"She had a temperature about three weeks ago so we're going back gentle with her. We gave her a day away at the Curragh and we'll take her back and train her for Newmarket and see what happens. I was super-impressed with her when she won the Fillies' Mile last year - she went through the last furlong coasting. She then travelled over for the Breeders' Cup and all we thought she had to do was get round, but she picked up an infection. She's not overly big but is still 30kg up on last year's racing weight, which doesn't usually happen with a filly of that size. I'd imagine she'll end up going straight to the 1,000 Guineas and then go to the Oaks after that. Plenty are saying she's by Starspangledbanner so won't stay a mile and a half, but my instinct is that she's an incredible filly. I could be totally wrong, we've only trained a few Starspangledbanners, but everything she does suggests she'll stay. She has loads of personality, but she relaxes. 31-03-26"
"She won a Group 2 at the Curragh over six furlongs and we think she's a Guineas filly. She'll probably be trained for the French Guineas as an easy mile round a bend could suit her. 31-03-26"
Fresh (84 days off)Won 1 of last 5Raced here before
Trainer Quotes
Apr 2026
"She has a good pedigree and is exciting. She ran very well in a hot maiden on her reappearance where she was just nabbed by a high-class filly. We're going to step her back into stakes company next, although we have to decide where. 22-04-26"
Fresh (73 days off)Won 2 of last 5Raced here before
Trainer Quotes
Mar 2026
"She's a good filly, even though it took her a long time to win last year. She'd been second twice and fourth in a Group 3 before she got it done really well at Leopardstown, winning a mile maiden by seven lengths. Ryan rode her at the Curragh on Sunday and loved her. He thinks she'll get a mile and a half well. She's the type for an Oaks trial. 31-03-26"
How do odds work?The first number is what you win, the second is what you bet. So 5/2 means you win £5 for every £2. 4/1 means you win £4 for every £1. The bigger the first number, the less likely bookmakers think the horse will win — but the more you'd win if it does.