ROYAL ASCOT 15-19 June Coverage: 1400-1715 BST First five races on BBC Two and BBC Sport website (UK users only), big-race commentaries on BBC Radio 5 live Results: bbc.co.uk/racing
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Tom Queally thinks Twice Over will run a big race
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Jockey Tom Queally is confident Twice Over, who was fourth behind Vision d'Etat in last year's Prince of Wales's Stakes, can win the race this year.
The Group One contest, which has French raider Byword in the field, is the highlight of Wednesday's card, the second day of the big five-day meeting.
"I wouldn't swap mine for anything in the race," said Queally.
Dandy Boy may go to post as favourite in the Royal Hunt Cup, a cavalry charge with a large field run over a mile.
Twice Over, who is trained by Henry Cecil and owned by Prince Khalid Abdullah, was leading a furling out a year ago but was caught on the line by Vision d'Etat, Tartan Bearer and Never On Sunday.
"He ran a hell of race to finish fourth in this last year and one furlong out you'd have thought there was no way he wouldn't be in the shake-up," said Queally.
"Byword looks the main danger (this year), although I think he was flattered to get within half a length of Goldikova last time, and Mawatheeq obviously got to within the same distance of Twice Over in the Champion Stakes so merits respect."
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606: DEBATE
hugozhackenbush
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The straight-talking Irishman said of his mount: "He's in very good form and this looks very winnable as it appears a slightly substandard Prince of Wales's."
After his run at Royal Ascot last year Twice Over won three times, including the Champion Stakes at Newmarket, before finishing third to Zenyatta in the Breeders' Cup Classic.
French hopes are carried by Andre Fabre's Byword, also owned by Abdullah, and Shalanaya, trained by Mikel Delzangles.
John Gosden has both Debussy and Tazeez going to post while Godolphin are pinning their hopes on Cavalryman and Allybar.
The field is completed by Glass Harmonium, Mawatheeq, Presvis, Stimulation and Wiener Walzer, from Germany.
Day one of the meeting attracted a crowd of 39,561, up from 38,707 last year, with bigger attendances expected as the week goes on.
Richard Hughes, 12-1 to be top jockey before racing on Tuesday, is an odds-on shot to be leading rider after a double for his father-in-law, trainer Richard Hannon, on Canford Cliffs and Strong Suit.
"Hannon and Hughes are due to combine with four runners on Wednesday, headed by Shamwari Lodge in the Windsor Forest Stakes [1505]," said BBC racing correspondent Cornelius Lysaght.
Replay - Vision d'Etat wins at Ascot in 2009 (UK web users only)
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