Joao Moreira has never hidden his regard for Beat The Clock (NZ) (Hinchinbrook) and the champion jockey was verging on the effusive after the rising star posted a smart victory in this afternoon’s feature race at Sha Tin, the Class 2 Hong Kong University Alumni Association Challenge Cup Handicap (1400m).
“I’ve been indicating that I think he’s a very nice horse, one of those up-and-coming horses, and I’m convinced we’re going to see him in Group races sooner rather than later,” Moreira said after the John Size-trained three-year-old landed his fourth win at start eight in a time of 1m 21.82s.
The Hinchinbrook gelding was sent off the 1.7 favourite, and, after a tardy break, had the innate speed to track the pace-setting Adventurer, albeit in a breeze-facing wide position.
“He had to do it the tough way today, three-wide and exposed, but he was just too strong,” Moreira continued.
When the rider shook his reins at the top of the home stretch, Beat The Clock responded with a smart change of gear that took him past the leader and on to a cosy length and a quarter score. It was all hands and heels in the final 100m.
“He wasn’t very fast out of the gate but once he got going he put himself in a very close position,” the Brazilian said. “I wish I could have had cover to get him a little bit more relaxed but despite that he was very professional, and when I asked him to get going he responded.
“The fact that he’s only a three-year-old, that’s what makes me even more excited, because it feels like there’s plenty more inside him, and, based on that, I’m confident that he’s a Group class horse. He’s a very nice horse going forward.”
The win took Size to 89 for the campaign, just two short of Tony Cruz’s Hong Kong record of 91 wins in a season. Moreira sits on 157 after a double today, 11 short of the record he established last year.
Meanwhile, chasing Beat The Clock in second place, Limitless once again flagged that he is a galloper of serious ability. The Lope De Vega gelding did plenty wrong on his first start for the Caspar Fownes stable, refusing to settle at the tail over the seven-furlong trip.
Zac Purton allowed last year’s Britannia Handicap (1600m) winner to creep forward on the turn; three lengths down at the swing into the straight, the four-year-old rifled home to finish second in 22.33s, compared to Beat The Clock’s 22.45s. Happy Agility took third.
Beat The Clock is a graduate of New Zealand Bloodstock's 2015 Ready to Run sale where he sold for $200,000 from the draft of Prima Park. - HKJC
“I’ve been indicating that I think he’s a very nice horse, one of those up-and-coming horses, and I’m convinced we’re going to see him in Group races sooner rather than later,” Moreira said after the John Size-trained three-year-old landed his fourth win at start eight in a time of 1m 21.82s.
The Hinchinbrook gelding was sent off the 1.7 favourite, and, after a tardy break, had the innate speed to track the pace-setting Adventurer, albeit in a breeze-facing wide position.
“He had to do it the tough way today, three-wide and exposed, but he was just too strong,” Moreira continued.
When the rider shook his reins at the top of the home stretch, Beat The Clock responded with a smart change of gear that took him past the leader and on to a cosy length and a quarter score. It was all hands and heels in the final 100m.
“He wasn’t very fast out of the gate but once he got going he put himself in a very close position,” the Brazilian said. “I wish I could have had cover to get him a little bit more relaxed but despite that he was very professional, and when I asked him to get going he responded.
“The fact that he’s only a three-year-old, that’s what makes me even more excited, because it feels like there’s plenty more inside him, and, based on that, I’m confident that he’s a Group class horse. He’s a very nice horse going forward.”
The win took Size to 89 for the campaign, just two short of Tony Cruz’s Hong Kong record of 91 wins in a season. Moreira sits on 157 after a double today, 11 short of the record he established last year.
Meanwhile, chasing Beat The Clock in second place, Limitless once again flagged that he is a galloper of serious ability. The Lope De Vega gelding did plenty wrong on his first start for the Caspar Fownes stable, refusing to settle at the tail over the seven-furlong trip.
Zac Purton allowed last year’s Britannia Handicap (1600m) winner to creep forward on the turn; three lengths down at the swing into the straight, the four-year-old rifled home to finish second in 22.33s, compared to Beat The Clock’s 22.45s. Happy Agility took third.
Beat The Clock is a graduate of New Zealand Bloodstock's 2015 Ready to Run sale where he sold for $200,000 from the draft of Prima Park. - HKJC