10 runners to watch at the Dubai World Cup

There would be nineraces at the Dubai World Cup meeting on Saturday, March 26. (Twitter: @DubaiWorldCup)
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Updated 17 March 2022
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10 runners to watch at the Dubai World Cup

  • Meydan Racecourse will host nine races featuring up to 34 Group and Grade 1 winners on March 26, including showpiece race favorite Life Is Good

DUBAI: A rough estimate suggests that we’ll see around 34 Group or Grade 1 winners compete for $30.5 million across the nine races at the Dubai World Cup meeting on Saturday, March 26. Here’s a few who you might want to watch out for at Meydan.

1. Life Is Good (Dubai World Cup)

He’s just really … good. So good, he’s only been beaten once, in fact, and that came on his first start for trainer Todd Pletcher and after a break. The four-year-old is the Dubai World Cup favorite and rightly so. He beat the best horse in the world, Knicks Go, last time and is likely to blaze a trail from the front. The only question? He’s yet to run the 2,000 meters of the Dubai World Cup distance.

2. Hot Rod Charlie (Dubai World Cup)

Lying in wait for Life Is Good is Hot Rod Charlie. An unlucky horse — he was once disqualified for getting in the way of a rival — he warmed up for this race with smooth success over 1,900 meters in the G2 Maktoum Challenge Round 2, so we know he likes the track. He’s also small and “bug-eyed,” in the words of one of his owners. There’s a lot to like about “Chuck.”

3. Aero Trem (Dubai World Cup)

This is a cool horse. Bred in Brazil and trained for much of his life in Uruguay, Aero Trem overcame a life-threatening illness to win one of the biggest races in South America; the G1 Gran Premio Latinoamericano in October. Then he came to Dubai, trained here, before hopping over to Saudi and running an excellent fifth in the Saudi Cup. He might not be able to win, but he will be flying the flag high for his racing-mad nation.

4. Yibir (Sheema Classic)

Yibir is talented. He proved that when winning the G1 Breeders’ Cup Turf. He’s also tricky, so much so that trainer Charlie Appleby has kept him at home in Newmarket until this week, when he belatedly joined his Dubai team. If things don’t go his way in the $6 million race, he might sulk. If they do go his way, he might well win.

5. Man Of Promise (Al-Quoz Sprint)

Rarely has a horse been as impressive in a 1,200-meter sprint as Man Of Promise in the G3 Nad Al-Sheba Turf Sprint on Super Saturday, when he took apart a G1-class field by four-and-three-quarter lengths. He now has to prove he can do it again in an actual Group 1, but if he can then the others should be worried.

6. Saffron Beach (Dubai Turf)

Trained in the UK by Australian Jane Chapple-Hyam, Saffron Beach improved throughout her three-year-old career and wound up with a G1 success. She’s in an extremely good race, but it would be unwise to underestimate either her, or her travel-loving trainer.

7. Drain The Clock (Golden Shaheen)

Trained by Barbados-born, US-based, Saffie Joseph Jnr., Drain The Clock is just the sort of horse to do well in this race. He’s a Grade 1 winner and warmed up for this race with a second place at Gulfstream Park in Florida last month.

8. Manobo (Gold Cup)

Five from five in his career so far, Manobo is very exciting. He could start off an excellent night for Charlie Appleby by winning the night’s longest race, the 3,200-meter Gold Cup, which his trainer won in 2019 with Cross Counter.

9. Secret Ambition (Godolphin Mile)

Nine-year-old Secret Ambition will be making the 45th start of his remarkable career when he lines up in the Godolphin Mile, a race he won 12 months ago. Since then, he’s run only twice, being beaten narrowly in Maktoum Challenge Round 1 in January and then finishing a good seventh, after setting the pace, in the Saudi Cup. This guy loves a fight and if he was quick enough to lead in Riyadh, then he’s quick enough to lead — and win — here. Write him off at your peril.

10. RB Rich Lyke Me (Kahayla Classic)

RB Rich Lyke Me is the first Arabian trained by Dubai/Bahrain-based Fawzi Nass, who has turned out to be pretty good at it. The grey has won both of his starts in Dubai and was a strong pacesetting third in the Obaiya Arabian Classic in Saudi. Back on home dirt, he has a serious chance of landing the Arabians’ World Cup.


’Flag can fly’ as Russia wins first Paralympic medals in 12 years

Updated 07 March 2026
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’Flag can fly’ as Russia wins first Paralympic medals in 12 years

  • IPC has allowed six Russian athletes and four from their allies Belarus to represent their countries
  • Voronchikhina said: “For us it’s been a really long time when we were without a flag

CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy: Russia won its first Winter Paralympic medals since 2014 on Saturday as Varvara Voronchikhina and Aleksei Bugaev claimed bronze in the women’s and men’s downhill standing events in Cortina.
Despite Russia’s ongoing war with Ukraine, the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) has allowed six Russian athletes and four from their allies Belarus to represent their countries, accompanied by their national flags, rather than competing as neutrals.
The move sparked a backlash with Friday’s opening ceremony being boycotted by seven countries, including Ukraine, and the Russian delegation was booed by some spectators in the Verona Arena during the athletes parade.
Speaking after winning her nation’s first medal since the 2014 Games in Sochi, 23-year-old Voronchikhina said: “For us it’s been a really long time when we were without a flag.
“I’m really glad and all my country and all my teammates also.
“I’m very happy because it’s the first medal for me.”
Russia was banned from the 2018 Games due to a doping scandal, although some athletes were permitted to compete under neutral colors.
Russia and Belarus were then banned from the 2022 Paralympics following the invasion of Ukraine, although they were permitted to compete as neutral athletes in the Paris Summer Paralympics two years later.
Four years ago,
Voronchikhina said that four years ago in Beijing, she was ready to compete before Russia was suspended by the IPC.
“In Beijing we were there,” the Paralympics debutant said. “I had third training in downhill and after we (had to) go back home.
“For me it was really, really sad and I hope in these Games I will be better and it will be.”
Later on Saturday, three-time gold medallist Bugaev picked up the eighth medal of his Paralympic career as he finished third in the men’s downhill standing.
“It was a difficult medal, I would say, even one of the most difficult of my career,” he said. “But I am very happy that I can represent my country again.”
The 28-year-old added: “It’s nice when you’re not deprived of anything, not restricted, not forced to not reveal yourself, like it was in Korea (2018) for example, when they combined the two colors of our flag.
“We’re just happy that we can compete here on equal terms. And even more so to bring home a medal so that the flag can fly.”
Both Voronchikhina and Bugaev received a polite smattering of applause from the crowd at the bottom of the Olympia delle Tofane piste as their medals were placed around their necks during the podium ceremonies.
At least one Russian flag was held aloft in the stands to greet their success.