Greg Wood 

French renaissance has Calandagan on course to lay siege to City Of Troy

Foreign presence will bring a genuine cosmopolitan flavour to the International Stakes at York on Wednesday
  
  

Calandagan, with Stephane Pasquier up, is victorious at Royal Ascot
Calandagan, with Stephane Pasquier up, is victorious at Royal Ascot. Photograph: Frank Sorge/racingfotos.com/Shutterstock

The gloomy noises off in horse racing over the latest incipient crisis to appear on the horizon can become a little overwhelming at times, but every now and again, a race or a week comes along to remind us all why we caught the bug in the first place.

Thirteen runners, including City Of Troy, this year’s Derby winner, have been declared for the International Stakes on the first afternoon of York’s Ebor meeting on Wednesday, when the track’s richest race of the year will have a double-figure field for only the second time this century, and on paper at least, it has pretty much everything that even the most demanding racegoer or punter could wish to see in a middle-distance top-tier Group One race.

The obvious storyline surrounds City Of Troy, who has been saddled with a “best-since-Frankel” billing pretty much since his first start as a juvenile but is still looking for the career-defining performance in an all-aged field that he needs to fully live up to it.

The track, the trip and the going all look ideal for Aidan O’Brien’s colt, whose sole defeat in six starts came in the 2,000 Guineas in May, but there are enough lingering doubts after a tough race in the Eclipse in July to see him priced up at even-money in the early betting for Wednesday’s race. From a punter’s point of view, it is a near-perfect scenario that will give his many fans a chance to double their money if he wins, while offering the doubters an attractive list of each-way alternatives, including proven Group One performers and up-and-coming improvers.

For racing followers of a certain age, meanwhile, this may feel like something of a throwback renewal of a contest that has been etching lasting memories into the sport’s collective consciousness ever since the first running in 1972, when the great Brigadier Gerard suffered the only defeat of his 18-race career at the hands of that year’s Derby winner, Roberto.

Small fields and odds-on favourites have become something of a pattern in this race in recent years, and the “international” tag has seemed a little overblown too. This year’s renewal, however, has runners from four countries – England, Ireland, France and Japan – and while City Of York is undoubtedly the star name in the field, it is the presence of his fellow three-year-old Calandagan, the King Edward VII Stakes winner, that arguably turns it into a truly compelling race.

The steady decline in the number of French-trained runners and winners in British Group One events has been a distinct and somewhat surprising feature of the last decade. Five of our 36 Group Ones were won by French-trained horses in 2015, but the totals for the eight full seasons since are 2-0-0-2-1-1-1-1, an average of one per year.

Three of France’s four Group One wins between 2020 and 2023, meanwhile, were on Champions Day at Ascot in October, when an easy surface played to the strengths of horses including Big Rock and Sealiway. But Goliath got them on the board for 2024 with a thoroughly dominant display in the King George at Ascot last month, and his trainer, Francis Graffard, will arrive at York with high hopes of recording a second British Group One win in less than a month when Calandagan goes to post on Wednesday.

It is not just the fact that Calandagan hints at a potential renaissance for French-trained runners at the top level in Britain that adds so much to Wednesday’s race.

He also runs in the famous green and red colours of the Aga Khan, which have been part of the fabric of the turf for decades, and where City Of Troy’s connections are concerned, he could be seen as something of a nightmare opponent. Graffard’s runner is a gelding, and as a result, he was ineligible for this season’s Classics, but while a win for City Of Troy could see him feted as one of the greats of recent years, a convincing defeat at the hands of Calandagan might suggest that he is not even the best of his own generation.

O’Brien is running away with the trainer’s title on the Flat this season and some might see it as just the latest affront to British racing’s dignity if Graffard could take another Group One back to Chantilly.

Kempton 2.10 Dancingintherain 2.40 Channagide 3.10 Big Sip 3.45 Top Of The Class 4.15 Ten Dimes 4.45 Brasil Power (nap) 5.15 American Fashion

 

Brighton 2.25 Premium Pass 2.55 Berkshire Nugget 3.25 Fighting Poet 4.00 Mon Etoile 4.30 Letter Of The Law 5.00 Dion Baker

 

Nottingham 5.10 Intrusively 5.40 Arnaz 6.10 Wild Clary 6.40 Standbackandlook (nb) 7.10 Always Fearless 7.40 Stratocracy

 

Wolverhampton 6.30 Enclosure 7.00 Oolong Poobong 7.30 Rose Fandango 8.00 Lumenbourg 8.30 Kinetic 9.00 Restricted

But Calandagan’s presence will add immensely to the fascination and narrative of Wednesday’s race, and if he – or Jerome Reynier’s Zarakem – could maintain the French momentum in our high-summer highlights, it would only be a positive sign for the sport as a whole.

Calandagan can come to International rescue

City Of Troy was an 8-15 chance for Wednesday’s International Stakes at York after the five-day declarations last week but the Derby winner had drifted to odds-against by Tuesday afternoon, offering punters a carrot that many will struggle to resist.

Aidan O’Brien’s colt was priced at just 1-4 when he battled home a length in front of Al Riffa in the Eclipse Stakes at Sandown in July, and while that showed a different side of City Of Troy, it was not the unforgettable, statement performance that the crowd had hoped to see.

Quicker ground on Wednesday – the fastest that City Of Troy will have encountered in his career, in fact – might see a much-improved showing from the favourite, who remains potentially the best middle-distance colt to race in Europe since the incomparable Frankel.

On his overall form to date, however, he is not in the same parish as the colt who took the International at odds of 1-10 back in 2012, and while he heads the Timeform ratings for Wednesday’s race, he has nothing like as much in hand of his field as the betting might suggest.

He also faces two interesting new opponents in Zarakem, the runner-up in the Prince of Wales’s Stakes at Royal Ascot, and the three-year-old gelding Calandagan (3.35), who took the King Edward VII Stakes at the same meeting, and Francis Graffard’s runner in particular looks significantly overpriced at around 7-1.

His emphatic Ascot success proved that he handles fast ground and was backed up by an impressive time. It was enough to put him within 4lb of the favourite on Timeform’s figures on just his sixth career start, and his recent profile of race-to-race progress suggests that he could well find significant further improvement on Wednesday.

York 1.50 JM Jungle was a close third in this race 12 months ago from a 5lb higher mark and has an obvious chance to improve a couple of places on that form from a decent draw in stall six.

York 2.25 Charlie Appleby’s Ruling Court made a small down-payment on his £2m price tag at the breeze-up sales when he ran away with a maiden at Sandown last month and he should build on that performance here.

York 1.50 JM Jungle (nb) 2.25 Ruling Court 3.00 Los Angeles 3.35 Calandagan (nap) 4.10 Samui 4.45 Profitable Edge 5.20 Yes I’m Mali

 

Carlisle 2.05 Khaldiya 2.40 Gundogan 3.15 Flowstate 3.50 Ribble River 4.25 Greenwich 5.00 Vintage Love 5.30 Oso Rapido 6.02 Kelpie Grey

 

Worcester 4.50 Don Occhetti 5.25 Galloping Pride 5.55 Ghost Jury 6.30 Idylle Sauvage 7.00 Wilful 7.35 Malago Rose 8.05 Midnight Jewel

 

Kempton 5.50 Afentiko 6.20 Defence Missile 6.50 Jayyash 7.25 Moon Angel 8.00 Matharu 8.30 God Bless America

York 3.00 A six-length third behind City Of Troy in the Derby remains the only blip on Los Angeles’s career record and the Irish Derby winner should confirm his strong credentials for the St Leger with another win here.

York 4.10 The unexposed Samui made a mockery of his opening mark of 89 when finishing 17 lengths clear at Killarney last time despite being eased in the closing stages, and even a 13lb hike in the weights looks quite lenient on that form.

 

Leave a Comment

Required fields are marked *

*

*