Showing posts with label Paul Nicholls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul Nicholls. Show all posts

Wednesday, 31 October 2012

Farewell to a very special horse - Kauto Star

Kauto and Ruby after that 5th King George

This time of year is always a tug on the heartstrings as flat horses go to the sales and jumping horses get retired when they return to training and things do not look right. It's hard to make that decision, always hard. But never more so when it's a real Champion we are talking about.

Long ago and what seems like a lifetime away we started following a horse named Kauto Star. He was one of the 'talking horses' who arrived at Manor Farm Stables from France. Even though pedigrees in jump horses never mean as much as those of flat horses I always look. In his there was a name that stood out. But for an odd reason. Still, odd reasons often dominate which horses we follow and which we do not. And more often than not it's the odd reasons and weird coincidences which bring the most astonishing adventures our way.

Kauto Star's sire was one Village Star who was most famous in our memory as being the horse who prevented (with the help of jockey Cash Admussen) one of our all time favourites Mtoto, from winning the Arc. Village Star and Cash kept Mtoto hemmed in, and when he and Michael Roberts got out they literally flew for the finish and just failed to catch Tony Binn and John Reid who had got first run. Over the years Village Star had begun to have a few decent jumpers and we noted this one down for various reasons, not least of that his French trainer Serge Foucher had said he was the best he'd ever had and nicknamed him 'L'Extraterrestrial'. Despite these good omens we still could not have known just how brilliant he would turn out to be.

In the last years of Persian Punch we had a share in a horse at David Elsworth's yard and had the luck to visit Punch on many occasions with Desert Orchid retired in the yard. He had such presence, even when he was very old and extremely furry. We had not seen him race having only begun to go racing in the late 90's. He was such a legend to us and when we met him 'in the fur' we literally bowed to his greatness. We wanted one of our own, no doubt about it.

We followed Kauto around and genuinely fell in love with him, still oblivious to how great he might be. He had real personality, was funny, always so boisterous at the races and loving of attention. When we visited the yard if we looked at Denman first Kauto would lean out of his box and shake his head up and down demanding we come and greet him. At the races he looked at the crowd, as if he really did know he was there for us.

The great ones always know, and looking back I am pretty sure he knew before we did just how great that he would be.



Horses bring people together. Our best friends came our way courtesy of a smallish bay gelding named See More Business and over the years we have shared many 'accidental' horses which we all agreed upon as 'keepers'. Kauto was one.

We never doubted him. Like Denman seemed a dead cert to get that Gold Cup Kauto was the horse to wrest it back. He was always like no other. The two together were perfect, like chalk and cheese.

Kauto being as great as he was did not detract from anything about Desert Orchid though and we refuse to compare the two. There is no point, one was grey, one is bay. Dessie was his own person, always in control. He carried weights and did great feats no racehorse does today. The days of Golden Miller, Arkle, Flying Bolt, Mill House and Dessie will come no more. We have different criteria by which we measure a great today, and the past is safe from erosion.

We are just so grateful that Kauto came and we had our own champion. Everyone should have at least one. (And we have been blessed with more than one!) Although, it is hard to imagine that the future could possibly hold another to join their ranks.

When Donna Blake Travelling Head Lass to Paul Nicholls drove Denman and Kauto to Cheltenham she posted that it was an honour to drive the 'Golden Boys'. The name stuck, as indeed they were.

Thank you so very very much to Anthony Bromley for finding him, to Clive Smith for having enough money to bring him to our shores, and to Paul Nicholls and his team who managed his 'horse of a lifetime' absolutely brilliantly from the very beginning right to the end. To all who helped to shape and make this wonderful fabled creature, Clifford Baker, Sonja Cook, Nicholas James Child, Rose Loxon, Ruby Walsh, Mick Fitzgerald, AP McCoy, Sam Thomas and his French jockeys, and all of the team at Ditcheat.

It's been a class act which will be very very hard to equal. Ever.



What is left now are all the tributes, the papers will be full of them tomorrow and I'm off to buy them all to stick in the scrapbook! 


Footnote: No idea where these photos have come from, other than the one of us at Ditcheat, but will try to rectify and credit when we have taken a moment to pause and reflect.



Tuesday, 28 February 2012

FAREWELL TO EARTHMOVER



Earthmover (IRE) 21-y-o (01Jan91 ch g)

Mister Lord (USA) - Clare's Crystal (Tekoah)

T
rainer: Richard Barber until 22 Jul 1998 / Paul Nicholls
Owner: RM Penny  Breeder: Brian McSweeny  Lass: Caromay Gifford  


From time to time we have to say farewell to one of our 4 legged friends.

Long before Ditcheat was the most famous yard in Somerset, before Paul Nicholls was Champion Trainer, and before all the superstars lit up Cheltenham for many years, that little quiet corner of the English countryside was brightened by the likes of See More Business, Flagship Uberalles, Call Equiname and a tall chestnut named Earthmover. The 3 first named are perhaps more famous, but it was Earthmover who would win first at the field of dreams - the Cheltenham Festival.

Earthmover was an old friend of ours. We followed him from the beginning when he was trained by Richard Barber and won his first Christie's Foxhunter Chase under young Joe Tizzard in 1998. After he moved to the then rising through the ranks yard of Paul Nicholls we had the extreme pleasure of meeting him and his lass Caromay Gifford at the yard in the days when they held Open Days. 

We loved the way he stayed on forever in his races and managed to dig ever deeper at the end. He was a kind and genuine horse and was always turned out so well by Caromay who he had a special bond with. Megan the young daughter of Paul called him 'Dennis', and he was her favourite horse in the yard before she grew up and met the unbelievable Big Bucks. At the races you could hear fans shouting, 'Come on Dennis!' when he looked to be in some impossible situation and going backwards because they knew he always gave his all and he always had a chance. 

We reached the point with him where it did not matter if he won or not. We, like many others, went to the races to see him, to be with him and to cheer him on. All we wanted was for Dennis to come home safely so we could see Caromay and connections give him a pat. He always looked like he thought he had won anyway - or at the very least he KNEW that he had given his best and that it was good enough.

And even at the age of 13 he still had a few surprises for those who might have doubted. No other horse had a 6 year gap between winning his first Foxhunter, and his second victory. And the old boy did it in such style too as he and Rilly went to the front approaching the fourth from home.

Two came after him but he fought them off. Never Compromise and Oneminutetofive were on his shoulder turning for home, Earthmover and Never Compromise jumped the last virtually together, two brave horses. It was our hero who in his familar 'never say die' style found even more on the run-in for a four-length success.

Winning rider Rilley Goschen said: ``It's a tremendous thrill to ride a Festival winner - he is such a smashing old horse. ``I was always happy with him in the race. He is a lovely horse to ride and dictates to you what he wants to do.''

Nicholls added: ``I really did fancy him, though with no disrespect to the others it wasn't the greatest of Foxhunters. But everything went right for him and Rilley give him a fantastic ride.

``It is up to the owner (Roger Penny) whether he is retired. It is something to think about."

``He is just an unbelievable horse and has been so hard to get right again. He was at death's door after a fall at Newton Abbot a few years ago and to come back and win a race he had won six years ago is unbelievable. All credit too him.''

He gave us some of our best ever days at the races cheering him on. Win or lose we loved him then, and always will. We were so grateful that he got a happy retirement with Charlotte and continued to enjoy life.

When he won his second Foxhunter we shouted until we were completely hoarse and then we cried. When we read that he had died we shed a few more tears.

Thank you so very much. 

A couple of our favourite articles on him.

Popular veteran rolls back the years to
record a famous double
Racing Post

March 19, 2004
Byline: Carl Evans


A REMARKABLE old campaigner plugged his way into the record books yesterday when winning his second race at the Festival after a break of six years, writes Carl Evans.

Earthmover does not have the ability of Best Mate, and his performance was overshadowed by that great horse's spectacular effort in the previous contest, but he defied age and 23 rivals to win this highlight of the hunter chasing season by four lengths from Irish raider Never Compromise.

He was helped in his quest by Rilly Goschen, who rode an exemplary race strictly to the orders of trainer Paul Nicholls.

 
GOLDEN OLDIES: `After all that he's
come through, the latest Festival win
was the highlight of the meeting'
Racing Post April 5, 2004Byline: Roy Briggs

Tell us about him.  "We were hoping he'd be Gold Cup class until he was seriously injured in a fall at Newton Abbot and was at death's door for a while. He's also been in the wars with other injuries and bled a few times. "So after all he's come through, the latest Festival win was the highlight of the meeting for me - he's very special, just like See More Business."

What's he like at home? "He has the most fantastic temperament. My daughter Megan [6]rides him around the yard and calls him Dennis."

Likes Caromay Gifford, who looks after him "and spoils him to death"; going out in the paddock.

Dislikes "None - he'd do anything for anyone."