Horse & Hound

Legends of the sport The brilliant career of threetime Gold Cup victor Best Mate, who was trained by Henrietta Knight

This three-time Gold Cup winner became the “people’s champion”, earning himself comparison­s with the mighty Arkle. Hannah Lemieux delves deeper into his success

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BEST MATE establishe­d a level of pre-eminence in racing that even 15 years after he left us, still remains untouchabl­e. He delivered every time his hooves touched a racecourse. His form is something to be marvelled at – from 22 starts under Rules, he finished in the top two every race bar one, and never fell.

It was his longevity as a National Hunt superstar that meant people yearned to see him in the flesh, flocking to the likes of Cheltenham to watch him. He became the first horse since Arkle to win three consecutiv­e Cheltenham Gold Cups, in 2002, 2003 and 2004.

Best Mate’s story began across the Irish Sea, when his breeder Jacques van’t Hart purchased Flat mare Katday for 1,250 Irish guineas. It was the start of a road to three-time Gold Cup glory for the breeder and the creation of a National Hunt icon.

Katday was put to stallion Un Desperado and on 28 January 1995, a bay colt was born near Trim in Co Meath. He was sold as a foal at the Tattersall­s (Ireland) November Sale at Fairyhouse in 1996. The renowned late bloodstock agent and horse dealer Tom Costello snapped up the foal for 2,500gns.

It was one of Costello’s then young sons who played a part in choosing the very apt name “Best Mate”. Having been nurtured at the Costello yard, Best Mate made his debut in a point-to-point at Lismore in February 1999 and it was here that trainer Henrietta Knight and her late husband, Terry Biddlecomb­e, first saw “Matey” during a visit to Ireland.

“We liked Best Mate in the paddock beforehand and Terry, in particular, had really

“He’d come alive at the races and I always

knew I was riding the best horse”

JOCKEY JIM CULLOTY

taken to him,” recalls Knight. “When Best Mate pulled up in that race, Terry said, ‘We should buy that horse.’ However, Tom wouldn’t sell until he’d won, so we waited.”

The couple returned to watch Best Mate win a two-runner race. This time their offer was accepted and they purchased him for owner Jim Lewis.

“Best Mate was always a top-class, natural jumper,” says Knight. “I never worried in a race that he would fall – he just never got it wrong – and he was always straightfo­rward to train.”

Jim Culloty partnered Best Mate in all but four of his races.

“I first sat on Best Mate at Hen’s yard,” remembers Culloty. “He was a goofy four-year-old with big ears, but had a lovely way of going from the start – he was a nice, pliable horse.”

Best Mate made his debut under Rules at the very place that would become synonymous with his name – a bumper at Cheltenham in 1999, which he duly won.

“Jim had a great relationsh­ip with Matey,” adds Knight. “They just seemed to trust each other and Jim always sat quiet on him during a race.”

With every run, Best Mate kept on improving. He found his way under the skin of racing fans and never let the punters down, finishing second if he didn’t win.

“YOU just couldn’t fault him on conformati­on,” explains Knight. “He was everything I look for in a horse and set the precedent for me in terms of

what I search for. Everyone always said he was stereotypi­cal of my type of horse. He walked well and he was a showman – he could have excelled in any discipline from eventing to dressage and showing.”

Known to be a weaver in his stable, Best Mate was turned out each day with Edredon Bleu, who also raced in Jim Lewis’s blue and

“Best Mate became the people’s champion. They loved him and he loved them – he changed the lives of those closest to him”

OWNER JIM LEWIS

maroon striped silks – inspired by the owner’s favourite football club, Aston Villa.

“I’m a big believer in turning horses out come rain or shine,” says Knight. “Best Mate was always in charge and bossed Edredon Bleu around. If he’d been a child at school, he would have been the cheeky, arrogant child in class.”

There was one thing Best Mate did not like, however, and that was soft ground.

“I’m not sure he would have won three consecutiv­e Gold Cups if the ground had been on the soft side,” muses Knight. “In that ground, he couldn’t show off his full ability and he didn’t like having to pull his feet out of mud.

Luckily for Best Mate and all concerned, the ground was officially “good” on all three of his Gold Cup glory days. Perhaps some things are just meant to be.

“Best Mate was unbeatable, unless in soft ground, and even then he finished second,” adds Culloty. “He was the most beautifull­y balanced horse to ride. When the ground suited him, he could stand off a fence from outside of the wings, but in the wrong ground you could just tell he hated it.

“I would get him into a rhythm and let him lob away during a race, he had such a high cruising speed. He’d come alive at the races and I always knew I was riding the best horse.”

Knight admits the first Gold Cup victory in 2002 was a surprise but that “Terry always had confidence in him”. By the time the National Hunt specialist lined up for his third consecutiv­e Gold Cup, he had a legion of fans gunning for him.

“Back then, emails and mobiles weren’t such a thing, so we used to get piles of letters

and cards for him sent by fans,” remembers Knight. “We would have people turning up at the yard wanting to see him in his stable, and we held an open day especially for him, so many fans packed in to see him – he was so popular.”

With his rise in popularity came a media storm and increased pressure for all his connection­s. His final Gold Cup was undoubtedl­y his most dramatic, and many will remember the emotional embrace between Knight and Biddlecomb­e in the aftermath.

During the race, Best Mate and Culloty got boxed in by rivals on the inside rail. A wave of panic trembled among spectators and could be heard in the TV commentato­r’s voice.

However, a superb jump at the second last earned him the lead and he battled up the famous Cheltenham hill in front.

“Winning on a horse of Best Mate’s calibre, you just feel relieved crossing the line that you haven’t gone and messed it up,” says Culloty.

And it wasn’t just Cheltenham where Best Mate raced into the history books – he also claimed the stakes in the King George VI Chase at Kempton on Boxing Day in 2002, under champion jockey AP McCoy.

IN his impeccable form under Rules stretching from 1999 until 2005, the only “PU” which glares off the page is his last race on 1 November 2005 at Exeter – the day we said goodbye to “Matey”. Having been pulled up by jockey Paul Carberry, he collapsed and died of a suspected heart attack, aged 10.

In her book entitled Not Enough Time: My Life With Terry Biddlecomb­e, Knight says of the moment she lost her stable star: “The end was quick. Best Mate would have felt no pain. It was as though he was in a coma.

He took his last breath and lay motionless. There was no struggle. His death was extremely peaceful.”

Jim Lewis had hoped Best Mate could be buried at Exeter; however, certain regulation­s prevented this, so his ashes were buried beside the winning post at Cheltenham a month after he died.

“Best Mate became the people’s champion,” said Lewis at the time. “They loved him and he loved them – he will be at rest at the scene of his greatest triumphs.” Best Mate undoubtedl­y changed the lives of those closest to him.

“He put my name on the map, he did so much for my training career and my life thereafter,” reflects Knight. “I was so very lucky to have two champions in my life – Terry and Best Mate.

“I have always lived for horses, but sometimes you need something to help you along and for me that was Best Mate. Horses like him don’t come by very often.”

Culloty describes his success on him as “career-defining”.

“If people remember me as a jockey, it’s because of Best Mate,” he says. “He deserved a long, happy retirement and it’s devastatin­g that never happened. It’s almost ironic that such a healthy horse with such a big heart died of a heart attack.”

Best Mate is immortalis­ed in two bronze statues, one in the village where he was trained and another at Cheltenham Racecourse. He may be gone, but the legacy of Best Mate lives on in the heart of every racing fan who was lucky enough to witness him grace a racecourse. He really was the people’s horse.

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 ??  ?? “Best Mate was the most beautifull­y balanced horse
to ride,” says jockey Jim Culloty, pictured jumping the last on their way to a first Gold Cup win in 2002, the first of
three on the bounce
“Best Mate was the most beautifull­y balanced horse to ride,” says jockey Jim Culloty, pictured jumping the last on their way to a first Gold Cup win in 2002, the first of three on the bounce
 ??  ?? Above: Jim Culloty, who partnered Best Mate in all but four of his races, remembers “Matey” as a “goofy four-year-old with big ears”
Above: Jim Culloty, who partnered Best Mate in all but four of his races, remembers “Matey” as a “goofy four-year-old with big ears”
 ??  ?? “He did so much for my training career and my life thereafter. I was very lucky to have two champions in my life – Terry and Best Mate,” reflects Henrietta Knight
“He did so much for my training career and my life thereafter. I was very lucky to have two champions in my life – Terry and Best Mate,” reflects Henrietta Knight
 ??  ?? Unbeknown to
Jim Culloty, a fortnight after a media open day at Henrietta Knight’s yard (left), Best Mate would reign triumphant in the Cheltenham Gold Cup
Unbeknown to Jim Culloty, a fortnight after a media open day at Henrietta Knight’s yard (left), Best Mate would reign triumphant in the Cheltenham Gold Cup
 ??  ?? Looking every inch the champion, Best Mate stands patiently in the parade ring at Exeter for the race that was destined to be his last
Looking every inch the champion, Best Mate stands patiently in the parade ring at Exeter for the race that was destined to be his last
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