Every generation of racing fans has at least one memory of the brave but ultimately doomed front-runner; the horse that, on the biggest stage, opens up a seemingly unassailable lead, only to suffer agonising defeat at the last.
Think Stay Gold and Yutaka Take hunting down Frankie Dettori on Ekraar in the 2001 G1 Hong Kong Vase (2400m) or, for British jump racing devotees of a certain vintage, Crisp going 30 lengths clear in the Grand National only to capitulate to Red Rum in the dying strides.
A habitual front-runner who had already burnished his international Group 1 credentials with a dead heat in the G1 Dubai Turf (1800m), Panthalassa went so far clear in the Tenno Sho Autumn six weeks ago under veteran jockey Yutaka Yoshida, that trainer Yoshito Yahagi must have believed victory was his.
It took an exceptional performance from Equinox to haul the five-year-old son of Lord Kanaloa in, with only the final five metres out of 2,000 costing Panthalassa a memorable success.
“I was a bit disappointed in the Tenno Sho because I thought he could do it but I was pleased that the Japanese racing fans were very excited (by his performance),” says Yahagi.
Excitement is an understatement as Yoshida took the well-known strength of Panthalassa to maintain a gallop and went all in, still holding a huge advantage turning for home before his stride shortened in an unforgiving final sprint.