The feature is over 1200m and Mannjal, trained on the course by Dhruba Selvaratnam, will be a popular Pick Six selection after an excellent second to subsequent Jebel Ali Sprint winner Terrific Challenge. Jockey William Buick said: "He loves this track and that was a great run last time. Hopefully he can go close to sign-off another good season."
With Ali Rashid Al Raihe and Tadhg O'Shea leading the trainer and jockey standings respectively, their representative Montpellier is respected but stable jockey Royston Ffrench has elected to ride Happy Dubai. Doug Watson is chasing Al Raihe hard and saddles three, of who So Will I and Classic Blade make most appeal.
The 1600m conditions race is the first on the card and South African Mike de Kock, who saddled a double on the track last week, will be hoping Art of War can build on last weeks' effort when second to stablemate Wonder Lawn.
Seemar and Durcan combine with Blues Ballad, a course and distance winner seeking a third course victory this season, while Al Raihe duo Derbaas and With Interest have to be respected. Selvaratnam's Emmrooz looks the most interesting of the remainder in an open contest.
The best of the handicaps is the penultimate race, over 1400m and De Kock's Warsaw makes a lot of appeal after a good run at Meydan last time. Bab Al Bahrain, trained by Rashed Bouresly, could emerge a big danger in a race few appeal. One who does, is Atlantic Brave, trained by Musabah Al Muhairi and to be ridden by stable jockey Wayne Smith.
With only 20 races left of the UAE racing season, including the eight on Dubai World Cup night, Tadhg O'Shea is in pole position in the race to become Champion Jockey. His 34 winners to date is four more than both Royston Ffrench and Wayne Smith.
The trainers' race is tighter with Ali Rashid Al Raihe on 26, two more than both Godolphin handler Saeed bin Suroor and reigning Champion Trainer Doug Watson.

