Royal Ascot 2025: updates, previews and more on Gold Cup day – live

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"Royal Ascot 2025: Gold Cup Day Highlights and Race Updates"

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The Royal Ascot 2025 event is underway, with a full card of races scheduled for the day, prominently featuring the Gold Cup at 4:20 PM. The day kicks off with the Norfolk Stakes at 2:30 PM, followed by several other notable races including the King George V Stakes and the Ribblesdale Stakes. The weather has remained consistent, with the Clerk of the Course reporting good to firm conditions, and only a slight adjustment in moisture levels from overnight watering. This consistency in the ground is expected to continue as the meeting progresses, with a notable preference for the stands' side in the later races. The GoingStick readings indicate that the course is in excellent condition for racing, maintaining a competitive advantage for the participants, especially in the high-numbered stalls during the Britannia Stakes at 5 PM.

Additionally, the atmosphere surrounding the event has been vibrant, with a mix of racing enthusiasts and fashion aficionados. Notably, yesterday's royal procession stirred some confusion when the Princess of Wales was unexpectedly listed as a non-runner, attributed to a miscommunication regarding her attendance. Ascot's director of racing clarified that the event does not officially designate a 'Ladies' Day,' despite popular perception, emphasizing the organic nature of fashion at the meeting. With top contenders such as the up-and-coming French stayer Candelari and the odds-on favorite Charles Darwin in the mix, the day's races promise excitement and surprises. The live blog will serve as a comprehensive guide throughout the event, ensuring that fans stay updated on all developments from the first race to the last.

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Here’s a guide to today’s action and Greg Wood’s invaluable guides will follow shortly …

2.30pm -Norfolk Stakes (5f)3.05pm -King George V Stakes (Handicap) (1m 4f)3.40pm- Ribblesdale Stakes (1m 4f)4.20pm- Gold Cup (2m 4f)5.00pm- Britannia Stakes (Heritage Handicap) (1m)5.35pm- Hampton Court Stakes (1m 2f)6.10pm- Buckingham Palace Stakes (7f)

Don’t look at these horses later in the day if you’re having a wager at the end of the card as there are the latest non-runners (along with their sick notes!)5.00pm Britannia Stakes19 Linwood (lame)

5.35pm Hampton Court Stakes1 Al Shababi (not eaten up)

Clerk of the course Chris Stickels has had little to do this week other than put 5mm of water on overnight. It’s a case of going … going … gone the same again virtually today, as we warned at the beginning of the week. It’s baking and will be through to the end of the meeting on Saturday so there’s little change with the stands’ side a little bit faster and the high numbers may be favoured in the 5pm today.So it’sGood to Firmon the straight course andGood to Firm, good in placeson the round course.

GoingStick (basically the higher the number the faster the surface) at 8am:Stands’ side: 8.9Centre: 8.5Far side: 8.7Round: 7.1

Going update ahead of Day Three of Royal@Ascot☀️pic.twitter.com/DXYzCQHmoM

Good morning. Before we get to the action on the track all the talk yesterday in the real world outside the “Ascot bubble” was about the fact that the Princess of Wales became a non-runner “at the last minute” after she was announced as part of the royal procession at 12 noon as is traditional byAscot, only for the track to hastily send out a revised list of who was going to be in the royal carriages with Catherine not among those involved about 20 minutes later. It appears human error was the likely cause of the confusion, not a last-minute decision as it appeared to be at lunchtime yesterday with the two lists being sent out so close to each other.

The Telegraph’s royal watcher Hannah Furness states this morning that “in the hours ahead of the procession Kensington Palace confirmed that the Princess would be unable to attend” and a clue as to why that was correct was contained in the Daily Mail this morning with Royal Editor Hannah English stating “it was a case of crossed wires”. “It is understood an ‘inaccurate version of the list’ was ‘issued in error’”, she added.

Welcome toAscoton what the track itself likes to call the third day of the Royal meeting, and everyone else knows and loves asLadies’ Day,with theGold Cupas the centrepiece of the action at 4.20pm (all times BST).

I must confess that I’d been racing at the Royal meeting for nigh on 40 years without realising that while courses the length and breadth of Britain have jumped on the bandwagon and branded one day each summer as their “Ladies’ Day”, Ascot has never had an official one and probably never will.

“We don’t have a Ladies’ Day, believe it or not, and we never have,” Nick Smith, the track’s director of racing and public affairs, told me last week. “It’s not in any marketing, it’s not promoted as Ladies’ Day, it’s the public that have called it Ladies’ Day.

“There’s never been a “best-dressed” competition, it’s more of an organic fashion show because that’s what the best milliners and couture houses in the world want it to be. We have a ‘Look Book’, but that’s very much to showcase modern styles which are within the dress code.”

From my perspective at least, the Look Book would have been more use than the form book in terms of finding winners over the first two days of the meeting, but I remain unbowed with more than half of the Royal meeting still in front of us and I’m very keen on the chance of up-and-coming French stayerCandelariin the Gold Cup itself. Illinois, another four-year-old, is likely to set off as favourite, while the veteran Trawlerman is also prominent in the betting.

Elsewhere on the card, one of the big Aidan O’Brien bankers of the week,Charles Darwin,is currently a shade of odds-on for the opening Norfolk Stakes at 2.30pm,Catalina DelcarpioandSerenity Prayerare vying for favouritism in the Ribblesdale Stakes at 3.40pm and a daunting field of 29 runners will thunder down the straight course in the Britannia Handicap at 5pm.

The official going at Ascot remains as it was yesterday evening, ie good-to-firm on the straight course and good-to-firm, good in places on the round and the live blog, as ever, will be your guide through all the action from first to last.

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Source: The Guardian