Latest news with #HarryEustace


Gulf Today
28-06-2025
- Sport
- Gulf Today
Newbury and Jebel Ali Racecourse cement ties following successful race collaboration
Mr Ubiquitous delivered a stunning performance to land the Jebel Ali Racecourse Handicap in impressive fashion at the Newbury Racecourse. Ridden by Jack Nicholls and trained by Harry Eustace, the three-year-old gelding surged late between horses to win by half a length, confirming his upward trajectory. Mr Ubiquitous was drawn in stall 2 and settled at the rear of the seven-runner field. As the pace quickened with two furlongs to run, Nicholls—still in only his second season in the saddle—showed maturity beyond his years. He waited patiently for a gap to appear before switching left, then slicing between rivals to produce a powerful burst that took him to the front inside the final 100 yards. The race, run over seven furlongs on good to firm ground, saw This Farh (trained by David Loughnane) dictate matters from the front, hitting the lead over a furlong out under Rossa Ryan. For a moment, it looked like he might hold on, but Mr Ubiquitous's finishing speed proved too much. Tolerance, trained by George Boughey and ridden by William Buick, finished strongly from off the pace but was always doing his best work too late, finishing another length behind in third. 'It is always a pleasure to be at Newbury Racecourse — a racecourse that reflects excellence,' said Mohamed Al Ahmed, General Manager of Jebel Ali Racecourse. 'I was delighted to see a vibrant crowd and new initiatives introduced to enhance the race day experience. 'On behalf of Jebel Ali Racecourse & Stables, I would like to extend my heartfelt thanks to the Board Members of Newbury Racecourse for their continued guidance and support. 'Their leadership has been instrumental in strengthening our international relations and expanding the global presence, and to the leadership at Newbury for their warm hospitality. 'Our long-standing relationship, built over two decades, is more than symbolic; it is a strategic partnership built on shared values and a mutual vision for the future of racing. 'We look forward to further collaboration and to welcoming our Newbury counterparts in Dubai in the near future,' he added. 'Newbury Racecourse was delighted to welcome Mohamed Ahmed, General Manager at Jebel Ali Racecourse & Stables and to stage a race in celebration of our enduring friendship and partnership which extends more than two decades,' said Shaun Hinds, CEO Newbury Racecourse. 'The Jebel Ali Racecourse Handicap was well supported and saw Harry Eustace's Mr Ubiquitous bring up a hat-trick in Dubai-style sunshine. 'Despite continents separating our respective venues we share many core values with an emphasis on delivering a first class racing experience for participants and racegoers driving everything we do. I look forward to visiting Jebel Ali Racecourse & Stables again and, in the meantime, closely following their development plans,' Hinds added.

Rhyl Journal
24-06-2025
- Sport
- Rhyl Journal
Champions Day seen as an ‘obvious' target for Docklands
Harry Eustace's five-year-old is owned by the Australian outfit OTI Racing, and was campaigned internationally over the winter before returning to Newmarket. His early campaign revolved around Ascot, a track he clearly favours and shone at again with a tough Group One victory over Rosallion. The Queen Elizabeth II Stakes is therefore the late-season target over the same course and distance, with a European campaign the likely focus in the meantime. 'The obvious thing to do would be to work backwards from Champions Day at Ascot, there's also the Prix Jacques le Marois and the Sussex Stakes,' said Eustace. 'He takes his racing well, he ran 10 days before Ascot at Epsom so I don't necessarily want or need to space his racing out a lot. 'He put in a huge performance at Ascot, but he's a five-year-old and if there was ever a year where we can campaign him more aggressively then this is it. 'We were waiting to see how Ascot panned out before we began plotting where'd he go next, but the one thing we know he won't do is go to Australia.' Eustace had two Group One winners across Royal Ascot, the second being Time For Sandals after her 25-1 strike in the Commonwealth Cup. She has a host of top level sprints on her radar, though connections anticipate next year will be a busier campaign as she started her season this time relatively early. 'She's great and seems to have come out of it really well,' he said of the filly. 'We hadn't really thought past Ascot with her because we were pitching her in a Group One and we knew it'd tell us how to campaign her for the rest of season. 'Now she's a Group One winner, she's got to run in Group One races so races like the Flying Five, the Nunthorpe and the Haydock Sprint Cup are all obvious targets. 'She was up and running early enough for the Fred Darling so I don't think we'll be campaigning her aggressively this year. 'We'll very much look at the older sprint programme next year, it sort of writes itself.'

Leader Live
24-06-2025
- Sport
- Leader Live
Champions Day seen as an ‘obvious' target for Docklands
Harry Eustace's five-year-old is owned by the Australian outfit OTI Racing, and was campaigned internationally over the winter before returning to Newmarket. His early campaign revolved around Ascot, a track he clearly favours and shone at again with a tough Group One victory over Rosallion. The Queen Elizabeth II Stakes is therefore the late-season target over the same course and distance, with a European campaign the likely focus in the meantime. 'The obvious thing to do would be to work backwards from Champions Day at Ascot, there's also the Prix Jacques le Marois and the Sussex Stakes,' said Eustace. 'He takes his racing well, he ran 10 days before Ascot at Epsom so I don't necessarily want or need to space his racing out a lot. 'He put in a huge performance at Ascot, but he's a five-year-old and if there was ever a year where we can campaign him more aggressively then this is it. 'We were waiting to see how Ascot panned out before we began plotting where'd he go next, but the one thing we know he won't do is go to Australia.' Eustace had two Group One winners across Royal Ascot, the second being Time For Sandals after her 25-1 strike in the Commonwealth Cup. She has a host of top level sprints on her radar, though connections anticipate next year will be a busier campaign as she started her season this time relatively early. 'She's great and seems to have come out of it really well,' he said of the filly. 'We hadn't really thought past Ascot with her because we were pitching her in a Group One and we knew it'd tell us how to campaign her for the rest of season. 'Now she's a Group One winner, she's got to run in Group One races so races like the Flying Five, the Nunthorpe and the Haydock Sprint Cup are all obvious targets. 'She was up and running early enough for the Fred Darling so I don't think we'll be campaigning her aggressively this year. 'We'll very much look at the older sprint programme next year, it sort of writes itself.'


South Wales Guardian
24-06-2025
- Sport
- South Wales Guardian
Champions Day seen as an ‘obvious' target for Docklands
Harry Eustace's five-year-old is owned by the Australian outfit OTI Racing, and was campaigned internationally over the winter before returning to Newmarket. His early campaign revolved around Ascot, a track he clearly favours and shone at again with a tough Group One victory over Rosallion. The Queen Elizabeth II Stakes is therefore the late-season target over the same course and distance, with a European campaign the likely focus in the meantime. 'The obvious thing to do would be to work backwards from Champions Day at Ascot, there's also the Prix Jacques le Marois and the Sussex Stakes,' said Eustace. 'He takes his racing well, he ran 10 days before Ascot at Epsom so I don't necessarily want or need to space his racing out a lot. 'He put in a huge performance at Ascot, but he's a five-year-old and if there was ever a year where we can campaign him more aggressively then this is it. 'We were waiting to see how Ascot panned out before we began plotting where'd he go next, but the one thing we know he won't do is go to Australia.' Eustace had two Group One winners across Royal Ascot, the second being Time For Sandals after her 25-1 strike in the Commonwealth Cup. She has a host of top level sprints on her radar, though connections anticipate next year will be a busier campaign as she started her season this time relatively early. 'She's great and seems to have come out of it really well,' he said of the filly. 'We hadn't really thought past Ascot with her because we were pitching her in a Group One and we knew it'd tell us how to campaign her for the rest of season. 'Now she's a Group One winner, she's got to run in Group One races so races like the Flying Five, the Nunthorpe and the Haydock Sprint Cup are all obvious targets. 'She was up and running early enough for the Fred Darling so I don't think we'll be campaigning her aggressively this year. 'We'll very much look at the older sprint programme next year, it sort of writes itself.'


Glasgow Times
23-06-2025
- Sport
- Glasgow Times
Champions Day seen as an ‘obvious' target for Docklands
Harry Eustace's five-year-old is owned by the Australian outfit OTI Racing, and was campaigned internationally over the winter before returning to Newmarket. His early campaign revolved around Ascot, a track he clearly favours and shone at again with a tough Group One victory over Rosallion. The Queen Elizabeth II Stakes is therefore the late-season target over the same course and distance, with a European campaign the likely focus in the meantime. Harry Eustace celebrates after winning the Queen Anne Stakes with Docklands (David Davies/PA) 'The obvious thing to do would be to work backwards from Champions Day at Ascot, there's also the Prix Jacques le Marois and the Sussex Stakes,' said Eustace. 'He takes his racing well, he ran 10 days before Ascot at Epsom so I don't necessarily want or need to space his racing out a lot. 'He put in a huge performance at Ascot, but he's a five-year-old and if there was ever a year where we can campaign him more aggressively then this is it. 'We were waiting to see how Ascot panned out before we began plotting where'd he go next, but the one thing we know he won't do is go to Australia.' Time For Sandals winning the Commonwealth Cup under Richard Kingscote (John Walton/PA) Eustace had two Group One winners across Royal Ascot, the second being Time For Sandals after her 25-1 strike in the Commonwealth Cup. She has a host of top level sprints on her radar, though connections anticipate next year will be a busier campaign as she started her season this time relatively early. 'She's great and seems to have come out of it really well,' he said of the filly. 'We hadn't really thought past Ascot with her because we were pitching her in a Group One and we knew it'd tell us how to campaign her for the rest of season. 'Now she's a Group One winner, she's got to run in Group One races so races like the Flying Five, the Nunthorpe and the Haydock Sprint Cup are all obvious targets. 'She was up and running early enough for the Fred Darling so I don't think we'll be campaigning her aggressively this year. 'We'll very much look at the older sprint programme next year, it sort of writes itself.'