British bookmakers believe it won't be long before Coolmore's star Australian import So You Think meets his northern hemisphere match.In first markets on the Sussex Stakes, a Group One mile race run on the second day of the five-day Glorious Goodwood meeting in July, So You Think has opened at the seemingly luxurious odds of 5-1.Although he is only one of three horses rated under a double-figure quote from an entry of 35, So You Think is almost a bit-player in a market dominated by Europe's boom

British bookmakers believe it won't be long before Coolmore's star Australian import So You Think meets his northern hemisphere match.

In first markets on the Sussex Stakes, a Group One mile race run on the second day of the five-day Glorious Goodwood meeting in July, So You Think has opened at the seemingly luxurious odds of 5-1.

Although he is only one of three horses rated under a double-figure quote from an entry of 35, So You Think is almost a bit-player in a market dominated by Europe's boom three-year-old Frankel.

The Sussex Stakes could be Frankel's first test against older horses and he has been made the 6-4 on favourite ahead of last year's winner Canford Cliffs (2-1).

So You Think has has started 13/2 on and 7/1 on in winning his two starts under the guidance of Aidan O'Brien, including his Group One Tattersall's Gold Cup earlier this week.

But the effortless nature of So You Think's two wins on Irish turf have done nothing to impress his former trainer Bart Cummings.

"The racing over there isn't worth two bob," Cummings said. "He met better horses than that here."

Even the influential thoroughbred publication Racing Post poured cold water on the four-year-old's latest triumph.

"His two Irish starts have shed little new light on his potential," it said.

That might be about to change as the serious part of So You Think's European campaign is about to start.

Frankel is unbeaten in six starts with his most recent appearance resulting in an annihilation of his 2000 Guineas rivals at Newmarket last month.

Canford Cliffs won the Lockinge Stakes when he opened his four-year-old term earlier this month.

O'Brien has won the Sussex Stakes four times with two of his winners, Giant's Causeway (2000) and Rock Of Gibraltar (2002), familiar names to Australian racegoers as shuttle stallions.