BOTH Quiet Reflection and Jet Setting are likely to be skinny prices on day four of Royal Ascot but it is hard to look beyond either filly in their respective heats.

QUIET REFLECTION takes on the colts in the Commonwealth Cup but with the ground certainly in her favour, she has all the hallmarks of a likely winner.

Her fifth place in the Lowther last year is the only blot on her otherwise perfect record, with trainer Karl Burke never having ran her on ground quicker than good.

A Listed and Group Three winner as a juvenile, she showed she has trained on this term with two wins already under her belt.

After scoring over six furlongs on heavy ground at Chantilly in April, Quiet Reflection had a couple of her rivals here well beaten when landing the Sandy Lane Stakes at Haydock last month.

A three-and-three-quarter-length margin barely does her justice as she was hardly under the pump to win and her 3lb fillies' allowance makes her an all-the-more attractive proposition. Dougie Costello has the ride.

JET SETTING, with Shane Foley on board, holds similarly clear-cut claims in the Coronation Stakes following her surprise success in the Irish 1,000 Guineas last month.

Runner-up and subsequent Oaks scorer Minding had her excuses that day and while she only won by a head, the fact that pair were 10 lengths clear of the rest illustrates just what a talent Jet Setting is when there is plenty of juice in the ground.

She changed hands for £1.3million at the Goffs London Sale on Monday and new owners China Horse Club will surely be disappointed if she cannot make a winning bow in their colours.

CHOREOGRAPHER really did not enjoy the rub of the green in the Dante but compensation awaits in the King Edward VII Stakes.

He impressed in winning a Windsor maiden on his racecourse debut in April, so much so that trainer Roger Varian took a steep hike in class for the Group Two Derby trial.

The Sea The Stars colt was an outsider that day but his official placing of seventh, beaten some nine lengths by Wings Of Desire, does not really do him justice as he raced far too freely in the early stages before twice being denied a run when trying to challenge.

He would probably have been much closer but for that trouble and Choreographer could go well at a reasonable price under Andrea Atzeni as today's nap selection.

Queen Kindly is the first of Frankel's progeny to race at the Royal meeting but GRIZZEL, ridden by Pat Dobbs, is taken to spoil the sire's excellent run of form in the opening Albany Stakes.

Trained by Richard Hannon, Grizzel is two from two so far, with her most recent victory coming in the Hilary Needler at Beverley.

While that race has lost a little of its prestige in recent years, there was much to like about how Grizzel stayed on to see off Clem Fandango by a neck over five furlongs.

Her first win at Sandown was also over the minimum trip but both her breeding and style of racing suggest the switch up to six here should bring about further improvement.

CYMRO has to shoulder a big weight in the Duke of Edinburgh Stakes but he looks well up to the task for trainer Tom Dascombe.

A winner at Thirsk back in April, he found the step to Group Three company at Chester too stiff an ask when last seen, although there is no shame in being beaten two and a half lengths by Hardwicke-bound Dartmouth.

The good ground was probably not in his favour that day either, so a return to slightly easier company and more cut in the ground can see him claim this valuable prize as Richard Kingscote takes the reins.

DAPHNE can prove a popular winner of the closing Queen's Vase. Owned by the Queen, she showed plenty of guts to triumph at Newmarket last time and looks likely to stay this longer trip with Pat Cosgrave doing the piloting.