Ciao! Dettori delights Ascot crowd with Hollywood ending

By Sports Desk October 21, 2023

Should we have ever doubted him? Given the year – and career – Frankie Dettori has had, he was always going to produce something special at Ascot on his farewell to British racing.

But to ride off into the American sunshine by winning the Qipco Champion Stakes on King Of Steel? Even he could not quite believe it.

The day started with an incredible ride from the 52-year-old Italian on Trawlerman in the Long Distance Cup, chasing a pacemaker, hitting the front only to be passed before regaining the lead close home.

That sent the crowd into a frenzy and there was a Cheltenham-like roar when Dettori galvanised his mount – and he almost made the bookies run for cover as Kinross hit the front in the Champions Sprint that followed only for Art Power to battle back and deny him a repeat victory.

The well-fancied Free Wind was well beaten in the Fillies & Mares race and when Chaldean was tailed off in the QEII, it all came down to King Of Steel in the final Group One of the day.

Second in the Derby and a Royal Ascot winner, his claims were clear but trainer Roger Varian had worries about the testing ground for his giant grey.

Last in the early stages and not looking comfortable, Dettori somehow conjured up a stirring finish to beat the filly Via Sistina, with the 3-1 favourite getting home by three-quarters of a length.

With the Ascot crowd chanting, ‘oh, Frankie Dettori’, the Italian returned to the winner’s enclosure for a final flying dismount to rapturous celebrations.

He said: “It’s emotional really, I don’t know what to say. I cannot believe it, the crowd have been sublime.

“It’s a fairytale ending to me, Ascot is my home. I’m pretty emotional to be honest, but happy tears!

“When I hit the front I’m thinking ‘this must be a dream, it can’t be right’ but then I realised it did happen and I just went numb.

“The first race was mad, but this was another level to be honest with you. It was incredible, everyone was cheering for me.

“They souped it up that it was my last race so everyone was up for it. It was amazing.”

It had to be Ascot, of course. The scene of so many of his great victories and his famous ‘Magnificent Seven’.

On that day in 1996, Ascot looked very different – before its multi-million pound redevelopment – and Dettori’s life was about to change forever.

While he was not an unknown by any stretch of the imagination, after riding all seven winners on the card, on the equivalent afternoon of what is now known as British Champions Day, he became a household name.

Casual racegoers would just back him in every race, expecting him to repeat the feat without quite realising just what he had achieved.

That popularity remained until the end, so much so that one punter was spotted writing out his betting slip at Ascot and instead of writing the horses names, he just wrote “Frankie” next to his four selected races.

Perhaps only Lester Piggott has surpassed him in terms of the indelible mark he leaves on the sport.

Dettori is now heading off to ride at the Breeders’ Cup at Santa Anita, the Melbourne Cup, Hong Kong’s international races in December and then the next stage of his life – a full-time move to California, where he rode with such success last winter.

While he is a popular figure in the States, he knows himself he will miss the adulation of the British crowds, his adopted homeland.

“It was special after the race, they were chanting, ‘oh, Frankie Dettori’ – that’s one thing I’m going to miss. I can’t take that to America with me because I’m fairly new over there,” he said.

“It’s been memorable from the beginning of the season. I wanted to finish at the top and it doesn’t get any better than this.

“I need to regroup now, go to the States (for the Breeders’ Cup) and then before Christmas we move there for good.

“I don’t know if King Of Steel is going to the Breeders’ Cup, Kia (Joorabchian, owner) has said to keep the option open. I got him over the line today so my job is done!

“I’m focussing on my American adventure at the moment, I’m not thinking about next summer, I’m going to be there every day, I’ve no plans to come back here.

“My first ride is on December 26, Boxing Day.”

Other jockeys have ridden more winners than Dettori, but none have dominated the sport like he has.

If we will get to see him ride in the UK again remains up for debate, but he was sticking by the line that this perfect farewell is his intended finale.

Given his final ride is the winner of the Champion Stakes, he might just be a longer price now to return. Quite simply, how do you top that?

Related items

  • Ghostwriter gallop sparking Cox’s Classic dream Ghostwriter gallop sparking Cox’s Classic dream

    Clive Cox has been buoyed by a racecourse gallop ahead of Ghostwriter’s Qipco 2000 Guineas bid, confident his smart Newmarket form can prove a positive in the opening Classic of the season.

    The son of Invincible Spirit was unbeaten throughout his two-year-old season and finished 2023 with a statement victory on the Rowley Mile in the Royal Lodge Stakes.

    With that experience under the colt’s belt, Cox was happy to forego an early-season trial in favour of a pipe-opener at Kempton, with Ghostwriter – a general 14-1 shot to claim the scalp of Aidan O’Brien’s odds-on favourite City Of Troy on May 4 – reported to have thrived over the winter.

    “I’m very happy with Ghostwriter and he has his Newmarket course form,” explained Cox.

    “I’m very pleased he has done exceptionally well over the winter and we will be going there with a racecourse gallop under his belt. He’s done very well and that is why he hasn’t run in a trial.

    “He’s been to Kempton and he’s a very athletic, clean-winded horse who has done well over the winter and we think that will have benefitted him far more than racing on testing ground, with his previous experience at Newmarket hopefully holding him in good stead.”

    Another star juvenile for the Beechdown Stables team last season was the Kennet Valley-owned Dragon Leader, who suffered defeat just the once in five starts in 2023 as he proved a real money-spinner for connections.

    Big victories at York and Redcar sandwiched a near miss in a valuable Doncaster event and Cox is eyeing stepping the son of El Kabeir up in trip this term when ground conditions allow him to return to action.

    “He was a very productive runner last year earning over £300,000 in prize-money,” continued Cox.

    “I’m pleased to say he’s wintered well, but he’s definitely better with a dry surface and we wouldn’t be making any concrete plans at the minute. When the ground gets a little bit quicker you will see him.

    “Last year he was looking like seven furlongs would help him and I would be very hopeful he will get a mile. We kept him at six last year simply because he was so well qualified for those races. Six and a half was no problem for him at Doncaster though in the Weatherbys race.”

  • ‘Mixed emotions’ for connections of Surrey Quest after epic Scottish National ‘Mixed emotions’ for connections of Surrey Quest after epic Scottish National

    Connections of Surrey Quest may have suffered agony at Ayr in the Coral Scottish Grand National, but could have bigger and better days on the horizon, with next year’s Grand National now entering calculations.

    After four miles of action, Toby Lawes’ progressive seven-year-old was left to fight out a thrilling finish to the Ayr feature with Willie Mullins’ Macdermott, with the trainers’ title-chasing Irishman’s runner coming out on top after not only a titanic battle to the line but an excruciating wait while the judge deliberated over the result.

    A standard-bearer over jumps for the Surrey Racing syndicate, Surrey Quest’s owners headed to Ayr full of confidence in their Kevin Brogan-ridden 20-1 shot after some promising results this season.

    And despite being left with “mixed emotions” following the nose reversal at the hands of the Danny Mullins-ridden winner, they can take comfort that their charge has continued on the upward curve that has already seen him strike twice in his four starts this term.

    “We’ve got mixed emotions and we thought the horse was in absolute brilliant shape heading up there,” said Clive Clive Hadingham, co-founder of Surrey Racing with Steve Grubb.

    “Statistically we might have needed the run, but other than that everything went to plan and Toby was very meticulous in his preparations. He came here in great shape and everything went to plan, we just lost out on the nod.

    “Winning is everything in this business and coming second, not matter how close, it feels like we came nowhere. We’d have been happy with a top-seven finish to be honest so we have to be proud. Kevin and Toby have done a fantastic job with this horse.

    “We know he is a good horse and we wouldn’t have come up here if we didn’t think we had a chance. Surrey Racing as a company doesn’t go to races we don’t think we have a chance in and we’re just so proud of the run – we honestly thought at the line we had done it.

    “Willie Mullins has so much ammunition and it’s just unfortunate we have come up against one of his and I guess the funny thing is if he wasn’t going for the championship he might not have been here today.”

    Surrey Quest holds an entry for the bet365 Gold Cup at Sandown on the final day of the jumps season, but his exertions north of the border make it unlikely he will try to replicate what Kitty’s Light’s achieved 12 months ago and make a rapid reappearance.

    Instead sights are fully turned to Liverpool and the famous Grand National fences where Surrey Quest could take in December’s Becher Chase ahead a crack at the big one itself in 12 months’ time.

    Hadingham continued: “It’s just mixed emotions, we’re so proud of him and we’ve had a super time up here in Ayr. I guess now we know we’re going to go on to bigger and better things with him.

    “We might have a look at the Grand National now and we might look at coming back to Ayr again. He’s such an economical jumper that now the National has changed a bit and the fences are slightly lower, that is something we can look at.

    “There’s so many big races next year he can go for and the Becher is one we will look at and we’ll take it from there.”

  • Arrest expected to make his mark as a four-year-old Arrest expected to make his mark as a four-year-old

    Kieran Shoemark is relishing stepping into the boots of Frankie Dettori aboard Arrest, as the St Leger runner-up makes his return in the Dubai Duty Free Finest Surprise Stakes at Newbury.

    Arrest played a key role in Dettori’s UK swansong last season and was a beaten favourite for the Italian’s final Derby ride at Epsom, before just failing to send the 53-year-old off in a blaze of Classic glory when second to Continuous at Doncaster in September.

    Shoemark was three places behind Arrest with Gregory on Town Moor, but having taken the reins aboard many of John and Thady Gosden’s star Clarehaven inmates since the relocation of Dettori to California, he will get the leg-up aboard Arrest for the first time on Saturday afternoon.

    The 28-year-old hopes the soft-ground loving colt can build on his positive finish to last season and feels there is plenty of improvement to be seen during his four-year-old campaign.

    “He’s obviously a big horse and hopefully he’s going to improve with age,” said Shoemark.

    “Hopefully the ground is not going to dry out too much at Newbury and we know he wants soft ground.

    “His run in the Leger was brilliant – the ground went against me on Gregory, but he enjoyed it. He’s a proper mile-and-a-half horse, not short of speed by all means, and the softer the better for him.

    “He’s a big, strapping horse and I honestly believe he will get better with age. He’s entitled to, so there will be plenty to look forward to for the year ahead.”

    As well as winning the Chester Vase, Arrest’s other victory last term came at Newbury in the Geoffrey Freer Stakes and joint-trainer Thady Gosden is confident the race more commonly known as the John Porter is the ideal spot to kick-start the son of Frankel’s season.

    “He’s a very talented horse, he ran great last year and was second in a Classic,” he said.

    “He’s developed very well over the winter and is a horse of great size and quality and he’s really filled into his frame and has been really pleasing leading into this race.

    “He doesn’t mind getting his toe in at all and the track and trip should suit.”

    Arrest will be in receipt of 3lb from William Haggas’ Hamish, who went through 2023 unbeaten, winning on four occasions, all at Group Three level.

    Hamish is one of two in the race for the Somerville Lodge handler alongside Mujtaba, but main hopes lie with the stable stalwart, who is owned by the trainer’s father, Brian, and got the better of Karl Burke’s Al Qareem on his final start of last year in the rearranged St Simon Stakes.

    The Spigot Lodge-trained five-year-old is another slated to concede weight to Arrest and his trainer is excited to get Al Qareem back on track.

    Burke said: “I’m looking forward to seeing him run and he’s been ready to run for the last month.

    “He’s working well, a mile and a half is his minimum trip, but on this ground I’m happy to start him off there.

    “He’ll step up and be a good one-mile-six and two-mile horse later in the year. It’ll be a tough race, but I think he’ll run really well.

    “We were lucky to keep him and he got travel sickness coming back (from Dubai). He’s hard work at home, Danielle Mooney rides him every day and he pulls her arms out every day, but he’s a lovely horse to have.”

    Simon and Ed Crisford’s Chesspiece was behind Arrest when sixth in the Leger before finishing off his season with a silver medal in the Listed Noel Murless Stakes at Ascot.

    He makes his first start after being gelded in the royal blue of Godolphin, while Andrew Balding’s Alsakib steps out of handicap company after finishing last year on a real high on home soil.

    Max Vega won this in 2022 and having finished third last season, returns for a third crack, while trainer Ralph Beckett is also represented by Salt Bay.

    Last year’s Irish Derby fourth Peking Opera makes his first Flat outing for Gary Moore, having been seen juvenile hurdling this winter, with Jack Channon’s Certain Lad completing the line-up.

© 2023 SportsMaxTV All Rights Reserved.