POSTED ON OCTOBER 21, 2012
FRANKEL'S FINAL WIN RAISES SERIOUS QUESTIONS FOR FUTURE
I thought Cirrus des Aigles had a major chance of beating FRANKEL (44) in the Champion Stakes. He ran a great race but initially looked to be outclassed when Frankel just blew on by him in the closing stages.
However the French champion rallied and forced Frankel to be ridden vigorously and even hit with the whip to hold him off. Cirrus des Aigles' jockey eventually accepted defeat in the last half furlong and put his own whip down to lose by a length and three quarters. If he'd beaten him up perhaps he'd have finished a half length closer.
Rather than adding to the celebrations of Frankel's career, and because nobody else seems prepared to do it, I think it's appropriate to question just how good he truly was.
There now seems to be near unanimous agreement that Frankel was the best horse of all time.
That's quite some claim.
As I see it extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. And the truth is, brilliant as he was, the evidence is skimpy for Frankel. This is primarily because he never raced outside Britain. His connections exploited the fact that there are so many Group 1's in Britain, and Europe generally, that the best horses are often able to avoid each other. Yes he won fourteen times in fourteen starts, but in seven of those wins he faced five or fewer opponents - one of which was often his pacemaker.
Frankel never broke a course record. He never came close to breaking the European earnings record. He scared away the opposition to the point where he beat the same outclassed opponent into second place in four of his last ten starts. It wasn't until his final outing that he faced a genuinely top class rival trained outside Britain and Ireland. That rival of course was Cirrus Des Aigles who he had to be hard ridden to beat by a length and three quarters.
I am very wary of saying that the earlier huge ratings awarded to Frankel by everyone, including me, resulted from anything more than the amplification in winning margins caused when a top class horse meets outclassed rivals. Ratings are not facts. They are simply a numerical expression of someone's opinion. And opinions can be wrong.
In other sports competitors actually have to set some new objective standard in height, speed, time, trophies or earnings to be hailed as a champion. It is only in horse racing that reputation and opinion seem to be enough.
The question I'm left with at the end of his career is 'would Frankel have remained unbeaten if his owners had been as adventurous as those who owned Falbrav?'
Falbrav came within two photo finishes of winning Group 1's in seven different countries. In doing so he tackled a far greater variety of distances, surfaces, tracks and pace scenarios than Frankel ever has. He won much more prize money too.
The reason Frankel's connections were so unadventurous was clearly to protect his stud value. He's now worth somewhere between 100 to 150 million pounds as a stallion. When Falbrav retired to stud many were surprised he fetched as much as US$30 million.
It is the over-supply and resulting weakness of Group 1 races in Europe that makes it possible for the connections of a top class horse to carefully stage manage their career so that they stay unbeaten as Frankel did.
In Japan, where there are on average 17 runners in Group 1 races this kind of thing is simply not possible. The connections of even all time great horses don't even think of trying to protect an unbeaten record to preserve their charge's stud value. The sport benefits greatly from this. Not just in Japan but internationally too. The owners of Japanese champions such as El Condor Pasa, Deep Impact and Orfevre have shown that they're prepared to run them overseas in conditions they haven't faced before. If field sizes in Japanese Group 1's were small enough for Japanese champions to stay unbeaten I doubt that their owners would be so sporting.
Back when the pattern system was introduced in 1971 the Group 1 designation was restricted to Classics, really prestigious WFA races and the very best 2yo races. Only 42 races held Group 1 status in Britain, Ireland and France in 1971. But by 1996 the number of Group 1 races run in Europe's top three racing nations was allowed to grow to 59. And by last year it had mushroomed to 72. This rate of growth far exceeds that of the racehorse population.
A Group 1 should surely be a genuine championship event where all the best horses line up - as is the case in Japan. But the massive increase in European Group 1's has devalued the original idea of what a Group 1 should be. All too often nowadays European Group 1's feature a handful of runners with one horse so dominant it starts at long odds on.
The best way to stop so many of our top races being uncompetitive would be to scrap the pattern race system altogether. This would allow each race to be judged on its merits rather than having its class judged in advance by some faceless committee. The alternative would be to curtail the number of Group 1's, just like they do in Japan. If we allow the number of European Group 1's to keep on rising year after year we're going to see ever more uncompetitive 'championship' events and more 'champions' that retire unbeaten but untested.
Having gotten that off my chest let me return to my proper task of seeing if their are any future winners likely to come out of the race.
Most obvious in this regard is our old friend CIRRUS DES AIGLES (43) who took his earnings over the four million pound mark by finishing second. He already holds the European earnings record and might just have a shot at the world earnings record of around seven million if he holds his form for another season.
The next engagement Cirrus Des Aigles holds is in the Japan Cup. The concern there is that the race comes five weeks after the Champion Stakes.
Cirrus Des Aigles is a stuffy horse that normally needs a recent run to be race fit. He did win the Prix Dollar off a long break two runs back despite losing the previous dozen times he'd come into a race off a break longer than a month. So I'm hoping his trainer has now found a way to keep him fully fit at home. That would be great because in the Japan Cup Cirrus Des Aigles faces off against the Japanese champion Orfevre. So the race could well decide just who is the best horse on the planet now that Frankel has retired.
If it turns out Cirrus Des Aigles needs the run in the Japan Cup there's always the Hong Kong Cup a couple of weeks later. He was forced to race wide from post thirteen in the race in 2010 and didn't get a clear run last year. He might well have won both times but for these problems.
This time around I imagine the plan will be to send Cirrus des Aigles to the front or close to it, to avoid traffic problems in Hong Kong. That means his chance may well depend on not getting an extreme outside draw.
FORGET ABOUT EXCELEBRATION IN BREEDERS' CUP MILE
EXCELEBRATION (43) put up his best ever performance to take the QEII by three lengths in fast time. The way he picked up at the end of a strongly run mile on soft ground forces me to ditch my previous theory that he might be best over seven furlongs.
It's now clear Excelebration actually appreciates a greater stamina test than he normally gets over a mile. He's won all five times he's run on soft or heavy ground. And here he took a race that is the most testing of all Group 1 races over a mile due to the stiff course and strong pace that it invariably features. In fact six of the last ten renewals of the QEII would have gone to a horse that had previously placed in a Group 1 over a mile and a half but for Rip Van Winkle losing by a nose in 2010.
The concern this raises is that Excelebration will not be suited by the Breeders' Cup Mile. I say this because in America turf races, even those over a mile, are run French style. They feature a slow early pace and a sprint finish. This is why French horses have won seven times in the Breeders' Cup Mile and British and Irish horses just three times.
One of the three British and Irish wins in the Breeders' Cup Mile was by Ridgewood Pearl on one of those rare occasions it was run on soft ground. The other two were by Barathea, who'd run a close fourth in the 6f July Cup earlier that season and Loyal Tycoon, who'd won the Nunthorpe and the King's Stand over 5f that season.
The lesson that it takes a British or Irish sprinter to win the Breeders Cup Mile has not been lost on trainers. The last six winners of the QEII that went on to run at the big American meeting all contested Breeders' Cup races over ten furlongs or more.
The awful record of QEII winners in the Breeders' Cup Mile rams the point home:
1998...Desert Prince..............................14th
1994...Bigstone.......................................8th
1993...Bigstone.......................................6th
1992...Selkirk..........................................5th
1990...Markofdistinction.........................7th
1989...Zilzal............................................6th
1988...Warning.......................................12th
1987...Milligram.....................................13th
1985...Shadeed..........................................4th
It looks rather clear that unless there's an incredibly unseasonal downpour in California Excelebration is not going to place in the Breeders' Cup Mile. The idea of taking the bookie's miserly 6-4 and 7-4 about his chances looks plain daft to me (he's forecast to start 5-1 by the American publication Daily Racing Form behind the obvious favourite Wise Dan). I think the stable should reconsider their plans and aim the horse at the Hong Kong Mile or Japan's Champions Mile instead. Better yet, put him away for the season and aim him at the Dubai Duty Free in the Spring. A win in that race over nine furlongs would prove his stamina and thereby increase his stud value.
POSTED ON OCTOBER 21, 2012
FANTASTIC RACE BETWEEN SHADOW GATE AND ERNEST HEMMINGWAY
A couple of years ago Takashi Kodama produced a remarkable training performance when he won a race at the Galway Festival with nine year old Pop Rock, the former Japanese star that had come within a short head of winning the Melbourne Cup four years earlier.
Earlier this week at Dundalk he topped even that effort when taking a conditions race with ten year old SHADOW GATE (40) who had won the Singapore Airlines Cup way back in 2007.
Shadow Gate was held up off the furious gallop set by Ernest Hemmingway then stayed on late to collar that one when he tired up the straight. In doing so he broke the course record for Dundalk's 1m 2f & 150 yards by nearly half a second to produce what I rate a solid Group 2 class effort.
If Taksahi Kodama can produce Shadow Gate in the same sort of form next year he might just be able to break the record set by 10yo Yavana's Pace ten years ago and become the oldest horse ever to win a Group 1 flat race.
The race was notable for the astonishing pace set by the Coolmore colt ERNEST HEMMINGWAY (38).
By taking the times at each furlong marker and then using the speeds in between to calculate the other seventy yards I estimate that Ernest Hemmingway ran the first seven furlongs 0.7 of a second faster than the winner of the seven furlong 60-95 handicap, which I rated the next fastest race on the card. He ran the first mile only a fifth of a second slower than the track record for that distance. And he reached the three furlong marker an almost impossible 5.9 seconds earlier than they did in the truly run handicap over the same trip won by Raydari, who is now two for two on Polytrack.
Running up to the three furlong marker Ernest Hemmingway really opened up on his rivals to blast six and a half lengths clear. He was full of running and looked uncatchable at that point. But soon afterwards the pace began to tell and he was steadily reeled in by his pursuers, though only the former Japanese star actually managed to catch him.
On his previous start in the Arc Ernest Hemmingway ran tremendously fast for the first nine and a half furlongs, taking the field along at a pace that made me happy to award him a rating of 40 for his effort up to that point. If they'd stopped this race after nine and a half furlongs he'd have earned the same rating from me again.
If he were mine I'd be giving serious thought to running Ernest Hemmingway in the Premio Roma next month. His performance for the first mile and a quarter in the Arc showed that he can act on the soft ground that race is usually run on, and it would give him a real shot of securing a Group 1 win.
Hopefully Ernest Hemmingway will stay in training next season. Ridden with a little more restraint he could well become one of the top ten furlong horses in Europe, with the Prix Ganay being an obvious early target. Trainer Aidan O'Brien has won that race twice in recent seasons.
Fourth placed CERTERACH (37) was two lengths clear of everything else with a furlong to run but paid the price for chasing after a couple of high class rivals and tired late to just get caught for third on the line. He's relatively lightly raced for a four year old and fast enough to win a Listed contest on this showing. He's big enough for jumping and already a gelding, so it would be interesting if his connections chose to go that route. Though I should add it looks pretty clear he needs a fast surface, so normal Winter ground would not suit him.
TARLA IS A VERY GOOD CHASING PROSPECT
TARLA (37) is a good-boded, deep-chested, long striding mare that looks every inch a three mile chaser. And if there was any doubt she soon dispelled it when jumping the very first hurdle on her way to winning the Grade 3 Grabel Mares Hurdle at Punchestown. She cleared the obstacle with three feet to spare and went on to give three more jumps plenty of daylight as she made all the running before cruising clear in the closing stages. She obviously won't have any trouble jumping a fence.
Tarla was never under pressure and simply coasted clear from some way out. She was allowed to just amble home from the last and I'm certain she could have got home from there at least as fast as the winner of the other Grade 3 hurdle on the card if she'd been ridden as hard, so I'm rating her on that basis.
All Tarla's four siblings that raced more than once have been steeplechasers. And I'm sure trainer Willie Mullins is right to suggest her future lies over the bigger jumps.
The fashion over the last decade or so has been to run future three mile chasers over shorter distances, even two miles, in their novice season. I imagine this will be the route pursued with Tarla as it has brought such positive results for so many horses. However it does mean she's going to be in danger of defeat if the ground isn't slow enough or the pace fast enough to bring her obvious stamina into play.
It's rare that a mare proves capable of winning a Grade 1 over fences. But Tarla has the size and scope to do the job. I'm going to be very interested if she ends up running in the RSA Chase at Cheltenham or the Champion Novice Chase at Punchestown. She might just have the pace to win one of the big two and a half mile novice chases too.
Rest pattern in her form....
ROI DU MEE TOUGH TO BEAT IN SMALL FIELDS
If ROI DU MEE (40) were a bit bigger he'd be recognised as one of the best chasers. But unfortunately his lack of stature seems to ensure he can only produce his best in steeplechases with five runners or less.
Roi De Mee broke his maiden over fences in a minor race with a big field but has lost the other dozen times he's tackled chases with six or more runners. In chase fields of five or less he's won four times out of five and finished second to the high class Kauto Stone in his only loss.
Earlier this week Roi Du Mee had an ideal opportunity against just four rivals in the Grade 2 PWC Champion Chase at Punchestown.
He was allowed to go clear at a pace that enabled him to save enough to accelerate from five out to the point where he came home from the fourth last 2.47 seconds faster than they did in the preceding Grade 3 novice chase over five furlongs less. When I adjust my rating to reflect this it points to a solid Grade 2 performance by the winner.
Runner up MAGNANIMITY (38) got left behind when Roi Du Mee started accelerating five out. He was hustled to close back up four out. The winner then got away from him again, but he was staying on once more to close the gap on the run in.
It takes a lot of class, stamina and ability for a horse to make two runs in a good three mile chase run in mud. And looking at Magnanimity's stamina-laden performance here it was hard not to think of the Grand National as a very tempting target. After all, thanks to a disastrous season last term, his official mark had dropped to just 140 for this race. That would put him on a mark of around 10-3 in the Grand National. So his connections must now give thought to whether they want to (a) wrap him in cotton wool and do everything to protect his mark for Aintree such as running him over hurdles or (b) shoot for all the big three mile conditions chases.
The most likely reason for Magnanimity's flop last season was breathing problems. After all he was tried in a tongue tie a couple of times last season and bounced back to form when one was re-applied here.
Horses with breathing problems often dislike steeply undulating tracks, especially testing one (as the uphill sections put too much stress on their breathing). So I'd be a little wary of supporting Magnanimity at tracks like Cheltenham, Down Royal or Fairyhouse. In addition, although all his wins under rules and this good run were on heavy ground I don't think he needs it that way. He ran a big race in the RSA Chase as a novice on good ground off a searching early gallop. As long as the pace is strong and the distance far enough I think he'll do fine on a faster surface.
Third placed JONCOL (38) won a slow run Hennessy Gold Cup over three miles back in 2010. But he's never seemed to quite get home in his other half dozen starts under rules beyond two and three quarter miles. He kept on really well here over 2m 7f but was clearly tired in the closing stages and blew hard after the race apparently - though this was certainly due at least in part to the fact he's a giant of a horse that must be very hard to get fit off a ten month break like he had before this contest.
Joncol has won five of the six times he's run two and a half to two and three quarter miles and finished a smart second to the high class Rubi Light in the John Durkan Memorial in his only loss. This run suggests he's as good as ever and will be hard to beat when he gets the soft ground he needs in chases over his optimum distance range.
BAILY GREEN PROBABLY BEST OVER TWO AND A HALF MILES
BAILY GREEN (38) won his sixth race in a row when taking a strongly run renewal of the Grade 3 Buck House Novices Chase at Punchestown in good style, jumping much better than most novices, which is one of his trademarks.
After leading early Baily Green's jockey allowed the runner up Special Tara to go on as he was going quite a clip. The leader eventually tired from two out whereupon Baily Green re-took the lead and surged fifteen lengths clear by the line.
Seeing how strongly built he is and given how well he stayed on here I'd be pretty confident that two and a half miles is more suitable for Baily Green than the two and a quarter miles of this race. Indeed he's already won over the longer distance.
Baily Green has been outclassing his rivals while winning in a wide variety of circumstances. It looks likely that he's going to prove capable of going up again in class before he starts showing a clear preference for certain distances, tracks and surfaces.
Runner up SPEICAL TIARA (31) set a strong pace and jumped well. He was going really well till stopping to nothing two out. If the race had been a quarter of a mile shorter he'd surely have given the winner something to think about. That's the way it looked to me anyway, and the recent comments of his jockey about him being a real two miler suggest he agrees. So I'll be very interested in his chances if he cuts back to two miles next time, especially if he drops in class as well, particularly around a tight track where his pace will be even more of an asset.
SEMPRE MEDICI SHOULD GO FOR CRITERIUM DE SAINT-CLOUD
SEMPRE MEDICI (36) clocked a Group class time when winning a nine furlong race fur debutantes run in swamp-like conditions at Longchamp.
The early pace was reasonable but it picked up steadily after half a mile. The last three furlongs was a real slog in the desperate ground but Sempre Medici kept on moving strongly, banging out 13.7 seconds for the third last furlong, 12.7 for the penultimate downhill furlong and 13.5 for the final furlong - during which his jockey took a long look around as his mount coasted clear.
It's possible that Sempre Medici is uniquely well suited by bottomless ground. And I concede his only sibling, Ed De Gas, and sire, Medicean, both handled soft surfaces. But for the immediate future that's not a problem because his obvious target has to be the Criterium de Sauint-Cloud, a ten furlong race that almost always features very soft or heavy ground.
Sempre Medici is a rather narrow, light-framed sort that looks built for longer distances. He should certainly stay a mile and a half, perhaps longer.
US LAW NEEDS TO LEAD
US LAW (37) earned a borderline Group 1 rating from me for a 2yo at this time of year when winning the Group 3 Prix Thomas Bryon at Saint-Cloud. And he certainly looked impressive.
However I should note that I base my rating on the sectional times for the race. These show that US Law was allowed to set an absolute crawl of a gallop. He reached the 600 metre mark 7.6 seconds later than they did in the Tierce handicap over the same distance. But from there he really turned on the gas, sprinting the final 600 metres 4.06 seconds faster than they went in the handicap.
Normally I'd have no problem saying a horse that earned a big rating in this way could reproduce the same level of form in a strongly run race. However it does look like US Law is particularly well suited by being allowed to dominate a small field from the front at a slow pace. He did this when winning his maiden against four rivals and when beating five opponents here.
On the two occasions US Law has faced bigger fields he has lost after failing to get to the front early, despite looking like he was asked to do so in his previous outing the Group 3 Prix des Chenes, where the early pace was strong. In that race he finally managed to lead early in the straight but got caught and beat into third, running about three to four lengths below the form he showed this time.
US Law's owner says the colt relaxes better when he's able to lead, and this does seem apparent from the videos of his races.
In America they'd call US Law a 'need to lead' horse. And such horses have obvious tactical problems, particularly in big races where large fields and pacemakers can force them to go too fast to get the lead or prevent them from getting to the front altogether - as happened in the Prix des Chenes where the early pace was strong.
In the circumstances I'm inclined to say that US Law is likely to have trouble winning a Group 1 despite the obvious merit of his performance in this race. That said, he is a smart miler who might just sneak a race at the top level if allowed his own way up front.
US Law's pedigree and physique suggest that the mile of the Prix Thomas Bryon is likely to prove his maximum effective distance. So the plan to run him next in the Group 1 Criterium International over the same course and distance next time looks a good one. His chance there will surely depend on whether he's able to get to the front early without having to run too hard.
Runner up KENHOPE (35) looks an interesting proposition for next season when she'll get the chance to run the longer distances she's built and bred for,
Kenhope raced a length second all the way until the winner started to get away from her approaching the final furlong. It looked like the Aga Khan horse Visiyani (34) who finished third was going to stay on past her into second. But in the final 75 yards she started to pick up again and was slowly eating into the winner's lead all the way to the line.
Kenhope was a neck second over six furlongs first time then won over seven at Maisons-Laffitte. She's a good moving sort that looks like she wants much faster ground than the heavy going she faced here. And she looks built for ten furlongs.
Kenhope's sire was second in a Group 3 and fourth in a Group 1 both over a mile. Her German dam lost all twelve of her starts and ended up being claimed by the owner of her sire when shipping over to France for a claiming race - basically because she's a half sister to the Listed winner Bedford Forest. Kenhope is her first foal.
If she was mine I'd be looking at the Prix Saint-Alary as Kenhope's big long term target. The Prix Saint-Alary is invariably a weak Group 1 that draws a small field due to the fact that the better French fillies target the Prix de Diane run soon after. This means Kenhope would have a good shot of placing in it at least, thereby enhancing her stud value. Meanwhile she should have a good chance of winning her next outing back against fillies in the Group 3 Prix des Reservoirs at Deauville on the 24th of October.
PENGLAI PAVILION A GOOD DERBY PROSPECT
PENGLAI PAVILION (34) is a well proportioned, classy looking colt with a terrific pedigree that looked a proper Derby prospect when winning a debutante's race over a mile at Saint-Cloud.
Confidently ridden, Penglai Pavilion was allowed to coast along on the wide outside in third place off the slow early gallop then picked up really well in the sprint up the straight. He was only pushed out with hands and heels but quickly pulled clear in the final furlong to win by three lengths. He ran the final three furlongs a second slower than the much harder ridden winner of the Prix Thomas Bryon. But it looked clear he could have gone a fair bit quicker if pushed harder.
Penglai Pavilion is a good moving sort, so I have no concerns about how he'll act on faster ground. Right now he holds no Group race entries. However he will surely be put into the ten furlong Criterium de Saint-Cloud when entries for that race opens. His physique and pedigree plus the way he finished suggest the distance of that race will suit him perfectly.
If Penglai Pavilion gets switched by Sheikh Mohammed to his UK Godolphin operation next year I'd bet on him getting supplemented for the Derby. That seems the most likely plan. If he stays in France he'll be a solid candidate for the Prix du Jockey Club and especially the longer Grand Prix de Paris.