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STAR FILLY LOVE ROLLS TO 1000 GUINEAS SCORE

By David Baxter/Racing Post | 07 Jun 2020 |


Love takes the One Thousand Guineas at Newmarket

The first week of the British flat season may have started late and in somewhat surreal circumstances, but there was a comforting sense of familiarity to be found in the June 7 QIPCO One Thousand Guineas (G1) at Newmarket as Love delivered another win in the race for Aidan O'Brien and Ryan Moore.

In the past five years, O'Brien has saddled four winners of the classic, though Moore has not been aboard the right member of the Ballydoyle battalion since 2016 when he partnered with Minding.

There was no difficult decision to be made this year after O'Brien entered just one runner, and one was all he needed as Love dominated her rivals to give the trainer a sixth win in the race and Moore a fourth.

Already a group 1 winner in Ireland, where she claimed the Moyglare Stud Stakes (G1) last season, Love's previous visit to the Rowley Mile ended in a 1 3/4-length defeat to Quadrilateral in the Bet365 Fillies' Mile (G1). But the daughter of Galileo emphatically reversed that form with a 4 1/4-length success.

Challenging on the outside of the field, Love traveled supremely well for Moore before hitting overdrive. 

"She was in control of the race a long way out. She won as she liked, really. She's a very uncomplicated filly, and we've always thought an awful lot of her," the jockey said. "She won the Moyglare last year, and we expected her to win the Fillies' Mile—I don't know if it was too soft for her that day. She's a typical Galileo filly. If it wasn't for her last run last year, you'd have been pretty confident she was the one to beat today."

By virtue of the fact British racing has only just resumed, and with Irish racing set to follow suit Monday, O'Brien, like all trainers, has been eagerly waiting to have runners, and Love became his first winner of the season in Britain—a spectacular way to start the campaign.

"We knew the horses were well, but we did stop and start (with the preparation), so you have to be a little careful," the trainer said. "When you back off them, some horses thrive, some don't, and some need work to make them thrive. It's not as straightforward as usual, and thanks to everyone we were delighted with them coming here."

Proving the one to beat at Newmarket, bookmakers wasted no time in making Love the one to beat at Epsom next month, cutting her to general 6-4 favoritism for the Investec Oaks (G1).

"We always thought the Oaks was going to suit her, and the Guineas was the place to start off," O'Brien said. "We thought she'd be a filly for a mile and a quarter to a mile and a half. We thought she'd stay well, and it was a nice starting point here. The distance between the races should be perfect, and we always thought Oaks would suit her."

Richard Hannon is the only trainer to have broken O'Brien's One Thousand Guineas stranglehold since 2016 with Billesdon Brook in 2018, and the trainer has high hopes for runner-up Cloak of Spirits, with the Coronation Stakes (G1) at Royal Ascot one possibility.

"I'm delighted with her. She did the donkey work and stuck at it," he said. "She's very elegant and a pretty classy filly. There will be a lot of good races in her. Maybe the Coronation Stakes could be next, but I will speak to (owner) Sheikh Obaid and see what he says. 

"I think being out in front suits her, and I think Andrea rode her perfectly. She hasn't lit the world up with her homework, but she is always like that anyway. I didn't know what to expect, but she has run a super race and beat a lot of very good fillies there."

Like Pinatubo a day earlier in the QIPCO Two Thousand Guineas (G1), Quadrilateral lost her unbeaten record as favorite to finish third, but the Roger Charlton-trained filly stuck to her task doggedly, shaping up like she could stay beyond a mile.

"She stayed on well but just got a little tired in the closing stages. She could have probably done with a little more cover, but these races are being run from the front, and nothing is coming from behind, so you have to be handy," Charlton said. "I was happy enough with that. The track probably doesn't play to her strengths, but Jason (Watson) seemed happy enough with the run."

The trainer added: "I don't know what we will do going forward. I will talk to (owner) Prince Khalid first. I'd imagine she would stay further, but we won't be rushing her."

Courtesy Bloodhorse.com