Free Eagle may get another chance to take on Golden Horn in the Arc

John Gosden concedes fact that Dermot Weld horse was third was help to Frankie Dettori

Frankie Dettori on Golden Horn leads the field of the Qipco Irish Champion Stakes at Leopardstown. Photograph: Alan Crowhurst/Getty Images
Frankie Dettori on Golden Horn leads the field of the Qipco Irish Champion Stakes at Leopardstown. Photograph: Alan Crowhurst/Getty Images

Free Eagle could get another chance to beat Golden Horn in the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe after their controversial QIPCO Irish Champion Stakes clash on Saturday when the English-trained winner kept the race in the stewards' room despite dramatically barging into his rival in the straight.

That there wasn’t a high-profile disqualification at Leopardstown, just a few hours after the Doncaster St Leger, appeared to centre on the final position of Found who finished runner-up to the wayward winner as Free Eagle faded to third.

The Weld-trained star was also interfered with by Golden Horn close to the line but Weld has played down the incidents which in other racing jurisdictions would have seen the winner automatically placed behind Free Eagle.

“He was unlucky not to finish second and if he had finished runner-up I have no doubt he’d have got the race. But the rules are the rules and they are the way they are. I’ve no complaints about that,” said the trainer who suggested the interference cost his horse victory.

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"I will speak to the owner but there are options such as the Arc, the Breeders Cup and the English Champion Stakes. We will let things settle for a few days before deciding. He has come out of the race unharmed but tired. He gave his all and it was an excellent run."

Stewards’ inquiry

Turf Club chief executive

Denis Egan

indicated the final positions of Found and Free Eagle were important in deciding the course of the stewards’ inquiry.

“If Free Eagle had finished second, the stewards would have had to decide if Golden Horn had improved his position through interfering with him. If they felt, on the balance of probabilities, that Golden Horn had, then he would have been disqualified. But that’s all an unknown, and there would have been a lot of things that would have had to be taken into account,” Egan said.

John Gosden is definitely targeting the Arc – and a potential clash with the mighty Treve – with Golden Horn but 24 hours later the English trainer admitted to relief at surviving the stewards and said: "I think the fact that Free Eagle was third was a great help to us."

He pointed to the shadow from the grandstand as the reason for the Derby winner’s violent swerve: “It caught him and he ran right across the shadow of the grandstand. The sun was out. They should probably have run the race later when there was no sun. I’m glad I know why he did it because he’s never done anything like that before.”

Saturday’s other Group 1, the Coolmore Fastnet Rock Matron Stakes, was relatively uneventful as Legatissimo stamped her authority with aplomb.

"She hadn't run in about six weeks and we'll try to give her another six weeks and head to the Breeders' Cup. I'd like to go for the Filly and Mare Turf," said trainer David Wachman.

Saturday’s Leopardstown crowd reached 13,800, an almost 5 per cent increase on the inaugural ‘Champions Weekend’ crowd in 2014.

Brian O'Connor

Brian O'Connor

Brian O'Connor is the racing correspondent of The Irish Times. He also writes the Tipping Point column