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Nashwan v Cacoethes: the great champion who sealed a thrilling trilogy by a neck

A great horse: Nashwan (Willie Carson) outpoints Cacoethes and Greville Starkey in the 1989 King George
True great: Nashwan (Willie Carson) outpoints Cacoethes and Greville Starkey in the 1989 King George

Class had seen Nashwan sail through each test in his Classic season with flying colours but his resolution was tested to the hilt to repel old rival Cacoethes at Ascot.

Their thrilling encounter on in 1989 was not the first time the pair had crossed paths. The Listed Autumn Stakes at the Berkshire course the previous October had provided fertile ground for a prolonged feud. Nashwan won, with Cacoethes third. It developed into a familiar theme.

The brilliance of Nashwan became apparent to all the following spring, when reports of impressive homework were confirmed accurate as he scored in the 1,000 Guineas by a length. Success in the Derby followed, with Cacoethes again third, beaten seven lengths.

Following his success in the 2,000 Guineas, Nashwan wins the 1989 Derby to land a plethora of ante-post bets
Nashwan had been faultless in his three-year-old season prior to the King George, including a comfortable Derby winCredit: Mark Cranham (racingpost.com/photos)
A dominant Eclipse win later, Nashwan and Cacoethes reunited for round three. With Prix du Jockey Club and Irish Derby winner Old Vic sidelined, victory in the King George seemed a mere formality for Nashwan. At prohibitive odds of 2-9 the market agreed. It did not turn out that way.

Willie Carson blinked first on Nashwan entering the straight and set out after leader Top Class. He easily reeled in the 50-1 outsider and cruised on by at the two-furlong marker. But Greville Starkey and Cacoethes tracked the unbeaten favourite through travelling just as well, if not better, and the titanic tussle began.

Willie Carson and Nashwan after their 1989 2,000 Guineas victory
Nashwan: the last horse to win the 2,000 Guineas, Derby, Eclipse and King George in the same seasonCredit: Mark Cranham
With every stride Cacoethes appeared close to having his measure but with each stride that followed Nashwan found another answer. The pattern continued into the final furlong, but the great champion would not lie down. More pressure, more answers. Result? Another win, by a neck.

The scoreline ticked over to three-zero. But it did not do justice to the runner-up, with the pair seven lengths clear of the third and 11 clear of subsequent Arc winner Carroll House.

And the diminished margin did not do justice to the outstanding Nashwan, who remains the last horse to win the 2,000 Guineas, Derby, Eclipse and King George in the same season.


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Deputy news editor

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