In what could be another phenomenal season for Nicky
Henderson, he need look no further for a superstar than last term’s Arkle
conqueror, Sprinter Sacre. This French bred gelding was foaled way back in
2006, and experienced somewhat up-and-down form, before exploding onto the scene
as a real star in 2011/12, when he tackled fences.
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| Probably the most fluent jumper in training |
Sprinter Sacre began his racing career in a National Hunt
flat race at Ascot in February 2010, where he won by just a nose to King Of The
Night. A couple of months later he won a similar race at Ayr by a more
impressive 4 lengths. When sighted again in November 2010, he was being sent
over hurdles, and lost his first test to Frascati Park having been sent off 6/5
favourite. The jury was out; would he be as good as expected? An answer of
sorts came just two weeks later when he slammed the field in a hurdle race at
Ascot by 10 lengths. Following this, Henderson decided to bring Sprinter Sacre
to the Cheltenham Festival, where he was to run in the Supreme Novices Hurdle.
Tony McCoy was booked to ride, and while travelling strongly, he collided with
the last flight, and weakened to finish third to Al Ferof and Spirit Son.
In the 2011/12 season, the shrewd Henderson switched
Sprinter Sacre to chasing, and his first test was a steeplechase at Doncaster in
December 2011. He demolished his opponents by 24 lengths at odds of 2/9, and
soon he would take a jump up in class. At the end of the month, Sprinter Sacre
contested the Grade II Wayward Lad Novices Chase at Kempton. His main competitor
in on the day was the 2011 Champion Hurdle runner-up, Peddler’s Cross, and a
horse who only found Hurricane Fly too good at the festival had to be
respected. Sprinter Sacre led from the start, and crossing the finish line, he
was a massive 16 lengths clear. The jockey that day, Barry Geraghty, described
him as “one of the best I’ve ever sat on.” Then began the expectation, and the
festival was looming for the world’s newest chasing star.
In the February of 2012, Sprinter Sacre won impressively by
6 lengths against more experienced chasers, like the runner-up on the day,
French Opera. At Cheltenham, Sprinter Sacre was competing in the Arkle, where
he re-opposed a horse that had beaten him over hurdles in 2011, Al Ferof, as
well as the formidable Cue Card and Menorah. He had the field in trouble four
fences out, and as he strode away, none of them could go with him. He went on
to win readily by 7 lengths, despite being eased by Geraghty in the closing
stages. Speaking after the win, Barry Geraghty described he ride in the Arkle
as a “schooling session”, and referred to the horse as “the special one.” A
month later, Sprinter Sacre had his rivals running from the track, not on it,
and only three horses showed up to face him. He was sent off at odds of 1/7,
and he strolled around, jumping marvellously, to record a 13 length win from
runner-up, Toubab. Upon this victory, his trainer, Nicky Henderson described
him as “frightening…extraordinary”, and he proclaimed there was “an aura about
him.”
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| A legend in the making |
In the 2012/13 season, the chaser we will all be watching
with admiration is no doubt Sprinter Sacre. In September, Nicky Henderson
declared his intention to take the “conventional route” to the Queen Mother
Champion Chase at Cheltenham in March, starting with the Tingle Creek at
Sandown. He said, “He (Sprinter Sacre) may well take the conventional route of
the Tingle Creek, Victor Chandler, Game Spirit, and all being well, he Champion
Chase.” Henderson also said he genuinely finds Sprinter Sacre “scary to watch”,
but that he was “spectacular.” Sprinter Sacre is currently trading at 11/10 in
the ante-post markets for the Queen Mother Champion Chase, but expect those
odds to shorten further as we watch the Tingle Creek, Victor Chandler, and the
Game Spirit. Despite him likely to oppose the likes of Finian’s Rainbow and Sizing
Europe on the day, 11/10 already looks a steal for one of the greatest ever.














