Club 26
Discounted tickets for 18 to 26 year-olds
Hall of Fame
Celebrating Horse Racing’s Heroes
Number One: Dettori and Star Catcher teamed up for glory in the Qipco British Champions Fillies & Mares Stakes.
Star Catcher rounded off her excellent campaign with victory in the Qipco British Champions Fillies & Mares Stakes at Ascot.
John Gosden’s filly was a maiden at the start of the season, having finished sixth on her only juvenile start at Chelmsford.
However, a good case can now be made for her being the best middle-distance filly of her generation after adding this Group 1 prize to her earlier big-race wins this season in the Ribblesdale at Royal Ascot, the Irish Oaks at the Curragh and the Prix Vermeille in Paris.
With Frankie Dettori in the saddle, the daughter of Sea The Stars was the 7-4 favourite to provide her owner-breeder Anthony Oppenheimer with a third Champions Day victory in as many years following the back-to-back wins of the brilliant Cracksman in the Champion Stakes.
It was not all plain sailing for the market leader as she was hard at work halfway up the home straight – and was briefly short of room after Sun Maiden drifted across the track, leaving Star Catcher the meat in the sandwich between her and Delphinia against the far rail.
Gosden’s charge rallied courageously, however, getting the better of Delphinia by a short head, with Sun Maiden third and the luckless Fleeting fourth after encountering traffic problems.
Dettori was bouncing straight back after defeat for Stradivarius in the Long Distance Cup, and was making it winner number 18 at Group One level this season – and the 250th of his glittering career.
He said: “Obviously I’m still a bit sour about Stradivarius, but the ground is a bit worse than we thought. I’ve gone from crying to smiling in half an hour.
“She’s lovely, she’s tough – I think she’s staying in training, with a bit of luck, and she’s a wonderful filly.
“She’s provided me with my 250th Group One and 18th this season, so I love her.”
Gosden said: “All three fillies were brave, as it was testing ground and not what we are used to. That is the hope (to see her again next year). Mr Oppenheimer believes in racing his horses and he enjoys it immensely, so she should be racing next year. She is a lovely filly and a brave filly.
“Anapurna found it too testing. She lost a shoe and was skidding all the way.”
Seamie Heffernan, rider of Aidan O’Brien-trained runner-up Delphinia, said: “She’s unlucky not to have won a Group 1, Second is better than third, but it’s not as good as winning.”
Sir Michael Stoute, trainer of third home Sun Maiden said: “She’s a very honest filly and a progressive, one too.”
#CHAMPIONSDAY
Follow us for the latest up-to-date buzz from the QIPCO Champions Day
We use cookies to improve your experience and to provide us with insight into how people use our website.
To find out more, read our privacy policy.
Cookies are tiny pieces of data stored on your device which can enable certain website functionality and collect information about how you use websites To find out more, read our cookie policy. You can manage which types of cookies to accept below.
These cookies are essential to the operation of this website and help provide basic functionality such as navigation and language support.
These cookies help us improve the performance of this website by giving us anonymised information about how you interact with it.