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Majestic start for Appleby and Buick at Newmarket

Charlie Appleby and William Buick got this year’s Craven meeting at Newmarket off to the perfect start as Majestic Pride justified favouritism in the bet365 British EBF Conditions Stakes.

Trainer Charlie Appleby.
Trainer Charlie Appleby. Picture: Pat Healy Photography

The reigning champion trainer and jockey invariably prove a formidable combination on the Rowley Mile and Majestic Pride was a 2-1 market leader for his first start since winning at Chelmsford in November.

The Shamardal colt was being niggled at with over two of the seven furlongs still to run, but responded to Buick's urgings to grab the lead and was always doing enough from racing out of the dip to hold the challenge of Holguin at bay, with a neck separating the pair at the line.

Majestic Pride holds an entry for the Qipco 2000 Guineas on May 6, but Appleby does not currently consider him a contender for the season's first Classic.

He said: "This horse has been on the runners list for a few weeks, so I didn't think he was going to lack for fitness today.

"He's a horse, that with the ground being on the slow side as it is out there, all his family go on it, even though he's by Shamardal.

"Going forward, I'll speak to William but I don't think he's a Guineas horse.

"We'll probably look at the race back here – the King Charles II (May 5) over seven furlongs."

Amanda Perrett's Rebel Territory (7-2) also obliged for favourite backers in the National Stud Handicap, getting the better of Vafortino by half a length in the hands of Jim Crowley.

"He's a super horse but he's a little bit ground dependent," said Perrett.

"He was tending to over-race over a mile last year, so dropping to seven furlongs really suited.

"I think we'll look at the Victoria Cup if the ground is soft enough, then maybe go back to Goodwood."

The finish to the Close Brothers Handicap was dominated by Yorkshire trainers with David O'Meara's 11-1 shot Bopedro narrowly outpointing John Quinn's 7-2 market leader Empirestateofmind, while the Roger Fell-trained Toshizou pipped Charlie Johnston's Dutch Decoy to third.

"It was very heavy ground at Doncaster (when sixth in the Lincoln) and ours are needing a run this season and it's put him right. He ran well enough I thought," said O'Meara.

"He travelled nicely, met a little bit of traffic before he finished off well enough. His owner, Lee Bond, told me to leave the blinkers off today as it might freshen him up and that has clearly worked.

"There are lots of nice races at York, Ascot and Goodwood for him – there's a great programme for these milers. That was good today."

James Tate has his eye on bigger things having seen Blue Storm (8-1) enhance the fine start made by first-season sire Blue Point in the Pat Smullen Memorial British EBF Novice Stakes.

"It's my first two-year-old winner of the year and when they hit the mark at Newmarket you just feel a bit better," said the winning trainer.

"We always picked him to be an early type, he's bred to be early and he's not the biggest. He hasn't had any setbacks at all so we thought we would get him started early but mine normally improve for the run first time so I was impressed with him.

"Obviously you don't really know what he's done and what he's beaten but I couldn't ask for much more really.

"He's very professional so I will be targeting the early black type races. I'm thinking the National Stakes and races like that, so we will just look at those targets and work back from there."

James Evans' Dream Composer was a neat winner of the Bet Boost At bet365 Handicap at 9-2 under Dougie Costello.

The gelding was ridden in the middle of the group by the rail and was travelling best of all when the field merged and hit the two-furlong marker.

A furlong from home he was asked to quicken and responded well, pulling away to cross the line half a length ahead of 16-1 shot Spring Bloom.


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