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Ceolwulf embarks on 2026 career-shaping autumn campaign

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Joe Pride is eager for Ceolwulf to provide clarity this autumn on whether he can claim Group One honours at 2000 metres.

The gelding’s achievements send mixed messages.

His principal successes span a mile, but include a Australian Derby placing aged three and a slender Group 2 victory at extended trip in maturity.

He has faced comprehensive losses in recent Queen Elizabeth Stakes (2000m) runnings.

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Now the surging backmarker readies a five-start autumn at Randwick Saturday, as Pride maps solutions to the staying enigma.

“This preparation, I am about once and for all establishing if he can run 2000 metres as well as what he runs a mile,” Pride said.

“There’s no doubt he runs 2000 metres, but is he as effective?

“And does he get the right set-up for 2000? He never seems to get speed on, and that might be the defining factor for him. He might get in a 2000 metre race that is run a bit different and be a different horse.”

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Two tests await to affirm his middle-distance prowess: fourth start in the Australian Cup (2000m) at Flemington, then the Queen Elizabeth finale.

First hurdle is the Apollo Stakes (1400m) this Saturday, facing unblemished mare Autumn Glow plus stable star Aeliana.

No first-up wins for Ceolwulf, though he has flashed ability, like last year’s eye-catching fourth to Fangirl here when below par.

Pride attributes last autumn’s shortfalls to various elements, fixing the foremost.

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“I’m convinced one of them was that I had him too big,” he said.

“I had him up around 530 kilos for his first-up run last time and he’s 510 now. I’m not a believer in a fighting weight for a horse so much, but with this horse, there is just a weight he runs well at and it’s around that (510 kilos).”

Saturday sees Ceolwulf primed for a late charge, Pride happy with a top “in the first four or five” as the Apollo Stakes offers compelling online bookmakers.

Races every fortnight thereafter build to peak for his campaign’s decisive duo, steering his career trajectory.

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“It is always my aim to find out what the one perfect formula is for each horse, and I’ll repeat it all day long,” Pride said.

“That’s why I want to work it out with Ceolwulf. I don’t want to waste any more time running him in 2000 metre races if he can’t perform at his best at that distance.

“I’ll keep him a miler for the rest of his life if I have to. I’ve just got to find that out.”

The post Ceolwulf back for career-defining campaign first appeared on Just Horse Racing.

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Starting Order & Pole for 2026 Daytona 500

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Following single-car qualifying and duels, the starting order for the 2026 Daytona 500 is set. The opening race of the 2026 NASCAR Cup Series season will kick off the 78th year of the Cup on Sunday, February 15, 2026, at the Daytona International Speedway.

The prestigious event will be contested on a 2.5-mile-long tri-oval superspeedway. 41 drivers will compete over 200 laps (500 miles) to drive down victory lane. FOX Sports reporter Bob Pockrass has revealed the starting lineup for the 2026 Daytona 500.


Who is on pole for the 2026 Daytona 500?

Richard Childress Racing driver Kyle Busch has already secured the pole for the race in Wednesday’s single-car qualifying to lead the field to green at Daytona International Speedway. He will be joined by Chase Briscoe on the front row after the latter posted the second-fastest lap in qualifying.

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Team Penske driver Joey Logano won Duel 1, edging out his teammate Ryan Blaney at the finish line on Thursday, and will start third in Sunday’s 500-mile race.

Hendrick Motorsports driver Chase Elliott won the Duel 2 after beating Carson Hocevar on the final lap. Elliott will start fourth in the race.

Three-time winner of the event, Denny Hamlin, will start 22nd, as he looks to win the fourth Harley J. Earl Trophy on Sunday.

Four open cars, which were able to earn their spot on the 41-car starting grid, are Casey Mears, BJ McLeod, Corey Heim, and Justin Allgaier. Seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Jimmie Johnson will start at the 41st position via the Open Exemption Provisional (OEP) rule.

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Chandler Smith, Corey LaJoie, J.J. Yeley, and Anthony Alfredo failed to qualify for the race in their respective Duel races.


2026 Daytona 500 starting lineup

Here is the complete Daytona 500 starting lineup of the 41-car grid after qualifying and duels:

  1. #8 – Kyle Busch
  2. #19 – Chase Briscoe
  3. #22 – Joey Logano
  4. 39 – Chase Elliott
  5. #12 – Ryan Blaney
  6. #77 – Carson Hocevar
  7. #3 – Austin Dillon
  8. #5 – Kyle Larson
  9. #6 – Brad Keselowski
  10. #71 – Michael McDowell
  11. #42 – John Hunter Nemechek
  12. #20 – Christopher Bell
  13. #97 – Shane van Gisbergen
  14. #21 – Josh Berry
  15. #7 – Daniel Suárez
  16. #47 – Ricky Stenhouse Jr.
  17. #66 – Casey Mears
  18. #34 – Todd Gilliland
  19. #60 – Ryan Preece
  20. #54 – Ty Gibbs
  21. #48 – Alex Bowman
  22. #11 – Denny Hamlin
  23. #41 – Cole Custer
  24. #43 – Erik Jones
  25. #4 – Noah Gragson
  26. #45 – Tyler Reddick
  27. #23 – Bubba Wallace
  28. #35 – Riley Herbst
  29. #51 – Cody Ware
  30. #38 – Zane Smith
  31. #16 – A. J. Allmendinger
  32. #88 – Connor Zilisch (R)
  33. #1 – Ross Chastain
  34. #10 – Ty Dillon
  35. #24 – William Byron
  36. #2 – Austin Cindric
  37. #17 – Chris Buescher
  38. #78 – B. J. McLeod
  39. #67 – Corey Heim (i)
  40. #40 – Justin Allgaier (i)
  41. #84 – Jimmie Johnson