
Free William Hill shop bet every day of the Newmarket festival
One of racing's summer highlights is back at Newmarket Racecourse from Thursday 10th until Saturday 12th July, and your favourite paper is bringing you everything you need to celebrate. The dazzling Newmarket races are a three day spectacular which features elite horseracing, high fashion and a chance for old favourites and new faces to vye for victory on the iconic course. Pick up your Record from Thursday 10 until Saturday 12 July to get your hands on a FREE William Hill £2 shop bet inside your paper.
Thursday 10 July - Ladies Day gets the festival off to a glamourous start alongside the top-tier racing including the Group Two Princess of Wales's Stakes.
Friday 11 July - Festival Friday sees the prestigious Group One Tattersalls Falmouth Stakes, a thrilling mile-long contest for fillies and mares.
Saturday 12 July - July Cup Day brings in the grand finale of Newmarket with the Group One July Cup. The winner will lift the coveted prize for this sprint race which attracts international contenders.
So don't miss out on the fun! Pick up your Daily Record from Thursday 10 until Saturday 12 July 2025 to get your hands on fantastic racing content from trusted punters and a FREE William Hill shop bet every day of the festival.
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South Wales Guardian
11 hours ago
- South Wales Guardian
Blue Bolt strikes in Distaff heat
Beaten into fifth place as an odds-on favourite for her racecourse debut at Southwell in April, Andrew Balding's filly has not looked back since, bolting up at Windsor in May before following up with a comfortable success at Newbury in June. She was a 2-1 favourite to complete her hat-trick at Listed level in Esher and having grabbed the lead from an early stage under Colin Keane, the daughter of Blue Point found plenty for pressure in the straight to score by a length from Cajole. 'When I saw the draw we had (stall three), I knew there was no point in taking her back,' said Keane. 'I'm still getting the hang of the place, for a stiff track it's hard to come from too far back off the pace. When the ground is like that, being on the pace helps and being on a nice filly is an even bigger help. 'It's such a stiff track, when you turn in on the straight you're climbing the whole way and I suppose horses struggle to make up ground on it.' Richard Hannon's Dubawi gelding Classic came good in the one-mile Coral Challenge. The five-year-old has often looked better than his bare form, and a switch to front-running tactics under Sean Levey unlocked that potential as he claimed success by a length and a quarter at 6-1. 'I was sick of seeing him be unlucky, looking like he has all the ability in the world, we know that,' said Hannon. 'Today he looked like he was never going to get beaten. Jack (Hannon's son) said to me a furlong from home 'is Sean OK, he looks like he's injured or something, he's not trying'. He was trying! 'This horse has had a lot of near-misses and he's an extremely talented horse who is by a stallion (Dubawi) where anything is possible. 'He could well turn out to be a Group horse and could come back to seven furlongs no problem – he's got loads of speed and loads of ability.' Mudbir came to the fore for John and Thady Gosden in the Coral Celebrating 50 Year Eclipse Sponsorship Handicap, prevailing by half a length under Jim Crowley having started at 9-2. The Kingman colt is owned and was bred by Shadwell and is a half-brother to their multiple Group One winners Mostahdaf and Nazeef. A gelding operation looks to be key to Yahber after his smart win in the Coral 'Pipped-At-The-Post' And Win Handicap. Trained by William Haggas and ridden by Tom Marquand, the three-year-old son of Sea The Stars was the 9-4 favourite after showing signs of promise when second at Redcar last time. He duly delivered over the 10-furlong trip, triumphing by a neck for owner Sheikh Juma Dalmook Al Maktoum. 'I'm really happy with him, he's been gelded and to be honest it's probably going to be the making of his future,' said Marquand. 'William and his team decided to do it and it's been the making of some really fun horses we've had like Addeybb. 'This guy is obviously plenty talented and it seems to have done the trick, hopefully it will set him on the right trajectory now.' The concluding Coral Golden Rewards Shaker Handicap then went the way of Flying Frontier, an 8-1 chance under Rossa Ryan who rallied late to claim a narrow victory on the line.

Rhyl Journal
11 hours ago
- Rhyl Journal
Delacroix denies Ombudsman in Eclipse thriller
A quality field of six runners went to post for a Group One contest that traditionally gives the Classic generation a first chance to meet their elders and this year's renewal was no exception, with four three-year-olds taking on two top-class older horses in Ombudsman and Sosie. Ombudsman was the 6-4 favourite to supplement his brilliant success in the Prince of Wales's Stakes at Royal Ascot and quickened up to lead inside the final furlong – but having looked to be struggling at the rear of the field early in the straight, Derby disappointment Delacroix (3-1) came with a wet sail under a power-packed Moore drive to get up by a neck. What. A. Race. This. Was. 🫨 DELACROIX GETS UP TO BEAT OMBUDSMAN AND WIN THE CORAL-ECLIPSE 🏆 — ITV Racing (@itvracing) July 5, 2025 'It wasn't the first or the second or the third plan! He began OK, but nobody really wanted to make the running and there was three of us in a line,' Moore told ITV Racing. 'Me and William (Buick, on Ombudsman) wanted the same position and I had to give way. He was on an older, bigger horse so I thought we'd wait and go around. 'They got first run on me and he's obviously a very good horse with a good turn of foot. He quickened up really well. 'I think 10 furlongs is fine and if anything he could probably run over shorter. He's a horse we've always held in high regard and he was the only horse in this race that hadn't won a Group One, but he'd threatened to and he's obviously out of a great racemare (Tepin) and by Dubawi.' O'Brien said: 'Incredible, I thought Ryan was going to make the running on him. Obviously you don't tell Ryan what to do, but you listen to what he's saying, so when I saw it all changing I didn't know what would happen or what to make of it. 'He ended up where he did and it just kept ringing in my mind that during the week Ryan said to me 'Aidan, I think this horse is a miler', and I always thought he was a mile-and-a-quarter horse. 'As the race went on that was what was ringing in my head, is he a miler or is he a mile-and-a-quarter horse, but obviously Ryan stuck to his judgement because he kept calm and had one go. 'What he did in the last two furlongs looked very different. It was a very good race, the second horse is a very good horse and when you get a four-year-old rated as high as that, you need a three-year-old that's a bit different to beat them. 'Ryan said he changed plans four times in the race today. He found himself where he was but he was calm and collected and clinical.' Paddy Power cut Delacroix's odds for the Juddmonte International at York to 5-1 from 16-1, with Ombudsman a 4-1 shot and Field Of Gold the 5-4 favourite. While plans for Delacroix remain up in the air, he looks set to either stick to a mile and a quarter or even drop back in trip. 'He's hardy so you shouldn't be afraid to race him, but the lads (owners) will decide what they want to do,' O'Brien added. 'They stacked them up in front today and he came with a deadly run, it was incredible what he did – mind-blowing. 'I don't think going back to a mile would worry him, but if they decide to keep him at a mile and a quarter I would be delighted. 'When you can relax like that and quicken like that over a mile and a quarter, it's very potent and a brilliant thing to have up your sleeve.'


North Wales Chronicle
18 hours ago
- North Wales Chronicle
Blue Bolt strikes in Distaff heat
Beaten into fifth place as an odds-on favourite for her racecourse debut at Southwell in April, Andrew Balding's filly has not looked back since, bolting up at Windsor in May before following up with a comfortable success at Newbury in June. She was a 2-1 favourite to complete her hat-trick at Listed level in Esher and having grabbed the lead from an early stage under Colin Keane, the daughter of Blue Point found plenty for pressure in the straight to score by a length from Cajole. 'When I saw the draw we had (stall three), I knew there was no point in taking her back,' said Keane. 'I'm still getting the hang of the place, for a stiff track it's hard to come from too far back off the pace. When the ground is like that, being on the pace helps and being on a nice filly is an even bigger help. 'It's such a stiff track, when you turn in on the straight you're climbing the whole way and I suppose horses struggle to make up ground on it.' Richard Hannon's Dubawi gelding Classic came good in the one-mile Coral Challenge. The five-year-old has often looked better than his bare form, and a switch to front-running tactics under Sean Levey unlocked that potential as he claimed success by a length and a quarter at 6-1. 'I was sick of seeing him be unlucky, looking like he has all the ability in the world, we know that,' said Hannon. 'Today he looked like he was never going to get beaten. Jack (Hannon's son) said to me a furlong from home 'is Sean OK, he looks like he's injured or something, he's not trying'. He was trying! 'This horse has had a lot of near-misses and he's an extremely talented horse who is by a stallion (Dubawi) where anything is possible. 'He could well turn out to be a Group horse and could come back to seven furlongs no problem – he's got loads of speed and loads of ability.' Mudbir came to the fore for John and Thady Gosden in the Coral Celebrating 50 Year Eclipse Sponsorship Handicap, prevailing by half a length under Jim Crowley having started at 9-2. The Kingman colt is owned and was bred by Shadwell and is a half-brother to their multiple Group One winners Mostahdaf and Nazeef. A gelding operation looks to be key to Yahber after his smart win in the Coral 'Pipped-At-The-Post' And Win Handicap. Trained by William Haggas and ridden by Tom Marquand, the three-year-old son of Sea The Stars was the 9-4 favourite after showing signs of promise when second at Redcar last time. He duly delivered over the 10-furlong trip, triumphing by a neck for owner Sheikh Juma Dalmook Al Maktoum. 'I'm really happy with him, he's been gelded and to be honest it's probably going to be the making of his future,' said Marquand. 'William and his team decided to do it and it's been the making of some really fun horses we've had like Addeybb. 'This guy is obviously plenty talented and it seems to have done the trick, hopefully it will set him on the right trajectory now.' The concluding Coral Golden Rewards Shaker Handicap then went the way of Flying Frontier, an 8-1 chance under Rossa Ryan who rallied late to claim a narrow victory on the line.