Hung Kam Po’s Amber Sky, a specialist down the five-furlong straight at Sha
Tin, successfully transferred his trail-blazing game to Meydan in Saturday’s
Group 1, $1 million Al Quoz Sprint. Dashing to the lead and never looking back,
the Ricky Yiu trainee held off Ahtoug and defending champion Shea Shea, and in
the process, eclipsed the latter’s course record.
Amber Sky was the first half of a brilliant sprint double for Hong Kong, and
for jockey Joao Moreira. One race later, the ace rider galvanized the John
Moore-trained Sterling City to defeat fellow Hong Kong shipper Rich Tapestry in
the Group 1 Dubai Golden Shaheen on Tapeta.
Coming off his first stakes score in the Centenary Sprint Cup on January 26,
Amber Sky now looms as the heir apparent to Yiu’s last sprint supremo, Sacred
Kingdom. The Australian-bred son of Exceed and Excel sped from post 8, and
Moreira cleverly steered the 3-1 second choice toward the favored stands’ side
of the course.
The 4-5 Shea Shea, in contrast, lagged farther behind than might have been
expected early. Regular rider Christophe Soumillon found himself threading his
way through the field, instead of getting a run along the stands’ side rail that
he typically prefers.
Amber Sky kept bowling along up front, throwing down the gauntlet to those
chasing. Ahtoug, who just missed to Shea Shea in the March 8 Meydan Sprint,
emerged as his nearest pursuer, but couldn’t quite get past. Shea Shea also
found his best stride, only too late.
Preserving a neck advantage from Ahtoug at the line, Amber Sky sizzled about
five furlongs on the good turf in :56.21. Shea Shea thus saw his old mark of
:56.41 lowered while reporting home another head away in third.
“He’s such a fast horse and very easy to ride,” Moreira said. “He proved
himself worldwide. He’s a very special horse.
“I was able to not let him go too fast in the early stages, to hold onto him
a bit, but when I pushed the button he gave me another kick and kept going to
the line.
“Near the line, there were a few horses attacking me but he was just too good
for them.
“Near the line, I could feel the other two horses coming at me, I didn’t know
who they were, but he kept sticking his neck out and we got there. This is such
a thrill for me to win a Group 1 on the biggest stage of all.”
“I’m just very relieved he won,” Yiu said. “It was tough. They were all
coming at him in the last 100 meters and I was worried that he might get tired
but he fought really well.
“I can’t compare him yet to those horses (his past legends Sacred Kingdom and
Fairy King Prawn) as he only done it down a straight course at 1000 meters. He
would have to do it around a bend at 1200 meters also, but maybe he can get to
that level in the future.
“It was always the plan to come here and win an international race. The
King’s Stand at Royal Ascot is a possible target but I will talk to the owners
first. It’s a stiff five furlongs uphill at Ascot, so it would be a new
challenge but he’s an improving horse.”
Charlie Appleby, the trainer of Ahtoug, was thrilled with his rapid ascent,
and also looking ahead to the Royal meeting.
“He has thrived out here and has been so consistent all Carnival,” Appleby
said. “He has improved with each run and we’ll aim towards the King’s Stand at
Royal Ascot. He deserves a chance there after that.”
Jockey Christophe Soumillon recapped what happened with Shea Shea.
“He jumped slow from the gate this time,” Soumillon said. “The pace was very
strong and could get no other position than last. By the time I got him running,
the winner had gone. The winner must be a very good horse to break the track
record.”
The top three had about 1 1/4 lengths to spare over Medicean Man, who was
trailed by Catcall, Hamza, Sole Power, Dux Scholar, Joy and Fun, Sholaan,
Berlino di Tiger and Beat Baby.
Joy and Fun, the 2010 Al Quoz hero who was third in 2012 and second last
year, was running his final race. An 11-year-old by Northern Hemisphere
standards, the Derek Cruz trainee is now set for retirement.
“The number draw (post 1) was against him as they all went across (to the
stands’ side),” jockey Brett Doyle said, “but he’s been a great horse, and he’s
run a good race all things considered.”
Ryan Moore, rider of Sole Power, likewise rued his post 2.
“We were drawn in the wrong place,” Moore summed up.
Jockey Leandro Goncalves said that Berlino di Tiger was compromised right
from the start.
“He’s a very fast horse,” Goncalves said. “His game is to break and go. He
stumbled coming out of the gate. For a horse like him, the first two jumps (are
very important). He missed it (the break), he stumbled. I was behind Joao
Moreira, the winner and I couldn’t figure out whether or not to go inside or
outside and it cost me a little bit, then the last sixteenth of a mile, he got a
little bit tired.”
Amber Sky has compiled a record of 14-7-2-1. Sixth in last year’s Centenary
Sprint Cup, he later placed second in the Bauhinia Sprint Trophy, and is just
now coming to the peak of his powers. He kicked off the current Hong Kong season
with a bloodless, 5 1/2-length romp in an October 30 handicap. Although failing
to handle a step up to about six furlongs in the November 17 Jockey Club Sprint,
where he tired inside the final furlong, he bounced back emphatically back down
at this trip in the Centenary Sprint.
Bred by O.E. and D.R. Pope Pty Ltd., Amber Sky is out of Australian Group 2
heroine Truly Wicked, a daughter of Rubiton. His second dam, Dizzy Lass, is a
full sister to Australian Group 3 victress Ticket to Rome from the family of
Group 2 scorer Great Glen.
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