This article is the second of a two-part
article which looks at the fantastic career of
Best Mate, arguably one of the best ever National Hunt race horses
ever.
You may remember that Part One of this article
ended by looking at Best Mate's record of 14 wins from 22 starts, as
well as an amazing seven second-placed finishes.
The only ever time that Best Mate did not
finish first or second in a race was in his last race, and this was a
sad occasion for everyone involved in horse racing.
Tragedy For Best Mate
Well, the 22nd race of his career is one that
I would rather forget (along with all of the horse racing loving
public) as it was the race where unfortunately Best Mate lost his
life. The only consolation is that he died doing something that he
loved, and it showed the bravery of the horse.
He was known to have had a big heart, being a
generous horse and always giving 100 per cent. The tragedy happened at
Exeter racecourse on 1 November 2005, during the running of the
William Hill Haldon Gold Cup race.
Jockey Paul Carberry knew part of the way
around the course that the horse was not quite right, and as a
precaution pulled the horse up (withdrew from the race). However, in
negotiating a way to get off the race track, Best Mate collapsed and
though vets fought as hard as they could to revive him, he died
moments later.
A True Star
But
in the end he went doing what he enjoyed and what he did best. It is a
sad reality that we all have to go sometime, but right to very end he
did what he did so very well.
A measure of how much he is respected in the
horse racing fraternity is the fact that he has a bronze statue of him
at Cheltenham racecourse, where his 3 consecutive victories in the
Gold Cup are an achievement that may never happen again in my
lifetime. He was also voted in to Cheltenham's elite 12 Hall of Fame -
another appropriate accolade that this horse fully deserved for his
achievements.
Indeed, his ashes are also scattered at the
winning post of the same racecourse, and were done so at the request
of owner Jim Lewis. The ceremony was held on December 10 2005, even
though Lewis' wife had tragically died not two days before that, after
a seven month battle against cancer.
The Legend Lives On
And so the legend of Best Mate lives on, with
his ashes and the statue standing as majestically as
he did at the winning post at Cheltenham. In fact, Best Mate has a
brother who is still running.
He is called Cornish Rebel and is right out of
the Best Mate mould, a talented horse with a bright future ahead.
I've never felt so attached to a horse, nor a
shocked to hear the news of his passing. But he truly was a great
horse and his spirit will live long in the heart, even though we will
not see him grace the race track again.
I write a lot about my interest in horses and
some would even call me a horse racing expert, but I'm really a big
fan of the sport and very passionate about it, so I'm not sure if that
classes me as an expert.
Which just leaves me to say thanks Best Mate
for sharing yourself with the horse racing world. It wouldn't have
been the same without you.