

The British Racing Hall of Fame will have two new members Oct. 18 as Enable , perhaps best known in the United States for defeating males in the 2018 Breeders' Cup Turf (G1T) at Churchill Downs, and Major Dick Hern join the modern greats of British Flat racing as the latest inductees.
Enable is best remembered for her sustained brilliance over five seasons in training which included 11 group 1 victories across four different countries.
Owned by the late Prince Khalid Abdullah's Juddmonte Farms and trained by John Gosden, the daughter of Nathaniel won 15 of her 19 races from 2016-2020, with the majority being achieved at the highest level. The bay filly, a Juddmonte Farms homebred, made history by becoming the first horse to win the King George VI & Queen Elizabeth Stakes (G1) at Ascot three times. She is also one of only eight horses to gain two triumphs in the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe (G1) while her victory in the Breeders' Cup Turf cemented her international reputation.
Currently Enable is part of Juddmonte's impressive breeding operation as a broodmare at Banstead Manor in Newmarket.
John Gosden, who trained Enable throughout her career, said: "I've never known a filly like her that could take the training and the racing. She probably did something that may never be done again as a 3-year-old to go and win the Oaks, then the Irish Oaks followed by the King George, then to York to win the Yorkshire Oaks and then dust them all off in the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe. I don't know if I'll ever be lucky enough to see another filly who could do something like that. She was without doubt one of those absolute race mares of a lifetime."
Simon Mockridge, general manager at Juddmonte UK, also reflected on her career and the most memorable moment, "I think her first win at Chantilly in the Arc was a real highlight. It was away from Longchamp, and it was a very special day because her draw wasn't perfect and it was a big field, and she ran away with that race. As a 3-year-old she was quite imperious. She had seven starts, six wins by a cumulative 24 lengths. She was very, very good that year."
Major Dick Hern was one of the outstanding trainers in the second half of the 20th century, scooping 16 British Classics and guiding the careers of multiple champions. Hern died in Oxford at the age of 81 in May 2002, but his legacy lives on and he will be posthumously inducted into the British Racing Hall of Fame.
William Richard Hern was born in Jan. 20, 1921 in Holford, Somerset, and spent his early adult years serving in the army in North Africa and Italy, becoming widely known as "The Major" from then on.
Hern was Champion Trainer on four occasions, in 1962, 1972, 1980 and 1983, and his British Classic triumphs included three Derby winners in Troy (1979), Henbit (1980), and Nashwan (1989). He also became the first trainer to saddle five winners of the King George VI & Queen Elizabeth Stakes at Ascot, plus he won every Irish classic at least once.
He trained none faster than Dayjur, who lit up the 1990 season with his electrifying pace. The colt reeled off successive victories in the Temple Stakes (G2), King's Stand Stakes (G2), Nunthorpe Stakes (G1), Sprint Cup (G1), and Prix de l'Abbaye (G1) before an agonizing defeat on dirt in the Breeders' Cup Sprint (G1) at Belmont Park when he had glory in his grasp only to jump a shadow in the final strides. He was beaten by a neck by filly Safely Kept.

Hern becomes the fifth trainer to be inducted into the Hall of Fame after Vincent O'Brien, Sir Henry Cecil, Sir Michael Stoute, and Aidan O'Brien.
Brough Scott, a British Racing Hall of Fame panel member, has narrated a special video to celebrate the achievements of a very special trainer. He said, "A great trainer, and a great man, Dick Hern is the most deserved of entries to the Hall of Fame. He was a champion; champion trainer, handler of the greatest of horses, and a champion in life itself.
"Of all his achievements, nothing can match what Dick did with Nashwan in the summer of 1989. By then paralyzed from a hunting fall, he had to use his eyes, not his hands, to feel for fitness and at Newmarket and then at Epsom, Nashwan was a training masterpiece."
Nick Smith, co-chair of the British Racing Hall of Fame panel, said: "There was unanimity across the panel that both Enable and Major Dick Hern are extremely worthy inductees to the British Racing Hall of Fame. Enable became a household name while the achievements of Major Dick Hern in the face of personal adversity were nothing short of astonishing. We look forward to welcoming those connected with both of them to Ascot on QIPCO British Champions Day and celebrating their achievements."