Zenyatta rules, Europe duo in double hit

ARCADIA, California, Nov 7 (Reuters) – Zenyatta scored the  biggest victory of her illustrious career Saturday by coming  from last to first to win the $5 million Breeders’ Cup Classic.

The unbeaten mare picked off her male rivals one by one in a  dramatic stretch run to become the first female to win North  America’s richest race.

The five-year-old Kentucky-bred was sixth in the stretch but  found another gear under the gentle urging of jockey Mike Smith  to win the prestigious race by a length over Gio Ponti.

Zenyatta still had more gas in her tank at the end of the  mile-and-a-quarter, 12-horse affair that featured Irish champion  Rip Van Winkle, Kentucky Derby winner Mine That Bird and other  notables.

“I still never got to the bottom of her,” said Smith.  “That’s the amazing thing. She still had a run left. She’s  incredible. She’s sent from heaven. She’s God’s horse.”

The breathtaking performance by Zenyatta overshadowed a  record run by European horses in the two-day, 14-race Breeders’  Cup card.

Euro invaders lifted six of the races, including the $2  million Mile won by French-trained four-year-old filly Goldikova  for the second successive year.

English raider Conduit, also reached the winner’s circle for  the second year in a row, the gallant chestnut colt taking the  $3 million Turf in the final strides.

Pounced, another English-trained challenger, took the $1  million Juvenile Turf, while 30-1 longshot Vale of York, racing  for Godolphin, took the $2 million Juvenile with a head victory  over Bob Baffert-trained favorite Lookin At Lucky.

FIRST TIME
Most in the crowd of 58,845, however, came to Santa Anita on  a sunny but cool day to watch Zenyatta take on the boys for the  first time in her career.

Despite entering the race unbeaten in 13 career starts, the  mare had been overshadowed by the filly Rachel Alexandra, whose  owners decided to skip the Breeders’ Cup because of their  disdain for Santa Anita’s synthetic surface.

Zenyatta initially balked at entering the gate and broke  last in the 12-horse field. But she slowly weaved her way  through and responded amid the roars of the Santa Anita crowd.

“There are tears coming to my eyes. I can’t believe it,”  trainer John Shirreffs said. “She is a great, great filly. She  is all heart.”

In other races, big outsider Dancing in Silks won the $2  million Sprint after edging Crown of Thorns by a nose, while  five-year-old grey gelding California Flag, partnered by  19-year-old Joe Talamo, cruised to victory with a 1 3/4-length  triumph in the $1 million Turf Sprint.