Morrison follows his Star on parallel path to Oaks success

In his youth, Hughie Morrison saw his father breed two Oaks winners from the same mare, so he could hardly be astounded if two candidates for the same Classic happened to emerge from one stable.
True, the filly he runs at Goodwood today has almost certainly left it too late; but there are certainly auspicious similarities between the one who has already booked her place at Epsom tomorrow week, Shirocco Star, and last year's winner.
Like Dancing Rain, Shirocco Star was beaten in a photo for the Swettenham Stud Trial at Newbury last Friday; and Morrison, like William Haggas last year, anticipates considerable improvement from his filly after her first start outside maiden company. Likewise, those Ladbrokes punters who yesterday backed Shirocco Star from 33-1 to 20-1.
"She was still a bit green at Newbury," her trainer said. "And quite rightly, so well was she going, Darryll Holland thought she would quicken up and get to one who, as things turned out, probably had the run of things. Nor, again quite rightly, did he want to barge his way out. It was very much part of a process, with this filly, and I was delighted with her run."
The protagonists drew well clear of Starscope, the 1,000 Guineas runner-up, and Morrison predicts better still over the extra two furlongs in the Investec Oaks. "She has plenty of speed for a filly bred to get a mile and a half standing on her head," he remarked. "You'd hope that nothing will travel better through the race at Epsom. She doesn't appear to have taken a lot out of herself, either, which is good, because she can be quite buzzy. In fact, that would be my main concern: how she takes the preliminaries."
Shirocco Star had coped better than most of Morrison's East Ilsley stable with the wet spring; Coquet, in contrast, hastens to the Height Of Fashion Stakes today with some catching up to do. "I wouldn't be at all surprised if she needed it, because it has been rather a rush getting her there," Morrison said. "It's probably extremely optimistic to have left her in the Oaks, but you never know with fillies. She's not as showy as Shirocco Star at home, but she's quite tough and I do remember deep depression in the house after Juliette Marny's work, a week before she won the 1975 Oaks."
Incidentally, when that filly's half-sister, Scintillate, followed suit at Epsom four years later, she warmed up in the same Newbury race as Shirocco Star.
Turf account
Chris McGrath's Nap
Refractor (5.15 Haydock) Unexposed on turf.
Next best
Zaina (3.45 Goodwood)
One to watch
Rewarded (James Toller) Looked well suited by the longer trip at Newbury last Saturday.
Where the money's going
Parish Hall is 4-1 from 9-2 with Ladbrokes for the Abu Dhabi Irish 2,000 Guineas on Saturday.
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