One Stripe pictured at Graham Motion’s Fair Hill Training Centre in Maryland
One Stripe’s first race in North America could be at either Colonial Downs or Gulfstream Park, both Listed events, or otherwise there is a Gr 1 at Woodbine in Canada scheduled two weeks after those two races.
It will all depend on whether trainer Graham Motion decides on a softer debut for the One World colt out there or to put him to the test.
Whichever race he does take part in it will be a stepping stone to his chief target, the Gr 1 Breeders Cup Mile, where he might face new Maine Chance-based stallion Point Lonsdale’s three-parts brother Diego Velazquez.
Hollywoodbets Racing are the majority shareholders in One Stripe, whom they own in partnership with the original owner Rikesh Sewgoolam.
The One World colt has been in fine fettle and looks to have grown, so there are high hopes he can make a good stallion CV even better by winning big races in North America.
Diego Velazquez is the second G1 winner produced by the Acclamation mare Sweepstake. Winner of both the Listed National Stakes and Listed Bedanken Stakes, Sweepstake is also the dam of champion, and G1 Grand Prix de Saint-Cloud-winning sire, Broome, as well as of the well performed Point Lonsdale.
Point Lonsdale, whose sire Australia, like Frankel, was sired by Galileo, was a group winner at two, four and five, and earned £724,572 in prize money.
At The Races wrote the below article about the plans for Diego Velazquez:
American adventure on the cards for Diego Velazquez
Prix Jacques le Marois hero has Breeders’ Cup Mile target.
Diego Velazquez will make the final two starts of his career in America after his poignant Prix Jacques le Marois success in the famous Sangster silks.
Transferred into the ownership of Sam Sangster on behalf of a syndicate he heads in the days prior to the Deauville Group One, Aidan O’Brien’s son of Frankel produced a career best to deliver a nostalgic victory that harked back to the glory days of old at Ballydoyle.
Now the Diego Velazquez team have their sights set on further big-race glory, with first a trip to Keeneland for the Coolmore Turf Mile on October 4, a race that serves as a ‘win and you’re in’ for the colt’s main objective, the Breeders’ Cup Mile in early November.
Reflecting on France and looking ahead to the future, Sangster said: “It was an incredible day and I was filled by confidence by Aidan before the Marois and he ran as he said he would. Aidan said he would give everything on the track and he’s so tough and genuine.
“It wouldn’t surprise me if he goes on and wins another one now before the season is out. We’ll absolutely take him to America now and he’s a horse who will really suit the Breeders’ Cup being at Del Mar.
“We wouldn’t be waiting for Del Mar so the obvious step would be Keeneland for the race there. He’s a horse that travels and it’s a ‘win and you’re in’ for the Breeders’ Cup Mile so it ticks a lot of boxes for his programme.”
Diego Velazquez’s Stateside adventure will bring the curtain down on his on-track career. He is set to join the National Stud for stallion duties in November and there is plenty of excitement building around the next stage of his journey.
“One chapter closes and the next one will start and hopefully this is a story of many chapters,” continued Sangster.
“Already talking to breeders from the UK and Ireland there has been a hugely positive response to the horse and he is going to qualify for some very nice mares.
“The guys who have bought into him are also very keen to support him with some proper mares, as will I myself.
“So the end of the racing career is just the icing on the cake for a project with the wheels already in motion to make sure we do everything we can to ensure the horse makes it as a stallion, and hopefully it all pays off.
“It was a dream day at Deauville and the world is his oyster now. He’s going to be a stallion to suit many people and as one door closes the next chapter will open at the National Stud in November.”