Fallon salutes Stoute and the ‘greatest training performance of all time’
Ahead of Desert Crown’s date with destiny, memories flood back of Kris Kin in 2003.
Whatever the fate of Cazoo Derby favourite Desert Crown in this year’s Epsom Classic – which will be run in memory of Lester Piggott – Kieren Fallon feels Sir Michael Stoute’s greatest training performance was getting Kris Kin to win the 2003 renewal. Dante Stakes winner Desert Crown has had just two starts in his career, with a bruised foot halting his preparation before he started serious work this spring, so it will be a remarkable feat should he remain unbeaten after the big race on June 4. Yet Fallon, who was aboard Kris Kin when he won the Derby with what is regarded as one of the great Epsom rides, considers Stoute’s third of five Derby winners the most unlikely. The 57-year-old, a mainstay of the Freemason Lodge yard throughout his career, is now a key contributor to Charlie Appleby’s success at Godolphin as a work rider and advisor.
Fallon, who won the Derby three times, with Oath for Sir Henry Cecil, and both Kris Kin and North Light for Stoute, said: “I recently played golf with (Derby-winning jockey) Johnny Murtagh and Ed Chamberlin in the WellChild charity golf event at the Belfry. I played with Johnny, and even today, he is still going on about Kris Kin. “He said, ‘You nicked that race on Kris Kin!’ “Johnny is still not happy about it,” Fallon laughed. “He said, ‘That useless thing Kris Kin. I see you going down the inside and there is no chance you are going down there, and by going round the inside and sneaking around there, you had the pick of the race’. “That Derby is the one that got away from him. He rode Alamshar (eventual third), one he really liked.” The son of Kris S had previously won the Dee Stakes at Chester – unceremoniously unseating Fallon after the line – en route to Epsom and was a major gamble on Derby day, being backed down from all rates to 6-1 fourth-favourite in the 20-runner field, headed by 2000 Guineas winner Refuse To Bend. Despite public confidence, the yard were far from content, as Stoute conceded: “Kris Kin was frequently lame and he was probably the most surprising Derby winner we had.


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