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Racing Information - Cathay Pacific Hong Kong Sprint

Background & History

The youngest of the four championships events, the Cathay Pacific Hong Kong Sprint has quickly become an essential stop on the itinerary of the world's best sprinters. It helps that its HK$10m purse is the largest anywhere for a 1000m dash.

The Hong Kong Sprint was added to the Hong Kong International Races roster in 1999 and carried Listed Race status. Even then it was the richest sprint of its kind. The race was a Gr.3 in 2000, a Gr.2 in 2001 and acquired Gr.1 status in 2002.

What a debut for the race as Fairy King Prawn, one of the most brilliant horses ever trained in Hong Kong, defied odds of 13 to 1 to score for trainer Ricky Yiu and jockey Steven King from Crystal Charm, also based in HK. Well done also to Ricky Yiu, who became the first Chinese trainer to win one of the Hong Kong International Races.

It is well worth noting the speed influence of Australian-bred horses in this race ¡V every one of the six renewals to date have gone to horses raised in that country and Falvelon, trained in Queensland, annexed the Sprint both in 2000 and 2001, both times defeating American speedster Morluc by narrow margins with Damien Oliver in the saddle. Trained by Dan Bougoure, Falvelon pulled off a significant betting plunge when he first won the race.

It was then that the local stranglehold commenced. Ridden by Gerald Mosse, All Thrills Too was always holding fellow HK runner Firebolt in the 2002 edition to give David Hayes his first and only success in an international race as a HK trainer.

Silent Witness' reign at the world's leading turf sprinter kicked off with victory from the very highly regarded South African champion, National Currency, in 2003. Long before they lined up, the race had been billed as a two-horse race but even allowing for losing a shoe at the start, it was Silent Witness, starting at odds of 1.3 favourite, the shortest in CXHKIR history, who proved a length too strong.

Victory came a lot easier in 2004 as Silent Witness won as he pleased with quality opposition burnt off over 200m out with Cape Of Good Hope trailing in second for HK ¡V the third home-based quinella in six renewals. It was this performance, his 13th straight win, that made a global star of the Hong Kong champion. Shortly afterwards Time Magazine listed him as one of the 'People Who Mattered' in 2004 with an introduction that read: "Yes, he's a horse. But don't hold that against him."

Wins by country in the Cathay Pacific Hong Kong Sprint
4 ¡V Hong Kong
2 ¡V Australia

Past Winners