Sweet Glow

A Turf Talk favourite and the unforgettable winner of the 1994 Ascot Stakes.

Early Promise & Finding His Trip

Sweet Glow did not begin his career looking like the horse he would eventually become. His first few runs in Britain were disappointing and, on the face of it, there was little to suggest that he would go on to develop into such a memorable staying performer.

He was beaten favourite in his first three starts, twice at odds-on, and at that stage looked more frustrating than exciting. After those early runs he was gelded, and that proved to be an important turning point.

His next appearance came at Market Rasen in April 1991, where he won at 7/2 and began a sequence of four straight victories. They may not have come in the strongest races, but they hinted that there was something there to work with. Even then, however, it still took time before the full picture emerged.

The real breakthrough came once he was stepped up in trip and ridden with more patience. That was when Peter Scudamore really seemed to unlock him. Switched off off the pace over three miles, Sweet Glow suddenly began to look like a proper staying hurdler with a turn of foot most horses at that distance simply did not possess.

Cheltenham, Ascot & Big-Race Form

Once Sweet Glow had found his rhythm as a staying hurdler, he developed into a seriously good horse.

His first major statement came at Cheltenham in October 1991 when, held up off the pace, he cut through the field to win a three-mile hurdle with real authority. That performance was followed by one of the most impressive wins of his career in the Coral Golden Hurdle Qualifier at Cheltenham, where he powered clear by 12 lengths with the kind of acceleration that simply did not belong in an ordinary staying hurdler.

He went on to add further victories at Cheltenham and Ascot and, for a period, was establishing himself as one of the best staying hurdlers around. There was always a feeling that Cheltenham Festival success should have come his way, and that remains one of the few frustrations of his career, because on his best form he absolutely belonged at that level.

In early 1993 he returned to winning ways in style at Ascot, shrugging off concerns about the ground to score at 16/1 before following up there again a month later for a valuable prize. That period also produced one of the most frightening moments of his career when he fell at the last in a Grade 2 hurdle at Kempton. It looked serious at the time and the screens came out, but thankfully he got to his feet to huge relief and applause.

He recovered, and by March 1994 he was back producing the very best form of his life. In the Letheby & Christopher Hurdle at Ascot he beat Avro Anson, who had got the better of him in the Stayers’ Hurdle at Cheltenham just a fortnight earlier, and he did it in devastating style, breaking the course record in the process. That performance set the scene perfectly for Royal Ascot.

The Day He Became A Legend

Ascot Stakes 1994

By the time Royal Ascot 1994 came around, the plan for the Ascot Stakes had been in place for a while.

Sweet Glow had been given two Flat runs as preparation, one over a mile and a half at Bath and one over a mile and three-quarters at Sandown, but neither was over anything like the trip he would tackle in the Ascot Stakes. They were there to bring him to the boil, not to show his hand.

Even so, when the early shows came through the day before the race, the price of 28/1 felt extraordinary. This was a horse who had been winning high-quality staying hurdle races and was returning to a track he loved. The gamble began almost immediately.

By the time we were in the paddock, the support behind him had become impossible to ignore. I still remember standing there with Martin Pipe as he marked his racecard. When he asked what I thought the dangers were and then smiled and said, “There are none,” it felt like one of those moments that stay with you forever.

There were still 30 runners to beat and Cash Asmussen had to switch him off near the back, which was never going to make life easy. Turning in, he still had plenty to do and it briefly looked as though he might have been given too much ground to make up.

Then came that familiar burst of speed. Sweet Glow simply picked them off, swept through the field and won the Ascot Stakes with authority. Cash never even had to use the whip.

It was one of those performances that felt every bit as good as you had hoped it might, and better. For us, it was the day he became a legend.

The Final Chapter

That was the last major win of Sweet Glow’s career and he was never quite the same force after that, although he continued to run with credit and still showed flashes of the horse he had been and we did have another big pay day with him in a race at Bath. By the time he retired in 1999, he had won 13 races and been ridden by some of the best jockeys of his era, including Peter Scudamore, Jamie Osborne, Richard Dunwoody, Michael Roberts, Charlie Swan, Gérald Mossé, Mick Kinane, Cash Asmussen and Tony McCoy.

He may not have won a Champion Hurdle or a Gold Cup, but that never really mattered to those who knew him best. To us, Sweet Glow was a superstar.

Some horses are remembered for the biggest prizes. Others are remembered because they leave a mark that goes beyond the form book. Sweet Glow was very much one of those horses.

13

Career Wins

6

Ascot Wins

3

Cheltenham Wins

1994

Ascot Stakes Winner

Date Racecourse Race Distance Going Jockey SP
27 Apr 1991 Market Rasen 4yo Conditions Hurdle 2m ½f Good to Firm M Foster 7/2
04 May 1991 Uttoxeter 4yo Novices’ Hurdle 2m Good Peter Scudamore 6/4F
15 May 1991 Newton Abbot Handicap Hurdle 2m ½f Firm Peter Scudamore 1/10F
27 May 1991 Hereford Handicap Hurdle 2m3f Firm Peter Scudamore 8/11F
16 Oct 1991 Cheltenham Handicap Hurdle 2m7½f Good to Firm Peter Scudamore 3/1
06 Dec 1991 Cheltenham Handicap Hurdle 3m Good to Firm D Richmond 8/1
31 Dec 1991 Cheltenham Handicap Hurdle 3m Good Peter Scudamore 2/1F
10 Jan 1992 Ascot Handicap Hurdle 2m7½f Good to Firm Peter Scudamore 7/4F
15 Jan 1993 Ascot Handicap Hurdle 2m7½f Heavy D Richmond 16/1
10 Feb 1993 Ascot Hurdle 2m7½f Good to Soft Peter Scudamore 4/6F
30 Mar 1994 Ascot Grade 2 Hurdle 2m7½f Good Richard Dunwoody 9/2
14 Jun 1994 Ascot Ascot Stakes 2m4f Good to Firm Cash Asmussen 14/1
27 Jun 1998 Bath Handicap 2m1f Good to Soft Michael Roberts 9/4F

Career Highlights

  • Winner of 13 races between 1991 and 1998
  • Six-time winner at Ascot
  • Three-time winner at Cheltenham
  • Won over trips from 2 miles to 3 miles
  • Ascot Stakes winner at Royal Ascot in 1994
  • Grade 2 hurdle winner at Ascot in 1994
  • Retired from racing in 1999

Notable Winning Jockeys

  • Peter Scudamore
  • Richard Dunwoody
  • Cash Asmussen
  • Michael Roberts
  • D Richmond
  • M Foster