Charlie Appleby with Oceanographer after his last-to-first victory in the Lexus Stakes at Flemington on Saturday. Vince Caligiuri / Getty Images
Charlie Appleby with Oceanographer after his last-to-first victory in the Lexus Stakes at Flemington on Saturday. Vince Caligiuri / Getty Images
Charlie Appleby with Oceanographer after his last-to-first victory in the Lexus Stakes at Flemington on Saturday. Vince Caligiuri / Getty Images
Charlie Appleby with Oceanographer after his last-to-first victory in the Lexus Stakes at Flemington on Saturday. Vince Caligiuri / Getty Images

Strength in numbers: Godolphin place five runners in Melbourne Cup in bid to end 20-year wait


  • English
  • Arabic

Godolphin will have five runners in Tuesday’s Melbourne Cup as the UAE-based stable bids to end a near 20-year wait in Australia’s greatest horse race.

The Godolphin stable has been coming to the Flemington racecourse since 1998 and the closest it has come to victory are three runner-up placings.

Central Park was second in 1999 followed by Give The Slip in 2001 and Crime Scene eight years later.

Godolphin is hoping its sheer weight of numbers will finally crack a win in the race that is said to “stop a nation”.

The 156th edition of the Melbourne Cup over 3,200 metres has become a global event and its bumper AUS$6.2 million (Dh17.3m) prize money lures the big names of thoroughbred racing, from Japan to the Gulf and Britain.

More horse racing:

• UAE racing: Tadhg O'Shea looking to start new season with a bang

• Dubai World Cup 2017: Advance tickets go on sale

• Breeder's' Cup Classic: Bob Baffert on Arrogate's chances

British-based Oceanographer joined race favourite Hartnell, Qewy, Secret Number and Beautiful Romance as Godolphin’s runners in the Cup with a slashing last-to-first qualifying win in the Lexus Stakes at Flemington on Saturday.

“We don’t usually do this (backing-up in four days), but he is a fit and we think he will run the trip,” Oceanographer’s trainer Charlie Appleby said.

The Godolphin team is optimistic of its chances of finally breaking its duck in the handicap two-miler.

“It’s an extraordinary achievement and it’s superb from all three trainers to have horses qualify for the race,” said the head of the stable’s Australian operations Henry Plumptre.

“I’d say three or four of them are really serious chances.”

Newmarket trainer Michael Bell has returned with topweight Big Orange, who is out to improve on his fifth placing in last year’s race.

“He ran a great race last year and he was really only a boy and he’s developed into a man now, his form’s improved and he’s got a significantly better draw,” he said.

“The fact he has got topweight is not so relevant given his physique and we just pray for the track to run like it did on Saturday and he’ll run a big race.”

Irishman Aidan O’Brien is hoping to replicate the trailblazing successes of compatriot trainer Dermot Weld with Vintage Crop (1993) and Media Puzzle (2002) with his runner Bondi Beach.

Another Irish trainer, Willie Mullins, whose galloper Max Dynamite was beaten by the Michelle Payne-ridden Prince of Penzance in last year’s Cup, is back with Wicklow Brave, to be ridden by Frankie Dettori.

Payne, the first female jockey to win the Melbourne Cup, does not have a ride in this year’s race.

Japan, which won with Delta Blues in 2006, will be represented by nine-year-old gelding Curren Mirotic, trained by Osamu Hirata.

The Melbourne Cup has been won six times by internationally trained horses: 2014 (Protectionist, Germany), 2011 (Dunaden, France), 2010 (Americain, France), 2006 (Delta Blues, Japan), 2002 (Media Puzzle, Ireland), and 1993 (Vintage Crop, Ireland).

Follow us on Twitter @NatSportUAE

Like us on Facebook at facebook.com/TheNationalSport

Who was Alfred Nobel?

The Nobel Prize was created by wealthy Swedish chemist and entrepreneur Alfred Nobel.

  • In his will he dictated that the bulk of his estate should be used to fund "prizes to those who, during the preceding year, have conferred the greatest benefit to humankind".
  • Nobel is best known as the inventor of dynamite, but also wrote poetry and drama and could speak Russian, French, English and German by the age of 17. The five original prize categories reflect the interests closest to his heart.
  • Nobel died in 1896 but it took until 1901, following a legal battle over his will, before the first prizes were awarded.