What we do know is that Itsallfrenchtome comes from a yard in fine form. Harry Fry operates out of Corscombe in Dorset and has sent out 25 winners already this season, which tells you this isn't a stable sending out runners just to give horses a day out. When Fry pitches up with a debutant, it's worth paying attention.
The horse's breeding carries a distinctly European flavour — by Moises Has out of an Enrique mare, both names rooted in French and Spanish bloodlines rather than the more familiar Irish and British sires that dominate the sport. Whether that's where the name comes from is anyone's guess, but it raises a smile either way. Breeding is never a guarantee of anything, but it does sketch the broad outline of what a horse might become.
Beyond that, the slate is blank. A debut is one of racing's great unknowns — you're watching something reveal itself for the very first time, and nobody, not even the trainer, knows for certain how it will respond to the noise, the crowds, or the company of other horses at full gallop. That uncertainty is half the point.