Daily Express

Petite Etoile was indeed a little star

In the first of a new series, our racing team reveal the horse that got them into the sport

- By Danny Hall

ONCE is a mistake, twice is a pattern – wisely Lester Piggott didn’t turn it into a habit.

Piggott, then stable jockey to Noel Murless, spurned the ride on the strong-willed, mercurial Petite Etoile in the Free Handicap of 1959 as champion jockey Doug Smith steered her to an easy three-length triumph.

With five Murless horses to choose from in the 1000 Guineas three weeks later, Piggott again got it wrong, with Smith guiding the steel-grey filly to her first Classic success.

It was an error Lester never repeated, and Petite Etoile’s subsequent fame became indelibly linked to her 24-yearold partner, who won the first of his 11 jockeys’ titles a year later.

In a career lasting four seasons, she was never out of the first two in 19 races, her wins including the 1000 Guineas, Oaks, two Coronation Cups and a Champion Stakes.

Not bad for a filly who began her career with defeat in a two-horse race and whom Murless described as being ‘a right monkey at the best of times’.

For this impression­able primary school racing student, the form figures 111111 next to Petite Etoile’s name were special enough. But it was the style of her victories – captured in the pioneering days of black and white TV racing coverage – which captivated.

Successes in her final three races of 1959 – the Sussex Stakes, Yorkshire Oaks and

Champion Stakes – came by less than a length as Lester played to the crowd with an audacious combinatio­n of stealth and showboatin­g.

Off the back of nine straight top-class wins, Petite Etoile lined up for the King George VI & Queen Elizabeth Stakes in the summer of 1960, just two months after the death of her owner Prince Aly Khan in a Paris car crash.

Despite missing her warm-up race due to coughing, she was widely thought to be invincible.

However, on

Ascot’s soft ground, her devastatin­g trademark turn of foot never materialis­ed.

Swishing her tail under pressure, she responded gamely but at the line was still half a length adrift of the rugged winner Aggressor, trained by John Gosden’s dad ‘Towser’.

In racing circles, it was an earth-shattering result – and a tearful one in the Hall household.

Another bout of coughing then curtailed her season.

But nothing adds to the myth of a champion more than their reaction to defeat, and Petite Etoile returned to win four more races in her final campaign including a second Coronation Cup.

As Murless proudly said of his little star: “She was unique in every way.”

 ??  ?? STYLISH PERFORMER: Petite Etoile had champion attributes
STYLISH PERFORMER: Petite Etoile had champion attributes
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