NEWS PREVIEW

Tiz Barows is the Chosun one

Tiz Barows unleashed a burst of acceleration that none of his twelve rivals could match as he fully justified his odds-on status to run away with the Sports Chosun Trophy (2000M Listed) at Seoul Racecourse on Sunday afternoon.

Having finished 4th in last year's Korean Derby and entering off two strong wins from his last three outings, Tiz Barows  was sent off at odds of 1.5 locally for the Sports Chosun, which was restricted to horses rated 80 or less, and under in-form jockey Antonio Da Silva, the four-year-old obliged in style.

Jeongmun Bolt set the early pace, but Tiz Barows was always handy and once Da Silva squeezed the accelerator in the home straight, the response was instant and devastating as the pair quickly left the field in their wake to win by a full four-lengths. Queens Tour, the only filly or mare in the race and the only runner to have won at the ten-furlong distance before, closed strongly for 2nd, half a length ahead of Choego Black in 3rd.

For Tiz Barows, who is by Tizway and is out of the Jambalya Jazz mare Kaylan's Rose, it was a fifth win on his eleventh start and his third from his last four. Trained by Seo In-seok he is owned by Japanese owner Inokuma Hirotsugu, whose colours were famously sported to victory by Roger Barows in the Tokyo Yushun – Japanese Derby – in 2019. While Tiz Barows hadn't quite reached his peak when he had his own Derby shot, he looks class 1 bound at the very least.

While all but one of Seoul's Saturday races were lost to a flooded track, on Friday at Busan, in similarly wet conditions, a former double Classic winner did make a somewhat unexpected return to form. Hit Yegam beat Winner's Man in both the KRA Cup Mile and the Minister's Cup in 2021 and ran second to the future Korea Cup winner in the Korean Derby.

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Since winning that Classic, which was held in December of 2021 due to pandemic restrictions earlier in that year, Hit Yegam had drawn a blank in nine consecutive outings and had finished no better than 10th in any of his latest four. With Friday's track conditions heavily favouring front-runners though, jockey Choi Eun-gyeong took full advantage of Hit Yegam's inside draw and early gate speed and he led from gate to wire in the class 1 6 f handicap, holding off the closing pre-race favourite Daemangui Gil by half a length to record his tenth win from twenty-one starts.

Next Sunday there is a double helping of Stakes race action at Seoul.  Raon The Fighter and Eoma Eoma renew their rivalry in the SBS Sports Sprint (1200M KOR-G3), the second leg of the Sprint series, while stablemates Raon First and Raon The Spurt headline the second leg of the Queens' Tour, the Ttukseom Cup (1400M KOR-G2).

Video: https://youtu.be/1Y5d5A1OHzw


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