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'It's an exercise in clutching at straws' - Paul Kealy cannot see Enable losing
Whenever you look at a race, big or small, you should always attempt to identify the favourite to see if it has any vulnerabilities to be exploited.
Are conditions right? Does the draw have any impact? How strong is the opposition? What has the preparation been like?
All are questions which need answering before you part with your money.
We already know the favourite for the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe as Enable is going for a record hat-trick in the race and a 13th win on the trot.
I've tried to dig holes in her claims of making history but came quite quickly to the conclusion that it's an exercise in clutching at straws.
The big worry about a high draw in a huge field was already off the table once only 12 were declared and a draw in nine really should not be a hindrance.
Urban Sea may have been the last to win from that berth in 1993, but that's a pointless stat without context. In the last ten years alone horses drawn nine have beaten 62 per cent of their rivals in the Arc and that from only four who were shorter than 28-1 in the betting.
This year she has been spot on, winning the Eclipse, King George and Yorkshire Oaks.
She has won Group 1s on anything from good to firm to soft, her best RPR coming on soft when she won the Arc at Chantilly in 2017.
All the boxes are ticked then, so we have only to worry about the opposition, don't we? Do We?
I can't see it. Big French hope Sottsass won the French Derby because Persian King didn't stay, and although some were cooing over his turn of foot in the Niel, you can get some context with the knowledge that the runner-up was brushed aside readily by Enable's stablemate Terebellum the time before. Yes, I had to look her up too.
Yet at York, the subsequently retired Crystal Ocean could not have run his race and the close third and fourth have been well beaten, one of them finishing a long way behind Magical who, if she were human, could draw a detailed picture of Enable's backside from memory.
The 14-length Baden Baden winner Ghaiyyath will find it difficult dominating horses who can actually keep up, especially from stall 12, and was thumped when he did run in better company at Longchamp in April.
That leaves Waldgeist, another who has seen the back of Enable quite a lot, but who is at least on home turf in France, where his form figures read 51111411 since 2018.
I think he'll be second, but if this race were not called the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, Enable would be nearer 1-3 than 8-11, wouldn't she?
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