Magnitude Rewrites the Script in Dubai World Cup
By Sharan Kumar
The Dubai World Cup once again
served its favourite dish, surprise with a side of shattered expectations, as
Magnitude tore up the script. Driven boldly by Jose Ortiz, he went straight to
the front and stayed there, dictating terms with unflinching authority. Forever
Young, chasing history and a coveted double, gave everything in pursuit but
found no way past a rival who refused to bend. In Dubai, reputations travel
well, but resilience decides who returns home with the prize.
And if that felt like a twist,
the backstory made it richer still. Magnitude ran exactly as his name promised,
large, loud and impossible to ignore, dictating matters with the swagger of a
horse who had not bothered to read the pre-race script. That script, of course,
had been carefully written for Forever Young, whose Saudi Cup–Dubai World Cup
double was spoken of as destiny. Destiny, it turns out, had other travel plans.
There was delicious irony in
the tale. Trained by Steve Asmussen, Magnitude had missed the Saudi Cup with a
fever, watching from the sidelines while others rehearsed for glory. On this
night, he returned not as a supporting act but as the headline performer,
repaying faith with a front-running exhibition that never wavered.
Forever Young loomed large
turning for home, the favourite doing everything right except getting past the
one horse who refused to yield. Magnitude dug in, found more, and kept finding,
as if the winning post owed him money. Jose Ortiz, visibly moved, called it the
ride of his life, though the horse might argue he merely kept up. One rival,
one threat, one duel. The rest were spectators. Meydan, under William Buick,
finished third.
There were whispers of Curlin,
Asmussen’s earlier conqueror of this race, and the comparison did not feel like
flattery. Like Curlin, Magnitude did not just win, he imposed.
No hard-luck tales, no traffic
excuses, no stewards required. The best horse won, which in Dubai often feels
like the biggest surprise of all. Because here, reputations travel first class,
but results prefer to hitch a ride with courage. Year after year, the World Cup
reminds us: form is a suggestion, fame is a rumour, and the race itself writes
the only story that matters.
Dubai’s grand theatre of turf
and dirt unfurled another glittering chapter on World Cup night, where global
powerhouses and local heroes traded blows in a carnival of class, courage, and
calculated daring.
The familiar Godolphin blue
shone brightly through Ombudsman, who delivered a polished performance in the
G1 Dubai Turf. Trained by John Gosden in partnership with Thady, the high-class
performer settled comfortably under William Buick before quickening decisively
inside the final 300 metres, asserting his class in style for Godolphin.
If Ombudsman’s win was smooth,
Calandagan served up drama. Fresh from his Japan Cup triumph, he looked in deep
trouble as West Wind Blows surged over 10 lengths clear. Yet, under a composed
ride from Mickael Barzalona, Calandagan unleashed a devastating late charge to
reel in the leader, stretching his remarkable run to five straight Group 1
victories for Francis-Henri Graffard.
The sprint division belonged
emphatically to Ahmad bin Harmash and Connor Beasley. Dark Saffron rediscovered
his spark to defend the Dubai Golden Shaheen, dictating from a wide draw and
holding off Bentornato with authority. Moments earlier, Native Approach had
swooped late to deny Japan’s Lugal in the Al Quoz Sprint, before the yard
completed a memorable treble with the Shaheen Classic.
Japan’s dominance continued in
the UAE Derby as Wonder Dean powered past Six Speed. Trained by Daisuke
Takayanagi, he now heads to Churchill Downs with hopes of rewriting history.
Elsewhere, Fairy Glen claimed
the Dubai Gold Cup with a perfectly timed surge, while Oman celebrated a
landmark breakthrough as Falaah stormed home to capture the Dubai Kahayla
Classic.
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