2007 is relevant as hell. What you had there was a race run at such a slow pace that a rogue like Turpin Green could finish within five or so lengths of the winner.
Kauto Star is now trading at around 1.8 - and at that price everything has to be in his favour - and it is not. Because two things will beat him at Cheltenham, soft ground or a fast run race. I don't think he can handle either at that course. He fell in the only Queen Mother he contested and on soft ground in 2008 he made a few notable errors on the first circuit jumping on ground he didn't like before Denman stuck the knife in.
2006 - Fast ground in the QM but a 2mile pace - fell
2007 - Dead but not soft ground and a slow pace - won
2008 - Soft ground and a fast pace - 2nd
2009 - Goodish ground and a slow pace - won.
"Dead, but not soft".
How scientific, Euro. If I'd known you were going to produce such overwhelmingly compelling evidence, I'd obviously never have started the thread.
"2008 - Fast pace......2009 - Slow pace"
Again, powerful stuff. Almost hard to argue against.
No matter that the ground was given as Good-To-Soft both years, and that Kauto Star ran the comfortably quicker time in 2009. Why let that get in the way, when a subjective interpretation of "pace", can keep the fantasy propped-up for a while longer?
In fact, let's start pulling out stats about falls in 2m chases from four seasons ago, and use that as evidence Kauto Star is vulnerable to the kind of "fast pace" Denman set in 2008. We can give this straw-man as many arms as we like.
Listen, I started this thread as a bit of mischief, mainly to try and hook SteveM (no malice was intended, as I hope was obvious), but it has been interesting from one point of view.
The Denman fans are, imo, prone to just a little bit of shrieking at present - possibly down to the fact that 'their horse' looks a little more vulnerable after the Aon, than he did immediately after the Hennessy. When Denman was defeated last year, I'd say that 100% Kauto fans considered the horse was some way below his best, and that defeat was excusable. But the Denman fans are so entrenched in their interpretation of the 2008 race, that they cannot possibly countenance that KS didn't run up to his best in that race. To do so, would devalue the form they hold so dear.
So we end-up with statements like Kauto can't go on Soft, Kauto can't go off a fast pace etc - all of it based on a single performance behind Denman, and which lies contrary to the rest of Kauto's chasing career.
I don't know who will win a week on Friday. Both horses are absolutely out of the top-drawer, and whilst my heart says Kauto Star, I won't mind at all if Denman wins. If both horses run their race, I'll be well satisfied. And whilst I have no desire to do so, if we
are looking to pick holes in either of them, I'd prefer to base it on something more substantial than the evidence above.