mare Mosaique
Bleue, is in turn a half-sister to Group 1 winners Muncie and Mersey.

Singapore-based horseman Steve Burridge, who lifted the January 12 U.A.E. Two
Thousand Guineas Trial with Dark Matter, sent out another winner in the form of
Captain Obvious. With Oscar Chavez picking up the mount from the injured Benny
Woodworth, the Australian-bred gray pounced and held off the late runners in the
about six-furlong Tapeta handicap.

The strength of the form was underlined by the second and third-place
finishers. Group 3 winner Hitchens, third in last year’s Group 1 July Cup and
most recently sixth in the Grade 1 Nearctic, rallied for the runner-up spot from
fellow Group 3 scorer Iver Bridge Lad.

Sheikh Mansoor bin Mohammed al Maktoum’s Jamr lasted from Godolphin’s
Measuring Time by a short head in the Friday opener, thus remaining perfect for
Mubarak bin Shafya. Driven to the front about a quarter-mile out by Pat Cosgrave,
Jamr opened up by daylight in the about 11-furlong affair on Tapeta. Then
Measuring Time, a $521,158 Tattersalls Autumn Horses in Training purchase, gave
chase and fell just short at the wire.

“He has now won all three starts since joining us,” Cosgrave said, “and has
improved from each start. He probably stays further than this so I was happy to
go for home at the top of the straight and luckily they could not catch me.”

Blue Panis, a $188,314 purchase by Prime Equestrian SARL at the Arqana Arc
Sale, rolled to a convincing 2 1/4-length score in the nightcap. Scything
through the field for Olivier Peslier, the five-year-old grabbed command of the
about one-mile turf handicap, and handed trainer Xavier Thomas Demeaulte his
first-ever win in the Emirates.

In his first outing for his new connections, Blue Panis was runner-up at
Marseille Pont de Vivaux on December 6. For former trainer Fabrice Chappet, he
captured a pair of French stakes and recorded five stakes placings, including
the Grade 2 Oak Tree Derby and last year’s Group 2 Oettingen-Rennen at
Baden-Baden.