November 23, 2024

Free Eagle withstands The Grey Gatsby’s late flurry in Prince of Wales’s

Last updated: 6/17/15 8:40 PM


Free Eagle withstands The Grey Gatsby’s late flurry in
Prince of Wales’s










Pat Smullen earned his first
2015 Royal Ascot score when Free Eagle captured the Prince of Wales’s

(Photo courtesy of Ascot Racecourse via Twitter)





Favored at 5-2, Free Eagle (High Chaparral) held gamely to repel the late bid
of The Grey Gatsby (Mastercraftsman) in Wednesday’s Prince of Wales’s (Eng-G1),
the feature race on day two of Royal Ascot. Pat Smullen registered his first
success of the 2015 Royal Meeting aboard the Dermot Weld-trained four-year-old
colt, who was making just his fifth career start and first since a third in the
Champion (Eng-G1) last October.

Free Eagle has had an interrupted training program, having suffered a stress
fracture to the tibia in 2014, and his preparation for the Prince of Wales’s
Stakes was also less than ideal as the horse picked up a cold a few weeks ago.

“He got a brilliant ride from Pat,” Weld said after Free Eagle prevailed by a
short-head. “He’s a very good horse and when you’ve a brilliant horse like him,
it makes the training easy.”

Free Eagle raced only twice last season, posting a seven-length score in the
Enterprise (Ire-G3) at Leopardstown in mid-September before the aforementioned
Champion at Ascot. The about 1 1/4-mile Prince of Wales’s marked his first Grade
1 tally.

“He hasn’t been easy, he has had a lot of problems,” the conditioner said.
“He had a heavy head cold a couple of weeks ago, and I thought today was going
to be very much in doubt, but we got him right on the day that matters. Fitness
was my biggest concern — he hasn’t run for nine months — and I had him as good
as I could have him with the limited preparation he had.



“He gallops low to the ground, he’s a lovely stayer, he sticks his head out
and he battles. But you can’t force fitness, and ideally the race was two weeks
too soon. I did have huge confidence in the horse and his ability, though. It
was a calculated risk and a personal triumph for me.”

Weld added the Prix de l’Arc de Triopmphe (Fr-G1) is Free Eagle’s long-term
goal.




Smullen had to take up the lead earlier than he had anticipated on the bay
colt, but despite a 242 day absence, the horse galloped all the way to the line.

“He has obviously been off for such a while and the race went very steady and
that is why I wanted to sit and wait on him,” Smullen said. “I probably sat
closer than I had anticipated beforehand and committed earlier than I thought,
but that is how the race unfolded.

“I am relieved because I have been saying for the last two years how good
this horse is and thankfully he is starting to show it. He thrived on that
ground. He is a wonderful horse who has a great action and that has played to
his strengths today. He is just a very good horse and he was able to show on
that very quick summer ground what a fantastic horse he is.”

The Irish jockey also suggested the step up to 1 1/2 miles would not hold any
issues for the colt.

“While he has plenty of pace, I do think he will improve going further,”
Smullen noted. “He galloped all the way to the line and on that evidence he
would get a mile and a half. The Irish Champion Stakes (Ire-G1) would obviously
be a possible but the race I would love to win is the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe.”

Smullen also paid tribute to Dermot Weld:

“I can’t tell you how good a training performance that was. It has not been
anything but difficult as there is nothing easy about getting Free Eagle here
today.  Truth be known I didn’t think he was going to show his true ability
here today because it has been a troubled interruption. Dermot backed off and
was patient with him, giving the horse the time he needed, he got him fresh.

“Jockeys can make mistakes by going too soon or trainers can by doing one
more piece of work but Dermot didn’t and he put it on trust to let the horse
show good he was and it paid off today. I didn’t think I have got as much
pleasure from riding a winner as I did from him to be honest.”

The Grey Gatsby’s defeat in the Prince Of Wales’s will surely be remembered
as one of the hard-luck stories of Royal Ascot 2015.

When the eventual winner, Free Eagle, was sent on by jockey Pat Smullen,
Frankie Dettori on third-placed Western Hymn (High Chaparral) made the same move
on his outside, with the result that The Grey Gatsby became held in. It was not
until Western Hymn began to fade that Jamie Spencer was able to drive The Grey
Gatsby for the line, and he made up more than a length inside the final furlong
before going down by a short-head.

Kevin Ryan, who trains the runner-up, was not dejected, and said: “I’m not
disappointed, and you probably think I should be, but I’ve got the horse back to
his best and I’m looking forward to the big races ahead. He’s in the Eclipse
(Eng-G1), the King George (Eng-G1) and the Juddmonte (Eng-G1), but it’s
unfortunate we don’t have a pacemaker for him, which is what he needs. If he was
owned by one of the big firms, he would have a pacemaker to ensure an end-to-end
gallop, but this was always our first aim and no one can say we didn’t get it
right.

“Over the first two furlongs I thought to myself ‘they are going a good
gallop here,’ but then they half pulled up, and my horse became half locked-up.
But it was a great horse race and he is back to his best. Jamie would have liked
to get out a lot earlier, but you can’t barge your way out and that’s the rub of
the green in racing. After the line he was in front.

“In racing there are often tiny margins, and it was a great training
performance by Dermot Weld with the winner.”

Reigning American Horse of the Year California Chrome (Lucky Pulpit) was
scratched from the Prince of Wales’s on Tuesday morning due to a foot bruise.



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