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Frankel Runs Away At Ascot, Firms Up Standing As World's Top Horse

Frankel, with jockey Tom Queally aboard, as he sped away with the win today at Royal Ascot.
Alan Crowhurst
/
Getty Images
Frankel, with jockey Tom Queally aboard, as he sped away with the win today at Royal Ascot.

While there was no Triple Crown again this year, horse racing is not lacking for news about an amazing horse.

Consider Frankel, which today made the rest of the field in England's Queen Anne Stakes at Royal Ascot look like they didn't belong to be on the same track with him. An astounding 1-10 favorite before the race (you'd win 1 pound if you bet 10 on him to win), the 4-year-old lived up to that billing. He beat his nearest rival, Excelebration, by 11 lengths. Bullet Train, a brother of Frankel's who helped set the pace in the early going, looked more like a steam engine by the end.

England's Timeform, which rates horses with a system that combines such criteria as race distances, weights carried and winning lengths, today gave Frankel the highest rating in its history, a 147.

"The facts are that Frankel's performance is likely to surpass anything witnessed in Timeform's 64-year history," Timeform "flat editor" David Johnson says in a statement the racing site posted online.

CNN gushes that:

"Once Tom Queally, Frankel's jockey, opened the tap there was no way any other horse was going to get close to Frankel, the giant bay increasing his lead with every one of his all-devouring strides. Still in full flow as he passed the winning post, it is hard to recall a performance like his by any horse in recent memory.

" 'Breathtaking,' 'astonishing,' 'brilliant' were just some of the milder adjectives murmured by appreciative fans, even the unexperienced racegoers among them sensing they were witnessing something extraordinary."

Videos of Frankel's win are popping up on YouTube.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Mark Memmott is NPR's supervising senior editor for Standards & Practices. In that role, he's a resource for NPR's journalists – helping them raise the right questions as they do their work and uphold the organization's standards.