Barzalona stood high in the saddle with his arm punching the
night sky as Monterosso hit the line well clear of stablemate Capponi
giving Sheikh Mohammed’s Godolphin stable the top two finishers in the world’s
richest race.
‘The Boss’, as Sheikh Mohammed is affectionately known, was jubilant as he hugged
the person nearest to him and danced around with joy as Monterosso avenged his
unlucky third in the race last year.
The former Australian star So You Think, now with the Coolmore team, finished
fourth after racing near the lead throughout but it was Godolphin again
dominating the race as they have done five times before in the 17-year
history of the Dubai World Cup.
Despite having had success in feature races all around the racing world over
the past 20 years, Sheikh Mohammed never tires of winning his own race.
By contrast, Barzalona, 20, born in Corsica and based in France is rapidly carving
his own name in racing history. He will soon join the Godolphin stable at
Newmarket in England as a retained jockey.
“I couldn’t believe it when no one was coming after me [in the straight]”,
Barzalona said. “This is a dream. I have no words to describe what I feel right
now. “
Asked about his dramatic celebration on the line, he said: “I just had to, I
had no choice.”
While Godolphin’s previous Dubai World Cup winners were prepared by Saeed bin
Suroor, Monterosso and Capponi gave their Dubai-based trainer Mahmoud Al
Zarooni his biggest success.
Monterosso powered away in the run home to beat Capponi, ridden by Ahmed
Ajtebi by three lengths with Planteur, trained in England by Italian Marco
Botti a half-length away third. Botti said jockey Ryan Moore had told him
Planteur should have finished closer.
Godolphin also had Prince Bishop and Mendip in the race but it was left to
Monterossa and Capponi to steal the show by putting the pressure on hot favourite
So You Think from the 600m mark.
So You Think finished a half-length away fourth and his rider Joseph O’Brien
said he just could not quicken on a surface that was too dead for him.
The highly rated Japanese contender Eishen Flash finished sixth without ever
looking likely to get into the finish. Jockey Christophe Lemaire said: “He was
nervous in the gate and didn’t start well, but he got a rhythm and ran well
during the trip but I was too far back in the trip.”
Equally disappointing was the US mare Royal Delta but jockey Jose Lezcano said
there were excuses for her. “We had a good position but in the middle of the
turn the horse in front of me quit so I had to wait a little longer than I
wanted to. She gave me a good run at the end but this surface (all-weather) is
a little different - it’s a little sticky.”
Centre of attention before the race was the leading US woman jockey Chantal
Sutherland who rode Game On Dude who wound up 12th. Sutherland claimed her
mount was a victim of circumstances. “It was a good trip considering everything that happened. The horse next to him
was acting up in the gate, so he thought they were going to break (start). At
home we break quicker, so he went to go forward and then he sat down. He just
got a little frazzled after not breaking so great. Then he relaxed. He was good
on the backside, he just wanted to get into his rhythm. So I did what I always
do and let him try to get there and I waited. The track is very tiring.”
Photo: Copyright Dubai Racing Club / Neville Hopwood.
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