Australian-bred son of Medaglia d’Oro wins 12th successive victory taking out the Stewards’ Cup on Sunday
Not even a slipped saddle and muddling tempo were enough to halt Australian-bred Golden Sixty’s burgeoning winning streak as the Hong Kong superstar posted a dramatic 12th successive victory after scrambling to a narrow triumph in the Stewards’ Cup (Gr 1, 1600m).
Undefeated since July 7 2019, Golden Sixty responded doggedly to Vincent Ho’s desperate urgings to deny veteran Southern Legend (Not A Single Doubt) (Karis Teetan) by a mere head with Ka Ying Star (City Scape) (Zac Purton) three quarters of a length further back in third.
“They went pretty slow all the way, actually, so he was a little keen and he was pulling a little bit and then everyone sprint home,” Ho said.
“I knew I would still get there, but it was quite close.”
Ho said he was inconvenienced in the straight after his saddle shifted.
“The saddle slipped back a little bit at the 300 metres but it was still OK but it was not as comfortable for me and Golden Sixty, of course,” Ho said.
“But top athletes, top horses need to overcome all kinds of different circumstances. Something you can’t predict but you have to be ready for that.”
Edging closer to Silent Witness’ (El Moxie) Hong Kong record of 17 consecutive wins, Golden Sixty never caused any doubts in Ho’s mind despite the slender margin over the admirable Southern Legend, a tigerish eight-year-old who rarely under-performs.
“Happy with this performance, of course,” Ho said. “Thank you to Francis (Lui) and all his team for all the hard work.
“Without them, this does not happen.”
Lui admitted he was concerned as Golden Sixty worked through his gears, clocking 21.80s for the final 400 metres as Southern Legend shaped to post a huge upset.
“I was a bit worried,” he said. “The pace was a bit slow.
“I feel OK now after the race.”
Lui said the Hong Kong Gold Cup (Gr 1, 2000m) – the second leg of the Triple Crown – was likely to be Golden Sixty’s next competitive outing.
“We’ll just see how he recovers,” Lui said, politely rejecting suggestions the best galloper in Hong Kong’s winning streak was building pressure.
“Not really, Golden Sixty brings a lot of joy,” he said.
Silent Witness, Hong Kong’s greatest sprinter, notched 17 wins between 2002 and 2005, when he was finally beaten by Bullish Luck (Royal Academy) in the 2005 Champions’ Mile (HK Gr 1, 1600m).
Initially sold for $120,000 at the 2017 Magic Millions Gold Coast Yearling Sale to Riverslea Park and Enigma Farm from the draft of Element Hill, the son of former Darley shuttler Medaglia d’Oro (El Prado) was then bought by Francis Lui for NZ$300,000 at the New Zealand Bloodstock Ready To Run Sale later that year. In 16 starts he has now taken his earnings to almost HK$60 million (A$10 million).
Golden Sixty is one of five winners out of Irish Group 2 winner Gaudeamus (Distorted Humor) who was bought by Josh Hutchins Bloodstock for $160,000 at the 2015 Magic Millions National Broodmare Sale.
All Winners Thoroughbreds bought the Capitalist (Written Tycoon) colt out of Gaudeamus for $425,000 at this year’s Magic Millions Gold Coast Yearling Sale from the draft of Element Hill.
What a race!?
— HKJC Racing (@HKJC_Racing) January 24, 2021
Golden Sixty grabs his 12th consecutive win and second G1, scoring narrowly in the Stewards’ Cup under @Vincenthocy! #HKracing pic.twitter.com/eSWHfUVezN