Japanese superstar Maurice clinches Hong Kong Cup

Japanese superstar Maurice clinches Hong Kong Cup
British jockey Ryan Moore riding Japanese horse "Maurice" races to win the 2000-meter Longines Hong Kong Cup at Shatin race track in Hong Kong on Sunday. (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)
Updated 11 December 2016 19:51
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Japanese superstar Maurice clinches Hong Kong Cup

Japanese superstar Maurice clinches Hong Kong Cup

HONG KONG: Japan’s superstar Maurice clinched the Hong Kong Cup on Sunday at the city’s Longines International Races, one of the world’s richest race meetings with a total purse of HK$83 million.
British jockey Ryan Moore stormed to victory in the last strides and finished the 2,000-meter course in less than two minutes and a second.
“He was a special horse at a mile, and at ten furlongs he’s even better,” the winning jockey said of Maurice after the race.
“He has improved every time I have ridden him.”
Australian Zac Purton finished second on Secret Weapon, while Staphanos, ridden by Christophe Soumillon, finished third.
The Hong Kong Cup is the highlight of the four Group One events at the annual meet at Shatin Racecourse — which also includes the Hong Kong Mile, the Hong Kong Sprint and the Hong Kong Vase.
It is also the city’s richest race with a total prize money of HK$25 million. Japanese horses made up almost half of this year’s contenders.
The triumph for five-year-old Maurice, Japan’s 2015 Horse of the Year trained by Noriyuki Hori, followed last year’s win in the Hong Kong Mile.
Another star of the day was undoubtedly Purton, who snapped up the 1,600-meter Hong Kong Mile with Beauty Only, an hour after emerging victorious in the 1,200-meter Sprint event on Hong Kong-stabled gelding Aerovelocity.
“He’s always been so honest but now that he’s fully matured and acclimatized we’re really seeing what he can do,” Purton said of the horse afterward.
Earlier in the day Brazilian jockey Joao Moreira rode Japan’s Satono Crown to a stunning victory in the 2,400-meter Hong Kong Vase, beating odds-on favorite Highland Reel in the final stretch.
A crowd of more than 94,000 turned out at the grandstand and total betting turnover was HK$1.508 billion, organizers the Hong Kong Jockey Club said.