Wonderful Updates For Arqana October

DEAUVILLE, France—Following on from an extraordinarily robust fortnight of trade at Tattersalls, the yearling sales action has switched back to Deauville, with a higher number of visitors than expected, especially breeze-up pinhookers unable to fill their quotas in the face of strong opposition in Newmarket.

Though held in its traditional slot, the Arqana October Sale has a slightly different feel this year as it incorporates a number of yearlings which would otherwise have been in the V2 Sale in August, as well as those originally destined for Osarus in September. In order to accommodate this higher level of demand, the sale has been extended to five days, beginning at the Elie de Brignac complex from Monday.

“In the spring and summer when we were putting the catalogues together for September and October it was very difficult to understand what was going to happen in the autumn,” said Arqana’s executive director Freddy Powell on Sunday. “Some people wanted to put some of their October horses into the Select Sale in September to try to sell as soon as possible, just in case, and some people wanted to go to October even if we felt they had suitable horses for the Select Sale. So it was a big juggling act with all the vendors and breeders, but Ludovic [Cornuel] and his bloodstock team have done a good job and have kept in touch with the vendors all the time to keep them informed.”

Having shunted back its major August Yearling Sale, which goes hand in hand with Deauville’s top-class month of racing, to a quieter September date, there is a sense of relief at some return to normality for Arqana, which had to delay and relocate its breeze-up sale in the spring to hold it in tandem with Goffs UK at Doncaster.

Powell continued, “The Arc Sale was the first sale in France this year to be held at the right time. Everything else has been different. At one point this year we didn’t even know if all the races could be run—there was a concern that this could be a lost generation—but thankfully most of the big races have gone ahead even if they weren’t all at the right time.”

As prize-money has fallen in other jurisdictions, and with no owners currently allowed to go racing in Ireland, and no spectators in Britain, this season France Galop has been proactive in its campaign to lure overseas owners to French racing. An extra incentive will be in place from next season as the owners’ premiums are raised to 70% on top of prize-money for 2-year-old races, and that will be extended to 3-year-old races from 2022.

“Knowing that we didn’t have our V2 Sale this year, and that Osarus didn’t have its sale, all those 2-year-old types are in this sale, so we can believe and hope that people who are looking for 2-year-old types are going to find them here,” Powell said. “There are a lot of pinhookers around, and obviously a lot of them couldn’t get to Keeneland this year. They are optimistic people and it’s great that they believe that we will be having breeze-ups here next year. It’s what we all hope for.”

He added, “The French stallions are quite popular in Europe at the moment and we have a catalogue full of them, and the catalogue has improved in the last few weeks with some good updates.”

In the case of lot 170, there has been not just one but two Group 1 updates since the publication of the catalogue. The colt, offered by Coulonces Sales, is from the first crop of the Haras de Montfort & Préaux stallion Recorder (GB) and is a half-brother to Wonderful Tonight (Fr) (Le Havre {Ire}), the winner of the Qatar Prix de l’Opera and QIPCO British Champions Fillies & Mares S. for English-based French trainer David Menuisier and owner Chris Wright.

Wonderful Tonight and the yearling were bred by Montfort & Préaux manager Mathieu Alex and the stud’s consultant Sylvain Vidal under the banner of Ecurie Taos. The pair bought the dam, Salvation (GB) (Montjeu {Ire}), privately for £2,000 after she failed to sell in the ring at the Tattersalls July Sale of 2010.

“She’s from Camelot’s family and there was a lot of class in there, and we were both big fans of Montjeu,” said Alex at Arqana on Sunday morning. “We bought her quite cheaply and at the time Air Chief Marshal (Ire) was on the farm. We have always supported our stallions and we thought that she would be a good match for him, both on bloodlines and physically.”

That first mating with Air Chief Marshal resulted in Penjade (Fr), who was a winner and twice listed-placed in France for Philippe Decouz before being switched to Chad Brown’s string in America, where she was fourth in the GIII Athenia S. The breeders have been true to their word in supporting the farm’s own stallions, and Salvation, now the dam of four winners, has twice visited Rajsaman (Fr) before her promotion to Le Havre’s book produced Wonderful Tonight from the second of her two matings with the stud’s flagship stallion. As well as the Recorder yearling colt, she also as a filly foal by the Queen’s former runner and is now back in foal to Le Havre.

“All her foals have been talented horses and she has been a very lucky mare for us,” Alex continued. “When Wonderful Tonight went to the yearling sale she was bought back in the ring and I said to David Menuisier and Crispin de Moubray that the filly was bred on the farm and that we liked her, even if she wasn’t a typical sales horse. To be fair to them, they said straight away that they would send a vet and that if all was good they would buy her. I am delighted for them and for Chris Wright as she will be a lovely broodmare for his stud.”

In winning the Prix de l’Opera at the Arc meeting, Wonderful Tonight became the fifth Group 1 winner to have emerged from the paddocks of Montfort & Préaux in the last six years, following the Le Havre-sired trio of Avenir Certain (Fr), La Cressonniere (Fr) and Suedois (Fr), as well as Air Chief Marshal’s Mont Ormel (Fr).

Alex added, “Sadler’s Wells and most of his sons have worked very well with Le Havre and the [yearling] colt is very typical of the type of horse the mare has produced. We are obviously very pleased to have Recorder on the farm. He’s very well bred and was a very talented horse, according to his connections. The Queen has supported him, Mr Augustin-Normand has supported him and now Mr Bizakov has supported him. We are very happy with his stock and next year will be a very important year for him. What I like about Recorder is that he was a fast Galileo, and that’s what we need, especially in this country.  What’s important for stallions is the quality of mares, where they are raised and good trainers, and that’s what we are working on hard for him, like we did with Le Havre.”

The Recorder colt is not the only yearling to have received a significant update since the publication of the catalogue. Among others is lot 125, the Reliable Man (GB) half-sister to Plainchant (Fr) (Gregorian {Ire}), recent winner of the G2 Criterium de Maisons-Laffitte as well as the G3 Prix Eclipse. 

In the Haras d’Etreham draft, a colt by the stud’s freshman stallion Almanzor (Fr), lot 122, is the three-quarter-brother to recent listed Prix de Saint-Cyr winner Speak Of The Devil (Fr) (Wootton Bassett {GB}), while Etreham also offers a supplementary lot, 110b, a Sea The Stars (Ire) half-sister to GII Jessamine S winner Aunt Pearl (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}).

The Arqana October Yearling Sale with Osarus gets underway in Deauville at 11am on Monday, with 2pm starts for the following three days and a return to 11am for Friday.

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Triple Tiara for Daring Tact in Shuka Sho

(Deep Impact {Jpn}) to her inside flashing a similar turn of foot. That duo blew past the longtime leader late, with Daring Tact always holding her rival safe. It was another 3/4 of a length back to Soft Fruit (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}), who was slow to begin. Maltese Diosa tired to seventh. Sunday’s card was the first time limited fans had been permitted to the racecourse.

“The filly seemed a bit nervous at the paddock but she broke well and we were able to race in good position and in good rhythm,” said winning rider Kohei Matsuyama. “There was some pressure as we were aiming for the first undefeated Triple Crown filly in JRA history, but I’m delighted to be able to accomplish this remarkable feat. I want to thank the filly and offer her my congratulations. She has developed into a bold filly and I hope that she will remain undefeated.”

Trainer Haruki Sugiyama and Matsuyama both celebrated their fourth Japanese Group 1 victory, while their star is possible for the Nov. 29 Japan Cup.

Not seen on the racecourse until November of her juvenile year, Daring Tact found 1600 metres at Kyoto to her liking at first asking, and added the Listed Elfin S. over that course and distance on Feb. 8. She stepped up again with a victory in the G1 Oka Sho (Japanese 1000 Guineas) at Hanshin on Apr. 12, and, tried over 2400 metres for the first time, demolished her rivals with a victory in the May 24 G1 Yushun Himba (Japanese Oaks) at Tokyo. That was her final appearance prior to her victory on Sunday.

Pedigree Notes

The lone Group 1 winner for her sire, Daring Tact is the second and best foal from Daring Bird. Her juvenile full-sister Maono Zenith (Jpn) (Epiphaneia {Jpn}) has placed in one start, and the duo share a yearling full-sister and a Drefong weanling half-sister foaled May 24. The second dam is G3 Fuchu Himba S. heroine Daring Heart (Jpn) (Sunday Silence), who is a half-sister to GI Super Derby hero Ecton Park (Forty Niner), and Japanese Group 3 winner Pit Fighter (Jpn) (Pulpit). This is also the extended family of Grade I winners Banker’s Lady (Nijinski II), her son Banker’s Gold (Forty Niner), and GI Jenny Wiley S. victress Daisy Devine (Kafwain).

Sunday, Kyoto, Japan
SHUKA SHO-G1, ¥195,460,000 (US$1,854,380/£1,435,735/€1,582,866), Kyoto, 10-18, 3yo, f, 2000mT, 2:00.60, gd.
1–DARING TACT(JPN), 121, f, 2, 3, by Epiphaneia (Jpn)
                1st Dam: Daring Bird (Jpn), by King Kamehameha (Jpn)
                2nd Dam: Daring Heart (Jpn), by Sunday Silence
                3rd Dam: Daring Danzig, by Danzig
(¥12,000,000 Ylg ’18 JRHAJUL). O- Normandy Thoroughbred
Racing; B-Hasegawa Farm (Jpn); T-Haruki Sugiyama; J-Kohei
Matsuyama. ¥103,822,000. Lifetime Record: 5-5-0-0. Werk Nick Rating: C. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Magic Castle (Jpn), 121, f, 3, Deep Impact (Jpn)
                1st Dam: So Magic (Jpn), by Symboli Kris S.
                2nd Dam: Xua (Ire), by Fairy King
                3rd Dam: Bold Starlet (GB), by Precocious (GB)
O-Shadai Race Horse; B-Shadai Farm (Jpn); ¥41,092,000.
3–Soft Fruit (Jpn), 121, f, 3, Deep Impact (Jpn)
                1st Dam: Strawberry Fair (GB), by Kingmambo
                2nd Dam: Storm Song, by Summer Squall
                3rd Dam: Hum Along, by Fappiano
O-Godolphin; B-Darley Japan Farm (Jpn); ¥25,546,000.
Margins: 1 1/4, 3/4, NO. Odds: 0.40, 55.90, 53.70.
Also Ran: Pallas Athena (Jpn), Miss New York (Jpn), Oh My Darling (Jpn), Maltese Diosa (Jpn), Musica (Jpn), Win Mighty (Jpn), Fiori Chiari (Jpn), Ablaze (Jpn), Dantsu Elise (Jpn), Ria Amelia (Jpn), Miyamazakura (Jpn), Win Marilyn (Jpn), Sanctuaire (Jpn), Cravache d’Or (Jpn), Ho O Peaceful (Jpn).
Click for the JRA chart & video or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.

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Intello’s Noble Heidi Is Germany’s Winter Queen

Manfred Schmelzer’s Noble Heidi (Fr) (Intello {Ger}) added to trainer Henk Grewe’s regular Tours de France tally with a July 1 debut win over seven furlongs at Compiegne, slipping to third in an Aug. 21 heat over the same distance at Clairefontaine, and she regained the winning thread upped to one mile at Chantilly last month, defeating subsequent G3 Prix Thomas Bryon second Homeryan (Fr) (Sea the Stars {Ire}) in that Sept. 1 test. She was sent postward as the 17-10 selection for Sunday’s G3 Preis der Winterkonigin, Germany’s premier event for juvenile fillies, and duly delivered for a career high in the one-mile Baden-Baden feature. The eventual winner stalked the pace in fourth after an alert getaway in this black-type bow. Improving into third at the top of the straight, she was sent in pursuit of Novemba (Ger) (Gleneagles {Ire}) approaching the final furlong and kept on strongly under continued rousting in the closing stages to deny that rival by 3/4-of-a-length nearing the line.

“She works well at home and has the feel of a very good horse although I did manage to get beat on her once,” winning rider Andrasch Starke told GaloppOnline. “The race was run at a fast pace and I had to commit on the bend. She quickened very well, but had a look around once she hit the front.” Champion trainer Henk Grewe added, “We selected her with the owner and she impressed us at the sales, although the price was a bit high for the pedigree. I think she will stay 10 furlongs without any problems and we’ll see if she can go beyond that. We might take her back to France to build her up, but she is not a [G2 German] 1000 Guineas filly. The [G1 Preis der] Diana is her ultimate goal.” Peter Schiergen, trainer of the runner-up Novemba, said, “Sybille [Vogt] gave her a ride and the horse ran great. She will now go on her winter break and we shall aim her at next year’s [G2 German] 1000 Guineas.”

Noble Heidi, half  to a yearling filly by Zarak (Fr) and the sixth pattern-race winner for her sire, is the second of three foals and lone scorer produced by a half-sister to Listed Radley S. runner-up Oxsana (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) and G3 Kolner Herbst-Stuten-Meile victress Turning Light (Ger) (Fantastic Light), herself the dam of MGSP Listed La Puente S. winner Surrey Star (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}). Her second dam, G2 German 1000 Guineas placegetter Turning Leaf (Ire) (Last Tycoon {Ire}), is kin to Listed Bremer Sprint-Cup third Tartuffo (Ger) (Big Shuffle) and Listed Krefelder Stutenpreis third Tamarita (Ger) (Acatenango {Ger}). The latter’s descendants include G3 Preis des Winterfavoriten-winning sire Tai Chi (Ger) (High Chaparral {Ire}), G3 Hamburger Stutenpreis victress Taraja (Ger) (High Chaparral {Ire}), this year’s G3 Prix Daphnis winner Thorin (Ger) (Soldier Hollow {GB}) and this term’s Listed Prix Gold River winner Think Of Me (Ger) (So You Think {NZ}).

Sunday, Baden-Baden, Germany
PREIS DER WINTERKONIGIN-G3, €105,000, Baden-Baden, 10-18, 2yo, f, 8fT, 1:43.32, sf.
1–NOBLE HEIDI (FR), 128, f, 2, by Intello (Ger)
1st Dam: Noble Pensee (Fr), by Orpen
2nd Dam: Turning Leaf (Ire), by Last Tycoon (Ire)
3rd Dam: Tamacana (GB), by Windwurf (Ger)
1ST BLACK-TYPE WIN; 1ST GROUP WIN. (€77,000 Ylg ’19 BBAGS). O-Manfred Schmelzer; B-Marc Bridoux & EARL Haras de l’Hotellerie (FR); T-Henk Grewe; J-Andrasch Starke. €60,000. Lifetime Record: 4-3-0-1, €88,280. Werk Nick Rating: B. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Novemba (Ger), 128, f, 2, Gleneagles (Ire)–Nevada (Ger), by Dubai Destination). O/B-Gestut Brummerhof (GER); T-Peter Schiergen. €23,000.
3–Amazing Grace (Ger), 128, f, 2, Protectionist (Ger)–Amabelle (Ger), by Danehill Dancer (Ire). O/B-Dr Christoph Berglar (GER); T-Waldemar Hickst. €11,000.
Margins: 3/4, 1 3/4, 3 1/4. Odds: 1.70, 22.50, 6.90.
Also Ran: Marlar (Ger), Near Lady (Ger), Peaches (Ger), Theodora (Ger), Shila (Ger), Gonamira (Ger), Reine d’Amour (Ger). Scratched: Salonlove (Ger). Click for the Racing Post result or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.

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Bast the Highest of Highs for Baoma Corp

   Only a few years after first becoming involved in Thoroughbred ownership, Susan and Charles Chu watched their first Grade I winner also become a Breeders’ Cup Champion when ‘TDN Rising Star‘ Drefong (Gio Ponti) crossed the wire first in the 2016 Breeders’ Cup Sprint under their Baoma Corporation banner.

While they’d had several graded stakes contenders come along prior to Drefong’s campaign, after the millionaire took his third Grade I in the Forego S. for Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert in 2017, Baoma Corporation went through a bit of a dry spell as they searched for their next big winner.

“[Susan] was getting to the point where we would lose a big race, and she’d get really down,” Baffert said. “I would say, ‘You know, you have to get through this. This is what it is.’ She had been kind of spoiled when she started winning right away.”

Then the next summer in Saratoga, Baffert got word from agent Donato Lanni on a yearling at the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Select Yearling Sale that could be worth a look.

“When we got up there, Donato Lanni said, ‘There’s a filly here that you are going to love,'” Baffert recalled. “So we went back there and sure enough, she was a no-brainer. Susan was there and we told her we found a really good filly and she said, ‘Please don’t look at it too much. We don’t want people to know you like it.'”

The Uncle Mo filly was the first foal out of the Arch mare Laffina, who hailed from the family of Grade I performers Fault (Blame) and Mananan McLir (Royal Academy). The youngster was purchased by Baoma Corp for $500,000 and was later named Bast.

“I actually thought she was going to bring a lot more,” Baffert said. “She looked like one of the best fillies there. I happened to see a picture of her going through the ring and you could tell she was like the perfect image of what you want a racehorse to look like. She was just a standout from day one.”

After running second in her first start, Bast ran back in the GI Del Mar Debutante S. a few weeks later, soundly defeating the filly who had beaten her on debut and winning by almost nine lengths. She then made the quick trip north to Santa Anita in September to claim a second Grade I in the Chandelier S.

Considered one of the top choices going into the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies at Santa Anita last year, the bay went to the head of the field early, and after getting caught in a speed dual with longshot Two Sixty (Uncaptured), she ended up placing third.

The juvenile filly bounced back soon enough by sneaking in another win at two in the GI Starlet S., defeating Juvenile Fillies runner-up and ‘TDN Rising Star’ Donna Veloce (Uncle Mo) and becoming the only horse of her foal crop to win three Grade I races as a juvenile.

A few days after the calendar turned to 2020, Bast made her sophomore debut a winning one in the GII Santa Ynez S.

It was announced the next month that a minor injury would force the filly to retire.

“She came up with a small issue on her hind end and she was going to need 90 days off,” Baffert said.

The team of Baffert, Susan Chu, and John Sikura of Hill ‘n’ Dale put their heads together to decide the best route for the new broodmare prospect.

“Susan loves to race,” Sikura said. “Before she sells the mares, she covers them to the best stallion possible. We try to create the most value in the fact that she’s in foal. She’s not just a prospect, she’s ready to be a producer.”

It was decided to send the daughter of Uncle Mo to fellow Baffert trainee and Triple Crown hero Justify (Scat Daddy).

“We all talked about it and I just really thought with Justify…I mean she’s picture perfect and he’s picture perfect,”Baffert said “It’s going to be a home run.'”

Sikura added, “I think you have the best of both worlds. You have the precocity and brilliant 2-year-old speed of Bast, and then in Justify you have a Classic-distance horse with precocity, speed and brilliance.”

The Chus will part ways with their three-time Grade I winner this November as Bast is offered as Hip 245 through the Hill ‘n’ Dale consignment at the Fasig-Tipton November Sale.

Baffert said he is anticipating that Bast will be a hit at the ‘Night of Stars,’ where her dam Laffina sold for $1.5 million in foal to Ghostzapper last year.

“Certain horses, when you pull them out of the stall, [people say], ‘Wow, she looks expensive.’ And those are the kind of mares that people are going for because you know they’re going to throw a beautiful foal. Those mares are priceless to come by.”

“Bast has been a Fasig-Tipton favorite for a long time,” said Fasig-Tipton’s Boyd Browning. “Since we saw her on the Saratoga sales grounds, she had that wow factor as a yearling. I think the greatest compliment I’ve ever heard about Bast was that Bob Baffert said she was one of the top five fillies he’s ever seen at a yearling sale.”

He added of the foal she is carrying, “The foal really represents a brilliance of one of the finest 2-year-olds in the country coupled with the dominance of an undefeated Triple Crown winner in Justify. It’s just a remarkable opportunity, and then you keep in mind how young the mare is and just how many opportunities you’ll have to see sons or daughters out of Bast. That gets you really excited.”

“You couldn’t ask for anything more,” Sikura said. “I think every category that a high-end seeker of quality bloodstock would look for, Bast has all of those criterion met. If she were human, she would be driven to school in a limousine and would have gone to private school. She’s the best of the best of the best. We’re excited and proud to represent Susan Chu and we’re looking forward to her not only succeeding in the sales ring, but more importantly to succeeding as a broodmare with whoever is lucky enough to acquire such a fine prospect.”

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