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Opera Ballo back on the right track in Heron Stakes

Opera Ballo back on the right track in Heron Stakes

The Charlie Appleby-trained Ghaiyyath colt was keen for William Buick on the outside of runners through the early stages of the one-mile Listed affair, before his rider managed to slot in behind horses.
Pellitory swept right into contention after leader Matauri Bay gave way, but 5-4 favourite Opera Ballo – who won his first two career starts in the manner of a potentially top-class performer before coming unstuck in the Craven, when he did not help his chance with his headstrong tendencies – found another gear and was well on top at the line.
He holds an entry for the St James's Palace Stakes at Royal Ascot but connections were keen to stress the exciting three-year-old remains a 'work in progress'.
Assistant trainer Alex Merriam said: 'The first-time hood has worked and William said once he got cover he settled much better than at Newmarket the last day, albeit he was still a bit keen early doors.
'He got the job done and he is very much a work in progress. He's had the hood on at home and it's definitely helped – you would be a brave man to take that off now.
'I'm not quite sure what Charlie has planned. He is in the St James's Palace, but he is a work in progress and we'll see. He will appreciate a bit of juice in the ground, I think, but we'll see how he comes out of this and let Charlie come up with a plan.'
It was George Scott's Champagne Stakes scorer Bay City Roller who ran on for second on his belated reappearance, two and a half lengths in arrears.
Having elected against a tilt at the French Derby to head to this race, the colt's handler is now excited to step up in trip at the next available opportunity.
Scott said: 'I'm delighted and the winner has had three runs this year and has a lot of quality.
'We were unsure where to go and we thought he was ready to step up to 10 furlongs but we just couldn't find the right race.
'Callum (Shepherd, jockey) said he hit the line great and he's ready to step up. His pedigree is all about 10 furlongs and a mile and a half and I'm really pleased with him.
'It looked so dry in France and going for a Classic off a long lay-off felt ambitious. He's very much a horse for the future and he has a lot of quality and we're really happy with that as a starting point.
'I will have to look at the programme book as he has a Group Two penalty which makes life difficult and I don't want to go into a Group One really. It may be somewhere in France with him or we might have to just sit on our hands for a bit.
'I really want to go 10 furlongs on a flat track and I wouldn't be surprised if he got a mile and a half one day, but I'm really pleased with this horse and that was great after so long off the track – I just want him to be sound in the morning!'

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Barry Hills: From humble beginnings to Classic glory and much more
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Starting from humble beginnings and with next to nothing, Hills climbed to the top of the training tree thanks to an eye for a horse and a shrewd angle for a bet. But the greatest achievement of Barrington William Hills was undoubtedly the racing dynasty he created with his five sons. He had three children with first wife, Maureen. Twins Michael and Richard were two of the best jockeys of their generation, while eldest son John was a successful trainer until his untimely death in 2014. Charlie is one of the best young trainers in the business having already won a host of big races since taking over from his father. His other son, George, has made a career in bloodstock, mainly in the United States, while Richard Hills' son, Patrick, rode, too. He is also survived by his second wife and George and Charlie's mother, Penny. Born in Worcester in 1937, racing was his life. The son of a head lad, Hills became an apprentice in 1952 at the age of 15 before weight was an issue and gave up the saddle seven years later to be head lad himself to trainer George Colling and shortly afterwards his successor John Oxley. It has gone down in racing folklore how Hills won the funds to set up his own stable after collecting £60,000 from his gamble on Frankincense to win the Lincoln at Doncaster in 1968. 'These days, you don't find a decent horse advertised at 66-1 three or four months before a race,' he told the Daily Mail. 'You don't come across chances like that every day. It never crossed my mind that he wouldn't win. That fearless punt was the beginning of many successful tilts at the ring that had bookmakers running for cover. Hills soon showed he was much more than merely a trainer of handicappers by saddling Rheingold to win Europe's premier middle-distance race, the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, in 1973. Rheingold had gone agonisingly close to winning the Derby the previous year, the first of four frustrating second places in the Epsom showpiece. Hills also endured bad luck in the Oaks particularly with Dibidale, whose saddle slipped in 1974 when looking the winner, but she did gain compensation in the Irish Oaks. However, Hills did chalk up five British Classics and the Irish Derby with very few big races eluding the master trainer in a career spanning 63 years, man and boy. One of those Classic wins was with the Sheikh Mohammed-trained Moonax in the 1994 St Leger at Doncaster. The late, great Pat Eddery was the man in the saddle that day and said on the day Hills retired from the training ranks: 'You used to come back in after a hard day's work and you'd have a beautiful breakfast. He was a gentleman. 'He's got guys working for him who've been there 25 years, which says all you need to know about what he's like to work for.' Hills instinctively knew how to prepare a horse for the track so was rarely wrong when the money was down. Not surprisingly, he loved taking the bookmakers to the cleaners, sometimes with equally-shrewd associates that included Jack Ramsden and Robert Sangster. The latter was one of his most successful owners, along with the likes of Khalid Abdullah and Sheikh Hamdan Al Maktoum. The Hills' list of memorable horses is a long one. Who could forget the popular grey stayer Further Flight, the winner of five successive Jockey Club Cups? His passion for betting never went away. He told The Independent in 2004: 'I still bet, yes. Not often, but occasionally. Further Flight in the (1990) Ebor would be the last really big win I had. It's about the only thing left that's tax free.' A forthright character when he wanted to be, owner Dick Bonnycastle named 1991 Derby runner Mr Combustible after him. Hawaiian Sound, Royal Applause, Cormorant Wood, Handsome Sailor and Cheltenham Festival winner Nomadic Way are just a handful of other household names to have been in his care. While enjoying success year after year after year, he suffered with his health and underwent an operation for throat cancer. In 2011, after 42 years at the helm, he thought it was time to hand over the reins at Faringdon Place to Charlie. But the death of John in the summer of 2014 caused him to step into the breach at his son's yard in Lambourn. Though he stressed that it was only a temporary measure, he only let go at the end of 2015 when he had settled in the now hugely-successful Owen Burrows as the new incumbent. It was typical of Hills not to leave a stone unturned. He leaves a legacy that takes some beating.

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Starting from humble beginnings and with next to nothing, Hills climbed to the top of the training tree thanks to an eye for a horse and a shrewd angle for a bet. But the greatest achievement of Barrington William Hills was undoubtedly the racing dynasty he created with his five sons. He had three children with first wife, Maureen. Twins Michael and Richard were two of the best jockeys of their generation, while eldest son John was a successful trainer until his untimely death in 2014. Charlie is one of the best young trainers in the business having already won a host of big races since taking over from his father. His other son, George, has made a career in bloodstock, mainly in the United States, while Richard Hills' son, Patrick, rode, too. He is also survived by his second wife and George and Charlie's mother, Penny. Born in Worcester in 1937, racing was his life. The son of a head lad, Hills became an apprentice in 1952 at the age of 15 before weight was an issue and gave up the saddle seven years later to be head lad himself to trainer George Colling and shortly afterwards his successor John Oxley. It has gone down in racing folklore how Hills won the funds to set up his own stable after collecting £60,000 from his gamble on Frankincense to win the Lincoln at Doncaster in 1968. 'These days, you don't find a decent horse advertised at 66-1 three or four months before a race,' he told the Daily Mail. 'You don't come across chances like that every day. It never crossed my mind that he wouldn't win. That fearless punt was the beginning of many successful tilts at the ring that had bookmakers running for cover. Hills soon showed he was much more than merely a trainer of handicappers by saddling Rheingold to win Europe's premier middle-distance race, the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, in 1973. Rheingold had gone agonisingly close to winning the Derby the previous year, the first of four frustrating second places in the Epsom showpiece. Hills also endured bad luck in the Oaks particularly with Dibidale, whose saddle slipped in 1974 when looking the winner, but she did gain compensation in the Irish Oaks. However, Hills did chalk up five British Classics and the Irish Derby with very few big races eluding the master trainer in a career spanning 63 years, man and boy. One of those Classic wins was with the Sheikh Mohammed-trained Moonax in the 1994 St Leger at Doncaster. The late, great Pat Eddery was the man in the saddle that day and said on the day Hills retired from the training ranks: 'You used to come back in after a hard day's work and you'd have a beautiful breakfast. He was a gentleman. 'He's got guys working for him who've been there 25 years, which says all you need to know about what he's like to work for.' Hills instinctively knew how to prepare a horse for the track so was rarely wrong when the money was down. Not surprisingly, he loved taking the bookmakers to the cleaners, sometimes with equally-shrewd associates that included Jack Ramsden and Robert Sangster. The latter was one of his most successful owners, along with the likes of Khalid Abdullah and Sheikh Hamdan Al Maktoum. The Hills' list of memorable horses is a long one. Who could forget the popular grey stayer Further Flight, the winner of five successive Jockey Club Cups? His passion for betting never went away. He told The Independent in 2004: 'I still bet, yes. Not often, but occasionally. Further Flight in the (1990) Ebor would be the last really big win I had. It's about the only thing left that's tax free.' A forthright character when he wanted to be, owner Dick Bonnycastle named 1991 Derby runner Mr Combustible after him. Hawaiian Sound, Royal Applause, Cormorant Wood, Handsome Sailor and Cheltenham Festival winner Nomadic Way are just a handful of other household names to have been in his care. While enjoying success year after year after year, he suffered with his health and underwent an operation for throat cancer. In 2011, after 42 years at the helm, he thought it was time to hand over the reins at Faringdon Place to Charlie. But the death of John in the summer of 2014 caused him to step into the breach at his son's yard in Lambourn. Though he stressed that it was only a temporary measure, he only let go at the end of 2015 when he had settled in the now hugely-successful Owen Burrows as the new incumbent. It was typical of Hills not to leave a stone unturned. He leaves a legacy that takes some beating.

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