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Potential Fairy-Tale! Pyledriver St Leger Feature

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Lambourn trainer WILLIAM MUIR is dreaming of emulating his first boss Fulke Johnson Houghton when he saddles market leader PYLEDRIVER in the Pertemps St Leger at Doncaster.

Group-class speedballs Averti and Stepper Point and John Porter winner Enroller are among the previous stable stars who proved that Muir has always been capable of mixing it with the big guns, but Classic glory would elevate him to a whole new level.

“No one, including me, though we’d have one of the Leger favourites in the yard when racing resumed a few months ago. Before the Covid pandemic kicked in, I was planning to start off in the Craven and then go to the Irish Guineas and the French Derby, but luckily as it turned out, that plan went out of the window.”

Instead, a twist of fate led Muir and his flashy bay colt to victory in the Group 3 Classic Trial on the All-Weather at Kempton Park before clinching high profile success in the Group 2 King Edward VII Stakes at Royal Ascot and bouncing back from a luckless run in the Derby by dominating the Great Voltigeur Stakes at York.

“The Voltigeur has always been a good trial for the Leger and my horse couldn’t have been more impressive,” he reflects. “He’s got to prove he stays further in the Leger but he wasn’t stopping at York was he?

“He’s a very uncomplicated, relaxed horse who switches off in his races and has proven he’s effective on all sorts of ground. I could have sleepless nights about a few things but the going at Doncaster won’t be one of them.”

Home-bred Pyledriver is an unlikely hero, being the first foal of a modest mare by the unfashionable sire Harbour Watch. He was overlooked by every trained eye in the business when led out of the sales ring unsold as a yearling but two years later has established himself as one of the best colts of his generation.

“He came to me and I got him ready to run as a two-year-old,” he recalls. “We took him to Salisbury and he was such a big price that I persuaded his owners to have a little bit on him each-way. I’m not a betting man but 50-1 was an insult as he’d been working nicely. We had £100 on between us and he won what turned out to be a hot little race.”

Pyledriver winning at Listed level at Haydock in September 2019.
A Listed success followed at Haydock Park last year before his exploits in June convinced Muir and his owners to run him in the greatest race of them all, the Epsom Derby.
“Sadly my owners couldn’t enjoy the experience because of the Covid restrictions but everything went wrong anyway. He got badly hampered and could have ended up on the floor but I saw something that afternoon that reminded me what a serious horse he was.

“On the face of it you might think he ran badly, but when I had chance to reflect on that race, the way he came home in that final furlong eased the disappointment. He was passing horses for fun and I’m convinced he’d have beaten Aidan O’Brien’s Mogul with a clear run. He proved me right when he finished about four lengths in front of that colt at York.”

That race, the Great Voltigeur, was won last year by John Gosden’s Logician, who went on to claim Leger glory the following month, and Muir is hoping Pyledriver can follow suit.

“I’ve had some nice horses over the years and have won several Group races but this colt could be the best I’ve ever had,” he says. “He’s still 1lb behind Enroller on official ratings. He won a Group 3 for me and reached 120 at his best, but there’s much more to come from this fellow.

“I wouldn’t swap my horse for anyone’s in the Leger. His form is there for all to see and if he does stay a mile and three-quarters it will open up some serious options for next year when I know he will be bigger and stronger.

“He has the gears to win over a mile and a quarter and for that reason I’ve put him in the Champion Stakes at Ascot next month. He’s in the Arc, too, but we’ll just wait and see what happens in the Leger before we make any plans.”

Pyledriver, owned in partnership by former university pals Roger Devlin and Hugh and Guy Leach, will be ridden by Muir’s son-in-law Martin Dwyer, already a Classic-winning jockey who enjoyed his finest moment on Sir Percy in the 2006 Derby.

“Martin has always had as much faith in Pyledriver as I have and was delighted with him when he hopped on him last week but we won’t be changing our routine. One of my lads Jeta Ram rides him out every day so it’s just a case of keeping him ticking over. He’ll twitch his nose at me when I walk past his box in a morning to let me know he’s alright.”

The opposition had better watch out if the colt flashes Muir a similar glance in the saddling box at Doncaster come Leger afternoon on Sky Sports Racing…

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Horse Racing
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