IT WAS difficult to find the losers. Cigar's win in the Dubai World Cup yesterday was a performance that grated with only the malevolent few. America's great horse kept his reputation intact, the crowd saw the stunning animal they had been promised and, perhaps most of all, Sheikh Mohammed was granted a result which will give his nation maximum exposure around the world.
They had never seen Cigar in Dubai, but those that thronged to Nad Al Sheba in their dish dashes on a breezy evening under ribbons of cloud had heard the stories. From the moment he stepped into the parade ring the big horse was applauded, the ripple coming each time he passed in front of the stands.
Cigar looked steeled for the occasion. He stared into the crowd with the sort of look you do not return in wharfside taverns. Two attendants held the reins at his bulging neck, hoping perhaps that the horse would not twitch and remove them from terra firma. Behind him, the beige stained tail reached almost to the ground.
Cigar was accompanied to the start by his old pony friend, Snowball, and looked as though he was wading through a drift as the stalls opened. The horse slipped and veered, a moment which his jockey, Jerry Bailey, considered cost him two places into the first turn.
L'Carriere and the Japanese horse, Lively Mount, blazed away at the front, but at the beginning of the straight Cigar had recovered himself and was still evidently full of life. He hit the front and characteristically cocked his head as if listening to a whisperer before the most serious challenge ever to his 14 race long winning streak emerged.
Burt Bacharach's Soul Of The Matter loomed alongside in a manner which suggested that Cigar would now have to show if courage was as much a part of his armoury as sheer ability. He answered gloriously. "It was the most he had ever been challenged in the stretch," Bill Mutt. Cigar's trainer. We've often wondered what would happen if a horse would run up and look him in the eye. Tonight we found out. He showed the courage it takes to be a true champion. That was sheer grit."
Bailey reported that Cigar had been down to the stub end for the first time in his dirt career. "I was a bit worried about the move he (Soul Of The Matter) made, but when he didn't go by me I knew I could have gone round another time and he wouldn't have beaten me," he said. "I don't think it was his best performance but I do believe it was his best effort."
The result was of little reassurance to those who believe British horses lose in North America's Breeders' Cup series because of the travelling rather than because" of inferiority. L'Carriere finished third for the United States, who filled the frame at an American style track that is routinely dominated by American riders (in the International Jockeys' Challenged and now by American horses.
Geoff Wragg's Pentire was Europe's best in fourth, while the home side's quartet was led home by Tamayaz in fifth place. This did not have Sheikh Mohammed blubbering into his handkerchief however.
Cigar has now earned $7.6 million for Alan Paulson but he may acquire much more for the rulers of Dubai. He may have helped establish the Emirates with the global respectability this race was, designed to attract.
. Trainer Karl Burke is to Weatherbys following the disqualification yesterday of last month's Lingfield winner Northern Trial the horse at the centre of the "winner who should not have run" fiasco. Burke will press for compensation from the Jockey Club's secretariat after what he called a catalogue of errors ended up with his horse running in and winning the Barnaby Rudge Claiming Stakes at Lingfield on February 22nd when a visor he insisted had been declared for the horse was removed at the start.