LUCA Cumani can get one on the board for the home team as Ialysos looks the pick in the Golden Jubilee Stakes, the feature event on the final day of Royal Ascot.

Foreign raiders have dominated big-race proceedings this week, with Group One honours heading to Australia, France and Ireland.

Admittedly, Ialysos is not strictly British, having been born and campaigned in Greece until joining Cumani’s string earlier in the year.

However, he had made quite an impression on the gallops and justified the positive vibes with a useful performance when scoring on his British bow at Haydock.

Ialysos overcame an early stumble to beat Anglezarke by a neck, form which was franked earlier in the week when that filly finished third in the King’s Stand.

His Greek form is hard to evaluate and being the only sprinter under Cumani’s care, even the Newmarket handler is a little in the dark about this horse’s potential.

Dubbed the ‘Greek Freak’, Ialysos is taken to step up and see off his better established rivals.

The Hardwicke Stakes looks down on class this year, so William Muir’s Enroller must have every chance.

Muir has not enjoyed the best of seasons but the victory of Nemo Spirit at York last week suggests there is light at the end of the tunnel.

Enroller won the John Porter earlier in the season, beating some solid yardsticks into the bargain, and he sets a fair standard.

The Chesham Stakes is often won by one of the lessfancied runners and this year Johnny Portman’s Meglio Ancora could fit that bill.

Already a gelding and by the unfashionable sire Best Of The Bests, he was sent off an unconsidered 16-1 chance for his debut at Newbury but his success was no fluke.

The runner-up, Michael Jarvis’ Alrasm, bolted up next time out at Doncaster and took his chance in Tuesday’s Coventry Stakes.

Clive Cox is enjoying a great season and his Jimmy Styles could be a blot on the handicap in the Wokingham.

Just as Forgotten Voice proved in the Hunt Cup, unexposed, improving younger horses can prevail in these ultra-competitive handicaps.

He has only had ten starts in his life and needed the 5lb penalty he picked up for a recent win at Newmarket to ensure a run.

The handicapper was more severe, though, and raised him 6lb so, effectively, he is still well-in.

Hatton Flight has been a prolific winner so far in his career but his biggest success may still be to come in the Duke of Edinburgh Stakes.

The nine-time winner is looking to make it four in a row.

The Queen Alexandra Stakes traditionally closes the meeting and Terry Mills’ Tyrrells Wood should take some stopping.

He won as he liked at Pontefract on his last start and this race was mentioned minutes after he crossed the line.

Brian Meehan’s Africa Art could be a handicap blot in Ayr’s Scottish Sun Handicap, while Karl Burke’s Captain Ellis should take the beating in Haydock’s Racing UK £12.99 Per Month Handicap.

Best bet at Redcar could be Bryan Smart’s Excellent Show in the H Jarvis 131st Anniversary Handicap.

All The Aces lost on his first start for almost a year at Newbury but can win the Listed toteswinger Pontefract Castle Stakes at the Yorkshire venue tomorrow.