
Australian Bloodstock director Jamie Lovett is hoping the cream rises to the top when Al Riffa (Wootton Bassett) takes his chance in the upcoming Melbourne Cup.
Australian Bloodstock has shares in three Melbourne Cup runners in Al Riffa, Vauban (Galiway) and Royal Supremacy (Make Believe), but Al Riffa was always going to take much of the attention in the lead-up due to his recent form in the Curragh Cup (Gr 2, 1m 6f) and Irish St Leger (Gr 1, 1m 6f) which sees him shoulder a whopping 59 kilograms in the $10 million race.
But despite barrier 19 seemingly adding another complication for Al Riffa, Lovett told Racing.com the horse’s immense class made it difficult to discount him. “Essentially, you always like to draw in but if the rain comes, I’m probably not that disappointed,” Lovett said of the horse Australian Bloodstock part-purchased mid-year.
“I know there will be plenty of speed from outside. Changingoftheguard has drawn 24 and I assume the intention will be to go forward so hoping Mark [Zahra] can get on the back of that and get in somewhere.
“They tell me the horse is great. He never lost any weight on the trip over, and his work has been good, and we’re really excited for Tuesday. I think he’s in a good spot. He obviously has got to overcome topweight, which history would suggest is very hard to win with, but I think he’s a very good horse.
“I’m very confident he will run very well whether or not weight is a factor but he’s one of the better horses to come down in recent times and he just might be able to carry that weight. “Don’t forget that Joseph [O’Brien] has won two of these [Melbourne Cups] so that experience has got to help as well.”
Lovett said the 21 barrier for Royal Supremacy came as a blow.
“I was a bit disappointed with the draw for Royal Supremacy, so we’re just going to have to go back and ride for luck, but Vauban from barrier two is interesting,” he said.
“Obviously, he [Vauban] was disappointing in the Caulfield Cup and if you’re looking for an excuse, Blake Shinn said he was on the wrong leg the whole way around, but he was probably a little bit close [to the speed].
“We’re hoping on Tuesday, drawn barrier two, he takes no part early. Hoping there’s plenty of speed. Some of his best races in Europe has been when he was left alone.
“If you remember his win in the Sky High in Sydney, he came from right behind them and I suspect they are going to run this at a fairly good clip and it just might suit him.
“All his best form in Europe is on forgiving or yielding ground, as they call it.
“He’s a different horse to the first two times here, he went to pieces in the yard and Gai (Waterhouse) and Adrian (Bott) have done an amazing job to get this horse to be relaxed so if he parades well, I can’t have him not running well.”
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