Love in Prime Form for King George VI & Queen Elizabeth

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Photo: Edward Whitaker/ Racing Post
Love wins the Prince of Wales Stakes at Ascot Racecourse

Love , the Ballydoyle super-filly who has the potential to replace the retired Enable  in terms of public affection, is reported in prime form to continue the excellent recent record of fillies and mares in the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Qipco Stakes (G1).

Five of the last nine winners have been in this category—Danedream  (2012), Taghrooda  (2014), and Enable (2017, 2019, 2020)—and Love, successful in her last four group 1s by an aggregate margin of almost 20 lengths, will start hot favorite to prove she's a genuine superstar.

The concession of eight pounds to the Derby winner Adayar  makes it a tough task, but trainer Aidan O'Brien is upbeat about her prospects of managing to do so if the ground remains fast.

Good to firm was Friday's going description, but between eight and 13 millimeters of rain is forecast in possible thunderstorms on Saturday, much of that coming during racing.

Love, whose rampant, runaway wins in the Qipco One Thousand Guineas (G1), Investec Oaks (G1), and Darley Yorkshire Oaks (G1) last season on good ground simply took the breath away, was more workmanlike in the Prince of Wales's Stakes (G1) on her 2021 return at the royal meeting last month.

That final-furlong battle over a 10-furlong trip below her optimum should have blown any cobwebs away and put her spot-on for Ascot's midsummer showpiece.

Older runners have a vastly superior record to 3-year-olds in the King George since 1988. Twenty two winners have been aged 4 and upwards, with the Classic generation responsible for 11 victories.

"Love is very good," O'Brien said. "We're all very happy with her and the fact that she's been around the track is a big help. She's very genuine, you saw that in her the last day. The trip is fine and the ground should be too." 

O'Brien also runs Broome  in a race he has landed four times. He said: "Broome is a very straightforward and consistent horse. We were delighted with his win in France, where he showed a really good attitude. We haven't done a whole lot with him since, but he's been in good form."

'I Genuinely Think Adayar Should be Bang There'

Adayar (Adam Kirby) wins the Derby<br><br />
Epsom 5.6.21
Photo: Edward Whitaker/Racing Post
Adayar wins the Derby at Epsom Racecourse

William Buick believes that a weight-for-age allowance of up to 11 pounds that the 3-year-old Adayar receives from his elders gives him a significant advantage in a crackerjack of a King George.

The son of Frankel  oozed class when landing the Derby by 4 1/2 lengths under Adam Kirby from Mojo Star, and he bids to become only the fifth Derby winner since 1988 to go on to take the Ascot group 1.

For a long time during the last century, the King George was viewed as the natural stepping-stone for a Derby winner en route to the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe (G1), but that is no longer the case.

Twelve winners of the premier Classic have attempted the famous double since 1988, with only Nashwan, Generous, Lammtarra and Galileo managing to do so. In fact, only three Derby winners since Galileo in 2001 have tackled the King George, with Kris Kin, third to Alamshar in 2003, faring best of them.

Buick, who experienced a rear view of Adayar at Epsom as he was riding the third, Hurricane Lane , said: "It's a stellar field. It's got a lot of the best middle-distance horses around at the moment—it's got 3-year-olds against older horses, and it's got fillies against colts.

"It also has the Derby winner, which isn't that common these days. It's going to be a great race."

Buick, who won the race aboard Nathaniel in 2011, added: "The allowance that the 3-year-olds get at this time of the year is very attractive.

"You would have to say Adayar is a very good Derby winner. He's an uncomplicated horse, too, and that helps."

Adayar's trainer Charlie Appleby, who has yet to win the King George, said: "Love is going to go off favorite, and deservedly so on what she's achieved, but Adayar receives the weight allowance and I genuinely think he should be bang there.

"It's a huge occasion. It's a challenge, stepping up into the big boys' division at a mile and a half, but I've been delighted with his preparation and he looks a million dollars. It looks as if there will be some pace in the race, which will suit us. 

"It's going to be a fantastic race to watch hopefully, and whoever wins it is going to be king of the mile-and-a-half division for the foreseeable future."