Steve Moran

Only an all-conquering world tour could see Winx match Phar Lap’s stature

It seemed appropriate enough as the year draws to an end, a calendar year that has seen her win another seven races, each at Group 1 level, including a fourth straight Cox Plate.

But I was distracted so two other immortals get a mention. I’ve wandered off the charted course, you might say.

Looking at the Black Caviar and Winx books side by side on the bookshelf. Hearing the voice of Gerard Whateley, who wrote the first mentioned, calling the Ashes cricket on SEN radio.

Seeing a copy of Peter Fitzsimons’ Mutiny On The Bounty on the couch. The former Wallaby’s storytelling and writing style is unusual but this is so compelling, I eschewed all Christmas lunch invitations and settled on the couch, with a glass (OK, a bottle) to read the first 200 pages in record time. Of course, I saw the children – who have children which apparently makes me a grandfather – on Christmas morning.

Fitzsimons’ offerings also include a compendium on Australia’s sporting greats, titled Everyone And Phar Lap. That was sitting just next to the others, at the top right of the bookshelf. For easy access.

I wondered whether Winx or Black Caviar would be ever so acknowledged. Not likely.

The Melbourne Museum still asserts, more than 80 years after he first went on display, Phar Lap remains its most popular exhibit.

An international conquest and a mysteriously tragic death, far from home, obviously fanned the Phar Lap mystique. Nowadays with greater general prosperity, a wider range of diversions and the contemporary shrinkage of attention spans; it’s unlikely any horse will ever be remembered quite like Phar Lap.

“For a nation struggling through all the sinking despair and rising misery of the Depression, Phar Lap was a symbol not only of the possibility of a brighter tomorrow but as often as not a suddenly bright today,” Fitzsimons wrote.

What could Winx do to be so hallowed?

Nothing, methinks.

Another sweep of the Apollo, Chipping Norton, George Ryder and Queen Elizabeth won’t do it. Nothing, on this soil, could surpass her fourth Cox Plate (bar a fifth I suppose).

Winx, adroitly – perhaps even sensitively – managed to date, has won 29 races in a row, 22 at Group 1 level. This is unprecedented and unparalleled. It makes her the best performed racehorse the world has seen.  

A winning world-wide tour, eclipsing Almond Eye in the process, might add to her legacy but such a venture may be more perilous than sailing around the Horn as she rises eight.

Will she go on?

Yes, said the recent Chris Waller Racing press release. But the language left the door well ajar and hinted at no with Waller’s quotes including: “She has nothing left to prove to us or her many followers and we are under no illusion that she is getting a little older…”

“This is not to say that it (retirement) may not happen before her first run of the preparation… and we will not commit to any races as yet but it would be logical to follow the path we have previously…”

Perhaps retirement would be the prudent course but that’s not for me to decide. It would simply be my Christmas wish. One errant step too far and we might have a mutiny on our hands.

Which racing jurisdiction has the most keenly contested jockey’s championship/premiership? Plus, which jockey makes the most money?

Soumillon’s Cravache d’Or success is certainly noteworthy given his enthralling tussles with Pierre-Charles Boudot in recent seasons, while the French and Hong Kong titles are generally the most compelling and probably the most keenly sought. However the Belgian born Soumillon falls a long way short when it comes to which jockey is getting the most... Read More

Prize-money dominance of a smaller number of trainers is a cause for concern

Instead, it may be the likely inequitable distribution of the huge prize-money (a combined $12.5 million) being offered for the All Star Mile and Golden Eagle. These new races follow quickly after the institution of The Everest, this year’s goodness-knows-why prize-money hikes for the three majors in Melbourne and the 2014 creation of The Championships... Read More

Domestic strength of Hong Kong runners in evidence at Sha Tin

It is clearly going to be a tougher sell, next year, to convince the British, Irish and French to travel East after the Dermot Weld trained Eziyra was the only competitor trained from those countries to finish in the first four with her third placed performance in the Vase. However, despite that hurdle, this most... Read More

Wide draws for fancied runners could prove interesting at the HKIR

The precipitation, however, has possibly done less to cloud the likely outcome of the four Group 1 races than the barrier draw which has no fewer than six highly fancied runners drawn widest or near widest in all races bar the Cup. They are, in race order, Mirage Dancer, Prince Of Arran (Vase); Hot King... Read More

Almond Eye – best horse in the World?

Ridden outside her usual pattern, she stalked the speed and cruised to victory in the phenomenal time of 2.20.6 for 2400 metres. The Japanese timing is questionable but add two or three seconds, if you will, it’s still an extraordinary gallop and about five seconds faster than the fastest Caulfield Cup. With due respect to... Read More

Privacy Preference Center

Advertising

Cookies that are primarily for advertising purposes

DSID, IDE

Analytics

These are used to track user interaction and detect potential problems. These help us improve our services by providing analytical data on how users use this site.

_ga, _gid, _hjid, _hjIncludedInSample,
1P_JAR, ANID, APISID, CONSENT, HSID, NID, S, SAPISID, SEARCH_SAMESITE, SID, SIDCC, SSID,