Latest News
 
                                                                                31/10/2025
No Instructions Needed: Frankie Dettori’s Doing His Homework For ‘Last’ Ride On Argine
Argine will be Frankie Dettori’s final ride in the U.S. and he and trainer Mitsu Nakauchida believe the filly is in good shape for the spotlight of her biggest test in the Breeders’ Cup Mile.
David Morgan
 
                                                                                30/10/2025
McPeek’s Scouting Makes Japan’s Champions Cup A Real Option For Mystik Dan
Last year’s Kentucky Derby winner will make history if he heads to Chukyo for the Champions Cup and his trainer Kenny McPeek is taking the JRA’s invite seriously.
David Morgan
 
                                                                                30/10/2025
Forever Young Takes “One Step Closer To Perfection” As Sovereignty Ruled Out Of Classic
Ryusei Sakai was pleased with Forever Young’s fast work Wednesday in the aftermath of Bill Mott’s statement that Sovereignty is out of the Breeders’ Cup Classic.
David Morgan
 
                                                                                29/10/2025
Who Rules The Group 1 World Ahead of Championship Meets At Del Mar, Flemington?
Which horses, jockeys and trainers have been the leading performers at the highest level ahead of the Breeders' Cup and the Melbourne Cup Carnival?
Hawk Eye View
 
                                                                                29/10/2025
Sovereignty Fever Puts Breeders’ Cup Bid In Doubt As Classic Rivals Thrive
Bill Mott revealed Tuesday morning that Sovereignty had an ‘elevated’ temperature, while all around him the main players prepped for the “best” Classic in two decades without a hitch.
David Morgan
Classic Hype Justified
Breeders’ Cups often come with hype but the word going around that this year’s Breeders’ Cup Classic would be America’s race of the year, if not the decade or perhaps the century, had plenty of substance until the news on Wednesday morning that race favourite Sovereignty was out due to the fever he caught Monday afternoon. But even without him, it still promises to be a great contest.
The race has, after all, the first three home in last year’s Breeders’ Cup Classic, Sierra Leone, Fierceness and Forever Young, plus the second and third best three-year-olds in America, Journalism and Baeza.
And let’s not forget Fierceness’s Grade 1-winning stablemates Mindframe and Antiquarian – both have beaten Sierra Leone this season – or trainer Bob Baffert’s lightly-raced and emerging last start Grade 1 winner Nevada Beach, all trading at double figure odds.
The intensity of the competition and the US$7 million on the table makes it a race that sparks passions. Fierceness’s owner, the billionaire businessman and sports administrator Mike Repole, is never one to shy away from saying what he thinks and he took to social media a week back to call out the use of a pace maker for defending champion Sierra Leone, calling the horse in question, Contrary Thinking, an “emotional support rabbit.”
Sierra Leone’s trainer Chad Brown at Del Mar Tuesday morning told Idol Horse: “The last time I used a pacemaker in a race I won with the pacemaker. It was the Flower Bowl, a Dubawi filly, name of Idea Generation, last year at Saratoga, I sent her for the Frankel filly McKulick and she made all and she won, so it wouldn’t be the first time. Contrary Thinking is definitely in there to see how far he can take everybody.
“I think Del Mar favours speed a lot, forward horses. He’s going to break on the lead, hopefully, set the pace and let’s see how far he can go. There’s a lot of purse money and if they leave him alone out there he could be dangerous; this horse has some quality to him.”
Brown might be expected to say that, of course, but Fierceness’s trainer Todd Pletcher is not concerned by Contrary Thinking’s pace-setting role in the 10-runner field.
“I have no issue with the pacemaker, I think Fierceness is perfectly happy to have a target and my concern is just that he runs a straight course from the inside gate,” Pletcher said, referencing his colt’s dive to the left after exiting gate one in the G1 Pacific Classic, which he won, at the track last time.
Meanwhile, California’s G1 Preakness Stakes hero Journalism will break from gate nine but that doesn’t faze his trainer Michael McCarthy.
“We’ll bounce out of there, kind of run into the first turn and look to have ourselves just back to the first flight of horses – stalking speed type of position,” he said.
Japan’s Forever Young, conqueror of Romantic Warrior in the G1 Saudi Cup, will break from gate five and that suits his trainer Yoshito Yahagi who said last year’s defeat was “a mistake on my end” because he did not expect the race to be so fast.
“He is a versatile horse, but ideally we want him to race in a good position which is in the middle slightly towards the front,” Yahagi said.
As for the hype around this year’s Classic: “It’s just a real good race,” McCarthy added.

Tenno Sho & Touch Of Destiny
While there’s obvious Japanese interest in the Breeders’ Cup, the JRA’s domestic programme this weekend features one of its majors, the G1 Tenno Sho Autumn.
Masquerade Ball is the likely market leader under Christophe Lemaire, but it’s a hot race and Cristian Demuro, recently crowned France’s champion jockey for the first time, will ride the G1 Satsuki Sho hero Museum Mile.
There’s also a first ride in a Japanese Group 1 for young French jockey Alexis Pouchin, currently in Japan on a short licence. Pouchin rode two winners in Hong Kong during a short-term stint last term and will partner the talented outsider Urban Chic at Tokyo.
Back at Del Mar trainer Michael McCarthy will see how the Uruguayan import Touch Of Destiny – a southern hemisphere three-year-old – gets through his Breeders’ Cup assignment before deciding whether to take up the JRA’s invitation to the G1 Champions Cup at Chukyo.
“It’s been part of the conversation and we’ll see what happens here this coming week,” McCarthy told Idol Horse.
Touch Of Destiny, won six from six in Uruguay last term and goes into the G1 Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile first-up since winning a Group 3 at Maronas in June.
“I’m sure the race will tighten him up plenty,” McCarthy said. “We’ll get a good idea. We’ll see how Uruguay’s best stacks up against in this case America’s best. So it’ll be interesting to see. He’s been a delightful horse to be around. He enjoys his job, very laid back, sleeps a lot.
“In a perfect world you’d like to have one race to move them forward a little bit but obviously it’s very exciting for the Uruguayan people and everybody involved in Uruguayan racing, so we’re delighted to be able to go and have the opportunity to represent them.”

This Week In Horse Racing History
It was on October 27, 1990 that the Argentine-bred mare Bayakoa became the first horse to win the G1 Breeders’ Cup distaff two years in a row. Having won at Gulfstream Park in 1989, the Rona McAnally-trained six-year-old took the spoils at Belmont Park in 1990. Both wins came under Laffit Pincay jr.
Also on October 27 (2001), Tiznow became the first and so far the only horse to win the G1 Breeders’ Cup Classic twice. The four-year-old defeated the brilliant Godolphin colt Sakhee by a nose, having defeated another European star, Giant’s Causeway, in a dramatic finish the year before.
The great Secretariat raced for the final time on October 28, 1973, winning the Canadian International at Woodbine, Canada by six and a half lengths under Eddie Maple.
One of Japanese racing’s most iconic images this century was captured on October 28, 2012, after Mirco Demuro rode Eishin Flash to victory in the Autumn Tenno Sho. The Italian rider dismounted on the track, took off his helmet and bowed low on one knee before the Emperor and Empress who were watching from the packed Tokyo grandstand.

Idol Horse Reads Of The Week
Umberto Rispoli’s Breeders’ Cup Classic dream was shattered last week when he lost the ride on Journalism. The Italian broke his silence on the matter when he spoke to David Morgan about that “body shot” moment, loyalty and the importance of being part of the story.
Adam Pengilly was in Hong Kong recently and sat down with Hugh Bowman “one of the deepest thinkers on horseback in the modern era” to talk about Winx, pressure, motivation, and the ridiculousness of trying to match Zac Purton.
Kochi’s provincial NAR track was close to the brink with dwindling attendances and waning interest when Koji Hashiguchi took a job as the venue’s race caller and along with Japan’s most famous ‘loser’ Haru Urara, he helped turn things around. Shuhei Uwabo travelled to Kochi to meet the man himself.
Juan Hernandez is the West Coat’s top rider – enjoying the support of the powerful Bob Baffert stable – and as he looks forward to the Breeders’ Cup on home ground again at Del Mar this week, now would be a good time to check out David Morgan’s profile of the Mexican ace, published in July 2024.
Racing Photo Of The Week
Longines Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint hopeful Yellow Card, trained by Michael W. McCarthy, gets a shower after working at Del Mar.
Date
29 October, 2025
Photographer
Carlos J. Calo/Eclipse Sportswire/Breeders Cup
Location
Del Mar

Global Blackbook
Badrinath’s win in the Listed Hagi Stakes at Kyoto last weekend is impossible to look past and the Contrail colt earned ‘Future Idol’ recognition for his one-length win under Ryusei Sakai.
The Sunday Racing-owned two-year-old was beaten on debut at Niigata in August and his Kyoto win followed a maiden success at Hanshin in September. Trainer Mikio Matsunaga could well point his charge towards the G1 Hopeful Stakes at the end of the year.

But Sakai was aboard another eye-catching youngster at Kyoto worth mentioning, the Yoshito Yahagi-trained Teruhiko who put two and a half lengths on the field in a Newcomers contest. In second place was Kitasan Black colt M’s Begin, the race favourite and a 600 million yen yearling.
World Horse Racing Calendar: What’s Coming Up
🇦🇺 Victoria Derby Day
Flemington, November 1
G1 Victoria Derby
One of the headline acts on Victoria Derby Day comes when the three-year-olds battle the 2500m staying test, but the G1 Coolmore Stud Stakes also takes centre stage at Flemington on Saturday. The contest – run up Flemington’s ‘straight six’ – has developed into one of Australia’s premier ‘stallion making’ races and it is a contest that trainer Chris Waller has farmed, winning six renewals. This year, he sends his impressive G1 Golden Rose winner Beiwacht, who narrowly holds favouritism in overseas markets over the Freedman-trained Tentyris. The son of Street Boss, who sports the Godolphin blue, powered to victory in the Listed Gothic Stakes on Caulfield Cup day last time out.
🇺🇸 Breeders’ Cup Day
Del Mar, November 2
(IFHA-rated: Breeders’ Cup Classic – equal 5th; Breeders’ Cup Turf – 15th; Breeders’ Cup Mile – 36th)
The Breeders’ Cup takes place at Del Mar for the second consecutive year and, rather unsurprisingly, the meeting has attracted a host of global superpowers targeting top-level success.
In the Breeders’ Cup Classic, we’ll find out whether Forever Young can avenge his loss in last year’s Classic when he takes on the likes of Sierra Leone, Fierceness and Journalism. Whereas, in the Breeders’ Cup Turf, Rebel’s Romance will bid to become the first horse to win the contest three times. Standing in his way though will likely be Aidan O’Brien’s star filly Minnie Hauk, who arrives in the US after her brave second in the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe.
🇯🇵 Tenno Shō (Autumn)
Tokyo, November 2
(IFHA-ranked 25th)
The Tenno Shō (Autumn) stands as Japan’s top 2000m test for older horses, serving as  both a domestic middle distance championship decider and a key lead-up to the Japan Cup. Meisho Tabaru, who claimed his first Group 1 victory in the Takarazuka Kinen, will be challenged by two three-year-olds, Satsuki Sho winner Museum Mile and Tokyo Yushun runner-up Masquerade Ball. Young French rider Alexis Pouchin is also set for his first top-level ride in Japan aboard Urban Chic.
🇦🇺 Melbourne Cup Day 
Flemington, November 4
He pushed Via Sistina to her limit in the Cox Plate, and Buckaroo is now confirmed for the Melbourne Cup after a brave second at Moonee Valley. Only a short head separated the Chris Waller-trained forecast in the Cox Plate and after significant speculation, the runner-up gets his chance to go one better at Flemington. With the picture of the final field becoming increasingly clear, Idol Horse’s interactive ‘Likely 2025 Melbourne Cup Field’ has been busy updating to give you updates on the latest jockey bookings and those on the fringe of making the cut.
🇦🇺 VRC Oaks Day
Flemington, November 6
The VRC Oaks is run over 2500m for three-year-old fillies and this year’s renewal will see Getta Good Feeling head to the contest on the back of a promising effort in the Thousand Guineas at Caulfield on October 18. Getta Good Feeling kept on reasonably well on the rail for third and will likely take on the likes of Salty Pearl and Classic Gem, who finished fourth in Group 3 company over 2000m last time out.
🇦🇺 Champions Stakes Day
Flemington, November 8
The Champions Stakes headlines a trio of Group 1s from Flemington when Via Sistina could bid to defend her crown after she held off Buckaroo in a thrilling Cox Plate at Moonee Valley. Treasurethe Moment, who finished a length and a half behind Via Sistina in the Cox Plate, could also have another crack at the daughter of Fastnet Rock.

🇩🇪 Grosser Preis von Bayern Day
Munich, November 8
The last British trainer to win the Grosser Preis von Bayern was Sir Mark Prescott with the mighty Alpinista in 2021 and George Scott could be looking to follow suit in this year’s renewal of the 2400m Group 1. The talented mare, who celebrated Arc success the following year, asserted herself in the final furlong at Munich four years ago and Scott will be hoping his three-year-old colt, Bay City Roller, can do the same. The trainer is contemplating a trip to Munich for his son of New Bay after a couple of near misses in Group 2 company in France recently.
🇯🇵 Queen Elizabeth II Cup Day
Kyoto, November 16
The Queen Elizabeth II Cup is the only top-level contest in Japan that is restricted to fillies and mares aged three or above and takes place over 2200m. On the back of her powerful win in the All Comers at Nakayama, Regaleira may hunt for a third win at the top table in this year’s renewal. The four-year-old filly, who has won four of her 10 starts, claimed her first Group 1 win in the Hopeful Stakes at Nakayama in 2023 and followed that up with a gutsy Arima Kinen success over Shahryar in December last year. ∎
 
                         
     
     
     
     
     
                            