Leading French trainer Andre Fabre is “firmly against” the proposal to open up the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe to geldings from 2027.
Board members at France Galop voted for the change at a meeting on Monday, according to online racing daily Jour De Galop. The European Pattern Committee will now need to agree to the change for it to be ratified.
Fabre, who has won Europe’s premier middle-distance contest a record eight times – most recently in 2019 with Waldgeist – is not a fan of the proposed change to the race conditions.
“I am firmly against it,” Fabre told the Press Association. “It is just a proposition at this stage, but I cannot see any benefit.
“It is true that the last few winners have not gone on to be successful stallions, apart from Sea The Stars (2009), but we need more stallions not less.
“The Arc is always a big field so that is not the reason and will agree that a gelding is much easier to train than a colt – it is an advantage.
“It is a bit like the Derby at Epsom. Some of the (Derby winning) sires have not been the greatest recently, but it is all cycles.
“I’m a big fan of tradition and do not like to break it without a serious reason. Just because there are one or two horses horses who are better gelded, it would be a shame.”
High-profile recent examples of top-class geldings who may have run in the race had they been allowed include Francis-Henri Graffard’s pair of Goliath and Calandagan, with the latter ending last year as the world’s highest rated racehorse after winning the Grand Prix de Saint-Cloud, the King George and the Champion Stakes at Ascot and becoming the first overseas runner in 20 years to lift the Japan Cup.
In theory, Calandagan could therefore belatedly get his shot at Arc glory as a six-year-old for owners Aga Khan Studs, who despite his ineligibility won last year’s Arc anyway with the brilliant colt Daryz.
“As the owners of Calandagan, obviously it was a bit frustrating that the big race he would go for in France wasn’t open to him, but as it turned out we won the race with Daryz and it meant Calandagan went to international targets, so in a global sense it wasn’t something that impacted us too much,” said Nemone Routh, French racing manager and director for the Aga Khan Studs.
“The 2027 Arc is a long way off and he has shown he doesn’t really like testing ground. If he’s still in great form and happy and he’s thriving obviously it would have to come into consideration, but it is a long way away.”