- More
Babouche has already looked special - here are five more Juddmonte juveniles to get excited about this season
Nothing pleases me more than when the white, green and pink colours of Juddmonte find a good horse. Some of the icons of the sport have worn those famous silks and not only are they titans on the track but the Juddmonte blood is some of the strongest in the breeding sheds too.
Frankel and Kingman are their standout stallions, but it shouldn't be forgotten that New Bay and Calyx, two up-and-coming sires, were both Juddmonte horses too and without them European racing would be much the poorer.
In Europe this season they have been a bit light on the older horse front with the notable exception of Bluestocking, who has held her head up high if some of the best races, but the Juddmonte two-year-olds are looking strong with a whole host of potentially Group 1 colts and fillies strutting their stuff.
Access premium tipping
View daily premium tips from the Racing Post’s foremost experts, including the likes of Tom Segal, Paul Kealy and more
Subscribe to unlock
- Racing Post digital newspaper (worth over £100 per month)
- Award-winning journalism from the best writers in racing
- Expert tips from the likes of Tom Segal and Paul Kealy
- Replays and results analysis from all UK and Irish racecourses
- Form study tools including the Pro Card and Horse Tracker
- Extensive archive of statistics covering horses, trainers, jockeys, owners, pedigree and sales data
Already a subscriber?Log in
Published on inTom Segal
Last updated
- Al Dancer proved front-runners can gain a big advantage in staying chases - but everything changes on testing ground
- Maybe Aidan O'Brien was right and City Of Troy is the best he's had - but we never got to see how good he really was
- There's no way out of the malaise for British trainers - Ireland have depth similar to Real Madrid and Manchester City
- Tom Segal with a trainer, a jockey and a horse to follow this jumps season - including a fancy for the Triumph
- It was a massive overcomplication - how I got it wrong in the Arc
- Al Dancer proved front-runners can gain a big advantage in staying chases - but everything changes on testing ground
- Maybe Aidan O'Brien was right and City Of Troy is the best he's had - but we never got to see how good he really was
- There's no way out of the malaise for British trainers - Ireland have depth similar to Real Madrid and Manchester City
- Tom Segal with a trainer, a jockey and a horse to follow this jumps season - including a fancy for the Triumph
- It was a massive overcomplication - how I got it wrong in the Arc