Mark Johnston looks to Subjectivist for Dubai World Cup glory

The Dubai World Cup is running for the 25th time on March 27, 2021 with more than 100 horses joining. (Twitter @DubaiWorldCup21)
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Updated 25 March 2021
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Mark Johnston looks to Subjectivist for Dubai World Cup glory

  • UK’s most successful trainer won Dubai Turf Classic in 1999, hopes for repeat at Saturday’s Sheema Classic

DUBAI: Mark Johnston does not take long to recall his most cherished Dubai World Cup (DWC) moment.

In 1999, one of the world’s most successful trainers won what was then the Dubai Turf Classic with Fruits of Love. Since then, it has been one close call after another for his horses.

On Saturday, Johnston will be hoping to redress the balance when his four-year-old colt Subjectivist runs at the Dubai Sheema Classic on the DWC’s 25th anniversary.

“He’s a horse from a family we know very well,” the Scotsman told Arab News. “We have his half-brother Sir Ron Priestley who was second in the Saint Leger in 2019.

“So, Subjectivist was always considered to be a potential top-class middle-distance horse and climbed steadily through the ranks last year culminating in a Group 1 win at the end of last season in France.”

That win at Prix Royal-Oak – France’s equivalent of the St. Leger Stakes and run at Paris Longchamp – back in October was the last time Subjectivist was in action, but any concerns over his readiness are more than outweighed by his obvious strengths, according to his trainer.

“He’s coming here on the back of a win at Group 1 level, and the only question in our minds really is that the horse has never raced on anything firmer than good ground,” the owner of Johnston Racing said.

“He did win his Group 1 on soft ground, so there is a little bit of uncertainty there on whether he’s actually better on soft ground, but I do feel that if he can perform to his best on the faster ground then he’s going to take an awful lot of beating. He’s the youngest and arguably the most progressive horse in the race.

“He’s going there without any preparation race, where others in the field have run in Saudi and Dubai, so he’s going in there first time up for the year. But we are quite relaxed about that,” he added.

Subjectivist was bred by Susan Hearn at Mascalls Stud in Essex and was purchased by Johnston for only 62,000 guineas at the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale Book 2 in 2018.

The break between races was not intended, with plans to race him at the Saudi Cup falling through thanks to a “quirk of handicapping” that saw him miss out while another of Johnston’s horses was allowed to run.

“We ran Mildenberger, rated the same, but one (Subjectivist) is a Group 1 winner and you would have thought the better horse, so unfortunately didn’t get into Saudi,” he said.

“Originally we were thinking ahead to the cup races in Britain and the Ascot Gold Cup will be his main target, but obviously the money in the UAE is very, very attractive so we’ve been tempted to go there.”

Johnston’s numbers are staggering. With 4,691 career wins to date, he is the UK’s most successful trainer, with more than 100 winners in 27 consecutive seasons. In nine of those seasons, he has sent out over 200 winners, and he has 25 Group 1 victors to his name.

Now he is hoping to add to his one major Dubai win and his peerless international record.

He said: “It’s very, very exciting but obviously it’s quite difficult to travel around the world. Dubai has been a bit of frustration for us. We won the Sheema Classic, what was then the Dubai Turf Classic, back in 1999. I don’t think we’ve had a winner in Dubai since, but we’ve had seconds and photo finishes, so it’s not been that the horses were not running well.

“International racing is very exciting and it’s tremendous to go around the world. Particularly for us, we’ve been training for the Maktoums, for Sheikh Mohammed (bin Rashid) and his family since 1994, it’s always very important to come to Dubai when we can.”

Beyond Dubai this weekend, Johnston will turn his attention to the talent at his base at Kingsley House Stables – bought in 1988 – in the scenic North Yorkshire village of Middleham.

“We are very strong with these cup horses. Sir Ron Priestley, Subjectivist, and Nayef Road particularly last year was very much living in the shadow of Stradivarius. And the year before we had Dee Ex Bee living in the shadows of Stradivarius. So, it will be quite exciting to be taking on Stradivarius this year with a few more guns blazing in Subjectivist and Sir Ron Priestley, top-class horses.

“Then, among the three-year-olds, we have Gear Up, another Group 1 winner in his last outing. He’ll go to the Dante Stakes with the dream being the Derby,” Johnston added.

“Dubai Fountain for Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed, she missed out on the top level last year, she was fourth in a Group 1 on her last start, but we are very, very hopeful that when she steps up to a mile-and-a-half, we think she’s a serious contender for the oaks this year.”

Before that, there is the little matter of winning in Dubai again. All eyes on Subjectivist.


Salford ‘way more prepared’ for Man City rematch says manager

Updated 13 February 2026
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Salford ‘way more prepared’ for Man City rematch says manager

  • Karl Robinson is adamant Salford will be a better side when they return to the scene of last season’s 8-0 defeat by Manchester City
LONDON: Karl Robinson is adamant Salford will be a better side when they return to the scene of last season’s 8-0 defeat by Manchester City.
The fourth-tier club side were thrashed by Pep Guardiola’s men in an FA Cup third-round tie at the Etihad Stadium.
They will now make the same short journey in England’s northwest in the fourth round on Saturday and the Salford manager is confident of a very different game.
“Last year was really emotional,” said Robinson. “It wasn’t too long ago our owners were leaning on iron bars watching non-league football.
“To then walk out at the Etihad in front of 60,000 with their football club was incredible. That’s the journey of all journeys.
“This year we have other things to worry about. We have a different mindset. We’ve learned from last year. We’ll be way more prepared.”
Playing City in the FA Cup was an indication of Salford’s rise through the ranks of English football from non-league level, with their ascent propelled by their takeover by a group of former Manchester United stars from the celebrated ‘Class of 92’.
Salford are now in their seventh successive campaign in League Two, with the ownership changing last year as a new consortium fronted by Gary Neville and David Beckham bought out their former Old Trafford teammates.
Forging their own identity in the shadow of some of England’s leading clubs is an issue for Salford, who will revert to their traditional orange kit after the ‘Class of 92’ brought in a red and white strip.
“Salford is a proper football club and that’s our message going into this game,” said Robinson.
“Last year we wore the red kit but we’ll wear our away kit this year, just to signify it’s a new era. We do sit separate to City and United. We have our own identity.
“We’re a completely different football club now.”
For all Robinson’s renewed optimism, City thrashed League One Exeter 10-1 in the last round of the FA Cup.
But he insisted: “There’s always hope, there’s always a possibility. You don’t know 100 percent. You might know the odds are 99.9 percent against, but there’s still that chance.
“Everyone goes to bed the night before with that thought of ‘what if?’, and that’s exciting.”