DANON SMASH FOLLOWS IN HIS SIRE'S FOOTSTEPS WHEN TAKING OUT THE HONG KONG SPRINT
By Hong Kong Jockey Club (Declan Schuster) | Sunday, December 13, 2020
Danon Smash followed in the footsteps of his sire Lord Kanaloa with a thrilling victory for Japan in the 2020 G1 LONGINES Hong Kong Sprint (1200m), their third in the HK$22 million contest’s 21-year history.
“It is a very pleasing moment that Lord Kanaloa and Danon Smash, sire and son could achieve their Hong Kong wins – it’s a happy moment,” said Mr. Chaki, trainer Takayuki Yasuda’s representative.
Lord Kanaloa landed Sha Tin’s premier dash twice in 2012 and 2013, and was also trained by Yasuda, and today Danon Smash joined the honour roll with a gritty success under Ryan Moore, who one race prior, secured the G1 LONGINES Hong Kong Vase (2400m) aboard Mogul.
“We got lucky – he stepped very well and we managed to slot into a lovely spot. I was always happy and when the pace steadied around the bend, I was able to just move out and keep moving forward and he got there in plenty of time,” Moore said.
The Lord Kanaloa five-year-old broke cleanly from the widest gate of 14 to sit midfield under Moore, who peeled out at the 300m mark to grind his way to a half-length victory in a time of 1m 8.45s, staving off the fast-finishing Jolly Banner in second, while Rattan rattled into third.
“He was very tough and very honest – he was a pleasure to ride and he’d shown very good form at times in Japan’s best sprints and at seven furlongs as well and he’s won some of the best races at Group 2 level and he deserved to win his Group 1,” Moore said.
The speedy bay has finished third and second in the last two editions of the G1 Sprinters Stakes (1200m) at Nakayama and is a four-time G3 winner and two-time G2 victor.
“I’m delighted and just thankful for being asked to ride him and I also need to thank the owners Danox and Mr Yasuda certainly knows how to prepare a sprinter for a Hong Kong Sprint,” the British ace said.
The 114-rater landed the 10th win of his career and followed last start’s runner-up effort to Gran Alegria with a triumph, his first at the top-level after eight attempts.
“I gave him a gentle breeze on Wednesday morning – it wasn’t anything strenuous. There was no real comments to say, no one was worried by anything about the horse but no one was overly bullish about the horse,” Moore said.
Today’s pair of wins takes Moore’s tally to seven at the Hong Kong International Races, the most any international-based rider in history.
“I think when he got the draw we were all possibly a bit worried and we needed to see what happens and thankfully everything worked his way and we just had a bit of luck and everything worked out nicely,” Moore said.
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