Big-race king Kinane has Arc memories to treasure
Sea The Stars and Montjeu were unforgettable winners in Paris.
Becomingly, the Irish still put modesty high on the list of qualities they value in a hero. There is still, for many of us, something irresistibly attractive about the champion who holds his peace and lets his deeds speak for him. That, certainly, was Sea The Stars’ way. In size, shape and temperament, he had neither Frankel’s flamboyance nor Montjeu’s swagger. His jockey, Mick Kinane, possesses similar traits. Out of the saddle his words are softly spoken, considered, peppered with modesty and humour. Once aboard, through his gentle, steely fingers flowed the one thing a rider gives a horse above all else – a confidence to mask any shortcomings. Kinane won the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe three times, the first in 1989 with Carroll House, who was unquestionably an average winner at best.He also partnered two of the finest Arc winners of any generation, yet any comparisons between Montjeu and Sea The Stars, other than each boasting a respective brilliance, could not be made with any assuredness. “Montjeu was a very proud horse – he had a love affair with himself. He was a really good-looking horse. “I gave him a bad ride in the Arc,” Kinane said, with an unerring matter-of-factness. “A very good horse nearly got away.” The 1999 renewal, run on deep ground, was a fair one, with 14 runners that included Daylami, who had won the Coronation Cup, King George and Irish Champion Stakes, multiple Group One winners Croco Rouge, Tiger Hill and Borgia, and Japanese challenger El Condor Pasa, who set solid fractions under Masayoshi Ebina and stole a march on the field. Kinane almost found himself boxed in behind a hard-ridden and tiring Greek Dance with three furlongs to race, before finding a gap and switching to the outside. With one, long, graceful sweep, like a scythe through long grass, the John Hammond-trained Montjeu ran down El Condor Pasa in the last 100 yards to score by half a length. When you remember the records of his opponents, the charge which brushed them aside like autumn leaves must rank among the finest Arc victories.
“Montjeu needs a run, needs a run badly…”
You know what happened next in the 1999 Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe! pic.twitter.com/rLVU8dbEi2 — At The Races (@AtTheRaces) September 27, 2021
✨ Un champion né sous une bonne étoile… 🏆 Zoom sur l’incroyable carrière de Sea The Stars
Son portrait ▶ https://t.co/uMhJtTJYpI pic.twitter.com/ixgZ4qtNqo — Equidia (@equidia) August 18, 2021


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