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Posted 2017-10-18 20:48:37  
Kitasan Black Aims for Consecutive Japan Cup Victory

Kitasan Black (JPN, H5, by Black Tide) put in a brilliant performance under Yutaka Take in the Japan Cup last year, taking command from the start and did not give his rivals a chance to challenge as he continued strongly to the wire, leaving runner-up Sounds of Earth (JPN, H6, by Neo Universe) 2-1/2 lengths behind. All 14 Japanese horses that ran in the race last year are still in training as of the end of August and are considered ready to stake their claim to the Japan Cup title again this year. The following are updates on last year’s top finishers, up-and-coming three-year-olds and prominent older horses.

 

Kitasan Black, after his Japan Cup victory, was sent to post-race favorite in the Arima Kinen (Grand Prix) (G1, 2,500m). He assumed command almost to the wire, but in the last strides, he was pinned by Satono Diamond (JPN, C4, by Deep Impact), a promising three-year-old coming off a victory in the Kikuka Sho (Japanese St. Leger, G1, 3,000m). Nonetheless, Kitasan Black was named the 2016 Horse of the Year. His plan for the 2017 season at that point was said to include three G1 starts – the up-graded Osaka Hai (G1, 2,000m), the Tenno Sho (Spring) (G1, 3,200m) and the Takarazuka Kinen (G1, 2,200m) during the spring. Then, depending on these results, he would possibly take aim at the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe (G1, 2,400m) in France.

The five-year-old validated his remarkable 2016 season in his first start, the Osaka Hai, where he chased the leader in second, and then made an early move towards the final corner to win comfortably. The following Tenno Sho (Spring) was run in much the same manner, and the Black Tide (JPN, by Sunday Silence) horse won the 3,200-meter race in 3:12.5, eclipsing the record set by Deep Impact (JPN, by Sunday Silence) by 0.9 seconds. With five career G1 titles to his name, expectations were high for Kitasan Black’s final start of the spring, the Takarazuka Kinen, but he failed to show his usual tenacity when entering the straight. Unable to sustain his bid, he faded to an uncharacteristic ninth – his first major defeat since a 14th in the Tokyo Yushun (Japanese Derby, G1, 2,400m). This led his connections to reconsider his intended Arc challenge in the fall and announce that he would target the Tenno Sho (Autumn) (G1, 2,000m) on October 29, the Japan Cup on November 26 and the Arima Kinen on December 24 instead.

Last year’s runner-up in the Japan Cup, Sounds of Earth kicked off his six-year-old season this year in the Dubai Sheema Classic (G1, 2,410m), but struggled over rough goings and finished sixth in a field of seven. He was in good form in his comeback start in Japan in the Sapporo Kinen (G2, 2,000m) on August 20, where he handled the tight turns to finish a respectable fourth, less than 2-1/2 lengths from the leader. His fall campaign is expected to begin with the Kyoto Daishoten (G2, 2,400m) on October 9 prior to his main targets, the Japan Cup and the Arima Kinen.

Cheval Grand (JPN, H5, by Heart’s Cry) concluded his 2016 campaign finishing sixth in the Arima Kinen after a third-place finish in the Japan Cup. Focusing on long-distance races this spring, he was runner-up in both the G2 Hanshin Daishoten (3,000m) and the Tenno Sho (Spring), finishing in front of multiple-G1 winner Satono Diamond in the latter. But experimenting with taking the early lead did not work out well and the son of Heart’s Cry (JPN, by Sunday Silence) disappointed to eighth in the following Takarazuka Kinen. His plan for the fall is expected to follow the same route as Sounds of Earth.

Last year’s Japan Cup fourth-place finisher, Gold Actor (JPN, H6, by Screen Hero), proceeded to run in the Arima Kinen in his bid to defend his 2015 title, but while making a bold early move to take the lead at the stretch, he was unable to fend off Satono Diamond and Kitasan Black in the final strides and was defeated to third. He was below form early this season, finishing fifth and seventh in the Nikkei Sho (G2, 2,500m) and the Tenno Sho (Spring), respectively, but bounced back in the Takarazuka Kinen where he accelerated sharply along the inside over the rough turf to close in on the winner Satono Crown (JPN, H5, by Marju) for second. However, he pulled up exhausted from his effort and was unable to recover in time for his intended fall kick-off start, the All Comers (G2, 2,200m) on September 24, so will head directly towards the Japan Cup, then possibly the Arima Kinen.

Rainbow Line (JPN, C4, by Stay Gold), who came off a runner-up effort in the Kikuka Sho last year and finished sixth in his first G1 attempt against his seniors in the Japan Cup, has been unable to make a breakthrough in his grade-race challenges this spring, finishing fourth, 12th and fifth in the Nikkei Sho, Tenno Sho (Spring) and the Takarazuka Kinen, respectively. He will continue to seek success in the competitive middle-distance category and plans to begin his fall campaign in the Kyoto Daishoten.

Satono Diamond, who did not start in the Japan Cup but won his second G1 title in the Arima Kinen last year, is currently preparing towards becoming the first Japanese horse to win the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe. He won his first start of the spring impressively in the Hanshin Daishoten over Cheval Grand for his fourth consecutive victory, but failed to beat Kitasan Black in the Tenno Sho (Spring), finishing in third a neck short of runner-up Cheval Grand. Departing for France in August, the Deep Impact colt was unable to show his winning ways in the Prix Foy (G2, 2,400m) on September 10 and finished fourth, leaving some concerns as to whether he can handle the possibly heavy track in the Arc. Returning to Japan after his overseas challenge in October, his start in the Japan Cup seems unlikely.

Among the season’s three-year-olds who may aim for the Japan Cup this year is Rey de Oro (JPN, C3, by King Kamehameha), winner of the Tokyo Yushun (Japanese Derby) in May. The King Kamehameha (JPN, by Kingmambo) colt, who gave trainer Kazuo Fujisawa – currently top among JRA’s active trainers in career wins – his first Derby title, won three out of three starts including the Hopeful Stakes (G2, 2,000m) as a two-year-old. He had to go directly to his first G1 attempt in the first leg of the Triple Crown, the Satsuki Sho (Japanese 2000 Guineas, G1, 2,000m) due to a delay in conditioning towards his three-year-old campaign and finished fifth. Sent to post second favorite for the Tokyo Yushun, he ascended to second at the backstretch after racing in the rear early and then refused to give way once taking the front at the top of the stretch to win his first G1 title by 3/4 length. He returned to training in the end of August and made his fall comeback in the Kobe Shimbun Hai (G2, 2,400m) on September 24, where he demonstrated his dominance and won easily from racing in fourth position.

 

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