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The 1986 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe was a horse race held at Longchamp on Sunday 5 October 1986. [1] It was the 65th running of the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe. The winner was Dancing Brave, a three-year-old colt trained in Great Britain by Guy Harwood. The winning jockey was Pat Eddery. [2] The winning time of 2m 27.7s set a new record for the race.
Dancing Brave was a May foal, and as Harwood did not believe in racing horses until they were at least two years and three months old, the colt was given only light training until late summer. [3] Dancing Brave made his first racecourse appearance in the one-mile Dorking Stakes at Sandown in which he started odds-on favourite against three ...
Dancing Brave Bering Triptych 1985 ... Fastest winning time – Found (2016), 2m 23.61s ... Dancing Brave: 3 Pat Eddery: Guy Harwood:
Even the worst One Piece arc is as good as your average shonen story, but the peaks are some of the best you’ll find in any story. You’ll laugh, you’ll cry, you’ll love One Piece, and if ...
Suave Dancer (1991 Prix du Jockey Club, Irish Champion, Arc de Triomphe): Compton Admiral (1999 Eclipse) Volvoreta (2000 Prix Vermeille) Green Tune (1994 Poulains) Dancing Champ: Dancing Duel (1993 Durban July) Space Walk (1994 Durban July) Copper Kingdom: My Brilliant Star (1992 Australian Oaks) Whiskey Road: Just A Dash (1981 Melbourne Cup)
The winner was Khalid Abdullah's Dancing Brave, a three-year-old bay colt trained at Newmarket, Suffolk by Guy Harwood and ridden by the Irish jockey Pat Eddery. Dancing Brave's victory was the first in the race for his owner, and the second for Harwood after Kalaglow in 1982. Eddery had previously won the race with Grundy in 1975.
The narrative then shifts focus to another “One Piece” bad guy, Arlong, a fishman villain who has controlled Nami since she was a child and seeks to distroy humankind — a plot from later on ...
The eleven-horse field for that year's Arc was a strong one with top European runners such as Tony Bin, Triptych and Reference Point, the latter sent off as the betting favorite. Ridden by Pat Eddery , Trempolino capitalized on a fast pace and won in record time, beating the record set by Dancing Brave in 1986 by a full 1.3 seconds.