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Ruler of the World in line for world’s richest horse racing event

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A cosmopolitan gathering of horses from seven different countries will contest the US$10 million Emirates Dubai World Cup at Meydan racecourse, on Saturday.

A maximum 16-runner field has assembled for one of the most open events in the 19-year history of the world's richest race.

Ruler Of The World, trained in Ireland by Aidan O'Brien, vies for the favourite's billing in the 2,000-metre contest with Military Attack and Akeed Mofeed, a pair of runners from Hong Kong.

Local hopes centre around three horses owned by Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al-Maktoum.

The sheikh's Godolphin enterprise is represented by Vancouverite and Cat O'Mountain, from Charlie Appleby's stable, and African Story.

The latter is trained by Saeed Bin Suroor, who saddles a second runner in Prince Bishop. Bin Suroor has won the Dubai World Cup five times, most recently with Moon Ballad in 2002.

Ruler of the World  ridden by Ryan Moore  returns to the winner's enclosure after winning the D...
Ruler of the World, ridden by Ryan Moore, returns to the winner's enclosure after winning the Derby at the Epsom Derby Festival in Surrey, southern England, on June 1, 2013
Adrian Dennis, AFP/File

"I feel good about our chances," Bin Suroor said on Thursday. "My horses have trained well in the build-up to the race. I expect both of them to be prominent in the early stages and they can both accelerate."

British hopes rest with Red Cadeaux, Hillstar, Side Glance and Mukhadram, who is owned by Sheikh Mohammed's brother, Sheikh Hamdan. Red Cadeaux and Side Glance finished second and fourth respectively in last year's race.

"Red Cadeaux likes the warm weather here in Dubai," said Ed Dunlop, who trains the eight-year-old. "It looks like anyone's race and if you offered me second place again, I would take it."

Hong Kong's record is poor but John Moore, the Australian who trains in Hong Kong, believes Military Attack has what it takes.

"I was delighted when my horse ended up in stall eight (at Wednesday's Post Position draw)," Moore said.

The ruler of Dubai Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid al-Maktoum (L) and the US owner of Animal Kingdom  the...
The ruler of Dubai Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid al-Maktoum (L) and the US owner of Animal Kingdom, the winner of the $10 million Dubai World Cup, the world's richest horse race, pictured at Meydan race track, on March 30, 2013
Karim Sahib, AFP/File

"He is tactically versatile so we can wait and see how the race unfolds around us before we make our move."

Japan fields a pair of runners in Hokko Tarumae and Belshazzar, the latter winner of the prestigious Japan Cup Dirt in December.

Belshazzar's trainer, Kunihide Matsuda, was delighted to get stall two. "It will be a victory draw for us," Matsuda predicted.

Completing the cast are Ron The Greek, representing Saudi Arabia, and Shanshaawes, from South Africa. Yet despite the international flavour, there is no US runner for the first time since the World Cup was inaugurated in 1996.

The synthetic racing surface installed at Meydan has seen US dominance – established when the event was run on dirt – wane considerably since the racecourse laid down a Tapeta surface four years ago.

And Australia, another prominent racing nation, has no representative at all.

The curtain comes down on Saturday night's race meeting with a live concert featuring Jennifer Lopez.

A cosmopolitan gathering of horses from seven different countries will contest the US$10 million Emirates Dubai World Cup at Meydan racecourse, on Saturday.

A maximum 16-runner field has assembled for one of the most open events in the 19-year history of the world’s richest race.

Ruler Of The World, trained in Ireland by Aidan O’Brien, vies for the favourite’s billing in the 2,000-metre contest with Military Attack and Akeed Mofeed, a pair of runners from Hong Kong.

Local hopes centre around three horses owned by Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al-Maktoum.

The sheikh’s Godolphin enterprise is represented by Vancouverite and Cat O’Mountain, from Charlie Appleby’s stable, and African Story.

The latter is trained by Saeed Bin Suroor, who saddles a second runner in Prince Bishop. Bin Suroor has won the Dubai World Cup five times, most recently with Moon Ballad in 2002.

Ruler of the World  ridden by Ryan Moore  returns to the winner's enclosure after winning the D...

Ruler of the World, ridden by Ryan Moore, returns to the winner's enclosure after winning the Derby at the Epsom Derby Festival in Surrey, southern England, on June 1, 2013
Adrian Dennis, AFP/File

“I feel good about our chances,” Bin Suroor said on Thursday. “My horses have trained well in the build-up to the race. I expect both of them to be prominent in the early stages and they can both accelerate.”

British hopes rest with Red Cadeaux, Hillstar, Side Glance and Mukhadram, who is owned by Sheikh Mohammed’s brother, Sheikh Hamdan. Red Cadeaux and Side Glance finished second and fourth respectively in last year’s race.

“Red Cadeaux likes the warm weather here in Dubai,” said Ed Dunlop, who trains the eight-year-old. “It looks like anyone’s race and if you offered me second place again, I would take it.”

Hong Kong’s record is poor but John Moore, the Australian who trains in Hong Kong, believes Military Attack has what it takes.

“I was delighted when my horse ended up in stall eight (at Wednesday’s Post Position draw),” Moore said.

The ruler of Dubai Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid al-Maktoum (L) and the US owner of Animal Kingdom  the...

The ruler of Dubai Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid al-Maktoum (L) and the US owner of Animal Kingdom, the winner of the $10 million Dubai World Cup, the world's richest horse race, pictured at Meydan race track, on March 30, 2013
Karim Sahib, AFP/File

“He is tactically versatile so we can wait and see how the race unfolds around us before we make our move.”

Japan fields a pair of runners in Hokko Tarumae and Belshazzar, the latter winner of the prestigious Japan Cup Dirt in December.

Belshazzar’s trainer, Kunihide Matsuda, was delighted to get stall two. “It will be a victory draw for us,” Matsuda predicted.

Completing the cast are Ron The Greek, representing Saudi Arabia, and Shanshaawes, from South Africa. Yet despite the international flavour, there is no US runner for the first time since the World Cup was inaugurated in 1996.

The synthetic racing surface installed at Meydan has seen US dominance – established when the event was run on dirt – wane considerably since the racecourse laid down a Tapeta surface four years ago.

And Australia, another prominent racing nation, has no representative at all.

The curtain comes down on Saturday night’s race meeting with a live concert featuring Jennifer Lopez.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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