Are Aidan O'Brien's Irish eyes really smiling?

By kv joef / Roar Guru

Generous accolades have been afforded to Irish trainer Aidan O’Brien for his preparation of 2014 Cox Plate winner, Adelaide. But for me, even if only on a personal level, a matter remains that needs redressing.

O’Brien’s relationship with some sections of the Australian Racing industry and media has been tumultuous.

In 2007 Aidan brought Northern Hemisphere three year-old Mahler to contest the Melbourne Cup. His first runner performed extremely well, finishing a game third to Efficient and the Luca Cumani-trained Purple Moon.

O’Brien said he would be back and so it was in 2008, bringing distance specialist Septimus, with well-performed stablemates Honolulu and Alessandro Volta.

Septimus was the winner of the Yorkshire Cup, a 13 lengths Irish St Ledger victor, and to be ridden by Johnny Murtagh. He was quickly installed as $6.5 favourite.

Ballydoyle played the usual handicapper-game suggesting he might not come if given too much weight – the same story we hear every year by some-or-other connections of a high-weight.

Most know the outcome of this adventure. The three Coolmore runners controlled the race at a strong pace and eventually weakened to run near the tail of the field.

Plainly, O’Brien had formed a view that Australasian stayers were not up to scratch and the best way to beat them was to break them.

According to many comments I read on The Roar he was ahead of his time. The plan didn’t bear fruit. All three pulled up sore and were never raced again – a tragic loss for any stable.

Septimus came here with a 122 rating – better by a point than It’s a Dundeel. Alessandro Volta had a rating of 115, as good as the pre-race rating of Adelaide.

Anyone with a racing trade background could hardly imagine the devastation he must have felt. Incidentally, his previous 2007 place-getter Mahler also never raced again. He arrived here with a rating of 118.

Then came the phone call to Crown Casino from Terry Bailey, Chief Steward. Aidan was preparing to fly home when the head steward requested him to attend an inquiry into the performance of his runners. Apparently, his jockeys were giving conflicting evidence about the Cup tactics and Bailey wanted him to attend in person and clarify the matter.

In the stewards room, he was told that one of his riders was close to being charged with ‘failing to allow their mount to run on their merits’. This assertion was more to do with a belief that team riding, European-style, had taken place.

After a heated exchange everyone went on their way, but it is not hard to imagine how long that flight back to Ireland must have felt.

Bailey was relatively new to the top job and no doubt wanted to impress on everyone the fairness of his stewardship, regardless of reputation. He certainly did that, but maybe these days he would have handled it differently. Like a chat over the phone.

Logically, it was incomprehensible what Bailey was suggesting. O’Brien brings three horses half-way round the world to play silly-buggers. He said in the inquiry he got the tactics wrong. Maybe Bailey just needed to remind him of our racing rules in a phone-call and I’m sure he would have got the message without the publicity or the affront to his integrity.

Bailey used this sort of diplomacy at a recent Cup, when a visitor received race-day medication without stewards approval and were allowed to start followed by a minor fine.

Chapter two of O’Brien’s stormy Antipodean relationship began with So You Think. Coolmore secured a majority share in the Australian champ and dual Cox Plate Winner. Dato Chin Nam and partners, new and old, moved the stallion-racer to Ireland under the care of O’Brien.

Cummings, his trainer and the winner of 2008 Melbourne Cup (Viewed), was devastated.

From the first start So You Think’s northern campaign with O’Brien came under criticism. Bizarre complaints like, ‘he has got under Cummings’ neck’ or a more reasonable, ‘he seems to be taking the speed out of the Australian champion’. It seemed his new trainer was going to do his way without ever contacting Cummings about the his successful methods.

No matter what O’Brien did, he was doing a poor job and wrecking the best horse in the world, according to many racing Australians.

In the early days I was one of the criticisers but I changed within a year. I have never forgotten that humble interview O’Brien gave at the end of So You Think’s career where he said he probably had got him wrong.

No mate, you didn’t get him wrong. We got you wrong!

Under O’Brien’s care, the High Chaparral entire won five Group 1 races from eleven starts, the same number of Group 1s as Cummings did from twelve starts.

Ballydoyle raced him in four counties, was successful in two, and only once finished further back than fourth – the same as Cummings.

The 2010 Official World Rankings gave So You Think an extremely high rating of 126 when trained by Bart Cummings. With O’Brien he also rated 126 in the 2011 and 2012 Official World Rankings.

To the world’s official handicapping panel, O’Brien didn’t improve him but certainly didn’t make worse.

What has all this to do with the 2014 Cox Plate?

Currently, he has equal top-rated three-year-old in the world with Australia, who rates 126 – the same high mark as So You Think.

Our best middle-distance horse from last year, It’s a Dundeel, rated 121 when winning the Queen Elizabeth II Stakes at Randwick from a previous steady mark of 118.

Just reminding you that Septimus rated 122 and Mahler 118, which is my way of saying O’Brien knows exactly how good our horses are and the type of animal needed to better them. Although Fawkner’s improvement from Spring may have surprised and worried them.

As with most big European stables, they have their three-year-olds sorted at the beginning of the season. Obviously, O’Brien knew that Adelaide couldn’t beat Australia, so instead of using him as a second stringer in the Euro-Classics, O’Brien began to plan one of the most audacious racing assaults of modern times.

Adelaide was trained to travel, to race on all sorts of tracks, taught to sprint-finish a race and battle hard from the pace. Ryan Moore tested him early and jumped on him for his final two starts before they shipped to Victoria. No stone left unturned.

Aidan O’Brien took over Ballydoyle from a world racing all-time legend, Vincent O’Brien, no relation other than by nationality and skill. Since then Aidan has won nearly every major race in the world among his 230-plus Group 1 wins. I could be wrong, but maybe only the Kentucky Derby and Melbourne Cup are left.

I hope you are starting to understand what a superb trainer Aidan O’Brien is.

Who knows what it will take to get him back to the Melbourne Cup? A bottle of our unique Tasmanian Whiskey? From my experience the Irish can become very forgiving after a single malt or two – just get it in writing.

He may never attempt the Cup again as he might view it as bad luck, a graveyard for his good horses. But we prepare our tracks differently now, as I’m sure his European colleagues have told him, along with the astute Australian Coolmore staff, otherwise Adelaide would have never come for the Cox.

He did risk one more good horse coming here for glory and with one of the great training performances of all time got the chocolates.

He still has not set foot in the place since 2008. Maybe he’ll pop-over from Dubai for the Championships in Sydney?

I hope O’Brien decides that a little, three-handle, gold trainer’s trophy would look good on the mantlepiece and I’m sure Tasmanian single malt will taste great out of it.

It’s a tough trophy to win, but I’ve never known the Irish to back away from a stand-your-ground challenge.

The Crowd Says:

2015-02-22T02:13:56+00:00

anthony mckeown

Guest


hi, read your article,just one small point, aidan o brien doesn't indulge in alcohol regards frank

2014-11-04T10:03:27+00:00

Fan of the Irish

Guest


Outstanding article and very pleased that his skills are finally being acknowledged in Australia....and Ryan Moore's for that matter.

2014-10-31T09:17:35+00:00

Bondy

Guest


Tristan I note Kogan are doing a Mlb Cup Million dollar tip contest pick the first 10 placegetters free entry . Cough, I'd be offering $ 50 mill personally ...

AUTHOR

2014-10-31T06:57:08+00:00

kv joef

Roar Guru


3 races won by champs to remind people what the word means. this selection always gives me goosebumps ... bit of fun to wet the appetite for the upcoming week across the globe ... my alltime fav ... 'he's moving like a tremendous machine' ... Secretariat Belmont Stakes 1973 - broke the track 2400m record by 2.5 seconds and still stands. Actually i think (?) he has 3 track records that still stand 40 years after the event. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vfCMtaNiMDM Frankel 2000 Guineas - heartbreaking speed ... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yg--FSBJ_hQ Might and Power Caulfield Cup 1997 ... thanks for coming - but i've got to go! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PLoSeZVVneQ

2014-10-31T05:21:55+00:00

johnny nevin is a legend

Guest


No horse in the world could beat CDA that day on those conditions only the imperious Frankel

2014-10-31T02:31:47+00:00

Aransan

Guest


Bondy, it is a pity that SYT wasn't able to run in the Champion Stakes over 10f on soft/heavy ground on 20/10/12 as I believe Frankel was vulnerable that day. He beat Cirrus des Aigles by 1.75 lengths bringing him back to the equine mortals.

2014-10-30T12:59:50+00:00

Bondy

Guest


Aransan With Frankel even having an off day he would've still had SYT covered over the mile or anything really ...

2014-10-30T12:54:54+00:00

Bondy

Guest


Sheek Fair points its hard to take as an Aussie I feel weak . I'm very keen on Lucia Valentina though, very keen...

2014-10-30T12:52:20+00:00

Bondy

Guest


Scuba Bloody good Stallion he is Reset , the Reset stock love distance and Flemington too, the boy Fawkner is of the stock ...

2014-10-30T12:47:29+00:00

Bondy

Guest


Andrew S I think SYT was the first Australian horse in modern International racing to give Australian thoroughbred racing true International credibility, as a punter and serious enthusiast I'd prefer that than seven cox plt's ....

2014-10-30T12:40:22+00:00

Bondy

Guest


Nice read KV he has the respect of the Australian punters nationally.

2014-10-30T11:12:44+00:00

johnny nevin is a legend

Guest


A very balanced article kv, O'Brien never got good press in Oz. The Melbourne Cup of 2008 was a clash of racing cultures, pacemakers are legitimate in Europe, if they are by the same owner their is no conflict of interest. Punters back home know who the pacemakers are so wouldn't dream of backing them. Incidently not only did O'Brien screw up the tactics that day but Septimus was the wrong profile horse for the Cup, a one paced galloper who liked a cut in the ground. I could never fully understand the furore from Australia about SYT with O'Brien, even by respected writers on the roar. In his 1st year he won both the Eclipse and the Irish Champion Stakes, Europes 2 best races at 2000m. He defeated the likes of Snow Fairy. Of course O'Brien got it wrong sending him to the Breeders Cup Classic on dirt but apart from that SYT had a good 1st season.

AUTHOR

2014-10-30T04:45:45+00:00

kv joef

Roar Guru


You are absolutely right Andrew. the Au racing public are gradually beginning to get a handle of what International Rankings mean. A ranking of 115+ means an international standard G1 horse - 120+ means an elite G1 horse - 125+ means you can contest any race, anywhere in your distance range and be a contender - 130+ means you are a World Champion and are on the cusp as being recognised as an international all-time great. If i remember right, MD/stayer Might and Power (Au's Secretariat) won over all distances, set track records that still stand while demolishing fields by panels of fence had a World Standing mark of 127 as the world's top stayer. SYT at a 126 is a real big deal. Andrew, you are right on the money about his inclusion in Au's 'best-ever' conversations.

2014-10-30T03:01:08+00:00

Rocket Surgeon

Guest


Great article. Thanks for the insight and back story.

2014-10-30T01:22:13+00:00

Andrew S

Guest


I feel sad for So You Think. Even under O'Brien he's the best performed Australasian horse overseas ever - it might not mean much here but the Prince of Wales' and the Coral Eclipse are a BIG deal in Europe. The tragedy is that if he'd stayed here under Bart he would almost certainly would have won three, probably four Cox Plates, and likely a Melbourne Cup - only the wet track beat him the year Americain won - and he'd be right up there in "best ever" conversations. He deserves his place among the all time greats but going overseas did less than staying home to cement his place!

AUTHOR

2014-10-29T22:04:10+00:00

kv joef

Roar Guru


What a shame. if i was trying to bred a middle-distance stayer that suited to Australian conditions. First i'd find a proven stallion in my price range. I'd analyse his quality offspring. Develop a pedigree blueprint and have some idea of physicality ... then i'd find the mare unless a v.suitable one was available. Mare selection is a whole new bag of fish. BUT always be prepared to be wrong and let go ... Personally i think the best value stallion in Au at the moment stands in South Australia. Been around for a while in Europe and is shuttling here the last couple of years. EVERY year he puts high quality black-type on the ground and was a high-quality racehorse ... Dalakhani. Pretty easy horse to bred to. And boy, do the Coolmore-bred ladies love this frenchman. Probably neighs with a french accent and treats them with scant respect. Not quite sure if he wears a beret.

2014-10-29T09:43:17+00:00

Scuba

Guest


Set Square has a big chance of adding to Reset's record in the Oaks next week. Unfortunately if recollection serves me correctly he has some fertility issues - hence why his service fee has halved from when he first stood despite his results.

AUTHOR

2014-10-29T08:59:46+00:00

kv joef

Roar Guru


Thx sheek, for your comments concerning both articles ... we really have lost the plot in some areas ... the blood is here ... here is an example of how simple it is ... it's funny Fawkner is a third generation Australasian horse in all lines. Fawkner's sire, Australasian bred stallion, Reset, has sired many other handy middle-distance horses from solid mares. Below is a small selection of Resets ... see what you notice ... open the pedigrees up in 4 different tabs and have a quick look ... it's not rocket science ... all are good black-type horses of recent years. Shoreham ... http://www.pedigreequery.com/shoreham4 Fawkner ... http://www.pedigreequery.com/fawkner Cassini (NZ) ... http://www.pedigreequery.com/cassini8 Mystic Prince ... http://www.pedigreequery.com/mystic+prince7 and maybe there is another observation with last year's W.A Derby Mystic Prince and Fawkner ... i know it is just the start of the story but not a bad place to start some research ...

2014-10-29T04:16:07+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


KVJ, You are brilliant man. I salute you. I hope the overseas connections put us to shame with their horses winning all the major races, WFAs & handicaps, from 2000m upwards, for many years to come. Our breeders & owners have trashed our racing history & heritage by abandoning staying races for the dime a dozen sprints. I hope we are shamed into the ground.

2014-10-29T01:48:32+00:00

Tristan Rayner

Editor


Enjoyable read KV. Interesting and informing.

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