3 minute read
Wonder mare Enable may not have reached the heights she did, had she not been partnered by Frankie Dettori.
That is the view of Teddy Grimthorpe, former long-standing racing manager to the late Khalid Abdullah, owner of the dual Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe and three-time King George VI And Queen Elizabeth Stakes-winning daughter of Nathaniel.
While the John Gosden-trained Enable retired in October 2020, having earned almost £11million in prize-money during her 19-race career, she owes much to the flamboyant Italian rider, who partnered her in 14 of her 15 victories and all but her first two starts.
On Saturday, Dettori announced his intention to retire at the end of the 2023, and Grimthorpe was among many quick to pay tribute to the popular 52-year-old's mastery in the saddle and out of it.
"The beauty of Frankie is his personality and what he brings to the sport. He is one of the few who are instantly recognisable stars off the racing pages – he is a international name," said Grimthorpe.
"That brings a lot of good stuff to the sport. He is a bubbly personality, so brings something that is quite rare and, of course, a genius in the saddle as well."
The hidden nuances and quick decisions made by a jockey are often what determines lifting the laurels or being buried under a weight of criticism.
That is what sets Dettori apart in the eyes of many, and Grimthorpe highlighted his riding intelligence and underlined his connection with Enable, who blazed a trail in top-class middle-distance races for four enthralling seasons until her retirement at the age of six.
Her 11 Group One successes also included an English, Irish and Yorkshire Oaks (twice), an Eclipse, a Breeders' Cup Turf and European Horse of the Year honours in 2017 and 2019.
Yet Grimthorpe insists she and Juddmonte owe much to Dettori's rapport with the mare.
"He had a special relationship with Enable, in every way. There is no question about that," he said.
"She was a great character on her own. When she had had enough of Frankie, despite giving her tons of Polos, she could chase him out the box and say 'enough'.
"She was one of those horses who wanted to know why she wasn't being fed first, or why she wasn't going out first, or galloping first or cantering first.
"I think Frankie understood her as well as anyone could, apart from John.
"His ride at Chantilly, when she won her first Arc, he made it look incredibly easy, but he made a couple of manoeuvres in the early part of the race which were incredibly astute. He didn't get trapped in on the rail and he didn't get blocked.
"In the early stages, he set everything up so when she came round the bend with a double handful, you knew, barring disasters, she was going to win. He made it look pretty comfortable, but that was him.
"I think certain horses are matched up by certain trainers to certain jockeys and they suit each other, and probably none would have been quite the same without the other, and I think that is the case with Enable and Frankie.
"She was a very good filly – I don't think she would have turned into a selling-plater under someone else – but equally so, some of those magic moments were magic because they understood each other and got on well.
"Three King Georges, you say that flippantly almost. But it still takes some doing.
"That battle with Crystal Ocean, with James Doyle and Frankie (2019) both hardly using the stick at all, with both horses giving their best, it was really spectacular."
Dettori will hopefully remain a major media presence once he hags up his breeches for the last time and Grimthorpe hopes the swashbuckling Italian will be given a rousing send-off up and down the land next summer.
"I really hope he will not be lost to us," he added. "It would be a terrible waste of a personality for him to be lost to us.
"Certainly it will be a fun-filled farewell tour. It will put bums on seats.
"The public come to see a personality and someone they know and love, and he epitomises that, definitely.
"For someone to pick up his mantle will not be an easy thing to do, because you have to be getting on those big horses as well. That was part of his brilliance – his great racing brain and fantastic balance on a horse.
"It is his awareness of the horses around him and their capabilities, and what may or may not happen in the race, that is uncannily brilliant – there's no question about that."