Jockey Ryan Moore has been immediately removed from all his Dubai World Cup rides to the value of £7million.Moore was pencilled in for six lucrative rides in Dubai however boss Aidan O’Brien has informed him that he is needed at the Curragh in Ireland on Saturday instead.Ryan Moore has pulled out of six races in the Middle EastGETTYThe Coolmore No1 rode Constitution Hill to victory on Wednesday night on the iconic horse’s long-awaited to racing.Moore was then expected to take part in one of the sport’s richest days in the Middle East.But O’Brien has now pulled rank. It comes after O’Brien declared the 2,000 Guineas favourite Albert Einstein for the Listed Gladness Stakes over 7f.Albert Einstein is unbeaten in his last two races but hasn’t raced since May 2025.Despite the lack of practice, O’Brien says he has no doubts over his readiness to run.“I don’t think we’ve ever had a horse as quick,” he said of the horse’s speed.However, O’Brien knows his Guineas No1 needs practice in the 7f warm-up despite never having given any of his previous Guineas winners a prep run.Meanwhile, Moore, who is widely regarded as the world’s best jockey, will miss out on a cash windfall after pulling out of the Middle East races.He would have landed a whopping £2,577,778 had he guided Charlie Appleby’s 50-1 By The Book to victory in the Sheema Classic.Aidan O’Brien is confident of victory this weekendGETTYVictory on the 12-1 Simon and Quddwah in Dubai would have been worth £2,148,148.A win on 14-1 Mufasa in the Group 1 Golden Sheehan over 6f was worth £859,259.Triumphant runs on Cover Up, Sons And Lovers and The Camden Colt in their respective races would have racked up £1.5m altogether.Albert Einstein is 4-6 to make a winning return en route to the Guineas, and victory on Saturday is worth a shade over £25,000.“Of the Guineas horses, the number one horse at the moment is Albert Einstein,” O’Brien said.“When we started working with him in the spring of his two-year-old career, we thought all the juveniles were no good and he was the only one we had.“He was that much above everything else. He’s very big, very powerful, wide and strong.“He was so far ahead of everything, it just wasn’t funny. He won at Naas very easily, and then at the Curragh. He travelled strongly and is unbelievably quick. It’s whether he’s able to slow himself down and relax [to get a mile].“He’s going to go to the Guineas without ever coming off the bridle in training at home, because we want to make sure he relaxes. In terms of speed, I don’t think we’ve ever had a horse as quick.”