The traditional powerhouses of horse racing such as Ireland, England and the United States should beware because the Qataris have limitless ambitions HE Sheikh Joaan bin Hamad al-Thani told AFP in an exclusive interview.

Sheikh Joaan, the fifth son of HH the Father Emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, added that their ambitions lay not only in winning on the track but also in breeding their own champions like Ireland’s Coolmore Stud and the heavyweight American operations in Kentucky as well as Dubai ruler Sheikh Mohamed al-Maktoum’s Darley Stud.

The Sheikh’s Al Shaqab Racing operation—which numbers over 100 horses in training—is named after a breeding enterprise in Qatar established in 1992 by his father.

“Qatar is growing and when Qatar believes in something, there is no limit to its ambitions,” said Sheikh Joaan, whose first winner in his silks came in August 2012.

“I would like to inform our English and other rivals that we have not just invested in order to win on the racecourse.

A file picture taken on October 7, 2012, shows
HE Sheikh Joaan bin Hamad al-Thani during the
Qatar Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe horse race at
Longchamp, in Paris. (AFP)


“We have become an important part of this industry, we have our methods in the way of approaching it. We respect the ways in which the others do things and we wish that they respect the manner in which we work.”

Sheikh Joaan, who experienced the biggest moment as an owner when French-trained filly Treve won Europe’s most prestigious race the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe last October, said that he didn’t favour any particular country in terms of deploying a centre for his operations and there was no individual race he treasured above all in winning.

“French races are important for us, but the British ones equally so,” said Sheikh Joaan, who will see Treve return to the track at Longchamp on April 27 in the Group One Prix Ganay.

“I don’t have a preference: the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe, Royal Ascot (in June), the King George and Queen Elizabeth Stakes (at Ascot in July).

“Each time I have a chance of winning with one of my horses, I take it. Soon, we will race in Japan. I have been invited to race there.

“We went to the Breeder’s Cup at Santa Anita, California, last November. We weren’t lucky there but we will hope to have more luck this year,” he added. 

Sheikh Joaan, whose main body of horses are based in England with trainer Richard Hannon Junior and will have horses with Todd Pletcher in the United States for the first time this year, said people were wrong to think he favoured France over any other country.

“People think that I am focussed on France,” said Sheikh Joaan, for whom Hannon’s father Richard trained Olympic Glory and Toronado to Group One success last year.

“I studied at the Saint-Cyr military academy and also lived in France. I love France, but this is racing one is talking about. If there was a racecourse on the Moon I would send a horse there to run in it.

“Bouquetot (in Normandy the historic French heartland of breeding horses) is one of the studs we have bought. We are looking at both England and Australia to develop that side of things. But we can’t do it all at once. We had a lot of luck last year in attaining our targets. We have others in our sights.”

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