Buckingham Palace Stakes
The Buckingham Palace Stakes was a flat handicap horse race in Great Britain open to horses aged three and over. It was run at Ascot over a distance of 7 furlongs (1,408 metres), and was scheduled to take place each year in June on the fourth day of the Royal Ascot meeting.
Handicap race | |
Location | Ascot Racecourse Ascot, England |
---|---|
Inaugurated | 2002 |
Race type | Flat / Thoroughbred |
Website | Ascot |
Race information | |
Distance | 7f (1,408 metres) |
Surface | Turf |
Track | Straight |
Qualification | Three-year-olds and up |
Weight | Handicap |
Purse | £100,000 (2014) 1st: £62,250 |
2020 | ||
Motakhayyel | Jack's Point | Mutamaasik |
Previous years | ||
---|---|---|
2014 | ||
Louis The Pious | Horsted Keynes | Watchable |
2013 | ||
Lightning Cloud | Dream Tune | Shamaal Nibras |
2012 | ||
Eton Forever | Jamesie | Atlantic Sport |
2011 | ||
Manassas | Excellent Guest | Striking Spirit |
2010 | ||
Treadwell | Himalya | Imperial Guest |
2009 | ||
Giganticus | Al Muheer | Redford |
2008 | ||
Regal Parade | Dhaular Dhar | Jedburgh |
2007 | ||
Binanti | Fajr | Dabbers Ridge |
2006 | ||
Uhoomagoo | Appalachian Trail | Binanti |
2005 | ||
Jedburgh | King Jock | Stetchworth Prince |
2004 | ||
Unscrupulous | Maghanim | True Night |
2003 | ||
Attache | Hurricane Floyd | Mine |
The Buckingham Palace Stakes was established in 2002, when the Royal Ascot meeting was extended to a fifth day to mark the Golden Jubilee of Elizabeth II[1] and was named after Buckingham Palace, the London residence of the British monarch. It was last run in 2014 and replaced from the 2015 Royal Ascot meeting by a new Group One sprint race, the Commonwealth Cup.[2] The Sporting Life called the loss of the only 7-furlong handicap at Royal Ascot "a mistake".[3]
In 2020, the race made a one-off return as part of an expanded Royal Ascot programme, following the 10-week suspension of horse racing in the United Kingdom due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[4]
Records
Leading jockey (3 wins):
- Neil Callan – Uhoomagoo (2006), Eton Forever (2012), Lightning Cloud (2013)
Leading trainer (2 wins):
- Kevin Ryan – Uhoomagoo (2006), Lightning Cloud (2013)
Winners
Year | Winner | Age | Weight | Jockey | Trainer | Time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2002 | Demonstrate | 4 | 8-06 | Richard Hughes | John Gosden | 1:27.43 |
2003 | Attache | 5 | 9-12 | Philip Robinson | Michael Jarvis | 1:26.85 |
2004 | Unscrupulous | 5 | 8-05 | Oscar Urbina | James Fanshawe | 1:27.41 |
2005 | Jedburgh [lower-alpha 1] | 4 | 9-08 | Mick Kinane | John Dunlop | 1:22.53 |
2006 | Uhoomagoo | 8 | 8-09 | Neil Callan | Kevin Ryan | 1:27.45 |
2007 | Binanti | 7 | 8-07 | Franny Norton | Patrick Chamings | 1:29.28 |
2008 | Regal Parade | 4 | 8-11 | Ahmed Ajtebi | David Nicholls | 1:27.17 |
2009 | Giganticus | 6 | 8-12 | Michael Hills | Barry Hills | 1:27.44 |
2010 | Treadwell | 3 | 8-10 | Fergus Sweeney | Jamie Osborne | 1:25.90 |
2011 | Manassas | 6 | 9-00 | Martin Dwyer | Brian Meehan | 1:29.71 |
2012 | Eton Forever | 5 | 9-08 | Neil Callan | Roger Varian | 1:29.68 |
2013 | Lightning Cloud | 5 | 8-13 | Neil Callan | Kevin Ryan | 1:26.31 |
2014 | Louis The Pious | 6 | 9-04 | Silvestre de Sousa | David O'Meara | 1:26.85 |
2015–2019 | Race not run | |||||
2020 | Motakhayyel | 4 | 9-03 | Jim Crowley | Richard Hannon | 1:26.19 |
- The 2005 running took place at York
References
- "History and conditions of the races at Royal Ascot". eclipsemagazine.co.uk. Archived from the original on 27 February 2015. Retrieved 19 June 2014.
- "NEW GROUP ONE SPRINT AT ROYAL ASCOT NAMED". Sky Sports. Retrieved 25 February 2015.
- Linfoot, Ben. "Ben Linfoot: On the radar - handicappers to follow at Royal Ascot". Sporting Life. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
- "New races unveiled as Royal Ascot broadens programme for prestigious fixture". Racing Post. Retrieved 12 June 2020.