Darley is counting on a forgotten turf heroine to showcase the talent of its Australian racing operation on the global stage.Less than a week after retiring top three-year-old Denman, Forensics remains as Darley's best Australian-bred hope in Europe for 2010.The 2007 Golden Slipper winner is out of work but plans are advanced for a racetrack comeback in the northern hemisphere."Forensics is currently resting but we are going to have one more crack at getting her to the races over there," Darley

Darley is counting on a forgotten turf heroine to showcase the talent of its Australian racing operation on the global stage.

Less than a week after retiring top three-year-old Denman, Forensics remains as Darley's best Australian-bred hope in Europe for 2010.

The 2007 Golden Slipper winner is out of work but plans are advanced for a racetrack comeback in the northern hemisphere.

"Forensics is currently resting but we are going to have one more crack at getting her to the races over there," Darley Australia's managing director Henry Plumptre said.

"She didn't acclimatise all that well in Newmarket when she first arrived from Dubai but Godolphin is going to give her another chance in the (northern hemisphere) autumn."

Denman's European campaign was declared over before it started when he was withdrawn from Friday's July Cup.

The colt was subsequently retired and will return to Australia in time for 2010 stud duties.

The glamour galloper, who won nine of his 12 Australian starts, will quarantine in England before joining established Darley stallions Exceed And Excel and Shamardal on a flight to Australia at the end of the month.

Forensics hasn't raced since her unplaced run in last year's Winter Stakes at Eagle Farm.

She is a six-year-old by northern hemisphere time and motherhood looms if she doesn't measure up to Godolphin's expectations.

"It's always a risk sending a mare overseas," Plumptre said.

"If things don't work out she will be retired and be sent to stud in England or the United States."

Forensics won the Golden Slipper at her fourth start when owned by the Ingham family and trained by John Hawkes.

A daughter of champion stallion Flying Spur, she was one of the highest profile horses to change ownership when Sheikh Mohammed paid a reported $500 million for the Ingham racing and breeding enterprise in 2008.

She took her Group One tally to three when she carried Sheikh Mohammed's maroon and white colours to victory in the 2008 Myer Classic at Flemington.