September 19, 2008 12:00am
SEPTIMUS, the ruling Melbourne Cup favourite, is still not certain to make the trip down under, Irish trainer Aidan O'Brien has revealed.
O'Brien said Septimus could miss the Melbourne Cup and instead contest Europe's most prestigious weight-for-age race, the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe at Longchamp next month.
Septimus is set to enter quarantine together with stablemates and fellow Melbourne Cup contenders Alessandro Volta and Honolulu after his stabling facilities at Ballydoyle were approved by Australian authorities.
However, O'Brien said Septimus could still be switched to the Arc if suitable track conditions prevail at Longchamp.
"Septimus, Alessandro Volta and Honolulu are going into quarantine to go to Australia but there's a chance that we'd take Septimus out of quarantine if the Arc was going to come up on the soft or slow side," O'Brien told Racing Post.
"We're looking at Great Leighs with Duke Of Marmalade, but it's possible he could miss that race and go straight to the Arc if he was going to get nice ground.
"The plan is for Soldier Of Fortune to go straight to the Arc and Yeats is going to the Cadran."
O'Brien and his fellow Irish trainer Dermot Weld were given the green light to launch their bids for the Melbourne Cup after the Australian Quarantine and Inspection Service examined and cleared both Ballydoyle and Weld's complex on the Curragh earlier this week.
The inspections were deemed necessary after the Federal Government tightened measures for overseas runners in the wake of Australia's first outbreak of equine influenza last year.
Septimus was an easy winner of the Group One Irish St Leger last weekend, winning by 13 lengths, yet controversially still managed to avoid getting a penalty for the Melbourne Cup.
O'Brien's outstanding stayer has been given 58.5kg for the Melbourne Cup and is the $6.50 favourite with TAB Fixed Odds for the $5.5 million race at Flemington on November 4.
Septimus's stablemate Yeats, who ran seventh in the Melbourne Cup two years ago, is topweight with 59kg but is considered a most unlikely runner.
Weld, who has won the Melbourne Cup twice with Media Puzzle (2002) and Vintage Crop (1993), is planning to send the mare Profound Beauty for Australia's most famous race.




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