O’Brien declares Sunday’s Hong Kong contingent his best ever
Ireland’s champion trainer Aidan O’Brien readily agrees he has brought his best team ever to attack the four Group 1 races in Sunday’s Hong Kong International Races at Sha Tin.
He is the only trainer this year to have runners in all four of the big races, including the Vase on Sunday at 1:10 a.m., the Sprint at 1:50 a.m., the Mile at 3 a.m. and the Cup at 3:40 a.m. EST.
O’Brien’s assault kicks off with Warm Heart in the Hong Kong Vase, Aesop’s Fables in the Hong Kong Sprint; Cairo in the Hong Kong Mile and 4-year-old colt Luxembourg in the Hong Kong Cup.
“I think there is no doubt that it is,” O’Brien replied when asked if this was the best team he’d brought to Hong Kong.
“It’s very difficult to win races here, and you don’t come with second-raters.”
Luxembourg and the filly Warm Heart are regarded as perhaps his best chances of claiming more Group 1 glory, but the other two should not be discounted in the highly competitive fields where the locals and a contingent of Japanese horses also will mount serious challenges.
“The plan with Luxembourg was that he would always go to Ascot and then come here, but he missed Ascot and has come here,” O’Brien said.
“The filly is a nice enough filly.”
O’Brien said there was definitely little a line in Warm Heart’s form to suggest she is better at a mile and a half, than a mile and a quarter.
Warm Heart already has scored two Group 1 victories this year – the Yorkshire Oaks and the Prix Vermeille.
At her most recent run, she finished second in the Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Turf in the U.S. She had won five of her six previous starts in three countries.
O’Brien has won three of the past eight editions of the Hong Kong Vase, with Highland Reel in 2015 and 2017 and Mogul in 2020.
Ryan Moore will ride all four of O’Brien’s horses and has worked hard to get down to Warm Heart’s allocated weight of 117 pounds after he was injured in a race fall in Japan last month.
“I was talking to him yesterday and he said his weight is very good,” O’Brien said.
Wednesday night’s Happy Valley meeting was the first time Moore had ridden since his fall in Japan.
Coverage of the Hong Kong International Races at Horse Racing Nation is made possible through a sponsorship by the Hong Kong Jockey Club.