Happy Romance a Fairytale Story for Owners

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Photo: Edward Whitaker/Racing Post
Happy Romance wins the Hackwood Stakes at Newbury Racecourse

The progress of Happy Romance  and her first-time owners was one of the stories of the 2020 flat season, and dreams are alive that she can lower the colors of an illustrious set of rivals in the Sept. 4 Betfair Sprint Cup (G1) at Haydock Racecourse.

The 3-year-old filly landed a hat-trick of big-race wins and was a close-up fourth in what proved to be a red-hot Juddmonte Cheveley Park Stakes (G1) last season for Oliver McMurray and his parents Ray and Claire, who he signed up as potential owners with trainer Richard Hannon while they were on holiday in Italy.

Happy Romance won her second group 3 with a last-to-first success in the bet365 Hackwood Stakes at Newbury in July, and McMurray is excited for the return to group 1 company.

He said: "We know she's a top of the ground filly and it looks like on this rare occasion we'll get a dry spell on the run up to the Sprint Cup so it's all systems go. We went down to see her do her final bit of work today."

The McMurrays more than trebled their £25,000 (US$30,548) outlay in one go when Happy Romance landed yet another Weatherbys Super Sprint for the Hannon team last July—Oliver and Ray's first on-course ownership experience was behind closed doors "with about 15 other owners and you could hear a pin drop"—and they subsequently added to the bankroll at York and Salisbury.

"We came into this with the attitude that it would be a nice family thing and we would lose a small fortune over the next two or three years," said McMurray.

"No one could ever imagine it. We've got friends who paid £25,000 for a horse that then got sold to a riding school for £2,000. It's a total parallel universe."

Bookmakers rate Happy Romance a 20-1 shot to add to the fairytale, but she earned a career-best Racing Post Rating of 110 when produced late by Sean Levey to land the Hackwood, a performance connections had seen coming for a while.

"She didn't stay in the (Dubai Duty Free) Fred Darling Stakes (G3) but we'd already seen that she'd grown a lot and Sean and Richard confirmed that she'd trained on," said McMurray.  

"I think Sandown (when a narrow third to Came From the Dark ) was like a comeback race and we knew there was talent there. To see her get her ground at Newbury and then get her head back in front was amazing for all of us."