show me:

Lemon Pop Caps off His Stellar Racing Career by Defending His Champions Cup Title

3 minute read

Lemon Pop wins this year’s Champions Cup at Chukyo.

LEMON POP (white cap) winning the Champions Cup at Chukyo in Japan. Picture: Japan Racing Association

Race favorite Lemon Pop won out a close race in this year's Champions Cup to become the first horse to defend the title since Transcend in 2010 and 2011, when the race was held under the name, the Japan Cup Dirt. The 2023 Best Dirt Horse, boasting three JRA-G1 wins including last year's February Stakes (dirt, 1,600m) and three NAR titles in the 2023-2024 Mile Championship Nambu Hai (Listed, dirt, 1,600m) and the 2024 Sakitama Hai (Listed, dirt, 1,400m), will retire from racing after this race and stand as stallion at Darley Japan Stallion Complex next year. Trainer Hiroyasu Tanaka claimed his third JRA-G1 victory following last year's Champions Cup with this horse, while jockey Ryusei Sakai won his sixth after this year's Takamatsunomiya Kinen with Mad Cool.

Lemon Pop broke smoothly from the inner gate and assumed command after rallying for the lead with Mitono O. The six-year-old son of Lemon Drop Kid continued to set the pace, pulled away persistently after entering the lane, and although challenged with an incredible late charge by Wilson Tesoro before the wire, managed to defend his title with a photo-finish victory.

"It was his last race and I'm glad that he was able to end his career with the best result. I wanted to ride him as smoothly as possible without any loss and was ready for any challenge. I thought we had won but wasn't quite sure because Wilson Tesoro came from behind with great speed, so I'm glad we were able to win. Lemon Pop is a strong horse—he has won six out of six G1-class races in Japan—there's no other horse like him, and I'm proud to have been on his back," commented Ryusei Sakai.

Last year's runner-up and second pick Wilson Tesoro traveled around eighth, dropped position rounding the last corners, switched to the outside at the early stretch to accelerate powerfully with the fastest late drive and nearly caught the winner but was a nose short at the wire to finish second again this year.

Ninth choice Dura Erede saved ground inside Wilson Tesoro in mid-division, showed tenacious effort on the rails while clocking the third fastest speed over the last 600 meters and while failing to threaten the top two finishers, secured third place as he did last year, finishing 1-1/2 lengths behind the runner-up.

Other Horses:

4th: (3) Hagino Alegrias—ran around 7th, passed one by one at stretch while no match for top 3
              finishers
5th: (4) Peptide Nile—chased leaders in 3rd, showed tenacity, failed to hold off late chargers in
              last 100m
6th: (12) Sunrise Zipangu—raced wide around 11th, advanced to enter lane in 4th, needed more
7th: (10) Ater Astraea—trailed in rear, showed 2nd fastest late speed but was too late
8th: (5) Peisha Es—sat around 5th, lacked needed kick in last 200m
9th: (15) Gloria Mundi—settled wide around 5th from wide draw, checked 300m out, even paced
10th: (11) Mitono O—rallied for lead and stalked winner in 2nd, faded after 200m pole
11th: (1) Crown Pride—tracked leaders around 3rd on rails, weakened in last 300m
12th: (7) Seraphic Call—made headway in backstretch from 13th position, failed to sustain bid
13th: (13) Mick Fire—broke poorly, positioned near rear, unable to reach contention
14th: (9) T O Drefong—raced wide around 9th, outrun after 3rd corner
15th: (16) Gaia Force—raced around 13th early, advanced at backstretch, showed little at stretch
16th: (14) Suleyman—traveled wide around 8th, dropped back after 3rd corner