Kevin Blake:
Now, onto Enable. It would be simple to look at the closing stages of the Arc and conclude that Enable ran her race and just found one too good in testing conditions. Given that she powered to the front two furlongs out and ultimately saw off everything bar Waldgeist with authority, it would seem a reasonable conclusion to draw.
However, for me there were significant signs in the early stages that Enable wasn’t quite herself.
From the very outset of her career, we have been accustomed to seeing Enable taking a strong hold in the early stage of her races. At times, if anything she has over-raced. The power with which she travels is what makes her so tactically versatile, as she is always there in Frankie’s hands if he wants her to take closer order.
This was not the case on Sunday. Not only did she not travel with her usual zest, Frankie had to urge her along on a couple of occasions in the opening furlongs. In fairness to her, she did pick up the bridle and travel better in the middle and latter sections of the race, but those uncharacteristically laboured opening few furlongs offer compelling evidence that she wasn’t quite herself on the day.
Dettori has confirmed that interpretation of her performance, saying: “I struggled in the first bit of the race and let her find her feet. She came good for me in the false straight and I waited for the 300m pole, but I didn’t find as much as I thought I’d left and I just folded a little bit.”
So, why might that have been the case? Many, including Gosden and Dettori, have pointed an accusatory finger at the ground, but I’m not so sure that was to blame. The thing is, the ground wasn’t riding nearly as testing as has been generally been reported.
Official ground descriptions are often unreliable in France and this looks to be an example of that. Timeform produce their own ground descriptions after racing has taken place based on analysis of the race times.
They have concluded that, far from being soft or even heavy as had been suggested, the ground at ParisLongchamp on Sunday rode good-to-soft.
Enable has gained four of her 10 Group 1 wins on ground that Timeform described as softer than good. It shouldn’t be forgotten that one of the most impressive performances of her career came on ground that Timeform called soft in the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes at Ascot back in 2017.
Given how she powered to the line in what was a well-run race that day, she is clearly not shy of stamina at the trip either. Considering she was just a three-year-old at that stage, the stamina test or the ground in the Arc shouldn’t have been problems to her at this stage of her career.
It is of course impossible to know with certainty, but my view is that she was just a little bit flat and not quite at her best on the day. Many observers seem to associate running flat with never travelling and finishing well beaten, but like everything else, there are varying degrees of running flat.
It is possible to be a little bit flat and the marked contrast from the norm in Enable’s early-race demeanour very much hints at that. While she has clearly still run a very big race, racing is a game of millimetres and a horse being just a tiny bit off their game is enough to be the difference between winning and losing.
Prior to the race, it was interesting to hear Jason Weaver give an insight into Enable’s work at home of late on Sky Sports Racing. He suggested that the word was that her recent work had only been considered adequate. This concerned John Gosden enough that he had changed her routine and asked her to make the running in a recent gallop, seemingly in the hope of sparking her up.
John Gosden isn’t one for making excuses after big defeats, but one can’t help but wonder whether he was concerned about her form going into the race.
Was there anything more that Frankie Dettori could have done on the day? Hindsight-ologists might suggest that he could have ridden her a little bit more quietly and looked to strike a shade later in what was a well-run race in testing conditions. In reality, he didn’t do anything notably different to what has worked so well for her all her career, including in the aforementioned soft ground King George where he struck the front even earlier.
A peak-form Enable would have put the Arc to bed from that position on Sunday, but she just didn’t have anything left to give him in the closing stages.