Tate counting down the hours to the Nunthorpe with Royal Aclaim
James Tate is well aware 60 seconds at full gallop down the York sprint track could be all that stands between Royal Aclaim and her ultimate aim of Coolmore Wootton Bassett Nunthorpe Stakes glory.
The Newmarket handler has had the five-furlong Group One in mind for his stable sensation since her very early days, with the 60,000 guineas purchase making a winning debut at Newcastle in May 2021 – when a certain multiple top-level winner Perfect Power was back in third.
Royal Aclaim did not run again as a juvenile, returning with an effortless Bath novice win in June before booking her Nunthorpe ticket an impressive Listed victory on the Knavesmire last month.
The daughter of Aclaim is the general 6-4 favourite for Friday’s feature, and Tate is focusing on getting the filly there in top order – while also trying to keep his enthusiasm in check.
He said: “We’ve been excited for about five weeks, so we’re just trying to restrain ourselves. At the start of the season it was a dream and I think I actually mentioned she’d go for the Nunthorpe after she won a little novice at Bath, so to be going for it and favourite is very exciting.
“It was a dream, but one we thought had a chance of being a reality because we had a fair idea from what she’d done as a two-year-old, both on the track and on the gallops, what sort of an engine she has. So, touch wood, to have her in one piece going into this race off a good preparation, I keep having to pinch myself and hope she stays right the next four days.”
Royal Aclaim will be having just the fourth run of her career at York, one less than the juvenile contender The Platinum Queen, but that lack of match practice is not concerning Tate, who thinks the filly is at her peak for the race.
He explained: “She’s the least experienced horse in the field, and that includes a two-year-old. It is unheard of, but she is like nothing we have ever had through our stable gates before – she’s completely different.
“In three runs she’s achieved a rating of 108, beaten two Group One winners and, to be quite honest, she’s never been 100 per cent fit and ready to go as she is now.
“She was maybe 80 or 85 per cent at York. I expected her to win, I hoped she’d win if everything went right, but I didn’t know she’d win quite as easily as that, given that she wasn’t 100 per cent.
“She’s going into the race well, she’s improved with every start so I’m hoping and expecting improvement on that Listed win. A filly to win the Nunthorpe, usually (a rating of) about 114 does it, she has to find 6lb, so about two lengths. Will she improve two lengths? I really think and hope so.”
The Platinum Queen caught the imagination with her blistering victory in a conditions race at Goodwood and will be bidding to become the first two-year-old winner since Kingsgate Native in 2007, having been supplemented at a cost of £40,000.
Assessing the threat posed by Richard Fahey’s youngster in the Qipco British Champions Series event, Tate said: “I see The Platinum Queen as a danger, of course I do.
“The second and third from that conditions race ran well in the St Hugh’s (Stakes at Newbury), the time was good so I see her as a danger and I definitely will be keeping an eye on her in the race.
“In terms of tactics, it probably makes it easier as you have her that goes forward, Winter Power goes forward, Flotus made all when she won the Summer Stakes, I think – there’s so much pace in the race and so many targets for us. Richard Fahey putting her in just added another target for us really.”
Tate, who is also a qualified vet, admits some nerves are now starting to set in, but retains full faith in the abilities of Royal Aclaim, who is owned by Sheikh Juma Dalmook Al Maktoum.
He added: “I’m getting less cool and calm the closer to the race we get. I’m just praying to get her to the race in good shape.
“It’s a sport at the end of the day and it will happen in under a minute, so I’m praying everything goes well in that minute.
“I’ve got every confidence in her and her ability, but at the end of the day she’s an animal, she’s only equine, so she’s got to get through the next few days and have some sort of luck in running.”
Tate’s family is steeped in racing history, with his father Tom training a stone’s throw from York at Tadcaster, while his uncle Michael Dickinson famously sent out the first five home in the 1983 Cheltenham Gold Cup.
Dickinson also saddled Breeders’ Cup winners on the Flat after moving to America and sked if his legendary uncle had offered any advice, Tate replied: “He said to stop talking her up so much!
“We absolutely love the filly and make no bones about it. She’s a horse and it is a horse race, it’s sport, anything could happen. But we adore her, she’s great.”
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