By Simon Rowlands -- published 27th August 2014
In his latest blog Simon Rowlands brings you the top performers of the 2014 turf season according to the stopwatch...
Among the juvenile colts, Ivawood is clearly a smart performer, and may yet prove to be as effective at 7f/1m as he has been to date at 6f. But, a bit less obviously, his stablemate Estidhkaar has already put up a good effort on the clock at 7f on good to soft going and looks nearly as good a 2000 Guineas contender at this stage.
The recent Ebor Meeting at York was a great success in many respects: in terms of competitive racing; in terms of good weather and good crowds; and for followers of the Handicap Previews on these pages (to name but three). It was also a great success in terms of the quality of performances compared to the clock.
Analysis of overall times may no longer be cutting edge, as it was when Phil Bull established Timeform in the 1940s, but it still has indisputable merit. The principle is that ability may be masked when horses run against each other â due to the multiple confounding factors associated with a chaotic horse race â but superior ability measured against the clock is open to far less dispute.
After all the relevant factors are taken into account â such as the track and distance, the abilities, ages and weights carried of the horses, the apparent state of the going, the effects of wind and rain â a good time signifies a good horse, period.
A poor time does not necessarily signify a poor horse, however. Races are run not to achieve the fastest possible times, or the highest possible ratings, but for one horse to beat the others. Horseracing can be a highly tactical sport (that is a major reason why it is so good to bet upon), and the pace at which a race is run will affect the overall time the horses are able to achieve.
This gap between ability and achievement, as judged by time, has been addressed in recent years by sectional-timing analysis. But it should not be forgotten that both sectional times and overall times measure the same essential things: a horseâs ability as manifested in its time over a given distance. An overall time is, in effect, a sectional time which covers the entirety of a race.
At York, we saw several high-quality performances as judged by overall times that have been contextualised for the circumstances which gave rise to them. This requires not only truly-run races but horses of superior ability running at, or near, their best.
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It can be seen that seven of the top 30 timefigure performances across the age-groups in 2014 to date came at the York Ebor Meeting, with a remarkable top-three juvenile figures achieved in one race, the Lowther Stakes, won by Tiggy Wiggy.
That Lowther Stakes came in a course-record time for two-year-olds, but, more importantly, it overshadowed all others on the day after adjustments have been made for various factors. The time was more than 2 seconds quicker than that for a valuable juvenile Sales race which immediately preceded it. Second and third, Cursory Glance and Anthem Alexander, also beat the old record.
Postponed (beat Snow Sky in Great Voltigeur Stakes) and Sole Power (beat Stepper Point in Nunthorpe Stakes) were others to put up especially meritorious efforts against the clock during the four days of action.
A comparison with the age-group leaders in recent years shows that Tiggy Wiggy has already achieved a figure that would top her generation in some years, but that the other divisional leaders â Night of Thunder for the three-year-olds and Mukhadram/Baccarat/Telescope for the older horses â are some way behind the usual benchmarks.
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There are four months still to go this year, of course, but the majority of older-horse bests, and all of the three-year-old bests, had been achieved by this juncture in recent years.
We have seen no Frankels â top on time at two, three and four, the last two with the fastest relative times this century â this year and almost certainly wonât for a very long time. But those historical figures ultimately confirmed the status of other top-notchers, and this yearâs may still have predictive value for horses that are underappreciated at this stage.
Tiggy Wiggy may have been dominant in the Lowther Stakes, but she is most unlikely to stay a mile next year, whereas Cursory Glance is very likely to and deserves to be regarded as an excellent 1000 Guineas prospect.
Among the juvenile colts, Ivawood is clearly a smart performer, and may yet prove to be as effective at 7f/1m as he has been to date at 6f. But, a bit less obviously, his stablemate Estidhkaar has already put up a good effort on the clock at 7f on good to soft going and looks nearly as good a 2000 Guineas contender at this stage.
Among the three-year-olds, there is a fair chance that we have not yet seen the best of Eagle Top, who put up his 119 timefigure on just his fourth lifetime start, behind Taghrooda in the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes. He promises to stay beyond 12f but would need to be supplemented for the St Leger, a race that would seem made for him in many respects.