RIP Sir Henry

I remember watching the television when Claire Balding interviewed him in his garden some 10 years ago now on the BBC. I think it was the time he was constantly noted as not scoring with a great amount of winners.

After watching the interview, I never really thought he could revive the successes that he'd had before in his illustrious career, but nevertheless the special thing I saw in him, was the way he took set backs at that time with a pinch of salt, and was content with being in his garden.

RIP Sir Henry Cecil.
 
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Very sad news, but not entirely unexpected.

Although he had a silver spoon background, he more than made the best of his opportunities combined with bags of natural talent and hard work.

He seemed such a pleasant man too, with none of the arrogance that someone with his achievements might be expected by some to display.
 
I rarely get worked up over the passing of famous people but Sir Henry is an exception similar to when I first heard the news that John Lennon had been shot all those years ago.

My first visit to Epsom was for Slip Anchor's derby and then returned to see Reference Point romp home a few years later. The era of the two great American jockeys in Europe, Steve Cauthen and Cash Asmussen was in full bloom which filled me with more than a bit of vicarious pleasures. Yet even then Henry Cecil was always the grand master, so gracious, so imperfect, so human. When Sheikh Mo removed all his horses it was a sad day. A lot of water has travelled down many a river since then.

Today is a very sad day indeed.
 
Hopefully Royal Ascot will name a race in his honour soon.

Sad as it is Matt Chapman is going a bit OTT on Twitter trying to put his name out there in all the tributes I feel.
 
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Going back further than the Cecil /Cauthen days - there were many greats before then Wollow, Bolkonski,Kris, Fairy Footsteps ( a fragile beast - i am sure nobody else would have got her to Newmarket). Le Moss and Ardross of course,

What would perhaps be most apt of all would be for Frankel's half sister Joyeuse to win the Albany or Queen Mary next week .

Truly the end of an era and indeed I suspect that Prince Khaled and Juddmonte's cut backs may have been in anticipation of losing HRAC.
 
I first became interested in racing as a child and Sir Henry was a big part of this world that fascinated me so much and it was troubling to see his decline both professionally and health wise. I always secretly hoped that one day we would hear he was in remission from cancer but of course it never came. He was a great trainer and a good man. No one could have deserved Frankel more.

Farewell Sir. May you rest in peace.
 
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Thank god they didn't let brough Scott do it ;)

Terribly sad. Sir H has been around in racing longer than I've been alive but from a flat racing point of view, it was him who got my interest up and of course he brought Cauthen - who as a young teenage girl was a total hero (and the promise of meeting him was one of the few things that kept me in line at the racing school!) his way with fillies was unsurpassed and horses like Indian Skimmer will stay in my mind far longer than many others. I'm so glad he had Frankel - nobody deserved a horse like him more.

RIP Sir Henry, find your brother and have a fabulous afterlife...

Thankyou
 
Just got back from work to read this. I'm too young to remember Cecil in his pomp but even so his recent resurgence was a heart warming story and it's a real loss to racing; thoughts go out to his family and friends.
 
Going back further than the Cecil /Cauthen days - there were many greats before then

Indeed. His link-up with Joe Mercer was hugely successful for them both and 1979 was a stellar year. I've always remembered the explosive start they made at the Craven and Newbury Spring Meetings. At Newmarket, they teamed up for 4 winners from 5 runners: Lyphards Wish (11/2) won the Craven (turning over Tromos), Chalet (9/2) won a 19-runner 7f handicap by 4l, Welsh Chanter (10/11) won the Wood Ditton and One In A Million (8/13) the Nell Gwyn. On to Newbury and standards slipped with 5 runners again but only the 3 winners: War Legend (5/2) in a maiden, Kris (11/10) impressively in the Greenham and Volcanic (4/1) by 12l in the mile maiden which closed the meeting. It seemed so easy in those days.

In the Cauthen era, Royal Ascot 1987 was particularly memorable - I was there - with 3 winners for the yard on the Wednesday including Midyan in the Jersey by 4l and (of blessed memory) Primitive Rising (a 3-y-o) in the Bessborough by 5l. There were 2 more on Thursday, including Paean, winner (by 15l) of the Gold Cup. The first two races on the Friday went to Space Cruiser (Windsor Castle) by 7l and Orban (Hardwicke) by 8l. At the Heath Meeting on the Saturday, the stable had 3 winners from 4 runners including Sanquirico by 5l and Intimate Guest by 4l. It was soft ground, which no doubt exaggerated the winning distances but it was phenomenal training, nevertheless.
 
greatest trainer of them all. blessing that he had frankel to train in the last years
of his life, famous silks everyone knows, dont know much about him. from what
ive been reading today, sounds like he was a genuis who understood horses. R.I.P
sir henry cecil
 
Today I lost a friend.
Not a personal friend but a pal from the day in my early punting life I decided, on scouring the old Sporting Life a trainer must be followed. H R A Cecil, Newmarket, he’ll do for me I thought
And so he did from the highs of the Cauthen era to the lows of the 12 winner season to back scaling the heights once again with his final masterpiece, Frankel.
I could regal all night stories of my “where was I” moments when one of Henry’s won, so I won’t bore you but let me give you the benefit of two :

Henry the Man: Walking out of the paddock at Newmarket for the 1993(Zafonic) 2000 guineas, Henry spots a racegoer immersed in a nice portion of chips. The great man walks over and mentions “Mmm, they look rather nice”, and with the racegoer still sitting there stunned helps Henry himself to aforementioned chips. “Thanks, delightful, they were nice indeed”, before strolling off to the trainer’s enclosure. Henry at his comic best - a toff, yes, but so in tune and in touch with the general public.
Henry the Trainer : Being at Goodwood to witness Frankel’s absolute destruction of Canford Cliffs in 2011 was a pleasure not only to have been on at 11/10 (Thanks B. Hill Esq) but to see the sheer joy and pleasure of a crowd affording Henry a reception only he deserved. Made all the sweeter for the pain the defeat brought to the pair of classless jerks his horse had defeated – step forward Hannon Snr & Jnr. The 3 cheers for Sir Henry that day were never more justified, even though typically he was embarrassed to accept it.
And so today the story has sadly ended. But the memories will linger on. It is a known fact in sport these days we hear so often eulogies of “world class”, “greatest”, “legendary” and “genius”. With Henry they were never more justified, but here was a gentleman so modest and approachable with it.
Meeting the great man this time last year when he had fought off the latest battle with cancer, will always be an abiding memory for yours truly.
So farewell maestro of Warren Place, in that own inimitable way of his of answering a question with a question ,when he’s meets his maker upstairs he need not worry, you were after all “rather good you know” (copyright Bosra Sham 1996 1000 Guineas)
Last year at Frankel’s last race the greatest thoroughbred of the modern era was described as the “greatest of the greatest” , a few words was missing from that sentence “and so is his trainer”

Cheers “H”
GBNF
 
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What a loss. I walked past him at York races a few years ago and thought I couldn't at least say hello. The man spent ten minutes with me, I was just a passer by. Complete legend doesn't do him justice.

What you experienced is what made Sir Henry the peoples champion. Even those who never met the man like myself felt an attachment to a man who gave something of himself to everyone he could.

While sad I am delighted he went out on the highest note of his career with Frankel. Despite the outside pressure from the media and others to run the horse beyond a mile he did it "His Way" and scored a perfect 14 out of 14 and was rewarded by having trained the highest rated horse in the world.

He achieved so much in racing but his greatest achievement of all was he gained the love of the people.

R.I.P. Henry
 
Alistair Down's tribute

Born to the castle but beloved of the country cottage and council house, Sir Henry Cecil was the most cherished and totemic figure of his era, and beyond any doubt among the two or three finest and most instinctively gifted racehorse trainers of all time.
And there was an aura about Henry that made you feel that while the knight of Warren Place was still around then the age of chivalry was not yet dead. There was always the whiff of glamour about Henry, but it was no superficial thing as his style was always backed by substance.
While his achievements were remarkable and almost without precedent, what made Cecil unique was the unshakeable bond he forged with the racing public. Nobody else in racing over the last 40 years has been held in such respect and affection. The public loved the man and it is devoutly to be hoped he fully understood what he meant to people and, in recent times, drew some spiritual sustenance from it.
Cecil started training in 1969 and won the Eclipse in his first season. Up to then all the years were BC - Before Cecil. But from that point in time until Tuesday everybody who follows the sport will have their own particular memories of the defining trainer of their age.
Successive generations have grown up and grown old with him, which is why the sadness in many a racing household is not at the death of some remote grandee but the loss of someone regarded almost as a friend who had stitched many a moment of magic into the weave of our sporting lives.
In a way Henry died once before - professionally. Having ruled the heights, suddenly everything went adrift and between July 2000 and October 2006 he did not saddle a single Group 1 winner and many a mutter was that he had gone at the game. In 2005 there were just a dozen winners, Warren Place was haemorrhaging money as the stable strength dwindled from 200 horses to 50. The decline looked irreversible.
But running through every corpuscle in Cecil was an insatiably competitive streak and, crucially aided by the unswerving loyalty of Khalid Abdullah, he chiselled his way back inch by hard-fought inch. And how we all enjoyed and celebrated his return from a wilderness in which he spent much longer than the customary 40 days and 40 nights.
Most admirably, he bought his ferocious competitiveness to bear on the battle with cancer, which was first revealed in 2006. He refused to bow to it and the courage with which he "fought the long defeat" made him the lion in summer. He never once burdened us with details of treatment, complaints about pain or the sheer medical drudgery of trying to stay alive - he just got on with it, doing his job in public, fighting his battle in private.
Of course we could all see the toll gradually increasing, the almost ludicrous good looks of his undoubtedly wild youth being overhauled by something more gaunt. You couldn't stop your heart going out to the man. When Frankel won last year's Juddmonte International at York, Henry, black-hatted, husky of voice and plenty frail, stood next to his equine masterpiece and you could all but feel the goodwill emanating from the crowd.
Many there that August afternoon knew full well that it was unlikely they would see him on his beloved Knavesmire again, but it was important for them to stand and applaud and be witness to a famous day made unforgettable by two indelible greats. The respect there as usual, the affection as always.
To go and visit him in Newmarket was to enter something of an enchanted world, the heart of the wise wizard's kingdom. When last there the roses were not yet in full bloom but the famous mummy's peas were shooting and the recently discovered prehistoric tree growing steadily away.
The garden at Warren Place was where Henry took his mind when it needed rest and respite. Training a couple of hundred bluebloods was always pressure enough and one can only muse at what thoughts flickered across that brain during the barren years.
ONCE he was ill and the struggle far advanced there will have been days when, as flower, fruit and vegetable came to their peak, he knew he was seeing their seasonal splendour for the final time.
For all the Classic winners and the myriad Group 1s, it will be Frankel with whom he will forever be linked, the unbeatable trained by the inimitable.
Nobody who was on the Rowley Mile that afternoon when Frankel barnstormed the 2,000 Guineas will ever forget the palpable shock of his brilliance. Nobody had ever seen anything like it for the very simple reason nothing like it had ever happened before.
As Frankel's tale grew in the telling there was something spectacularly gratifying that he was in Henry's hands. The great man might indeed be suffering, but if Frankel was going to be his swansong then it was a glorious one that would echo down the centuries by way of a monument.
If Henry was increasingly frail, the sage in his loafers still had plenty of his old spark. He was, as ever, the very prince of politeness who could have written a textbook on manners. As the hacks gathered round after yet another spectacular Frankel triumph the customary happy pantomime would begin as Henry tilted that great head to one side and inquired of the assembled scribes: "What do you think?"
It was all you could do not to blurt out: "I think you are a bloody genius mate, and I wish you weren't ill."
Though he was by no means a saint, I can recall no whiff of scandal or suggestion of chicanery ever attaching itself to his horses or the way in which they ran. If he had occasional ups and downs in his personal life, the public saw his shortcomings as being like their own and thought none the worse of him.
For the next few days and weeks racing will be awash with tributes. But those closest to him and who loved him most dearly will simply be awash.
What is for certain is that racing's landscape will look very different no longer illuminated by the beacon of brilliance that was Cecil. Royal Ascot was for many years his stamping ground and where he ruled supreme, season in, season out.
Next week's meeting will be the first of my working lifetime without that lofty presence immaculately attired. I can see him now at the Ascot of old, silk-toppered, often blue of shirt and yellow of tie, with a saddle under his arm and striding from the weighing room towards the saddling boxes at the top of that beautiful paddock guarded by its phalanx of mighty trees, centuries in the making.
If Hollywood had tried to create the dashing, patrician English racehorse trainer they would never have dared come up with anything as splendid as Cecil.
So perhaps this year, among all the frippery, room could me made for a minute's silence in grateful memory of a man born for the Ascot stage who combined a love and understanding of the high-class thoroughbred with a lifelong flair for fashion.
WHEN great men die they inevitably pass into the hands of obituary and historians and Henry will be no exception. Facts and figures will be piled high and his praises rightly sung.
But for those of us whose racing life coincided with his, there is a genuine pang at his passing because with him goes the strongest connection with so much of our own racing histories. Henry composed and orchestrated the sporting back catalogue of countless hundreds of thousands of us for more than four decades. No surprise then that it hurts a bit because part of our own past dies with him.
There is a sense of relief that his suffering has come to an end and, although he must have been bowstring-weary with the fight, nobody could have been more valiant.
He will be mourned in every corner of the racing village because his appeal was universal and enduring. But above all he should be celebrated because he had more life, vigour, courage, individuality and sheer, natural, rampant talent than can usually be found in a legion of folk.
Our bright spark of genius has been extinguished. Well may the trumpets sound for him on the other side.
 
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