Frankel hailed by senior British handicapper
Senior BHA handicapper Phil Smith paid tribute to
following the unbeaten colt's grand finale in Saturday's Group 1 Champion
Stakes.
It remains to be seen whether Frankel's final rating will be the highest of
all time -- the figure will be decided at a conference later this year -- but in
terms of stellar performances, Smith said he had never known a horse who could
achieve top-class marks every time he ran.
"He's won nine Group 1 races (going into the Champion, his 10th), is the
first horse to produce two 140 performances -- in the Queen Anne Stakes and
Juddmonte International at two different distances -- and his consistency is the
element that handicappers love to see.
"He has been metronomic, giving performance of 130-plus over and over again,"
Smith said. "The conditions were not helpful today, but he has put up another
130-plus effort.
"The (soft) ground concerned us all, and I think back to great horses of
yesteryear, Brigadier Gerard being the obvious one, who were all out to win on
this type of ground against significantly inferior horses.
"Frankel certainly wasn't running against significantly inferior horses
today. They were some of the best he has faced, and yet he still went past them
looking like a champion.
"It will be a very easy contest to rate, compared to some of his races
because they have finished in the order we hoped they would. Frankel was on 140,
Cirrus Des Aigles on 130, Nathaniel on 126 and so on. That helps us. The
distance between the second and third was 2 1/2 lengths, and we would call that
four pounds over this distance, so you would have to think they have run to
their maximum.
"Then you have to assess the 1 3/4 lengths by which Frankel beat Cirrus Des
Aigles," the handicapper continued. "I think he was value for a little more than
that, although he wasn't as extravagant as in some of his other wins. I believe
there was a little in the tank and that he was value for 2 1/2 lengths and
possibly more, which makes Frankel's run today a 134-plus performance.
"We just don't get that level so consistently. Five years ago, in 2007, there
was not a single 130-plus performance in the world, yet this horse does it time
and again. Last year there were two horses in the world rated 130-plus, namely
Frankel and Black Caviar, and Frankel has done it again this year.
"I've never seen a horse who is so consistent. He never throws in a below-par
performance."
The Juddmonte Farms homebred showed plenty of early promise before he saw a
racecourse. As a result, Prince Khalid Abdullah named the well-bred son of
Galileo in honor of the late Hall of Fame trainer Bobby Frankel, who had
conditioned a raft of Juddmonte stars in the United States. The tribute turned
out to be ideal.
In his career debut at Newmarket as a juvenile, Frankel scored cozily from
another hot prospect in Nathaniel, under no more than a mild hand ride from
regular rider Tom Queally.
Trainer Sir Henry Cecil next sent him out in a conditions race at Doncaster,
and Frankel turned in a jaw-dropping performance. Streaking 13 lengths clear, he
revealed himself as a colt of unusual potential. Frankel followed up with a
10-length demolition job in the Group 2 Royal Lodge Stakes at Ascot, and capped
his campaign with a 2 1/4-length decision in the Group 1 Dewhurst.
Ranked as Europe's co-champion juvenile of 2010, Frankel aimed for the first
British classic of 2011, the Group 1 Two Thousand Guineas. He used the Group 3
Greenham Stakes at Newbury as his prep, and even though he won handsomely by
four lengths from Excelebration, his rank behavior was cause for concern. The
wildly-talented colt would have to learn to harness his energy, not fritter it
away by fighting Queally early.
But instead of trying to force Frankel to settle in the one-mile Guineas, his
connections decided to let him rip to his heart's content. Frankel put on one of
the most scintillating spectacles in the centuries-old history of Newmarket,
scorching his rivals from flagfall to finish in a six-length tour de force.
Some wondered whether the budding superstar would jump up in trip for the
Group 1 Derby over 1 1/2 miles at Epsom. Cecil knew his pupil better than that,
however, and took the more conservative approach. Frankel would remain at a mile
for the Group 1 St James's Palace at Royal Ascot. Meanwhile, Cecil and his team
at Warren Place spared no efforts in teaching the headstrong colt to relax.
The lessons appeared to have taken root, for Frankel proved rateable in the
opening stages. But Queally pushed the button too soon on the far turn. The
exuberant Frankel opened up, only to tire in deep stretch. He held on by an
uncharacteristically short three-quarters of a length, and the universal opinion
was that he'd gotten away with a tactical blunder.
Frankel then stepped up to face an outstanding older miler in Canford Cliffs
in the Group 1 Sussex Stakes at Glorious Goodwood. Reverting to front-running
tactics, Frankel ran Canford Cliffs -- the horse who had just beaten Goldikova
-- off his feet.
Connections opted to keep him at a mile in the Group 1 Queen Elizabeth II
Stakes on Champions Day last year. After tracking the pace like a coiled spring,
he was let loose and stormed clear, again beating his old rival Excelebration by
four lengths. The still-flawless Frankel reigned supreme as Europe's Horse of
the Year and champion three-year-old colt.
Prince Khalid sportingly decided to keep him in training in 2012, but his
four-year-old season was imperiled by an injury scare in April. The exuberant
mover had struck into himself in a gallop, injuring his right front leg.
Internal hemorrhaging in the area led to worries of a more serious soft tissue
injury, and sparked rumors of his retirement.
Racing Manager Teddy Grimthorpe was quick to rebut the rumors, and further
scans revealed that the damage was only superficial. Frankel soon resumed
training and was ready for his reappearance in the Group 1 Lockinge Stakes on
May 19.
If there were any doubt about whether the champion was back, Frankel tore it
to shreds. Settled even more kindly off the pace than previously, he stormed
away to defeat Excelebration by five lengths, implying that he'd actually
improved at four -- just as Cecil had forecast.
Frankel crushed Excelebration by more than twice that margin in the Group 1
Queen Anne Stakes on June 19. His 11-length conquest opened the Royal Ascot
meeting with a bang, and gave further substance to Cecil's belief that he was
still improving.
Back at Goodwood to defend his title in the August 1 Sussex, Frankel romped
by six lengths over Godolphin's progressive Farhh. In the process, he became the
first horse ever to win the prestigious one-mile test twice.
Now that Frankel had a more relaxed attitude, he was ready to tackle a longer
distance. The chosen target was, appropriately enough, the Group 1 Juddmonte
International on August 22 at York.
The great Brigadier Gerard had met his Waterloo in that 1 5/16-mile affair,
then known as the Benson and Hedges Gold Cup. But Frankel had no difficulty in
winning the race sponsored by his owner.
Reserved far off a torrid pace, Frankel deployed his trademark ferocious
speed down the homestretch. The added ground made no difference to him, as he
pummeled Farhh and St Nicholas Abbey by a resounding seven lengths.
The 1 1/4-mile Champion Stakes was earmarked as his final outing, and Frankel
did not disappoint.
"His final rating is not purely a BHA decision," Smith said, "but an
international handicappers' decision, which will be discussed at the end of the
year in Hong Kong among 20 handicappers.
"After today his 140-rating won't change. However it could go up, it could
conceivably go down at that conference, although that is unlikely."
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