EQ Life Masthead - 2019
RSS
enews
live TV (up)
EQ Life virtual competition
CMH.TV advert (V2)
subscriptions
EQ Life Magazine
12 month subscription
Blue Point retired

Blue Point retired after remarkable double © Edward Whitaker

Blue Point retired after remarkable double

© Edward Whitaker

 

Charlie Appleby has paid tribute to brilliant sprinter Blue Point, who he says has been retired "at the pinnacle of his career" and with nothing left to prove.

The five-year-old, who will stand at Sheikh Mohammed's Dalham Hall Stud in Newmarket next year, was the equine star of Royal Ascot when he completed a Group 1 sprint double that had only previously been achieved by the great Australian sprinter Choisir since the Diamond Jubilee Stakes was granted Group 1 status in 2002.

Appleby said on Monday: "After a fantastic Royal Ascot bookended by wins in the Group 1 King's Stand and the Group 1 Diamond Jubilee and subsequent discussions with his highness Sheikh Mohammed, we feel it's the right time to retire Blue Point.

"To do what he did within five days was the pinnacle of his career and he couldn't have done any more. He retires fit and well to Dalham Hall, where he will try and emulate his father Shamardal. He's five now and thrives at Ascot, so we don't think he has anything else to prove."

Blue Point claimed back-to-back wins in the King's Stand Stakes when beating Battaash for a second time last Tuesday, before gamely fending off the highly progressive Dream Of Dreams after travelling strongly into contention in the Diamond Jubilee just four days later.

The Royal Ascot double, achieved under James Doyle while regular rider William Buick recovers from a head injury, took his career record to 11 wins from 20 starts, four of them at the highest level, for earnings of £2,631,333.

Ascot suited Blue Point's style of running especially well and he enjoyed five wins there, the first of them coming at the expense of that year's champion sprinter Harry Angel in the 2017 Pavilion Stakes. He played a key role in a vintage season for sprinters, and his subsequent third behind Caravaggio and Harry Angel in the Commonwealth Cup – his only defeat at the track – came in an epic renewal.

He was also beaten only once at Meydan, where his comfortable Al Quoz Sprint defeat of crack American sprinters Belvoir Bay and Stormy Liberal, the latter a dual winner of the Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint, on Dubai World Cup night in March earned him almost £950,000.
Blue Point retires as the dominant force of the sprinting division, unbeaten in five races this year.

This article first appeared on Racing.com and is reprinted here with their kind permission. To find out more about Racing Victoria's Off the Track program, visit rv.racing.com/the-horse/off-the-track.
 

READ THE LATEST NEWS ARTICLES HERE 

  

M_Ad_out_now_48

Back to top. Printable View.