Dettori: A magical career never far away from the headlines
Perhaps the greatest ever is a household name around the world.
Frankie Dettori has been pure box office for racing – one of those rare figures to cross the divide from the back pages to the front. Ebullient, effervescent, magical – just a sample of the adjectives one could attach to peak Dettori moments throughout his illustrious near 40-year career, which will come to a close at the end of 2023, following the announcement of the Italian’s impending retirement. Those qualities allowed him to transcend the barriers and branch out into such themes as restaurants, food companies and even a yogurt endorsement in Europe. Dettori, 52, has had few peers in the weighing room, and fewer that could come close to matching his burning ambition. Combine those two priceless commodities and great things happen.More often than not for Dettori, greatness happened on the big occasion. There were unquestionably some lows, too, and in one form or another it has been headlines all the way from the day Milan-born Dettori rode his first British winner at Goodwood back in 1987. Son of the prolific Gianfranco Dettori, Lanfranco, to give him his full name, was dispatched to Newmarket as a 14-year-old to learn his trade with Luca Cumani. The now-retired Cumani described Dettori as “a bit wild, but I think we put him straight”, and that grounding was to provide the fledging rider with his first century of winners as a teenager in 1990, as well as his first Group One on Markofdistinction. Plenty had him marked as the next Lester Piggott – in fact record-breaking trainer Mark Johnston said at this year’s Royal Ascot: “No disrespect to Lester Piggott, but isn’t Frankie Dettori just the greatest jockey?” An indiscretion for possessing a small amount of cocaine in 1993 proved a momentary blip as his star continued to rise with a first British Classic winner and champion jockey title soon under his belt, as he struck up a lucrative partnership with Sheikh Mohammed’s Godolphin operation. Saturday, September 28, 1996 then marked Dettori’s passage into sporting folklore as he punched his way into the wider public consciousness with his ‘Magnificent Seven’ at Ascot – winning all seven races at mind-bogglingly huge odds. It seemed the only way was up.
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