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Racing Information - Cathay Pacific Hong Kong Cup

Background & History

Few racing events in the world match the prominence and prestige accorded the HK$18-million Cathay Pacific Hong Kong Cup, the world¡¦s richest turf race over 2000m and the finale of the World Racing Championships.

The CX Hong Kong Cup predates the World Racing Championship and the current trend towards racing's globalisation by more than a decade. Staged at first as the Hong Kong Invitation Cup in January 1988 when overseas entries were confined to Malaysia and Singapore, Flying Dancer, trained by HK legend Brian Kan Ping-chee, emerged victorious.

In 1989, the Hong Kong Cup¡¦s invitational list was expanded to include horses from Australia and New Zealand but the glory went to Singapore as Colonial Chief, handled by a couple living legends of HK racing ¡V champion trainer, Ivan Allan, and champion jockey now champion trainer, Tony Cruz ¡V denied a local success by a short head.

Late in 1989 the meeting was brought forward by a month to its current slot in mid-December - except for 1992 when the races were postponed as a equine virus forcing the temporary suspension of racing in Hong Kong. That season's events were later staged in April 1993.

Horses trained in New Zealand took three of the next four renewals: Grey Invader (at the meeting's record odds of 72/1) in 1989; Kessem in 1990 and Romanee Conti in 1993, the year the race was granted international Gr. 3 status.

In between the Kiwi dominance was a victory by River Verdon, one of the greatest horses in HK racing history, a HK Derby winner and still the only horse to land the local Triple Crown, and shortly afterwards Motivation followed up for HK and trainer John Moore.

1994, the year the race attained Gr.2 status, marked the beginning of an international dominance with invitations extended to the world's best. This was when State Taj became the first Australian-trained winner in Hong Kong and year later the first Japanese victor obliged in the form of Fujiyama Kenzan.

First Island scored for Britain in 1996 and the next two winners hailed from the United States: Val's Prince and Midnight Bet (the latter in track record time) respectively. Incidentally, no American-based horse has won in HK since.

France got in on the act thanks to its famous international campaigner, Jim And Tonic, in 1999. This was when the event was granted full Gr.1 ranking in 1999 and became the final leg of the Emirates World Series. The Cup's distance was also increased to 2000m from 1800m the same year.

Fantastic Light ran out the shortest-priced Cup winner (2.9) in 2000 for Godolphin and Frankie Dettori and Agnes Digital capped a sensational hat trick for Japanese raiders in 2001.

Hong Kong ended the drought in 2002 as Precision sensationally prevailed in a three-horse photo finish at odds of 65/1 for trainer David Oughton and jockey Mick Kinane.

Falbrav turned on perhaps one of the most awesome displays of raw power the race has witnessed in 2003. From being four lengths off the speed in midfield as turning for home, he had burned to the lead by the 200m. Commenting on this burst of acceleration, jockey Frankie Dettori famously noted: "I nearly peed myself!"

Finally, the tough-as-teak Irish filly Alexander Goldrun just managed to fend off the late burst by Hong Kong's Bullish Luck in last year's edition.

No horse has ever been able to win the Hong Kong Cup twice and Jim And Tonic is one of only five horses that have been victorious in any two of the Hong Kong International Races (although he also won the Audemars Piguet QEII Cup).

The other dual victors are Monopolize, winner of the Hong Kong Bowl in 1995 and 1996; Luso (Hong Kong Vase 1996 and 1997); Falvelon, (Hong Kong Sprint in 2000 and 2001) and Silent Witness (CX Hong Kong Sprint 2003, 2004).

Jim And Tonic
, with his 3.8 lengths triumph in 1999, established the Cup's largest margin of victory.

No trainer or owner has yet achieved two CX Hong Kong Cup wins.

Wins by country in the Cathay Pacific Hong Kong Cup ¡V 18 renewals to date:
4 - Hong Kong
3 ¡V New Zealand, Japan
2 ¡V Great Britain
1 ¡V USA, Australia, France, Ireland, Singapore, UAE

Past Winners