Rizeena victory in Coronation Stakes makes Clive Brittain oldest winning Royal Ascot trainer in living memory
Rizeena emphatically proved Clive Brittain right as she made him the oldest Royal Ascot winning trainer in living memory by bouncing back to form with a three-quarter length success in the Group One Coronation Stakes.
Seventh place behind Miss France in the 1,000 Guineas at Newmarket last month had been a bitter reverse for Brittain but he insisted that the run was all wrong.
There was added frustration when a minor problem meant Rizeena had to miss the Irish 1,000 Guineas and a first chance of redemption.
Prize guys: Prince Andrew, Duke of York, Clive Brittain, Sheikh Rashid Bin Dalmook Al Maktoum and jockey Ryan Moore following Rizeena's victory
Crowning moment: Jockey Ryan Moore riding Rizeena wins the Coronation Stakes during day four of Royal Ascot
But the filly, successful at this meeting 12 months ago in the Queen Mary Stakes, was as good as Brittain’s word as she hit the front a furlong out and held of the late charge of French challenger Lesstalk In Paris to give jockey Ryan Moore his third winner of the meeting.
Vast experience enables a sense of perspective to be brought to situations and no-one is more equipped than Brittain to analyse and evaluate a horse race.
The 80-year-old trainer spent 23 years working for Newmarket great Sir Noel Murless before embarking on a career which has including training three great fillies in Pebbles, Sayyedati and User Friendly.
It is 40 years since he saddled his first royal meeting winner – Averof in the 1974 St James’s Palace Stakes – and Rizeena, his second in the Coronation Stakes after Crimplene in 2000, was his 18th at the meeting.
Rizeena has now won five of her 10 races but lost all four of her runs at Newmarket and it a failure act on the undulations at her local course which Brittain now blames for the Guineas reverse when ridden by Richard Hughes.
The trainer said: ‘Richard had her in the perfect position but she just did not fire. It was 10lb to a stone below her best.
‘We have not been having a great time but I have got two stand-out three-year-olds. Brazos, who was beaten by the ground in the Jersey Stakes so don’t forget him, and this filly. They are reasons to get up in the morning.’
Star quality: The victory made trainer Clive Brittain the oldest at Royal Ascot in living memory
If Rizeena hates Newmarket, she has now proven a love for Ascot and her season is likely to include another return to the Berkshire venue.
Brittain, renowned for his attacking strategy, added: ‘I think we will come back here for the big meeting (in October) and the Queen Elizabeth II Stakes.’
An even quicker trip back to the track could be on the agenda for John Gosden’s Eagle Top, the most impressive winner of day four with his three-and-a-quarter-length dismissal of Aidan O’Brien’s Adelaide in the King Edward VII Stakes.
When Gosden won the race in 2011 with Nathaniel, he subsequently successfully supplemented the colt to the King George VI & Queen Elizabeth Stakes and that route will be considered again with a son of Pivotal clearly held in very high regard.
Gosden, a neighbour of Brittain in Newmarket, said: ‘We have supplemented a King Edward winner before so I would not be frightened to do it again. If this horse is right it will be considered.’
The Lady Bamford-owned colt would probably have headed to Epsom for the Investec Derby had he not disappointed when running at Leicester when blood tests subsequently proved he was off-colour.
He provided a second winner of the week for jockey William Buick and a third for Gosden.
Added to his St James’s Palace Stakes winner Kingman and his Prince of Wales’s Stakes heroine The Fugue, the trainer has assembled a squad of horses which give him a good chance of holding on to his lead in his pursuit of a second trainers’ championship.
Gosden reckons Eagle Top has too much pace to be considered a Ladbrokes St Leger contender – his two hopes for the race are Derby third Romsdal and Doncaster maiden winner Forever Now.
They could clash in the final Classic with Hartnell, who survived a stewards’ enquiry to give trainer Mark Johnston his seventh win in the Queen’s Vase to earn 14-1 Leger quotes.
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