WANTAGE trainer Henry Candy will assess Breeders' Cup options for Limato after his stable star produced another scintillating show to claim his second Group 1 prize in the Qatar Prix de la Foret at Chantilly.

Runner-up to Make Believe in the seven-furlong contest 12 months ago, the Darley July Cup hero showed off his devastating turn of foot to capture the £126,044 first prize by three lengths from the front-running Karar under Harry Bentley.

Candy said: "The race worked out really, really well. The horse was really relaxed and Harry was able to take a pull. It was lovely to see the way he quickened up like that."

Bentley added: "He's got an incredible turn of foot, but he does settle in his races, too. He really is a class act."

Limato could now run in the Breeders' Cup Mile or Sprint at Santa Anita on November 5 with the Kingston Warren handler preferring the former, although owner Paul Jacobs, who named the gelding after his wife, Linda, and late parents Marjorie and Tom, is undecided.

"I'm not sure about the Mile, we'll have to see," he said. "The Mile is a lot more valuable, but it's a lot more competitive."

Blewbury trainer Eve Johnson-Houghton had the last laugh after Accidental Agent provided the most valuable success of her career in the £150,000 Tattersalls October Auction Stakes at Newmarket.

Owned and bred by Johnson Houghton's mother, Gaie, out of her mare, Roodle, the son of Delegator was bought back by her connections for 8,000 guineas after being led out unsold from the nearby Tattersalls sales ring last October.

And the 14-1 shot showed he was worth every penny when making it two wins from four starts by capturing the six-furlong contest's £81,165 first prize by a length from Simmie under Charlie Bishop.

The winning handler said: "This has been the plan for a while. My mother bred him. He went to the sales and had an 8,000 guineas reserve. Nobody looked at him.

"We bought him back for 8,000 guineas and we've had the last laugh."

East Ilsley-based jockey Robert Winston showed nerves of steel as Librisa Breeze swooped late and fast to lift the totescoop6 Challenge Cup at Ascot.

Winston was behind a wall of horses on the Dean Ivory-trained four-year-old 150 yards from home in the seven-furlong heritage handicap, before bursting through to land the £112,050 first prize by half a length from Firmament.