SAHorseracing.com
SAHorseracing.com
Four-Year-Olds Chase History in Wide-Open FWD Champions Mile

Little Paradise and Invincible Ibis will attempt something no four-year-old has managed in 15 years when they line up in Sunday's HK$24 million G1 FWD Champions Mile at Sha Tin — a race that has systematically humbled the city's Classic generation since Xtension claimed it in 2011.

The Age Group Trend
The numbers are stark. Five-year-olds have been the dominant force in the FWD Champions Mile since 2001, producing nine winners. Six-year-olds have taken it six times. Four-year-olds won five times between 2001 and 2011, then nothing. Recent Classic graduates have been competitive — California Spangle ran second behind Golden Sixty in 2022, Voyage Bubble and My Wish were both fourth in 2023 and 2025 respectively, Galaxy Patch fifth in 2024 — but the race has not gone to a four-year-old in a decade and a half.

The Contenders
Little Paradise brings the stronger Classic Mile form. His Hong Kong Classic Mile victory was built around a race-best 22.51-second final 400m — an electric sectional that announced him as the division's most dangerous miler. He flopped in the BMW Hong Kong Derby, finishing ninth, though trainer Jimmy Ting points to circumstance rather than ability. "In the Hong Kong Classic Cup he missed the start and in the Hong Kong Derby he was just too far back," Ting said, framing both runs as process failures rather than reflections of the horse's ceiling.

Ting put him through a 1200m dirt trial on April 16, where Little Paradise led throughout in 1m 10.96s, with sectionals of 25.6, 23.0 and 22.3 — Red Lion and Docklands among those behind him. The session appears to have pleased connections. "His trial was good, and I hope he can run well. Zac is happy — he liked the trial and he thinks he's in good form," Ting said, adding that he'd ideally like to see the gelding settle midfield, though he left the tactical call to Zac Purton.

Purton, a three-time FWD Champions Mile winner aboard Beauty Generation in 2018 and 2019 and Beauty Eternal in 2024, was characteristically measured about expectations. Notably, he had passed on the ride in the Classic Mile, and his acknowledgement of that decision carries weight. "Before the Classic Mile, I was really impressed. I thought he was a lovely horse, and when I made my decision not to ride him, I did say that I think he will end up the best four-year-old out of the Series." Now reunited with the horse, Purton framed the race as an information-gathering exercise as much as a win mission: "It's his chance to show us where he is at."

Invincible Ibis arrives as the Derby winner, giving the four-year-old camp a second strong representative. A five-time winner in Hong Kong and a double winner at the mile trip, the Hellbent gelding was third to Little Paradise in the barrier trial. James McDonald takes the ride after Hugh Bowman chose stablemate My Wish. Little Paradise is drawn in barrier two; Invincible Ibis steps from gate five.

The Opposition
The older horses bring proven Group 1 credentials, including last year's FWD Champions Mile winner Red Lion, who meets both four-year-olds off the back of that trial. Royal Ascot Group 1 winner Docklands also features among the more experienced opposition. The Classic generation will need to be at their best — and then some.

Ting, for his part, is keeping expectations grounded. "I think this is a very open race and it is hard to say who is the best," he said — and on the available evidence, that reads as an honest assessment rather than false modesty.

© 2009 SAHorseracing.com. All rights reserved.