started slowly, in rear, headway over 3f out, pressed winner over 1f out, every chance inside final furlong, just held
in touch, chased leaders 4f out, pressed winner 2f out, no extra approaching final furlong, soon one pace
started slowly, held up, headway behind leaders over 2f out, soon ridden and one pace over 1f out
close up, led over 3f out, ridden and headed over 2f out, weakened over 1f out
held up, headway to chase leaders over 3f out, led over 2f out, hard pressed inside final furlong, held on well under pressure close home
outpaced in rear, well behind final 3f, tailed off
tracked leader, led over 5f out, ridden and headed over 3f out, soon behind and eased over 1f out
in rear, some headway over 4f out, ridden and weakened over 2f out
outpaced in rear, moderate late headway under pressure final 2f, never dangerous
led and set good pace, headed over 5f out, soon weakened, tailed off over 3f out
Monduru came back to winning form last time and can follow up in this contest, his main dangers seeming to be All On My Own and Kingsdon. All On My Own is actually now six-pounds better off with the selection for having finished a length behind him at Wolverhampton last time. However, neither of the two has form on this surface. Believe it or not, Adjiram won at Longchamp as a three-year-old but his recent form, which has been interrupted by injury, is not overly inspiring. A repeat of Kingsdon's Newmarket run in the summer gives him a major chance, so watch the market for clues. At this stage, though, Monduru looks to have as good a credentials as any.