LONDON: Charlie Appleby admitted he was able to tick off one of his bucket list items having trained Cross Counter to Melbourne Cup glory.
The English stayer, ridden by Kerrin McEvoy, gave Dubai-based Godolphin, owned by Sheikh Mohammed, their first victory in the “Race that stops a nation.”
That left Appleby overjoyed, having helped “the Boys in Blue” break their Melbourne Cup duck.
“When I was lucky enough to get the job, I said there were two things I wanted to do — win the Derby and the Melbourne Cup,” the Godolphin trainer said.
“I’d like to say I was going to repeat it, but it’s going to be a pretty tall order.
“This is a race we have been trying to win for years and I’m just fortunate to turn up with the right horse.
“This is huge for everybody. It’s a dream. (This has been on) my bucket list for a long time.”
It was only Cross Counter’s — a four-year-old bay gelding — eighth start, but he had missed a top-two finish only once.
Marmelo was second and A Prince of Arran two lengths behind in third.
The winner stormed down from the outside in the final several hundred meters for a length victory. Cross Counter was third-last on the first turn.
McEvoy, who won the Melbourne Cup for the third time, said: “What a field to do it in. Charlie and myself used to travel to Doncaster and Chester and all of the tracks up north in England, back when I was over there riding, and all of those miles meant this, winning the Melbourne Cup.” AN
Charlie Appleby says Godolphin victory at Melbourne Cup was a dream come true
Charlie Appleby says Godolphin victory at Melbourne Cup was a dream come true
Saudis need extra time to end Palestine’s dream Arab Cup run and claim semi-final spot
- The Green Falcons dominated the first half but the breakthrough came early in the second when Salem Al-Dawsari drew a foul in the box and Feras Al-Buraikan converted the penalty
- Palestine responded immediately to level the score, but with just 5 minutes of extra time remaining Mohammed Kanno sealed the victory for Saudi Arabia
DOHA: Saudi Arabia halted Palestine’s impressive Arab Cup run at the quarter-final stage with a hard-fought, 2-1, extra-time victory in a tense match on Thursday.
Herve Renard’s side dominated for long spells during the first half in Al-Rayyan, Qatar, as they probed patiently against a disciplined Palestinian defense that had kept two clean sheets in their three matches during the group stage.
The closest the Green Falcons came before the break was late in the opening period when a deep cross created space for Feras Al-Buraikan, only for Hamed Hamdan to make a crucial, last-ditch clearance.
Saudi Arabia eventually broke through early in the second half through their talisman, Salem Al-Dawsari, whose sharp first touch drew a foul from Mohammed Saleh inside the area. Al-Buraikan converted the resultant penalty with confidence to give the Saudis a deserved lead.
Palestine responded immediately, however; Oday Dabbagh controlled a cross from Hassan Altambakti with a superb first touch before finishing clinically to level the match and reignite hopes of a historic semi-final berth.
Saudi Arabia thought they had a chance to retake the lead late on when they were awarded another penalty, but the video assistant referee overturned the decision. And so, with the teams locked at 1-1, the match moved into extra time.
With five minutes remaining, and a penalty shoot-out looming, Mohammed Kanno delivered the decisive blow as he rose to head home a pinpoint cross from Al-Dawsari, sending the Green Falcons into the last four and bringing an admirable Palestinian campaign to an end.









