Dubai: Former UAE champion trainer Doug Watson is weighing up the options for his new sprint star My Catch and one of them is a trip to Singapore next month.

Previously trained in France by David Brown, My Catch caught the eye when out-sprinting his nine rivals to land the Listed Meydan Classic for three-year-olds on Thursday night at Meydan Racecourse.

The $200,000 (Dh734,466) Group 3 Mahab Al Shimaal on Super Saturday may appear to be the obvious next target but Watson continues to weigh other options, including the Group 3 Melrion Trophy at Kranji, Singapore on March 14, six days after Super Saturday.

The trainer said: “We will think about the Mahab Al Shimaal next Saturday but there is a race in Singapore that I would really like to aim him at as he is a decent turf sprinter.”

Watson, who won the Mahab Al Shimaal in 2007 with Terrific Challenge, campaigned Meandre and Dux Scholar at Singapore’s international meeting.

The former finished ninth to Military Attack in the Group 1 Singapore Airlines International Cup, while Dux Scholar also finished in ninth place behind Lucky Nine in the Group 1 Krisflyer International Sprint.

The American has saddled 17 winners for the 2013-2014 UAE racing season but My Catch provided him with a first success in this year’s Dubai World Cup Carnival.

Meanwhile, Satish Seemar, another former UAE champion trainer, saddled his second winner at the Carnival when Gold City won a $120,000 SMKS Trophy.

Promising apprentice Marc Monaghan, who notched a first winner at the 11-week extravaganza, said: “It is great to ride a Carnival winner and the horses are in really good form.”

Seemar’s first Carnival victory came when Filfil won the Saeed & Mohammed Al Naboodha Group Trophy on February 1.

Frenchman Mikel Delzangles saddled his first UAE winner when Mshawish won the Group 2 Zabeel Mile, over 1600m on turf. Ridden by British Champion Jockey, Richard Hughes, Mshawish scored from 2013 winner Trade Storm under Jamie Spencer.

Fourth in both the French Derby and St James’s Palace Stakes at Royal Ascot, Mshawish is clearly a classy performer, an opinion confirmed by Hughes, who said: “His European form was there for everyone to see and that was a very good performance. The pace was slow, so I was keen to make sure I was never far away and then we really quickened nicely. I was certainly impressed by him.”

The Jeremy Gask-trained Medicean Man won his second start in eight days when taking the 1200m all-weather handicap under Martin Lane.

Lane said: “I was delighted to be offered the ride and you have to be impressed with the way he did it. Everything went smoothly with a fast early pace really suiting him. As the leaders tired he has been able to run on strongly.”

Gask added: “We will miss Super Saturday next week and wait for the Al Quoz Sprint on Dubai World Cup night, a race in which he was ninth last year.”