Tacitus Hits Meydan

Finished fifth in Saudi Cup

Juddmonte Farms’ blue-blooded star Tacitus has arrived at Meydan Racecourse for the 25th edition of the Gr1 $12 million Dubai World Cup sponsored by Emirates Airline .

The Bill Mott-trained multiple Gr2-winning and four-time Gr1-placed son of perennial American champion sire Tapit and champion Close Hatches exits a respectable fifth-place finish in the Saudi Cup on 29 February and has reportedly settled in well after the short trip from Riyadh.

“Everything went well,” said Riley Mott, assistant trainer. “He got in really early Wednesday   morning at about 1:00 a.m. and looks good. We’ll take it lightly with him the next few days and likely just keep him on the jogging track near the quarantine centre. The U.S. horses aren’t used to the longer walk to the track, so we will adjust how we train him going into the World Cup and maybe go to the main track every other day. We will keep him fresh and probably have a couple works.”

In the King Abdulaziz Racecourse fixture, the long-striding grey 4-year-old colt raced inside from post two, but lacked room when the real running started midway through the turn of the 1800m one-bend affair. The Dubai World Cup will be a stretch back out to 2000m and two bends, which is a change his connections seem happy to see. In his previous two tries at 2000m, he was a good third in both the Jockey Club Gold Cup (G1) and Kentucky Derby (G1).

“I was really impressed with his performance,” Mott continued. “If you watch his race, he lacked some room going into the turn and was parked behind Benbatl, waiting for him to make his move or come off the rail. No excuses, but when it was time to get going, he had to hesitate and from that point to the wire, he didn’t lose any ground with the leaders. He stayed the course with them and didn’t back up, while finishing behind two American champions (winner and runner-up Maximum Security and Midnight Bisou). His frame, his breeding and his previous races say he’s a two-turn horse, so that extra furlong will be intriguing.”

In 10 career starts, Tacitus has three victories, three seconds and two thirds, which has earned him $2,677,500 in prize money. Second in the prestigious Gr1 Travers Stakes and Gr1 Belmont Stakes, he won the Gr2 Wood Memorial and Gr2 Tampa Bay Derby earlier in 2019 to stamp himself as one of the best of his generation. Mott has won the Dubai World Cup with the great Cigar and was third in 2015 with Lea.

Tacitus joins a field that is expected to also include 2019 runner-up Gronkowski, Japanese star Chrysoberyl, Belmont Stakes winner Sir Winston and DWC Carnival star Benbatl.

More horses will hope to qualify for the race this Saturday in the Gr1 $600,000 Al Maktoum Challenge Round 3.

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