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・ 1985 James Hardie 1000
・ 1985 Japan Open Tennis Championships
・ 1985 Japan Series
・ 1985 Japan Soccer League Cup
・ 1985 Japanese Regional Leagues
・ 1985 John Player Special League
・ 1985 Jordan League
・ 1985 K League
・ 1985 Kansas City Chiefs season
・ 1985 Kansas City Royals season
・ 1985 Kansas State Wildcats football team
・ 1985 Kantalai massacre
・ 1985 Kenilworth Road riot
・ 1985 Kentucky Derby
・ 1985 KFK competitions (Ukraine)
1985 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes
・ 1985 Kvalserien
・ 1985 Labatt Brier
・ 1985 Lahad Datu ambush
・ 1985 Lancashire Cup
・ 1985 Latvian SSR Higher League
・ 1985 Laurence Olivier Awards
・ 1985 LFF Lyga
・ 1985 Lipton International Players Championships
・ 1985 Lipton International Players Championships – Men's Doubles
・ 1985 Lipton International Players Championships – Men's Singles
・ 1985 Lipton International Players Championships – Women's Singles
・ 1985 Little League World Series
・ 1985 Livingston Open
・ 1985 Livingston Open – Doubles


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1985 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes : ウィキペディア英語版
1985 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes

The 1985 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes was a horse race held at Ascot Racecourse on Saturday 27 July 1985. It was the 35th running of the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes.
The winner was Lady Beaverbrook's Petoski, a three-year-old bay colt trained at West Ilsley in Berkshire by Dick Hern and ridden by the Scottish jockey Willie Carson. Petoski's victory was the first in the race for his owner, and the fourth for Hern after Brigadier Gerard (1972), Troy (1979) and Ela-Mana-Mou (1980). in 1982. Troy and Ela-Mana-Mou had also been ridden to victory by Willie Carson.
==The contenders==
The race attracted a field of twelve runners, seven trained in the United Kingdom, two in France, two in Ireland and one in Japan. The favourite was the Henry Cecil-trained Oh So Sharp, a three-year-old filly owned by the Sheikh Mohammed who had won the 1000 Guineas and Epsom Oaks. The Irish challengers were Law Society who had finished second in the Epsom Derby before winning the Irish Derby, and Princess Pati the winner of the 1984 Irish Oaks. France was represented by the former Australian Horse of the Year Strawberry Road and Treizieme, a filly who had won the Grand Criterium in 1983. The Japanese challenger was the three-year-old Sirius Symboli, winner of the Japanese Derby. Apart from Oh So Sharp, the best of the British-trained runners appeared to be the Coronation Cup winner Rainbow Quest (accompanied by his pacemaker August) and Petoski, who had recovered from a poor run in the Derby to win the Princess of Wales's Stakes and who was expected to be suited by the prevailing firm ground. The other runners were Crazy (Ebor Handicap), Raft (Prix de la Cote Normande) and Infantry (Dee Stakes). A notable absentee was the Derby winner Slip Anchor who had been an intended runner before he was ruled out with a leg injury. Oh So Sharp headed the betting at odds of 4/5 ahead of Law Society (3/1) with Strawberry Road, Petoski and Rainbow Quest next in the betting at 12/1.〔 〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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