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    You are at:Home»Sports»Dubai World Cup 2026: Speed, stamina and wealth meet; horses race for $12-million top prize
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    Dubai World Cup 2026: Speed, stamina and wealth meet; horses race for $12-million top prize

    Editorial TeamBy Editorial TeamMarch 27, 2026
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    Dubai’s streets are famous for their luxury cars, but on the last Saturday in March, the real horsepower is at Meydan Racecourse, where the world’s finest thoroughbreds assemble for the Dubai World Cup. With a total purse of $30.5 million and a $12 million top prize, the event’s prestige and financial might could make Wall Street blush.

    At the forefront of this elite international invasion are Japanese owners and breeders, whose thoroughbreds have dominated Dubai, Saudi Arabia, America and other global stages over the past decade. Japan’s breeding industry has evolved into a powerhouse, blending world-class bloodlines for both speed and stamina.

    Legends like Sunday Silence reshaped the gene pool, while stars such as Deep Impact, Equinox, and Ushba Tesoro produce durable and battle-tested offspring that now take on the world’s best on tracks like Meydan. Take Forever Young, Japan’s dirt sensation, who has earned more than $30 million through victories in the $20 million Saudi Cup (twice), the $7 million Breeders’ Cup Classic, and the $2 million UAE Derby.

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    Already a titan at home, he has carried national hopes across continents in 2025, finishing third in the Dubai World Cup for a $1.2 million payday. Watching him thunder down Meydan’s long stretch, muscles coiling with each stride, reminds fans that these horses are engines of ambition, where every stride is worth millions to owners.

    Then there’s Hit Show, the ultimate outsider. At odds of 80-1, few expected the Qatari-owned galloper to triumph, yet he shocked the world in the 2025 Dubai World Cup, earning nearly $7 million in just over two minutes. Nights like these cement Dubai as more than a racing venue; it’s a stage where legends are born.

    HIT SHOW ridden by Florent Geroux, winner of the DUBAI WORLD CUP at the Dubai World Cup 2025, held at Meydan Racecourse on Saturday, April 5, 2025

    The allure continues. Ushba Tesoro, another Japanese powerhouse with over $17 million in career earnings, captured hearts in 2023 with his Dubai World Cup win while Hong Kong champion Romantic Warrior, with career earnings approaching $20 million, finished second in the 2024 Dubai Turf after winning the Jebel Hatta earlier in the Carnival.

    Turf racing is equally lucrative. The Dubai Sheema Classic, with a $6 million prize, has become a proving ground. Victories by Danon Decile and Japan’s Equinox in 2025 added millions to Japan’s total, while global stars like Mishriff and Shahryar have earned between $6 million and $15 million each, underscoring Dubai’s status as a magnet for top earners.

    In Dubai, the racing is electric and the stakes astronomical. Every Carnival and World Cup night draws the most accomplished horses from across the globe to compete for record-breaking purses. Horse racing is much more than speed and stamina; it’s a showcase of wealth and international prestige, where every race could add more millions to the owner’s bank accounts.

    How Sheikh Mohammed created Dubai World Cup 2026, ‘home team’ known in global horse races
    Meet unsung heroes behind Dubai World Cup 2026, from race starter to head valet

    Source: Khaleej Times

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