Queen Anne Stakes glory goes to the USA and Tepin

Trained by Mark Casse and ridden by Julien Leparoux, the five-year-old was making her British and European debut

Julien Leparoux on board Tepin celebrates winning the Queen Anne Stakes during day one of Royal Ascot 2016. Photo: Adam Davey/PA
Julien Leparoux on board Tepin celebrates winning the Queen Anne Stakes during day one of Royal Ascot 2016. Photo: Adam Davey/PA

Brilliant North American mare Tepin claimed Royal Ascot glory in the Queen Anne Stakes.

Trained by Mark Casse and ridden by Julien Leparoux, the five-year-old was making her British and European debut having won a host of big races in her homeland, including the Breeders’ Cup Mile at Keeneland last October.

Sent off at 11-2 due to doubts about the rain-softened ground, Tepin was always travelling well and knuckled down admirably in the final furlong to get the better of Belardo by half a length.

Leparoux said: “It’s just amazing. It’s a great feeling.

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“She’s a champion and she proved it today.

“She had to work hard, for sure, as the last 100 metres was a long way to go.

“It’s awesome.”

When the starting stalls opened, the field initially split into two groups, with Tepin leading a contingent that raced closer to the stands side.

With ground conditions in his favour, Belardo was the 9-2 joint-favourite to add to last month’s top-level triumph in the Lockinge Stakes at Newbury and his pacemaker, Barchan, ensured it was a serious test of stamina by setting a furious gallop.

When he inevitably folded heading inside the final quarter-mile, Kodi Bear was left in front, but he was quickly pressed by Tepin and the more patiently-ridden Belardo.

That pair settled down to fight it out and it was Tepin who found most for pressure to clinch a momentous victory under her jubilant rider.

Lightning Spear came from a long way back to finish third.

The other joint-favourite, French challenger Ervedya, never threatened to land a telling blow.

Tepin’s owner Robert Masterson said: “The mare is the best thing in the world - she’s fantastic.

“People say Americans have to have drugs in their horses. She had no drugs and no nasal strip, the things everyone was worried about.

“The biggest thing we were worried about was the ground. She’d won on soft but we didn’t know how bad the ground was.

“She performed magnificently. She had a lot of things to overcome for the first time, but she just did it.”