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Saturday, April 11, 2026 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.
Jefferson Smith rides Sussex to victory. 
PICTURES: Juhaim

Sussex claims The Late Yousef Al Romaihi Cup

Sussex delivered a commanding performance in the 3200m Thoroughbred Open Handicap, clinching The Late Yousef Al Romaihi Cup at Al Rayyan Racecourse Thursday. The seven-year-old bay gelding secured back-to-back wins this campaign, turning the race into a one-horse show with a pillar-to-post display. Always well clear of his rivals, Sussex powered home alone in the straight to win by a commanding 10 lengths.**media[433903]**Under the care of M.H.K. al-Attiyah, he was partnered by Jefferson Smith. The meeting featured a total of 10 races. Always well clear of his rivals, Sussex travelled comfortably at the head of affairs and steadily increased his advantage throughout. While rivals and spectators alike may have expected him to weaken over the extended trip, the opposite unfolded, as he continued to find more with every stride, his strength and dominance becoming increasingly evident. In the home straight, he powered further clear without coming under any real pressure, sealing an emphatic and authoritative success. Foehn, representing Hamad Ramzan al-Naimi and handled by Hadi al-Ramzani, with Alberto Sanna aboard, finished best of the rest to take second, 2 1/5 lengths ahead of the Jassim al-Ghazali-trained Gulf Legend, who kept on for Sheikh Abdul Rahman Rashid al-Thani under Salem Alajmi to take third. The trophy was presented by Ali, Fahad, and Mubarak Yousef al-Romaihi, in the presence of Saad Ali al-Kubaisi, Deputy Director of the QREC Registration & Studbook Department. RESULTS 64th Al Rayyan Race Meeting – The Late Yousef Al Romaihi CupWINNERS: (Horse, Trainer, Jockey)1 - The Late Yousef Al Romaihi Cup - Thoroughbred Open Handicap (Class 2)Sussex, MHK al-Attiyah, Jefferson Smith2 - Purebred Arabian Maiden PlateLouvay De Mireval, Mohammed al-Ghazali, Marco Casamento3 - Purebred Arabian Maiden PlateBin Narain, Ahmed al-Jehani, Arnaud de Lepine4 - Local Thoroughbred Maiden PlateAyash, Ibrahim Saeed al-Malki, Marco Casamento5 - Thoroughbred Novice PlateEdgartown, Alban de Mieulle, Faleh Bughenaim6 - Thoroughbred Handicap (0-80)Court Poet, Nayef Batal al-Otibi, Salman Fahad al-Hajri7 - Purebred Arabian Handicap (60-80)Mejlad, Mohammed Ahmed al-Hajri, Salman Fahad al-Hajri8 - Purebred Arabian Graduation PlateDabida, Alban de Mieulle, Soufiane Saadi9: Local Thoroughbred Handicap (55-75)Best Way, Alban de Mieulle, Soufiane Saadi10 - Purebred Arabian Handicap (70-90)Mohimma, Jean de Mieulle, Faleh Bughanaim

Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland practices putting on the sixth hole during a practice round prior to the 2026 Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club on April 07, 2026 in Augusta, Georgia.  (AFP)

McIlroy chases Masters repeat at lightning-fast Augusta

Rory McIlroy seeks a historic repeat victory starting Thursday at the 90th Masters, while world number one Scottie Scheffler and Bryson DeChambeau lead a host of challengers in firm and fast conditions.Second-ranked McIlroy completed a career Grand Slam by capturing the green jacket at Augusta National last year, but only Jack Nicklaus, Nick Faldo and Tiger Woods have won back-to-back green jackets, Woods the most recent in 2001-2002."Maybe not the largest field in golf but it's the strongest," McIlroy said. "I know that I can do it now, so that should make it a little easier for me to go out and play the golf I want to play."McIlroy suffered an injury scare last month when back pain prompted his withdrawal at Bay Hill. But he competed the following week and has rested since."I've taken the last three weeks to make sure I'm 100 percent coming in here, which I am," McIlroy said."I feel comfortable on the golf course, feel comfortable with my game. It has been a good three weeks at home getting ready physically and mentally and just trying to prepare for everything this week is going to throw at me."Scheffler, last year's British Open and PGA Championship winner, has failed in two Masters repeat bids."Defending can always be difficult, but I think that's mostly just the odds of winning a tournament in back-to-back years," Scheffler said. "That's just extremely challenging, especially when you look at these major championships."Scheffler, the 2022 and 2024 Masters winner, has been off for three weeks as wife Meredith gave birth to son Remy on March 27."Game feels like it's in a good spot," Scheffler said. "I feel rested and ready to go this week."DeChambeau, who edged McIlroy for the 2024 US Open title, was in the final Sunday group last year at the Masters when the Northern Ireland star made history."It's great if we can continue to have a rivalry," DeChambeau said. "It kind of helps create more buzz around the game of golf."It's one of those things like I got him at Pinehurst, he got me here, and I hope there's more of those to come because it's great for the game."DeChambeau, ranked 24th, won LIV Golf titles in Singapore and South Africa last month and likes speed at Augusta."If it's firm and fast, the greens are going to be even more difficult to hit than they already are," DeChambeau said. "I feel really good. It's just about going out and executing."Precision will be at a premium with no rain in the forecast to soften the course."You have to be more precise when it's firm," American Kurt Kitayama said. "Whenever it's firm and fast makes any course difficult, and especially with how sloped the greens are, it's going to be even more penalizing missing your spots."Dustin Johnson, the 2020 Masters champion who holds the 72-hole Masters record score of 20-under par 268, is already seeing strong bounces on the course."Makes it a little bit more difficult," Johnson said. "You have to be spot on with pretty much all your clubs and where they're going, especially if it gets firm. The landing areas get really small."Other contenders include world number three Cameron Young, who won The Players Championship last month; England's fourth-ranked Tommy Fleetwood, last year's Tour Championship winner, and England's ninth-ranked Justin Rose, last year's Masters runner-up.