Key events

Greg Wood

Greg Wood

Queen Elizabeth II Stakes (3.15pm) preview

A fascinating renewal of Ascot’s autumn championship event for milers, and a race in which several of the leading contenders are facing each other for the first time. The key races to consider include Tamfana’s win in the Group One Sun Chariot Stakes at Newmarket two weeks ago, Charyn’s course-and-distance win in the Queen Anne at the Royal meeting and Henry Longfellow’s close second in the St James’s Palace Stakes on the round course the same afternoon. Aidan O’Brien’s runner has struggled to reach the same lever in two outings since, however, and Dylan Cunha’s Prague has also needs to be factored into calculations after his win in the Joel Stakes last month.

SELECTION: CHARYN

Champion Filles & Mares Stakes (2.35pm)

And they’re off … War Chimes is slowly away … Village Voice kicks early but it’s Wingspan who will dictate from the front in the early stages … Content is last at the midway stage … Tiffany is just behind the leader as they turn for home … a slow pace again in this race … Kalpana kicks for home and is going to be hard to catch … and kicks well clear for a smooth win.

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Seems Ms Vorderman has worked out the form correctly.

Going now changed to Soft, Heavy in places!

Champion Filles & Mares Stakes (2.35pm) betting

  • Kalpana 4/1

  • Content 6/1

  • Quantanamera 7/1

  • Tiffany 8/1

  • Sumiha 11/1

  • Doha 12/1

  • Queen Of The Pride 14/1

  • Wingspan 14/1

  • Grateful 16/1

  • Village Voice 18/1

  • 22/1 BAR – 14 Runners

  • Full betting here via Oddschecker

Greg Wood

Greg Wood

Champion Filles & Mares Stakes (2.35pm) preview

Aidan O’Brien, who is within sight of a new record for prize money won in a British season, started the day without a winner on this card since Magical landed the Champion Stakes in 2019, and his overall record in the Group Ones on Champions Day since the meeting’s inception in 2011 is five wins from 64 starters, a strike-rate of just under 8pc. That feels distinctly sub-par for such an outstanding trainer, and the fact that many of his fancied runners are attempting to back up quickly after a big run at the Arc meeting in Paris is one possible explanation to bear in mind here, as both Content and Grateful were in action just two weeks ago. Grateful won the Group One Prix de Royallieu, while Content was a no-show in the Prix de l’Opera, but she is the mount of Ryan Moore today and preferred in the market too. The likely favourite, meanwhile, is the progressive Kalpana, who started the season running off 78 in a Newmarket handicap – a 10-length victory there makes her one of the hindsight bets of the season – and she has a fine chance on the form of her win in the Group Three September Stakes on the all-weather at Kempton. Soft ground is an unknown for her, however, which is not the case for Andreas Suborics’s contender, Quantanamera,and she has a live chance on her winning form in a Group Two at Deauville in August.

SELECTION: QUANTANAMERA

Champion Sprint Stakes (1.55pm)

This will be fast and furious … and they’re off … Art Power and Swingalong out fast but Audience leads … Kind Of Blue is up there and Montassib is at the back … Swingalong kicks for home but Kind Of Blue just holds on!

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Champion Sprint Stakes (1.55pm) betting

  • Kinross 11/2

  • Montassib 13/2

  • Kind Of Blue 8/1

  • Beauvatier 9/1

  • Audience 10/1

  • Swingalong 10/1

  • Elite Status 11/1

  • Mill Stream 14/1

  • Flora Of Bermuda 16/1

  • Unequal Love 16/1

  • 22/1 Bar – 20 Runners

  • Full betting via Oddschecker here

Greg Wood

Greg Wood

Champion Sprint Stakes (1.55pm) preview

A maximum field for the first Group One of the afternoon, a race which was won by a 40-1 chance (Art Power) racing from stall one 12 months ago, on similar ground. That was the second success for a big outsider in the last five runnings, and an odd race all round, as Art Power raced alone for much of the way. He is back for another crack today, and at a big price again too, but is unlikely to get the run of the race from stall 12. The key piece of recent formis probably the Sprint Cup at Haydock won by Montassib in September, when the 16-strong field included no fewer than 13 of today’s runners, including leading fancies Kinross, Elite Status, Audience, Kind Of Blue and my pick, Swingalong. Karl Burke’s filly was an excellent fourth in this race last year, goes on any ground and has fared much better in the draw than she did at Haydock.

SELECTION: SWINGALONG

Long Distance Cup (1.20pm) result

1 Kyprios 8/11 fav
2 Sweet William 8/1
3 Trawlerman 5/1

𝐈𝐧 𝐚 𝐥𝐞𝐚𝐠𝐮𝐞 𝐨𝐟 𝐡𝐢𝐬 𝐨𝐰𝐧 ⚫️🔴⚪️

The mighty 𝐊𝐲𝐩𝐫𝐢𝐨𝐬 gains sweet redemption from last season’s defeat by Trawlerman in the Qipco British Champions Long Distance Cup @Ascot

🇬🇧 #ChampionsDay | @ChampionsSeries 🇬🇧 pic.twitter.com/hxqgafAOxP

— Racing TV (@RacingTV) October 19, 2024

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Long Distance Cup (1.20pm)

And they’re off … Sweet William needs to be pushed along already! The Euphrates and Kyprios, the stable companions, are in the lead and dictating the pace … Burdett Road is pulling far too hard … the pace is just a steady one, dictated by the Aidan O’Brien pair up front … now the pace quickens … Sweet William makes a challenge … Kyprios and Sweet William fight it out but Kyprios has won a race that his stable controlled! And remarkably that’s the first win at this meeting for the all-conquering O’Brien team since 2019.

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The favourite Kyprios looks well as he limbers up for the first race.

Carol Vorderman has arrived for those who need help with the odds!

Carol Vorderman at Ascot. Photograph: Mark Cuthbert/UK Press/Getty Images

Long Distance Cup (1.20pm) betting

Greg Wood

Greg Wood

Long Distance Cup (1.20pm) preview

The first and, in all likelihood, the only odds-on shot on the card as Kyprios, one of the outstanding stayers of recent decades, attempts to go one better than in 2022 and complete a seven-race season unbeaten. To this point, his schedule has been identical to the race – including Group One wins in the Gold Cup here at Ascot, the Goodwood Cup, the Irish St Leger and the Cadran at Longchamp on Arc weekend. Kyprios did not line up for this race two years ago, but he was favourite last year after an injury-affected campaign, only to come up a neck short behind Trawlerman. The fact that Kyprios has six races to his name already this season, including a soft-ground victory at the Arc meeting in Paris just two weeks ago, alongside his trainer’s poor record on this card with horses backing up quickly after Longchamp, makes him a dodgy favourite to my mind, and while Al Nayyir appears rejuvenated after a switch to the Tom Clover stable, I’ll go with the fresh Trawlerman to repeat last year’s win.

SELECTION: TRAWLERMAN

Trawlerman pictured when victorious at Ascot on this day last year. Photograph: Dave Shopland/Shutterstock

At the end of a long season and often run on testing ground this is not normally a meeting for backing short-priced favourites but punters are getting stuck in. Oddschecker inform me that these are the three best-backed horses so far:

Kyprios 4/5 (1.20pm)
Charyn 7/4 (3.15pm)
Calandagan 6/4 (3.35pm)
The treble, they tell me, pays 11-1.

Kyprios with Ryan Moore up after winning the Prix du Cadran on his most recent outing at Longchamp. Photograph: Frank Sorge/racingfotos.com/REX/Shutterstock

It’s not the end of the Flat turf season yet but the champions will be crowned today, including the top jockey Oisin Murphy.

It’s #ChampionsDay!
Picking up the Jockeys’ Championship trophy will be culmination of hours on the road, dedication to my weight and focus on riding winners every day. But I couldn’t do it without all the support. Thank you and I’ll be very happy to lift the trophy at 2.50pm. pic.twitter.com/9Tb18gpEIG

— Oisín Murphy (@oismurphy) October 19, 2024

One of the hot favourites on the day has arrived

It’s squidgy ground (that’s officially soft!) and will be tough going but at least the rain has stopped falling now.

Good afternoon. These are the races to look forward to on a cracking card at Ascot.

  • 1.20pm: QIPCO British Champions Long Distance Cup, Group 2

  • 1.55pm: QIPCO British Champions Sprint Stakes, Group 1

  • 2.35pm: QIPCO British Champions Fillies & Mares Stakes, Group 1

  • 3.15pm: Queen Elizabeth II Stakes (sponsored by QIPCO), Group 1

  • 3.55pm: QIPCO Champion Stakes, Group 1

  • 4.35pm: Balmoral Handicap (sponsored by QIPCO)

Ascot confirmed that three British Champions Day races have been switched to the inner Flat track due to ground conditions on the round course. Photograph: Steven Paston/PA

Preamble

Greg Wood

Greg Wood

Good afternoon from Ascot, where the rain that has been falling fairly persistently for much of the last 12 hours is – hopefully – starting to ease ahead of Britain’s most valuable afternoon at the races: Qipco Champions Day, with £4.1m and four Group One races up for grabs.

The track updated its expectations to a 29,000 crowd on Friday evening, not far short of the attendance to see Frankie Dettori draw the curtain on his British career 12 months ago. A wet start to the day was the last thing anyone wanted, as it may well put at least a slight dent in the “walk-up” ticket sales, but anyone within easy reach of the track who is at a loose end should be aware that there are even occasional patches of blue sky appearing over Berkshire at present.

Frankie Dettori celebrates on King Of Steel after winning the Champion Stakes last year. Photograph: Paul Childs/Action Images/Reuters

As was the case last year, the action in the three events on the round course will unfold on the tight inner track due to concerns over the going. It’s not a great look for a day designed to celebrate the summer code that it has ended up on Ascot’s hurdles track for three of the last six years, but it didn’t seem to bother anyone too much 12 months ago and the field sizes are unusually strong, so hopefully not many spectators will notice that the runners are a little further away than ideal.

The Champion Stakes, with £1.3m in the pot, is the feature at 3.55, and the overnight rain seems to be behind a distinct move in favour of Francis-Henri Graffard’s Calandagan, who has form on soft ground and also stays 12 furlongs, in the betting this morning. The King Edward VII Stakes winner is now top-priced at around 13-8, with his fellow three-year-old, Economics, the Irish Champion Stakes winner, as big as 9-4.

Charyn, another winner at the Royal meeting in June, also heads the market at around 13-8 in the Queen Elizabeth II Stakes on the straight mile at 3.15, while the emerging talent Kalpana is the likely favourite for the Fillies’ & Mares’ and it is anyone’s guess which of the runners will set off as the punters’ pick for the 16-strong Sprint.

You can follow all the action as it happens here on our live blog from the first race to the last (the only handicap on the card, at 4.35) and we are underway on the track at 1.20, when the dual Gold Cup winner, Kyprios, will attempt to get favourite-backers off and running at odds-on in the Long Distance Cup.



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