'It's Frankel's destiny to be here, and it's my destiny to look after him'
James Thomas speaks to stallion man Rob Bowley about life with the super sire
There is a stark juxtaposition between the giant frame of Frankel, a towering talent of the turf, and the quiet, unassuming figure of his doting handler, Rob Bowley.
Nevertheless, Bowley has been ever-present by the world champion's side since he arrived at Juddmonte's Banstead Manor Stud to begin his second career at the end of 2012. The pair have built up a symbiotic relationship, with Bowley the deft touch to Frankel's brute force, his carefully honed approach to horsemanship central in harnessing the 11-year-old's animal instincts.
It is a position of enormous prestige and – given Frankel's immense value – arguably even greater responsibility. It is not a role that Bowley takes lightly.
"I never take him for granted because to look after him is just such a privilege," he says proudly. "We've built up a great relationship, he knows me and I know him intimately, I know all his little quirks. He's very bright and notices everything that goes on, he's highly intelligent and very laid back.
"I'm always aware of him. If I've got a day off or something like that I'll think about him and wonder how he's getting on and if everything is okay.
But, as a master of his craft, the sprightly 60-year-old has the wits and wherewithal to recognise there is no space for the starstruck when it comes to handling highly charged stallions.
"They're big beasts and they know what they want, and down at the covering barn anything can happen, so you've got to be on your toes," he says. "You've got to be aware of the fact that they're stallions.
"If I looked at Frankel as the highest-rated horse ever, the greatest horse to have ever run on turf, I'd freeze. I wouldn't be able to walk him out for thinking 'oh my god, what if he stumbles?', so you can't think like that. I've just got to treat him the same as I do my other horse, Oasis Dream."
Seasons change
February signals the beginning of the breeding season, the busiest time of year for stallions and their handlers. But – despite the workload, with some stallions performing three covers a day – Bowley says it's a period he looks forward to.
"Their temperament changes once they realise what's going on," he says, before explaining that Frankel, who will stand his seventh term at a fee of £175,000, is now the consummate professional in the breeding shed.
"Once we start walking in January and introduce them to mares on the stud they know things are happening. With Bobby, he's a big powerful horse, but it's like walking down the high street taking him down to the covering barn.
"He just ambles down there, he doesn't bite, he doesn't pull you about to get to the mare, he's a total professional. He might have the odd shout if there's food coming and he can hear buckets rattling, but that's about it."
Regardless of the fact that Frankel was granted outstanding opportunities at stud, it requires an unhealthy degree of cynicism to claim that his stallion career has got off on anything other than a positive note.
Man of experience
There are few limits to the heights Frankel's progeny can reach, but there is no doubt that Bowley, who has enjoyed a varied career in the racing and breeding industry, considers working with the son of Galileo his own magnum opus.
Upon leaving school Bowley served his apprenticeship at the Newmarket stable of Bruce Hobbs, for whom he had a handful of rides before he joined Guy Harwood during the days of another mighty Khalid Abdullah colour bearer, Dancing Brave.
"I was there in '86, when Dancing Brave was there, Bakharoff, Sadeem, Phardante," recalls Bowley. "Dancing Brave was an amazing horse, I didn't look after him but I was lucky enough to ride work with him. Seeing him quicken away from you by 15 lengths was fantastic."
His first job with stallions came at Woodditton Stud – now one of many Darley-owned properties in Newmarket – where he worked with Superlative and Sayf El Arab. After a brief spell at Darley, Bowley joined Juddmonte as a groom in the August of 1999 and was promoted to stallion man a year and a half later.
It was towards the conclusion of 2012 when Bowley was looking after Oasis Dream and Zamindar that stud director Simon Mockridge approached him about taking on arguably the most famous horse to retire to stud anywhere in the world.
"We didn't know what Frankel was like to handle - we'd heard stories from people saying he was hot, which he was a two-year-old," says Bowley. "They wanted someone who was a bit more experienced, so I acquired him, which was fantastic.
"Initially I didn't want to give up Zamindar. As a stallion man you build up an empathy and a relationship with your horses, but Simon told me Zamindar was going to be retired and that he'd like me to do Frankel, so that was it.
"When I picked him up from Warren Place he kicked the box all the way here because he thought he was going to the races. He was preparing himself mentally. After 48 hours he'd completely settled down though and was like a different horse.
"He's a horse that learns very quickly – he lives in the now, he doesn't mither on about something or worry about things."
FRANKEL'S STUD CAREER IN NUMBERS
2,500,000gns - the price of his most expensive yearling, King Power
£175,000 - 2019 stud fee
138 - winners worldwide
36 - Group/Graded/Listed winners
6 - completed seasons at stud
5 - Group/Grade 1 winners
Khalid Abdullah's operation currently stands five stallions at Banstead Manor Stud, with Frankel joined by the hugely promising Kingman, the redoubtable Oasis Dream, up-and-comer Bated Breath and the exciting Expert Eye. It is a fitting tribute to one of history's most accomplished breeders that all five horses were homebred by Juddmonte Farms, a fact Bowley identifies as a contributing factor in the stallions' intrinsic qualities.
"I couldn't think of a better job or a better place to work with stallions than at Juddmonte," he says. "It's hard work – believe me, especially at this time of year – but they're great horses to work with.
"I'll have been here 20 years in August and I've worked with some great stallions; the likes of Rainbow Quest – he was a real character – Zafonic, Three Valleys, Champs Elysees, Beat Hollow, Observatory. They've all got such personalities, and I think a lot of that is down to them being homebred. Frankel has that x-factor though, he knows he's special and we're very fortunate to have him."
While Bowley may have reached the very pinnacle of his chosen career, it is a harsh reality that professional accomplishment and personal contentment will not always run in tandem.
When asked what kind of impact Frankel has had, not only on his career but on his life, there is a marked change in Bowley's tone and his gaze drifts off into the distance. There are no specifics to his response, just a sense of sorrow that brings the sheer frivolity of racing into sharp relief.
"Myself and my family have had a very difficult time in the last four or five years," he says softly, "and Frankel has been a great comfort to me personally, and Oasis as well.
"It's great coming in when they have their heads over their doors looking for you. If you're down or have something on your mind, you can come to work and by the time you've started you've forgotten about it.
"I've got a great wife, three beautiful children and three grandchildren too, and without them I wouldn't be anything."
Destiny fulfilled
Destiny is a recurring theme throughout our conversation and Bowley speaks of being a spiritual individual, although a smile again breaks across his face as he promises that he isn't about to deliver a sermon.
Not that Bowley has ever sought his share of Frankel's fame, not now or at any point since late 2012. But, with his 61st birthday on the horizon, he can draw some well earned satisfaction from having played an almighty hand in writing the next chapter of one of the turf's great stories.
"Frankel could be champion sire, he's going the right way at the moment," he muses. "He's a special horse and I believe he could do anything at stud. If you don't work with him it's very difficult to understand what he's like. I'll miss him when I go, I'll miss them all.
"He'll be all right though, I can retire knowing that I've done my job."
Rob Bowley on dealing with Frankel's celebrity status…
Few, if any, stallion men have ever spent as much time in the limelight at Rob Bowley has in the process of caring for Frankel.
"Initially Simon Mockridge [stud director] said to me 'are you ready? because people are going to want to come up all the time because he's so popular'," says Bowley. "Rarely a day goes by when we're not showing him to someone in the afternoon. We've had people come up here and burst into tears, he gets birthday cards, Valentine's day cards, the lot."
"Frankel loves the attention – he likes sticking his tongue out at people – but I tend to take no notice," he says. "I haven't got time to watch TV or go on social media. My sole purpose is to look after those horses. I get more pleasure showing Bobby to the general public and to children as well – I get a lot of joy out of that as they appreciate him for who he is."
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