Pierre Ng seizes upper hand in Hong Kong trainers’ title battle with Sha Tin double
Pierre Ng reclaimed the ascendancy in the rollercoaster tussle for the 2023/24 Hong Kong trainers’ championship with a crucial double at Sha Tin on Monday to edge two wins clear of Francis Lui.
With only four meetings left in the season, Ng leads Lui 67-65 after Alexis Badel partnered Gangnam Star (Telperion) to victory in the Class 5 Uncompromising Integrity Handicap (1400m) and Super Bonus (Bungle Inthejungle) won the Class 4 Guangdong-Hong Kong Cup Handicap (1200m) under Andrea Atzeni.
“Brilliant. I’m quite happy. At this stage, I just have to keep going. Hopefully we get more winners in the next few meetings,” Ng said of the championship standings.
“Andrea told me he lost his iron out of the gates [on Super Bonus], so luckily picked it back up. Luckily the pace wasn’t that fast – they did the first section in 24.35 seconds, which is quite easy for him to roll along.
“He was three-wide all the way, but he’s made improvement. He used to just stop or want to get away from horses in the straight, but now he’s more straightforward and finishes off hard.”
Gangnam Star triumphed at his 12th start.
“He took a bit of time to get his first win. He was very difficult from the start when he came to Hong Kong, so he needed time to get settled down. When we tried to run him [last October], he had a heart problem, so then we had to step back again and start him later on,” Ng said.
“It’s good that he can find some confidence today to hit the front because he’s a thinker – he’s always thinking what to do and what not to do. He won well.”
While Ng shared training honours with Chris So, Lyle Hewitson snared a treble with wins on the So-trained pair Flying High (Office Bearer) and Parterre (Flower Alley) before saluting on Michael Chang’s Ching (Frosted) in the Class 3 Better Future Handicap (1600m).
“Just really happy, I came to the meeting thinking I had a decent book,” Hewitson said. “I didn’t think there was a standout but the cards fell in my favour and everything worked out really well.
“To cap it off with Ching was great. He’s been a special horse to me in Hong Kong and, like Chris So’s horses, Ching was beautifully prepared and I was the lucky recipient.”
Zac Purton logged a brace on a pair of promising talents – Bottomuptogether (Shamus Award), who is unbeaten after three starts following his searing win in the Class 3 Sportsmanship Handicap (1200m) and Amazing Fun (Tivachi), who made an impressive debut with success in the Class 4 Racing Goes On Handicap (1000m) for Dennis Yip.
In the saddle for each of Frankie Lor-trained Bottomuptogether’s victories, Purton said: “He did a really good job. He had barrier one but he came under pressure mid-race, which I didn’t appreciate. He let down well in the straight, he’s done a good job.”
Ridden quietly by Purton, Amazing Fun clocked 56.22 seconds up the straight course.
“He’s got ability, this horse. Early in the season I trialled him and he was very good but at that stage he didn’t relax,” Yip said. “After that he was ready to race, but he got injured. I put him in Conghua and told my son to teach him to relax in the morning.
“The horse is now very relaxed and it’s lucky this race was there for him. When he passed the other horses, Zac said he didn’t know what to do and the horse was looking around a bit. He needs time to keep improving.”
Alexis Badel also achieved a double and predicted a bright future for Manfred Man’s Chiu Chow Spirit (Zoustar) after the Australian import’s victory in the Class 2 Hong Kong Reunification Cup Handicap (1400m).
“Brave horse, very good quality – he deserved this,” Badel said after he threaded a gap along the fence to deny Tomodachi Kokoroe (Written Tycoon) by a short head.
“I’m very happy, Manfred has been a good supporter and I’m happy that they stuck with me on the horse and I’m happy that I could deliver.
“I was a bit worried about the draw because with the small field and from that gate [nine], I was worried about finding the right spot. But it worked out well, the pace was good enough and this horse has really got a great turn of foot – he can out-sprint the field.
A Group 3 winner for Tony and Calvin McEvoy when he raced as Twin Stars in Australia, the winner took his Hong Kong career earnings to beyond HK$7 million (approx. AU$1.34 million) with his second Sha Tin success.
Flying High made it five course and distance wins after unleashing a powerful finish to clinch the CMA 90th Anniversary Cup Handicap (1000m) before Parterre controlled the speed before fending off Giant Leap (Capitalist) to land Class 4 Serving The Community Handicap (1200m).
Jimmy Ting’s Smiling Collector (Turn Me Loose) held on courageously to defy Forerunner (Almanzor) and land the Class 4 Continuous Development Handicap (1400m) for Harry Bentley before the Ricky Yiu-trained Mighty Strength (Time Test) prevailed in another tight finish to snare the Class 4 Riding High Together Handicap (1400m).
Hong Kong International Sale graduate Harmony N Home (Slade Power) posted his first win since March, 2021 with victory in the Class 5 World-Class Leadership Handicap (1400m) under Matthew Poon for Danny Shum.