King Edward VII Stakes 2019 Result
15:05 Friday 21 June 2019 |
|
KING EDWARD VII STAKES (Group 2) (1) |
Distance : 1m 3f 211y |
Prize : £127,597 Age : 3yo Race Type : Flat | Going : Good |
All 8 ran. |
Winning Owner: Mr D. Smith, Mrs J. Magnier, Mr M. Tabor |
Time: 2m 29.16s |
POS | SILK | BTN | HORSE | AGE | WGT | ISP |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
JOCKEY & TRAINER | ||||||
1 | JAPAN | 3 | 9-0 | 6/4 | ||
J: Ryan Moore T: Aidan O'Brien, Ireland | ||||||
2 | 4½ | BANGKOK (IRE) | 3 | 9-0 | 10/1 | |
J: Silvestre De Sousa T: Andrew Balding | ||||||
3 | nk | EAGLES BY DAY (IRE) | 3 | 9-0 | 25/1 | |
J: Daniel Tudhope T: Michael Bell | ||||||
4 | 2½ | PRIVATE SECRETARY | 3 | 9-0 | 9/2 | |
J: Frankie Dettori T: John Gosden | ||||||
5 | 1¼ | PABLO ESCOBARR (IRE) | 3 | 9-0 | 13/2 | |
J: James Doyle T: William Haggas | ||||||
6 | 9 | PONDUS | 3 | 9-0 | 4/1 | |
J: Oisin Murphy T: James Fanshawe | ||||||
7 | 1¼ | HUMANITARIAN (USA) | 3 | 9-0 | 12/1 | |
J: Robert Havlin T: John Gosden | ||||||
8 | 33 | JACK YEATS (IRE) | 3 | 9-0 | 16/1 | |
J: Donnacha O'Brien T: Aidan O'Brien, Ireland |
All 8 ran. |
Winning Owner: Mr D. Smith, Mrs J. Magnier, Mr M. Tabor |
Time: 2m 29.16s |
A race that often hasn't lived up to its status in recent years but, in Japan, it featured a colt with genuine Group 1 aspirations and he delivered in no uncertain terms, his performance more than up to scratch, the best in the race since Nathaniel in 2011; the pace was strong thanks to the winners' stablemate Jack Yeats, the first 3 coming from behind, but it was far from smooth sailing for Japan, forced wide on the home turn and to concede first run to Bangkok, who made his move on the inner, but, such was the strength of his finishing burst, it mattered not a jot, Japan thoroughly impressive come the line.
A race that often hasn't lived up to its status in recent years but, in Japan, it featured a colt with genuine Group 1 aspirations and he delivered in no uncertain terms, his performance more than up to scratch, the best in the race since Nathaniel in 2011; the pace was strong thanks to the winners' stablemate Jack Yeats, the first 3 coming from behind, but it was far from smooth sailing for Japan, forced wide on the home turn and to concede first run to Bangkok, who made his move on the inner, but, such was the strength of his finishing burst, it mattered not a jot, Japan thoroughly impressive come the line.