March gets underway with a 10-race card at Seoul from 10:35 to 18:00. Here are the previews:
Global Hit goes around at Meydan on Saturday evening/Sunday morning (Pic: KRA)
Seoul Race 1: Class 6 (1200M) Special Weight A / KRW 45 Million
Maidens with all but two racing for the first time. (8) WE GO HIGH looked very assured in his trial, crossing the line 1st on the bridle and without much encouragement in what was a quick time compared with most trials recently. If he brings that form to the races, he wins. (4) THUNDER FIRE drew the widest gate on debut and after going forward early got shuffled right back before running on. He should have derived some benefit from the experience and with a much better draw today, can improve. (10) ACE MATCH was slowly away on his debut but ran on pleasingly enough for 5th place and he too can have come on for the run. Returning to the first-time starters, (1) WHIZ GOLD and (6) TOUCH THE SKY looked the best in trials.
Selections
(8) We Go High (4) Thunder Fire (10) Ace Match (1) Whiz Gold
Next Best
6, 4
Fast Start
2, 4, 6, 8
Seoul Race 2: Class 6 (1200M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
Fillies only in this maiden. (11) GWANAKSAN JOY has finished between 2nd and 4th in each of her four starts so far, including last time out on December 28th when she was a beaten odds-on favourite in 3rd. She likes to race on pace, so she does have the challenge of the wide draw here, but she is worth another chance. (2) INDIAN TAPIT has a 5th and a 4th from her two outings to date, both at this distance and most recently racing handy. Kozzi rode her both times and third up she can be peaking. (3) HYEOKMYEONGUIJILJU didn’t do much from a wide draw on debut but has raced on pace in her latest two and has finished 3rd and 4th. She draws well to get forward again and can match or better those finishes. (4) WONPYEONG NURI and (8) CUPID WORLD are the other place chances.
Selections
(11) Gwanaksan Joy (2) Indian Tapit (3) Hyeokmyeongjilju (4) Wonpyeong Nuri
Next Best
8, 9
Fast Start
2, 3, 4, 11
Seoul Race 3: Class 6 (1300M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
(7) SEOBU SKY ran a solid 3rd on debut over 1200M on January 26th, settling just behind the speed and running on well. He should have come on for the run, Ruan Maia climbs on, and he can win this. (3) ARCH DAY is the main danger. He has two 3rd places among his six starts to date, one at this distance and today comes into a better gate than last time. That should allow him a soft run to the speed, and he will be in this a long way. It would be a surprise if those two don’t fill out the quinella, but (1) SEOHAE BADA does have a 3rd on her record and enters off a useful enough 5th over 1400M and from the inside gate may make for some interest on a place line. (2) DIA ROOK and (10) BLACK RUSSIAN others in the frame.
Selections
(7) Seobu Sky (3) Arch Day (1) Seohae Bada (2) Dia Rook
Next Best
10, 6
Fast Start
1, 3, 4, 9
Seoul Race 4: Class 5 (1400M) Handicap / KRW 45 Million
(9) PURGE STEP was a winner on debut over 1300M on January 25th, overcoming a wide draw to jump out fairly and then be ridden up to the pace. She comes up in class and slightly in trip, but neither should be an issue, and she can measure up. (4) CHEONGSAN JILJU got his maiden win two starts back but had a slightly disappointing day at the office on his first try at this class and distance on January 25th. That was the first time he had missed the top five and he is well worth another chance here. (1) SUNSHINE QUEEN is winless in eleven, but she came close two starts back and ran a fair 5th on her first try at this class on January 18th. She’s nicely in at the weights and from the inside gate can be in the finish. (5) LOTUSMIREU and (7) CHEONJI SKY are others who can contest at least the minors.
February draws to a close with an 8-race card at Busan on Friday from 11:25 to 18:00. Here are the previews:
Busan Race 1: Class 6 (1200M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
Maiden fillies in the opener with two of the nine racing for the first time. Despite two very unpromising trials, (6) JJAK SARANG ran 4th on debut over this distance on February 7th, showing on pace throughout. She should have come on for that run and can be the one to beat here. (9) GREAT MARU has been poor in her latest two most recently having weakened after leading on January 27th. She does have a 2nd place to her name though and that’s enough to put her in contention in this company. (7) DOCTOR KAREN has a 4th on her record at start two and while that is surrounded by two less encouraging efforts, she should be on pace in this company and go close. (1) WONDER MOCCASIN and debut maker (2) AREUMDAUNNALDAL others who could feature.
Selections
(6) Jjak Sarang (9) Great Maru (7) Doctor Karen (1) Wonder Moccasin
Next Best
2, 4
Fast Start
1, 6, 7, 9
Busan Race 2: Class 6 (1300M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
After an inauspicious debut, (7) POWER TIME has picked up in his latest two coming from off the pace to record a 6th and 3rd at 1200M and 1400M. Tanaka stays on and with similar tactics, he can win here. (6) COWBOY MAN has a front running 2nd and a 3rd on his record and had excuses last time out as he returned lame when 6th over 1300M on January 17th. He came back in to work on February 7th and fully fit here, he can be a danger and will probably start as favourite. (2) HANEULPYEONGJEONG returned from nine months out in December and has since run 4th twice, most recently on January 19th at 1400M. She draws well to be on pace and third-up she can be peaking. (3) DIVINE KINGDOM and first-time starter (4) CAPTAIN DRAGON are others to look out for.
Selections
(7) Power Time (6) Cowboy Man (2) Haneulpyeongjeong (3) Divine Kingdom
Next Best
4, 9
Fast Start
2, 4, 6, 11
Busan Race 3: Class 6 (1600M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
(6) GLOBAL WONDER was an improved 3rd when stepped up to the mile at start number four on February 7th, settling midfield and working home well. Franco climbs aboard for the first time, and it can be his day. That will mean overturning the form on (1) FATE. He too stepped up to a mile for the first time in that February 7th race and after a slow start made his way forward and ran on for 2nd. Both were well beaten by a good winner, but the pair can dispute top honours this time. (10) RUNNING FASHION is one-paced but does have a 2nd place to her name as well as the fastest time among these for the distance and she looks a fair place chance here. (5) NICE GIRL and (11) JOJOBA perhaps the best of a limited rest.
Busan Race 4: Class 5 (1200M) Handicap / KRW 45 Million
Fillies and mares only here. (7) MIRAGE got her maiden win at start three on December 15th having been on pace throughout. The win had been coming and after having January off she came back in to work at the start of this month and while up in class, she has every chance of measuring up in this company. (12) QUEEN TYCHE was a smart winner at this distance on February 16th, coming from off the pace. She is up in class but she did it from gate twelve last time and she can measure up. (5) ASSEMBLE won at start number two in November, similarly on pace all the way, and comes back in after sixteen weeks out. It’s fair to say she didn’t offer many clues in an underwhelming trial on February 8th, but she will have plenty of backers here. (9) MOTHER CHUKJE and (4) ALICE MARINE others in the hunt.
CC Wong rode his second Listed winner in a week as Chan Famous came from a long way back to stake his claim for a spot in the starting gate when the Triple Crown kicks off in April by winning the Sports Seoul Trophy (1400M KOR-L) on Sunday afternoon. At Busan, Oasis Blue did the same, with a comfortable score in the Gyeongnam Shinmun Trophy (1400M KOR-L), the pair of races the respective main Classic trials of the two tracks.
Jockey CC Wong and Trainer Kenny Seo share…a moment (Pic: KRA)
Having debuted nondescriptly last November, Chan Famous won his next two before kicking off his three-year-old campaign with a 4th place at class 4 over this distance. That adequate but by no means amazing record led him to be sent off at 38.1 on the local tote as One Punch Dragon, entering the race on a three-race winning streak, jumped as the favourite.
Another outsider, Silver Rain, set the pace along with the fancied Long Run Bulpae, who entered as the only horse to have raced at class 3 level. Silver Rain would fade in the straight leaving Long Run Bulpae and Lee Dong-ha alone out in front and seemingly home and hosed.
Chan Famous downs Long Run Bulpae (Pic: KRA)
That would be to reckon with Chan Famous as having sat towards the rear of midfield, CC launched his mount and he relentlessly eroded a big deficit in the final furlong, reeling in and passing a tiring Long Run Bulpae to win by just under a length. Best Race was 3rd and Captain P.K., Seoul’s best juvenile of 2024, was 4th.
Chan Famous is by Hansen and out of Intouchable (by Elusive Quality). Trained by Seo Bum-seok, he was a 94 Million Won purchase as a two-year-old by his owner, Hong Kong based Shum Ho Chun.
It was a first big race win in Korea for the owner while for trainer Seo, generally known as “Kenny”, it was another big price success with a young horse – stablemate Aqua Line, won last November’s G2 Breeders’ Cup Rookie at Busan at 80/1, although has been on the sidelines since. For CC Wong, it was a second Korean Listed win in as many weeks with the jockey having taken out the Segye Ilbo Trophy on Crown Hamseong last Sunday.
At Busan, Oasis Blue crossed the line in front for the second time in Listed company, having previously done so in last Octobers Gimhae Mayor’s Trophy. That day he was deemed to have been at fault for an incident early in the race that resulted in a jockey being unseated and under the local rules of racing, he got thrown out.
Since then, he had registered a 3rd place and a win at class 4 level over the Korean Derby distance, but Oasis Blue was dropped back to 1400M to scratch that Listed itch on Sunday. Close all the way under jockey Jin Kyum, taking the lead turning into the straight and once he got in front set about his task well, opening up a big lead and taking the line a full three-lengths to the good over Yongbi Paewang, with My Dream Day in 3rd.
Oasis Blue is by Uncaptured and is out of Saena (by Peace Rules). He is trained by Baik Kwang-yeol and owned by Lee Jong-hun, who has owned the likes of Success Story, Beolmaui Kkum and Beolmaui Star.
The first leg of the 2025 Triple Crown is the KRA Cup Mile (1600M KOR-G2) at Busan on Sunday April 6.
We’re just over a month away from the first leg of the Triple Crown and both Seoul and Busan host their respective main Classic Trials on Sunday. There are 11 races at Seoul from 10:35 to 18:00 and 6 at Busan from 12:05 to 16:30. Here are the previews:
Seoul Race 1: Class 6 (1200M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
A rather ordinary maiden to open with. (7) MISS FAMOUS has a 4th and a 6th from two starts so far, both at this distance. Ignore the times as the track was very slow, but she ran through the line fairly enough on both occasions. CC gets on and third up she be peaking. After an inauspicious debut, (8) RAON SPILETTA has posted a 4th and a 5th, both at this distance. In this company she can compete for the early lead and can be in the finish. (1) CRAZY MARI debuted fairly last August but didn’t run again until December when she was less impressive. She does draw the inside gate though and may be a bit fitter this time. (4) LASER RUN has been back to trial since a woeful debut and should be better this time around. Debut-maker (10) GREAT CHARM trialed adequately and in such a weak race, has to be given a chance first-up.
Selections
(7) Miss Famous (8) Raon Spiletta (1) Crazy Mari (4) Laser Run
Next Best
10, 6
Fast Start
1, 4, 7, 8
Seoul Race 2: Class 6 (1300M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
Fillies only in this maiden and (6) I AM GO will be the warm favourite. She is yet to finish outside of the top five across her five starts to date and enters off a 3rd place at 1200M on January 11th. She should get quite an easy lead here and can go all the way. (7) SWITCH POWER actually finished ahead of I Am Go when they ran 4th and 5th over this trip last November. She has since picked up a 5th and a 3rd in two subsequent starts and shapes as the main danger. (4) JUNMA FORCE came from well off the pace to run an improved 4th at start number two on December 29th and can continue to make progress here. (11) SAMJEONG WINNER and (10) MODERN DANCE are the other main place chances.
Selections
(6) I Am Go (7) Switch Power (4) Junma Force (11) Samjeong Winner
Next Best
10, 5
Fast Start
5, 6, 7, 11
Seoul Race 3: Class 6 (1400M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
(6) TAPDINE has run twice and finished 3rd twice, both at 1200M and most recently when slightly slow away on January 11th before quickly being ridden up to the pace. He steps up to 1400M for the first time and can win from the front. (2) RAON NOTHERN DANCE has made good progress across four starts, culminating in 2nd place at 1300M on January 19th. In this company and well-drawn, he can also be expected to be on the speed and to be in this a long way. (7) GRAND KWAEMA has been consistent across his four starts so far, never finishing worse than 4th. Moon Se-young stays on and he should be there or thereabouts today. (9) GWANAKSAN CHECK IN may appreciate the additional distance today and along with (8) DYNAMIC SONG is another to consider for the minors.
Selections
(6) Tapdine (2) Raon Nothern Dance (7) Grand Kwaema (9) Gwanaksan Check In
Next Best
8, 11
Fast Start
2, 6, 7, 9
Busan Race 1: Class 6 (1200M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
Twelve fillies in the south coast opener. (2) QUEEN LIRUN debuted on December 22nd but laid out and became unmanageable before being discontinued with three furlongs left. She was ordered to take two trials as a result and came through them very nicely, finishing 3rd in one and winning another. She draws nicely to lead and if she behaves, she can win. (11) BLACK TREE was an improved 4th at start number two over this distance on December 13th. She comes in fresh after ten weeks off and with Seo Seung-un climbing on, may well start as favourite. (10) GLOBAL HEROINE was found to be lame after a disappointing outing last month. She came back into work on February 9th and going on her 3rd place at the start before, has to be in this. (5) QUEENS DRAGON and first-time starter (7) FINAL ATTACK are others to consider.
Selections
(2) Queen Lirun (11) Black Tree (10) Global Heroine (5) Queens Dragon
Next Best
7, 3
Fast Start
2, 5, 8, 10
Seoul Race 4: Class 5 (1200M) Handicap / KRW 45 Million
(3) GOLD QUEENS was a winner on debut in November before running a fair 4th on her first try at this class, again at 1200M, on January 11th, settling midfield and running on. She draws well, stays under a light weight, and she can win here. (1) NAEGILUI YEOJEONG got promoted to this class with a pair of runner-up finishes and then immediately got his maiden win on January 19th. He comes up 4kg in weight, but from the inside gate can get to the lead and can repeat. (8) WONDERFUL DONGCHON is up in class having scored at this trip aon January 5th and he can measure up in this company. (2) GAMUN PARTY and (9) HAKSAN DARK HORSE others who can be in the mix in a competitive race.
Busan Race 2: Class 6 (1400M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
(7) FLYING THE KHAN enters off back-to-back 3rd place finishes over 1300M. He has a smart finish on him so the slight step up in trip can be to his benefit and he can win here. (5) FAST QUEEN came from well off the pace for an improved 2nd place on what was her first try at this distance on January 12th with a couple of today’s rivals behind. The track was very slow that day so ignore the time, and she is another who can be dangerous late on. In contrast, (3) SEOGWI WORLD should be on pace. He weakened on debut but should have derived benefit from the run and nicely drawn he can be in this a long way. (11) STAR FORCE and (4) ROCK CANDY are among other place chances.
Selections
(7) Flying The Khan (5) Fast Queen (3) Seogwi World (11) Star Force
Next Best
4, 1
Fast Start
2, 3, 9, 12
Seoul Race 5: Class 5 (1800M) Handicap / KRW 45 Million
Saturday’s racing is at Seoul with 11 races from 10:35 to 18:00. Here are the previews:
Seoul Race 1: Class 6 (1200M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
Maiden fillies in the opener. Ruan Maia has been in excellent form since the short Lunar New Year break, and he can continue here with (7) KOTAP. She has a best of 3rd and comes in following 5th place in a tougher race than this on January 4th. She draws well to lead, and she can go all the way. (10) EXCELLENT HANSEN took a few goes to figure things out but raced on pace for the first time on December 29th and finished a much-improved 2nd. He has the challenge of a wider gate but can build on that here. (2) NAEGILUI ACE was a well beaten but improved 5th at start two and from a good draw can get closer. (3) GIDAEHARA and (5) FLYING LION others to consider.
Seoul Race 2: Class 4 (1200M) Special Weight A / KRW 75 Million
Imported maidens with four of the twelve racing for the first time and we’ll take a chance on one of them with (4) WHIZ REALITY. He went through two trials, winning the second of them when leading all the way (on January 2nd, beware it may not appear in all racecards). He draws very nicely to lead and if he brings that form to the races, he can win. (9) GRAY CANDY didn’t do much on debut but was much more accomplished at the second time of asking at this distance on January 25th, leading for most of the way and running 2nd in a good time. He too will be aiming to get on-pace, and he can go one better. (8) TIARA SUA was 3rd in that January 25th race. She has four-lengths to find on Gray Candy but can improve. (6) NOBLE MY DEAR and (11) FLYING OAKS also in the frame.
Selections
(4) Whiz Reality (9) Gray Candy (8) Tiara Sua (6) Noble My Dear
Next Best
11, 1
Fast Start
4, 5, 8, 9
Seoul Race 3: Class 6 (1300M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
(4) DIXIE MAN had a poor day at the office two weeks ago when sent off as favourite over 1400M. Except for copping a bump at the start, he doesn’t really have any excuses but Moon Se-young stays on and so shall we, going on his effort two starts back when 3rd at this distance. He can sit handy here and is worth another chance. (6) JEULGEOUN SANGSANG has a 3rd and a 4th from two starts so far at 1200M and last time out at this trip on January 26th when going right back and running on. Third-up he can be peaking fitness wise and has every chance of going better. (5) BEATRIZ has been ordinary in her latest three, but she should at least be on pace and if the track is anything like it was last week, she can be in this for longer. (3) CAPTAIN RISE and (7) BEST SHARK the other placing chances.
Seoul Race 4: Class 6 (1700M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
(3) CHRYSOL MAJOR returned from three months out to run 4th at 1300M on January 19th. He steps up to two turns for the first time, but his running style suggests that it can suit and stripping fitter for that effort a month ago, he can win. (7) SANBANG BOMNAL beat three of these on his way to 2nd place at this distance on January 25th. That was by far his best effort to date and from a similar gate and against similar opposition, he can repeat. (8) SAVANA CHARLIE was 5th in that race settling back and running on. He has never finished inside the top two but has been between 3rd and 5th on no fewer than twelve occasions and should be there or thereabouts again. (6) GRAND FLYING and (9) MARUBYEOL others in the hunt for the minors.
Selections
(3) Chrysol Major (7) Sanbang Bomnal (8) Savana Charlie (6) Grand Flying
Next Best
9, 11
Fast Start
4, 5, 6, 11
Seoul Race 5: Class 5 (1300M) Handicap / KRW 45 Million
Plenty enter with recent form reading well, but (3) CUPID IT will be favourite. An also-ran in the Rookie Stakes, he got his maiden win at start three over 1200M in October before running 2nd on his first try at this class and distance in a double-quick race at the end of November when leading for much of the way. He had a couple of issues after that but has been back in work this month and from a great draw he can lead all the way. (7) YONGBI TAEYANG and (10) UGWANGMYEONG came home 2nd and 4th respectively when they raced one another at this class and distance on January 18th. The former was on speed with the latter coming from well back and with similar tactics expected from both, they can be in the mix again. (2) GREEN FEELSTAR and (11) WANGCHOEGO among plenty of other placing chances.
The weekend’s action gets underway at Busan on Friday with 9 races from 11:25 to 18:00. Here are the previews:
Busan Race 1: Class 6 (1200M) Special Weight A / KRW 45 Million
Three-year-old maidens with nine of the twelve racing for the first time. (9) FLASH PARK went through two trials, winning one and running a close 3rd in the second, both in quick times. Both times he was going well late so the draw shouldn’t be a problem, and he can win first-up. Of the experienced ones, (12) FLYING RACE has appeared twice, improving to 2nd at start number two over this distance in December. He’s had eleven weeks off since, but that experience can be important here. (11) TOP DOG did nothing on debut last September but looked much better prospect when a close 2nd in a January trial and should be better this time around. (3) STUKA led all the way to win his trial with a couple of today’s rivals behind him. (5) APDOJEOK NUMBERONE another who hinted at ability across a couple of trials.
Selections
(9) Flash Park (12) Flying Race (11) Top Dog (3) Stuka
Next Best
5, 1
Fast Start
1, 3, 4, 8
Busan Race 2: Class 6 (1300M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
(3) UNLIMITED RUN was an improved 3rd at start number two on January 24th, settling midfield and running on. Third up he can be peaking, Seo Seung-un climbs on, and he is the one to beat. (4) STARTMAN ran a solid 3rd on debut over this distance on January 24th racing handy throughout. He should have come on for the run and has every chance of matching or bettering that here. (6) DALBITWIE needs line drawn through his latest in December when luckless and coming back slightly lame. He was back in work within a week, and he has placed at this trip as recently as November. (10) DONGNAM DOLPUNG is next best and then the form drops off the proverbial cliff. Without much confidence (11) SHACKLE SUN will probably be fifth in the market.
Selections
(3) Unlimited Run (4) Startman (6) Dalbitwie (10) Dongnam Dolpung
Next Best
11, 2
Fast Start
3, 4, 9, 11
Busan Race 3: Class 6 (1600M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
(5) BARBELL MOMO comes in having beaten three of these on his way to 2nd place on his first try at a mile on January 24th. He was slow away and went right back before running on very pleasingly and a similar effort today should see him go one better. (9) YEOSU GUARDIAN was one of those behind Barbell Momo that day, coming home 5th. At the start before he was a good 3rd, also over the mile, and he shapes as one of the dangers. (4) EAGLE POWER was the longest but one shot on the board in that race. He defied that to run a good 4th and with an apprentice keeping his weight light, he can match or better that here. (3) DREAM TREE and (12) FLYING ICE are others in the hunt.
Selections
(5) Barbell Momo (9) Yeosu Guardian (4) Eagle Power (3) Dream Tree
Next Best
12, 6
Fast Start
2, 8, 9, 10
Busan Race 4: Class 4 (1400M) Handicap / KRW 45 Million
Fillies only here. (12) B.K DANCING GIRL will be favourite having run 3rd on debut before winning in an utterly facile manner at start number two over 1200M on January 19th leading all the way. She comes up in class and in trip but is down in the weights and the manner of that win suggests there is more to come. (9) BLACK EQUUS similarly scored at start two, in her case over this distance on January 19th coming from off the pace. This is harder but Munro stays on and she can measure up. (1) AWESOME SUNRISE is a nineteen-race maiden but has nine top three finishes and from the inside gate, this is the kind of race she can find the money in again. (3) MUSKET GIRL and (10) SIMON STAR among plenty of others with at least placing chances.
Busan Race 5: Class 5 (1200M) Handicap / KRW 45 Million
(8) BEOLMA KING was a winner on debut over 1300M in November before running 3rd on his first try at this class over the same trip on December 13th. He comes in fresh following ten weeks off and while there will be the question as to whether the 1200M is too sharp, he has every chance. (2) SPEED TOP will probably be the betting favourite. He won on debut at 1200M last November before running 2nd on his first try at this class on December 29th, beating a few of these in the process. He draws nicely to be on pace and third-up he can be peaking. (9) SING FOR ME was similarly a winner on debut before running midfield on his first try at this class on January 24th. He can settle back and run in and can be a danger late here. (7) ROAD TO THUNDER and (12) MR.WOLF are other chances.
Peter Wolsley has never done emotion at the races, but he almost made an exception after race 3 of the short 6-race program at Busan on Sunday December 29th. Samakui Kkot was the trainer’s 693rd winner in Korea and he knew it would be his last.
It’s an old picture but Peter Wolsley never posed for many – here with Macheon Bolt (Pic: KRA)
“I didn’t give (jockey Lee) Sung-jae any specific instructions” said Wolsley, “but he knew the horse likes to be on pace and he got him there. A few times I thought he was beat, but he kept lifting and Sung-jae got him home.”
It was an energetic ride by the journeyman jockey, a rider who had ridden so many times for Wolsley over the years, and who knew the significance. Lee Sung-jae did not want to lose that race. “It was Sung-jae’s last ride of the day, and he came straight up to us afterwards. I don’t get expressive, I don’t get emotional, but it was good to share that moment with him.”
And it was done. After seventeen years, Peter Wolsley’s career in Korean racing was over. Not by choice, but by remorseless numbers. Those numbers said that he hadn’t shaped up in the past couple of years. Foreign trainers – rightly – get held to a higher standard than the locals, and according to those numbers – debatable – the previous fifteen years were irrelevant.
“I got the official notification by text message just before Christmas that I would be done a week later. Nice after seventeen years, isn’t it?”
Peter Wolsley was the first foreign trainer in Korea. Goodness knows what advert he answered, but he arrived in 2007 and was assigned to Busan Racecourse, then only two years into existence. The KRA’s wish to bring in foreign trainers was not universally shared in the wider Korean racing industry – and probably not even within the entire KRA – and with little plan what to do with him, he was assigned what was known as “the breakdown barn”, essentially the horses nobody else wanted to train.
One of the tractor drivers who harrowed the track spoke some English, so he was seconded to be Wolsley’s interpreter. It wasn’t a promising start. But through patience, horsemanship and not a little stubbornness, Wolsley got some of those unfortunate horses up to standard. And even winning.
An early turning point (and I have written these sentences before) came in late 2008. Wolsley had requested that pacifiers (mesh eye-protectors used to prevent sand getting in the eyes of the horse) be allowed to be fitted during races – a cause also taken up by the first foreign steward Brett Wright – and in October of that year, they were finally approved for use.
Bold Kings wins the 2015 Grand Prix (Pic KRA)
The next month, Wolsley’s mare Gyeongcheonsa became the first racehorse in Korea to run in pacifiers and she duly flew home to win at odds of 19/1. One race later, his colt Khaosan, also sporting the same equipment and starting at similarly attractive odds, came from last to second in the home straight.
Wolsley never looked back – he even got the 90/1 2008 Korean Derby winner Ebony Storm to finally win another race – and a couple of years later, Khaosan would provide the trainer with his first Korean Group race winner. Almost every horse wears pacifiers in races in Korea now.
Peter Wolsley reached one hundred Korean winners in May of 2011 and later the same year the aforementioned Khaosan won the G3 Owners’ Cup – albeit in the Stewards’ room – under a first Korean ride for jockey Nathan Stanley. It took only two more years for the double century to arrive when My Winner won the Gold Circle Trophy, an International Trophy exchange race in September 2013, under Darryll Holland.
The numbers continued to pile up – the winning milestones were so regular I stopped bothering to report them – and in 2014 Wolsley earned a Classic win when Never Seen Before scored at odds of 25/1 in the Minister’s Cup, the final leg of that year’s Triple Crown.
“I really believed he was going to win. All week he had been so good – I walked him around that hill behind the stables at Seoul Racecourse – and he felt amazing. I remember telling you that he would win. You didn’t believe me, I might add.” I didn’t.
“He had to fight, it was a good race, Gumpo Sky was a proper horse, so was Success Story, but Charlie (jockey Lee Hee-cheon) rode him well and he beat them.”
Others behind Never Seen Before included a couple of fillies, Korean Derby winner Queen’s Blade, as well as Winner’s Marine, who went on to foal the great Winner’s Man.
Then in 2015, came Bold Kings. Only debuting as a three-year-old at class 4 level that March, he promptly went unbeaten in six, including at class 1 over 2200M in November which earned him his shot in that year’s Grand Prix Stakes, then the biggest Group 1 of the year and still the season finale.
Bold Kings looked beaten on the turn in the Grand Prix, but he and jockey Jo Sung-gon found a way, shifting inside at the top of the straight, and launching a run. He beat Gumpo Sky by a neck with Clean Up Joy in 3rd and the great Triple Nine in 4th in what is still regarded as the most exciting Grand Prix ever run. It was seven from seven.
“You don’t really think about it at the time but looking back on it, to do that was some achievement. For a three-year-old that never ran at two to debut at the start of the year, run seven times and finish the year unbeaten by winning the 2300M Grand Prix is astonishing, really.”
Bold Kings had some injury setbacks in 2016 and was eventually moved to a different trainer. He was retired at the end of the 2017 season and while registered as a stallion, was reported to have died in 2019.
I ask Wolsley about the jockeys who rode for him, and he mentions Park Geum-man, one of the first to be attached to his barn in the early days, and how proud he was when he won the Korean Derby in 2010, albeit on another trainer’s horse (Cheonnyeon Daero, who by a curious twist of fate, would be the horse demoted in favour of Khaosan in the Owners’ Cup a year later). But he also goes on to talk about feedback and the important relationship between trainer and jockey.
“When you can’t ride them all yourself (Wolsley, in company with most of his fellow foreign trainers here, had to do exactly that for a long time), feedback is so vital to a trainer. Daryll Holland was so good at it. He could ride a horse in the morning and tell you instantly if there is an issue and what we need to do to fix it – it hasn’t surprised me at all that he is making a good go of his training career.”
“Jo Sung-gon was an excellent jockey. In my opinion he was the best of the locals that I worked with in terms of race riding, but what really made him stand out was his feedback. Obviously, he spoke good English, which helped with me, but it wasn’t just that. He had a sense with the horses that made him so valuable to a trainer.”
Jo Sung-gon took his own life in 2019 at the age of 37.
Wolsley’s cellphone wallpaper is of Jo Sung-gon winning the Grand Prix on Bold Kings. “It has been ever since the day we won. I won’t change it.”
As for his owners, Wolsley, like any diplomatic trainer, was hesitant to name names, but when pressed admitted that two stood out: “Park Hee-sang was with me the whole time. While he does love winning – and we had some very good horses together over the years – he loves his horses more. Korea needs more owners like him.”
“And of course, Peter Hill (Pegasus Farm) has been a great supporter.” Like any owner and trainer, they had their ups and downs “but he backed me from the start and to the very end, and I will always be thankful to him.” Samakui Kkot, Wolsley’s final winner, fittingly saluted in the Pegasus green.
Wolsley’s big rival in the training ranks over the years was Kim Young-kwan. “I loved to beat him” he admits “I knew I couldn’t do it over an entire season because he always has so much fire power and so much influence that eventually, he would come out on top. But I used to like saving a few up at the end of the year and then go all out in the first few months of the new year. Build up a big lead. It would drive him mad! Can you imagine the panic?”
Wolsley and fellow Aussie trainer Simon Foster (Pic: Ross Holburt)
He may laugh but the rivalry was real, and there was absolutely no love lost between the pair. With Wolsley spurring him on, Kim Young-kwan transitioned from a tracksuit wearing old style Korean trainer to a suited and booted modern businessman trainer. Both men would probably be horrified by the idea but there is a fair case to be made that without Wolsley, Kim Young-kwan would not have reached the heights that he did, winning races in Dubai and saddling Blue Chipper to 3rd place in the Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile at Santa Anita.
Wolsley too took several of his horses to the Dubai Carnival over the years and won what would prove to be his final Group race in 2021 when Mr. Afleet won the G2 KRA Cup Classic at Seoul.
Wolsley’s final Group win was in the stilted Covid environment (Pic: KRA)
In terms of how these seventeen years ended, while I was skeptical, I had heard rumours that Wolsley was in danger of not being renewed – under the stated (and, it has to be said, ever evolving) criteria for overseas trainers to retain their licenses, he was at risk – and the trainer himself had certainly believed himself to be. He was given the equivalent of a “strike” last year and had reached the age at which Korean trainers are expected to retire. But it was still fast.
“I would have respected it if they had said “look your results the last two seasons haven’t been as good as they were and we think it’s time, how about going up to next June when your visa will be up and retiring with the others? (Kim Young-kwan and Yang Kui-sun are among those other first-generation Busan trainers reaching retirement age in 2025). I might not have liked it but I could have and would have accepted that.”
“After it was done, they invited me into the office, and to be honest I didn’t want to go, but I did, and they gave me a plaque and said they hope I only have good memories. I do have a lot of good memories, but I don’t have any respect for the way it ended. It’s been such a big part of my life that I don’t want to feel any hate – and I don’t to individuals – but it is hard not to.”
“I would have liked to have got to 700 (winners). In the back of my mind, I wondered if I would make it and I was thinking about it last year, I knew it would be tough, and I knew the owners were thinking I might not be here come January, so it was hard to get the two-year-olds in. It wasn’t to be.”
As for the future, Wolsley is still young, trainer-wise, and open to other challenges but for the next few months, he is going to take some time out.
“I am ok with my Korean visa to stay here for six-months so I am going to relax, do a bit of skiing in Japan and go to Sri Lanka for the Australian Test (cricket) matches. And then I will think about what I want to do.”
In assessing Peter Wolsley’s contribution to Korean racing, I think back to a talk given a few years ago by an overseas consultant who was brought over for a few months to examine the training and racing and make recommendations. In the Q&A after her final presentation, she was asked why Busan horses tended to perform better than Seoul horses. Her answer was given without hesitation: “Peter Wolsley. He’s raised the standard there.”
“We’ve seen some things over the years, haven’t we?” Wolsley laughs as we part on a freezing January evening in downtown Seoul. “And stop bowing, I’m not Korean.”
Wolsley has seen far more than I have, and while he might not be Korean, the story of the development of Korean racing over the past two decades is inextricably linked with Peter Wolsley. While all things must end, it will be poorer for his absence.
In numbers
4285 Starts, 693 wins, 521 2nds, 434 3rds for a win rate of 16.2% and a Place Rate of 38.5%
Principal Race Wins:
2011: Owners’ Cup (G3) – Khaosan
2013: Gyeongnam Governor’s Cup (G3) – Secret Whisper
Crown Hamseong wired the field to walk off with the Segye Ilbo Trophy (1200M KOR-Listed) at Seoul Racecourse on Sunday afternoon. The four-year-old filly scored a first Stakes win for herself and in the process a maiden Korean Principal race win for jockey CC Wong.
Crown Hamseong and CC Wong have plenty in hand on Daemnagui Gil on the line (Pic: KRA)
It had been a day for pacesetters with all prior winners on the card having led practically from gate to wire and there was accordingly a cavalry charge to get the coveted leading position after the short run heading into the turn from the six-furlong start. Vincero Cavallo, Naol Sniper, Something Lost, Yeonggwangui World and Saenae Town all tried, but coming out of gate two, CC and Crown Hamseong were too quick for them all.
Opening up a lead of three-lengths into the home straight, Crown Hamseong made the closing stages a procession as the other front-runners fell away. Daemangui Gil and Speed Young would eventually emerge from the rear to get closest, albeit a full two-lengths back on the line. Crown Hamseong returned as the 9.9 fifth favourite in the local win pool.
It was perhaps a race too far for Vincero Cavallo, who showed close to the pace early, but ran out of petrol equally quickly and finished well down the field. The pre-race favourite had run every month since his 6th place in the Korea Sprint and it showed.
As for Speed Young, giving the prevailing track conditions were evidently favouring front-runners, it was always going to be a hard ask given his racing style and widest gate. Under a sensible Kim Hye-sun ride, he perhaps did well to run 3rd.
Veteran Daemangui Gil ran a super race to run 2nd, Kim Tae-hui threading her way through the field late to get closest to the winner. It was a pick-up ride for Kim after scheduled jockey Jung Do-yun suffered a broken shoulder in a fall at Busan on Friday. Jung is expected to be out for several months.
Crown Hamseong [Freedom Child – Choegoya Choego (by Menifee)] is a four-year-old filly who was purchased by her owner Hwang Eui-young for 30 Million Won as a yearling in 2022. Trained by Lee Gwan-ho, she came into the race boasting seven wins from ten starts, up to class 1 level and a mile. She skipped all three legs of the Triple Tiara series last year. She could be very interesting in this year’s Queens’ Tour.
For jockey CC “Jimmy” Wong, it was a 43rd win in Korea and his first in a Listed or Graded Stakes. After an initial very successful stint in the country early in 2024, he returned to Singapore to see out the final days of racing in the Lion City but returned in late autumn and is gradually picking up from where he left off.
CC Wong is part of a very strong visiting jockey group at Seoul that also includes Ruan Maia, Kozzi Asano and Harry Kasim, as well as long-time Korea based multiple Group winner Johan Victoire and former Champion Apprentice in Turkey, Furkan Yuksel.
Next weekend, attention turns to the three-year-old crop with Triple Crown Classic trials at both Seoul and Busan.
While restricted to Korean bred runners, the race nevertheless has attracted most of the nation’s top sprinters, including the first three locally trained horses across the line in last September’s international Korea Sprint.
VINCERO CAVALLO was only the 3rd best local in that Korea Sprint, coming home in 6th place, but he has kicked on since then with a 4th place in the Kookje Shinmun Trophy (1400M KOR-Listed) followed by back-to-back wins at today’s distance of 1200M, both at class 1 and in contrasting styles, from the front, and from well off the pace. Versatile and perhaps with his best yet to come, he can get his first Stakes win here.
The Korea-trained horse who got closest to Remake, Jasper Krone and Anarchist in the Korea Sprint, running on late for 4th, was SPEED YOUNG. He is a two-time local Group race winner, having won the G2 Breeders’ Cup Rookie as a juvenile in 2022 and the 2024 G3 Busan Owners’ Cup at a mile last June.
Speed Young rounded out the year with 3rd place in the G1 President’s Cup at 2000M and G1 Grand Prix at 2300M, both races won by stablemate Global Hit. Global Hit’s regular jockey Kim Hye-sun rides him on Sunday.
Champion jockey Moon Se-young is rapidly closing in on 2000 career wins and he partners NAOL SNIPER. Runner-up to Global Hit in the 2023 Korean Derby, he moves down to the sprinting ranks for the first time after a strong end to 2024 and is an intriguing entry.
One of just two fillies or mares in the race, CROWN HAMSEONG is a winner of seven from ten most recently on her first try at class 1 in December. This is a stern step up in challenge, but she looks to have plenty of potential and it’s not impossible she could give jockey CC Wong his first Korean Stakes win.
Twelve runners will go around in total:
1. HANGANG CLASS – Champion juvenile in 2023, it didn’t really happen for him as a three-year-old and he missed five months of the season. Showed signs of a return to form with 2nd at class 2 over 1800M on December 27th. A two-time winner at this distance (as a juvenile), he will have some backers on a place line.
2. CROWN HAMSEONG – A winner of seven from ten including her latest two, both over a mile and most recently her first go at class 1 on January leading all the way. Moon Se-young rode her in both and while he gets on Naol Sniper, CC Wong is a more than adequate replacement and from a great draw she can be in this a long way.
For the first time in more than two months Stakes race action returns to Korea as the Listed Segye Ilbo Trophy over 1200M takes place at Seoul on Sunday afternoon. There are 11 races at Seoul from 10:35 to 18:00 and 6 at Busan from 12:05 to 16:30. Here are the previews:
Last year’s Segye Ilbo was won by Vics Go, who doesn’t return to defend his title (Pic: KRA)
Seoul Race 1: Class 6 (1200M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
(2) ROAD TO A SPUR has made steady progress across three starts so far, culminating in 3rd place over this distance on December 22nd. CC stays on, he draws well to lead and today can be the day. (11) SPARTAN has mixed his form across seven appearances so far with his best being a pair of 3rd places over this distance. He has the fastest time among these for the 1200M and while he has the challenge of the widest gate, he can be a danger. (8) BS STORM was a fair 5th on debut over 1300M on December 28th, starting well before getting shuffled right back but then running on. He should have come on for the run and be closer here. (9) STUNNING WORLD and (6) NONSTOP SERVE others who can be considered.
Selections
(2) Road To A Spur (11) Spartan (8) BS Storm (9) Stunning World
Next Best
6, 5
Fast Start
1, 2, 4, 10
Seoul Race 2: Class 6 (1300M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
Fillies only in this maiden and plenty look ready to win. (6) TURBO CHARGE ran 4th a couple of times before an improved 2nd over 1400M on January 4th when she led for much of the way around. She comes back slightly in trip, she draws well to lead again, and she can win. (2) MUNHAK BELL was 6th on debut before running 2nd at start number two over 1200M on January 5th, settling in the front end of midfield and running on. Third up she can be peaking fitness wise and has every chance. (5) RAON THE AFFIRMED ran 3rd in that January 5th race having also shown on the speed. She has two-and-a-half lengths to make up on Munhak Bell but looks good for at least another place finish. (7) GRAY PHANTOM and (4) GWANAKSAN WONDERFUL are among plenty of others who have shown potential.
Selections
(6) Turbo Charge (2) Munhak Bell (5) Raon The Affirmed (7) Gray Phantom
Next Best
4, 10
Fast Start
2, 5, 6, 9
Seoul Race 3: Class 6 (1400M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
(3) LADY BLUE beat three of these on her way to an improved 2nd place on January 18th, racing on pace throughout over 1300M. Like most of these, she comes up to1400M for the first time, she draws well to lead again, and she can go one better. (4) BLACK SMILE ran 5th in that January 18th race having gone well back and run on. That continued signs of her having started to figure things out and Maia climbing on means she can continue to make progress here. (5) YONGAM GIPPEUM also looks to be on the right trajectory and comes in off a 4th place at this distance last time out. He likes to settle back and run on, and he can be a danger late here. (8) HEEMANGBAND and (10) EAGLE WINGS are others who may improve.
Selections
(3) Lady Blue (4) Black Smile (5) Yongam Gippeum (8) Heemangband
Next Best
10, 2
Fast Start
2, 3, 6, 7
Busan Race 1: Class 6 (1200M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
Fillies only in this maiden. (9) KYUNGNAM DRAGON ran twice last summer for a 4th and a 2nd at 1000M and 1200M. She hasn’t raced since but she looked well when 3rd in a January trial and Seo Seung-un partnering with Bart Rice means she should be sent off as favourite. (8) RIGHT CHAMP has been getting closer in recent starts, most recently when 3rd at 1400M on January 19th. In this company, she can be on pace and has a chance (4) THE NOMINATE was 7th on debut last May and then didn’t reappear until January 19th when she was a solid 3rd place at this distance. She should strip fitter for that run and can press again here. (12) QUEEN TYCHE was 2nd in that January 19th race, her best so far and she can be in the mix again. (10) ILLUSION another place contender.
Selections
(9) Kyungnam Dragon (8) Right Champ (4) The Nominate (12) Queen Tyche
Next Best
10, 1
Fast Start
1, 8, 9, 12
Seoul Race 4: Class 5 (1300M) Handicap / KRW 45 Million
It’s hard to go far past (1) ECLIPSE EDGE here. He got his maiden win at start three over this distance last November and then following a dodgy day at the office on his first try at this level, ran 3rd on January 18th, again over this trip. He likes to race on pace or handy and won’t need to improve much to win this. Plenty of others enter in form though. (5) BAEKDU ILSEONG is one for one having scored on debut over 1200M on November 11th. The way he ran on suggests the increase in trip can only suit and the class rise shouldn’t be a problem. (2) HAKSAN CAIRO was 5th behind Eclipse Edge on January 18th on his first try at this class. He comes into a much better gate today and can get closer. (6) ORANGE TIME and (3) EAST GANGJEOK are the other main chances.
Busan Race 2: Class 6 (1400M) Special Weight A / KRW 30 Million
(8) INDY GHOST has finished 3rd in both outings so far most recently in a slow (even by current standards) race at this distance on January 12th when midfield and running on. Third up she can be peaking, Munro is on, and she can win. (10) GOD NIKE has picked up in her latest two, with back-to-back 3rd places. She likes to settle back and run on so the wide draw shouldn’t be a problem, and she can get even closer today. (11) DOCTOR CASTLE has mixed his form across his four appearances so far. Three of those have been over a mile but he does have the fastest time at this distance (in as much as times are relevant presently with the slow track) and can be a danger here. (5) BARBELL TROFEO, who needs a line through his latest, and (1) RAON FLATTER are others in the hunt.
Selections
(8) Indy Ghost (10) God Nike (11) Doctor Castle (5) Barbell Trofeo
Next Best
1, 6
Fast Start
1, 5, 9, 10
Seoul Race 5: Class 5 (1700M) Handicap / KRW 45 Million