Danceabout can give her followers something to shout about with victory in the Falmouth Stakes at Newmarket tomorrow.

Geoff Wragg's smart filly scored three times last season - a maiden, a Listed contest and the Group Two Sun Chariot Stakes - to take high rank among her generation.

In the Sun Chariot - run over a mile for the first time - she produced a sparkling turn of foot inside the final furlong to cut down Alshakr and land the spoils by a neck.

Danceabout returned to action in the Juddmonte Lockinge Stakes on very soft ground at Newbury in May and she ran with credit in the Group One contest.

She did not look quite ready but nevertheless ran well. She had every chance but tired in the final furlong when lack of peak fitness began to take its toll and she came home in fourth place, three and a half lengths behind the winner Medicean.

Medicean has since gone on to record successes in the Queen Anne Stakes and Coral Eurobet Eclipse Stakes so the Newbury form is clearly top class.

Danceabout is sure to have come on for her reappearance and with drier underfoot conditions in her favour on the July course she is made the nap selection.

Meshaheer can make amends for an unlucky run at Royal Ascot last time by taking the TNT July Stakes.

The David Loder-trained juvenile won in great style at Doncaster on his debut to earn his position at the head of the market for the Coventry Stakes but his supporters never had much to cheer about.

The son of top sire Nureyev missed the beat at the start from his low draw and having failed to get a decent position was forced to switch to the outside but encountered traffic problems and Frankie Dettori moved him back to the inside.

When he did get a run he flew but it was all too late and he finished third, beaten a neck and the same behind Landseer and Firebreak.

Meshaheer can gain compensation in tomorrow's Group Three event.

Year Two Thousand finished a good fourth behind And Beyond in the Queen's Vase at Royal Ascot last time and would not have to improve too much to land the Bahrain Trophy.

Henry Cecil's charge had earlier beaten the highly-regarded Xtra by four lengths at Newmarket and is a useful prospect.