Goodwood hero Stradivarius shows his status at Champions Day

Stradivarius and Frankie Dettori win their Champions Day contest at Ascot / Picture by Malcolm WellsStradivarius and Frankie Dettori win their Champions Day contest at Ascot / Picture by Malcolm Wells
Stradivarius and Frankie Dettori win their Champions Day contest at Ascot / Picture by Malcolm Wells
They love him at Goodwood - and now they love him at Ascot too.

Stradivarius, winner of the past two Qatar Goodwood Cups and a contender to make it a hat-trick in 2019, squeezed through the smallest of gaps on the home turn for a dramatic fifth win from five starts this year in the £530,000 G2 Qipco British Champions Stakes at Ascot's flat-season showpiece, Champions Day.

Trainer John Gosden admitted afterwards that the participation of a colt he described as "fabulous" had been "touch and go" owing to unsuitably soft ground.

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After the four-year-old, who was third last year, had scored by a length and a half under Frankie Dettori from one-time Gosden inmate Thomas Hobson and then survive a stewards' enquiry, having drifted right and checked the runner-up inside the final furlong, the trainer said: "I said on Racing UK beforehand that the ground was one thing, but we are going to get put in the box from stall one and he'll have to be Houdini to get out of it - well he did.

Stradivarius and Frankie Dettori win their Champions Day contest at Ascot / Picture by Malcolm WellsStradivarius and Frankie Dettori win their Champions Day contest at Ascot / Picture by Malcolm Wells
Stradivarius and Frankie Dettori win their Champions Day contest at Ascot / Picture by Malcolm Wells

"He saw that glimpse on the bend and he dived for it. Ryan (Moore, on Flag Of Honour) tried to shut it but he was too late. It was a very clever ride. If he'd tried to come round, he would have been put back in that box.

"He's a great horse - a fabulous horse - who didn't like that ground, but what a clever ride to take that one opportunity. We committed sooner than we wanted to on ground he didn't like, but it was jockeyship at its highest level.

"He benefited from the break (since his last race). I wouldn't have come here unless he was in great order. Bjorn (Nielsen, owner/breeder) and I had a long talk out on the pavement for 15 minutes after I walked the course and it was touch and go whether we ran him, but I said ''It's Champions Day and we should run.

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"The ground is in pristine condition, although yes it's too slow for him. They won't go a great gallop and our problem will be getting out of the box, so full marks to the horse and the jockey for being brave enough to go through that tiny little gap. Lucky he's not a big horse, isn't it."

Stradivarius, the champion stayer, stays in training and will bid to repeat this year's success in the inaugural Weatherbys Hamilton Stayers' Million. He is already only 9/4 from 52 with Ladbrokes for its centerpiece, the Gold Cup at Royal Ascot in June.

Gosden said: "He won't run until May, when he will reappear in the Sagaro Stakes here at Ascot or the Yorkshire Cup, and then we will try to win the Weatherbys Hamilton Million once again."

Dettori steered the evens favourite to victory but said it was a hard-fought success.

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The John Gosden-trained four-year-old, who has won all four of his previous starts this season including the Gold Cup at Royal Ascot, burst into the lead on the far rail after turning into the finishing straight, but had to hold off Thomas Hobson to win the £530,000 Group Two race by a length and a half.

"Obviously Ryan [Moore, riding Flag Of Honour, who made much of the running] was the one to beat. I had to shield Stradivarius a bit and then I was in the lap of the gods trying to get a run," explained Dettori.

"When his horse didn't turn [into the straight] very well, I thought, I know I am committed - I might not get another chance. I got out of that pocket. For him [Stradivarius] I went far too soon, but I had to take the commitment. In fairness, he answered every call, and I wouldn't have done it if I didn't have that much horse. I had so much horse that I was able to take the gap in a split second before even Ryan realised.

"Stradivarius has been a model of consistency and he deserved to be crowned champion stayer. What a season it has been for him."

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He continued: "I thought I was a couple of lengths clear, and then I heard the commentator say, 'Thomas Hobson is half a length behind!' I thought, 'God', and could just see this head behind me. But I picked him up again and he went again.

"We discussed the ground - it isn't his ideal ground, but the horse has been so fresh at home - he's had two months off - and you can't beat a day like this at Ascot, so we rolled the dice and I'm glad it came off. He is all heart, this horse."

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