Paddy Bell, the man inspired by three-time Melbourne Cup winner Makybe Diva and defined by his association with unbeaten champion sprinter Black Caviar, is looking to another mare to deliver him something similarly momentous in Hong Kong this Sunday.
The 30-year-old New Zealand-born horseman has travelled G1 Chairman’s Sprint Prize (1200m) contender Viddora to Hong Kong, via Dubai, on behalf of the dual Group 1 winner’s owners and her trainer Lloyd Kennewell.
Just as he did for Peter Moody and Black Caviar’s connections when the 25-time winner from as many starts, ventured to Royal Ascot to take the G1 Diamond Jubilee Stakes (1200m) in June 2012.
Bell was Black Caviar’s regular track rider through most of her career. Her constant companion from morning track work to the races to the cargo holds of aircraft which ferried her across the world. He’s fulfilled the same role with Viddora and was the logical choice to do so after joining the Kennewell team about six months ago.
However, his work with Black Caviar – one of the greatest horses of the modern era – has condemned him to the same question repeatedly and one he’s already been asked several times with Viddora. “How does he assess a horse without reference to Black Caviar?”
“Yes, I’m asked that question just about every time I ride a good horse. Simply, I don’t compare them with Black Caviar. I put Black Caviar in a whole different league to all other horses. I try to compare horses based on those a level below that grade and just assess them on how they breathe and how they feel and what I think they might be capable of doing,” he said.
That doesn’t prevent him from offering a detailed assessment, nor making just one reference to Black Caviar, of Viddora, who comes to Hong Kong after running a creditable fourth to Blue Point in the G1 Al Quoz Sprint (1200m) at Meydan in Dubai.
“She’s a strong mare, not overly tall but she’s strong,” Bell says of Viddora, “she’s well-muscled, she’s powerful and carries herself in a beautiful manner. She’s kind on the bridle and she’s got a big stride, obviously not as big as Black Caviar’s but you can’t compare that. Her stride is big, she’s powerful and she breathes fluently with a good set of lungs. All that put together, I think she’s a very good horse.”