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Allan, Ivan
- Cheers Hong Kong
- Indigenous
- Olympic Express
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Seeking a fresh challenge from his native Singapore where he had
umpteen trainers titles and big-race winners to his name, Ivan Allan
decamped to Hong Kong in 1992. More than 450 winners and 10 years
later, he finds himself challenging for a fourth trainer's title.
He has won virtually every major honour in Hong Kong racing at domestic
and international level. Fairy King Prawn's success
in Japan's Yasuda Kinen in June 2000 made him the first trainer
to win an overseas Group 1 with a Hong Kong-trained horse. Allan
won his third Hong Kong Derby last month with Olympic Express.
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Collet, Robert
- Lethals Lady
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Aged 53, won the Breeders' Cup Mile in 1986 with Last Tycoon
as well as the French 2,000 Guineas with No Pass No Sale,
the E.P. Taylor Stakes with Truly A Dream. Volochine
ran third for him in the Hong Kong Cup in 1994. Collet also had
great International success with Le Glorieux who was campaigned
to win the Washington D.C. International, Grosser Preis der Berliner
Bank and the Japan Cup in 1987. Other big winners include Son
Of Love in the English St. Leger and Ukraine Girl in
the French 1,000 Guineas. 2001 brought Group success with Zipping
who won the Group 2 Prix Robert Papin and the highlight of last
season was winning the Group 1 E.P. Taylor Stakes again at Woodbine
with Choc Ice.
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Hayes, David
- Helene Vitality
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The trainer of Melbourne Cup (Jeune 1994) and Japan Cup
(Better Loosen Up 1990) winners, David Hayes, son of Australian
training legend Colin Hayes, had racked up more than 1,000 winners
and landed trainer's premierships in Victoria and South Australia
before moving to Hong Kong in the mid-1990s. Champion trainer
in 1997-98 and 1998-99, Hayes has trained 314 Hong Kong winners.
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Head-Maarek, Criquette Christiane
- Okawango
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Born on November 6th 1948, first took out a licence to train in
1978 having previously acted as assistant to her father. She trained
35 winners in her first season, won the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe
in her second season, and has been champion trainer in France once,
in 1986. Numerically, her best French season was 1987 with 107 wins.
She has won some big races overseas, especially with Hatoof
who won the 1992 E.P. Taylor Stakes and 1994 Beverly D Stakes in
America and the 1992 1,000 Guineas and 1993 Champion Stakes in England.
She lives and trains in Chantilly and is president of the French
Trainers Association.
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Kan, Brian
- Industrial Pioneer
- Rainbow And Gold
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Brian Kan is Hong Kong's winning-most trainer with well over 800
victories spanning a 24-year career. He has won five trainer's championships
and a very long list of group races, including five Hong Kong Derbys,
the latest of which arrived last year via his AP QE II contender,
Industrial Pioneer.
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Kitahashi, Shuji
- Eishin Preston
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Aged 66, first took out a licence to train in 1977. He is based
at the Ritto Training Center and his best performer remains last
year's Hong Kong Mile winner Eishin Preston, who also won
the 1999 Asahi Hai Sansai Stakes (Jpn Gr.1).
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Murray, Bede
- Universal Prince
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Aged 66, has spent a lifetime in racing and has been a trainer
for four decades. He has a country facility at Conjola, south
of Sydney that he uses in conjunction with his stable complex at
Kembla Grange - when horses get jaded with stable life he sends
them to the ¡¡±farm¡¨ to freshen-up. He has trained more than 1,500
winners, with six coming at the highest level. Universal
Prince in the 2001 AJC Australian Derby at Randwick he regards
as his best win.
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Oughton, David
- Idol
- Precision
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English-born David Oughton is in his 15th season training
in Hong Kong and he is approaching the 400-winner landmark. Numerically,
his best season was in 1989/90 when he had 41 successes but he has
won the Hong Kong Derby (Che Sara Sara in 1996), three Hong
Kong Gold Cups (Starlight 1990, 1991 and Idol 2001)
and the Champions & Chater Cup (San Domenico 1989).
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Shirai, Toshiaki
- Agnes Digital
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Aged 56, first took out a licence in 1978. His biggest winners
include Agnes Digital (2001 Tenno Sho Autumn, 2000 Mile Championship,
2001 Hong Kong Cup), Special Week (1999 Japan Cup, 1999 Tenno
Sho Autumn, 1998 Tokyo Yushun (Japanese Derby)) and Dance Partner
(1996 Queen Elizabeth II Commemorative Cup and 1995 Yushun Himba
- Japanese Oaks).
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Saeed bin Suroor
- Grandera
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Aged 36, got his first trainer's licence in 1994. Success came
quickly and in 1995 he was placed in charge of Sheikh Mohammed's
Al Quoz stable in Dubai and the mighty Godolphin operation in Newmarket.
He was champion trainer in Great Britain in 1996, 1998 and 1999
and has trained some terrific horses, such as Lammtarra (Epsom
Derby, King George and the Arc in 1995), Halling and Swain
(the King George in 1997 and 1998). In 1999 Almutawakel won
the Dubai World Cup and Daylami won four Group 1 races, including
the Breeders' Cup Turf, easily becoming the first ever Emirates
World Series Champion and bin Suroor its first champion trainer.
In 2000 a second successive Dubai World Cup arrived via Dubai
Millennium while Fantastic Light's global exploits in
2000 (when he won the Hong Kong Cup) and 2001 made him the first
back-to-back winner of the World Series.
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