Got a few minutes for (yet another

) ramble, so offering a few general thoughts on the July Cup.
My Dad (who wasn't always

% accurate

) once told me that humans can sprint up to 200 metres, no one ever gets beat at 200 metres because they tired, they simply couldn't run fast enough flat out.
But 400 metres isn't a sprint because the human body isn't designed to sprint that distance and beyond flat out, it's the trip at which humans have to start pacing themselves.
In a rare interview, Lester Piggott said racehorses can't run flat out for 5f, sure, you can bomb off in front if you like and maybe get so far clear you hang on, but you'll be tying up in the closing stages.
So the word "Sprint" is actually a misnomer in U.K. racing - the only real Sprinters in horse racing are Quarter horses.
There's also a lot of talk about "divisions" in racing - many like to put horses into neat compartments: 2yos, 3yos, older horses, colts, fillies, sprinters, milers, middle-distance horses, stayers etc.
So the idea a "miler" can be just as effective in a 6f "sprint" is something many struggle with.
I'd actually be more worried that, despite his bullishness, Appleby runs Symbol Of Honour as well tomorrow and the fact Notable Speech took a backward step from Newbury to Royal Ascot, where he pulled hard in an admittedly slowly-run race early doors by Group 1 standards.
Chief Singer didn't win the 2,000 Guineas, but he was runner up in a particularly good renewal.
A better field than tomorrow's didn't see which way he went when he was asked to pick up at the business end when I was there in 1984.
I find tomorrow's race a fascinating parallel with it.