Seven Days: Bahrain’s Burgeoning Success

It has been another banner week for the breeze-up sector, not to mention the burgeoning Bahraini participation in European racing. 

Following Classic victories for Cachet (Ire), Native Trail (GB) and Eldar Eldarov (GB), more graduates of the two-year-old sales scene lifted one of last weekend's major races in Britain, the G2 Mill Reef Stakes, and also the G3 Stockholm Cup. 

Sakheer (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}) was imperious in the Mill Reef, and was the standout in a magnificent seven winners on Saturday for Roger Varian, which also included landing a Group 3 with Mitbaahy (Ire) (Profitable {Ire}) and the Listed Doonside Cup with Royal Champion (Ire) (Shamardal).

Varian had also featured prominently the previous weekend, claiming his second St Leger with Eldar Eldarov, who, like Sakheer, is owned by Bahrain's Shaikh Khalid bin Hamad Al Khalifa, who races under the banner of KHK Racing, a name which only appeared on the British racing scene in 2020. This season KHK Racing has had 12 individual runners from six different stables.

Through trainer Fawzi Nass and bloodstock agent Oliver St Lawrence this is an outfit that has been making quite a splash at the sales in recent years, its purchases including the 2020 Arqana Select Sale topper Pure Dignity (GB), the Dubawi (Ire) half-sister to Sottsass (Fr), who is raced in partnership by Shaikh Khalid and his brother Shaikh Nasser Al Khalifa. She has raced just once, winning well on debut at Newmarket, and is entered on Wednesday at Kempton.

St Lawrence said, “This is only the second crop of three-year-olds for KHK Racing in Britain, so to have a Classic winner and then a very promising two-year-old is very exciting.

“It's also very important for racing, and all the shaikhs that are involved in Bahrain are really enjoying it.”

Bred by Drumlin Bloodstock, Sakheer, who was bought as a foal by Camas Park Stud, was sold at Arqana 18 months later by one of the original breeze-up men, Willie Browne of Mocklershill. St Lawrence signed for him at €550,000 a year after picking up Eldar Eldarov at the same sale for £480,000 from Norman Williamson.

On the forthcoming return of a lovely broodmare prospect, St Lawrence said, “The intention is for Pure Dignity to run on Wednesday and if all goes well, Roger will try to find a black-type race for her later in the season. Then we will put her away, and she will race on next year, all being well. 

“I think both Shaikh Nasser and Shaikh Khalid are very keen to try to build up a quality broodmare band which will obviously take a bit of time.”

Shaikh Khalifa, who also races horses individually as Victorious Racing, has enjoyed success this year at Britain's flagship meeting, Royal Ascot, where Bradsell (GB) (Tasleet {GB}), yet another breezer, won the G2 Coventry Stakes for Archie Watson. He also owns the Listed winner and Group 3 runner-up Rocket Rodney (GB) (Dandy Man {Ire}).

St Lawrence added, “It has been a dream season and I am lucky enough to be buying these expensive horses, With that comes a lot of weight of trying to produce some good ones, but I think so far we are fulfilling that remit, though this season will be a tough one to follow.”

Those charged with running racing in Bahrain have signalled their intent to increase the domestic racing programme, with the G3 Bahrain International Trophy steadily gaining more traction, and the second Bahrain Turf Series set to kick off just after that in early December. On the back of recent results it is not hard to imagine that we will see increased Bahraini participation in British racing, too.

Easy to Please

In Scandinavia, the Lodge Park Stud-bred Hard One To Please (Ire) (Fast Company {Ire}) has been making merry this season. The winner of the Swedish and Norwegian Derbys in July and August, he stepped into Pattern company to land Sunday's G3 Stockholm Cup in the hands of Pat Cosgrave for trainer Annike Bye Hansen. 

An £8,000 Goffs Sportsman's yearling-turned-80,000gns breezer, Hard One To Please was bought by Walter Buick at the Tattersalls Guineas Sale. It could be a big week for the family as his half-sister Dandy Alys (Ire) (Dandy Man {Ire}), who was recently runner-up in the G3 Sweet Solera Stakes, is entered for Friday's G2 Rockfel Stakes. Their dam, the nine-year-old New Approach (Ire) mare Alyssum (Ire), has a Camacho (GB) yearling filly in Book 3 of the Tattersalls October Sale.

Move Over Hollie and Tom

Hollie Doyle and Tom Marquand are rightly feted, both individually and as racing's unofficial golden couple, but two other young jockeys, Saffie Osborne and David Egan, who also happen to be a couple, stole the limelight in the last week.

On Thursday, the second Racing League drew to a close in Britain, with a sensational 6,539/1 treble from Saffie Osborne, who duly lifted the £20,000 prize as the leading rider of the series. The 20-year-old jockey's most enjoyable moment of that evening would surely have been her victory on 40/1 shot Raising Sand (GB) for her father Jamie. The 10-year-old son of Oasis Dream (GB) has been a stalwart of the Osborne stable and his eighth win came two years after his last victory.

Osborne's recent run of success has propelled her into the top 50 riders in the country, the only other female on that list along with Doyle, who is second behind William Buick.

For David Egan, 22, it has been an up-and-down year. He lost his retainer with Prince AA Faisal in July, having previously ridden the owner-breeder's Mishriff (Ire) to victory in the $20 million Saudi Cup, G1 Dubai Sheena Classic, and G1 Juddmonte International. Taking the news of that reversal with admirable equanimity, Egan kept his head down, kept riding, and for his boss Roger Varian has been at the heart of a real purple patch for the stable, winning his first Classic on Eldar Eldarov and notching four wins at Newbury on Saturday, including in all three group races, two of which were for Varian and one for Hughie Morrison on Stay Alert (GB) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}).

Angel Shouldn't Be Kept in the Dark

It is hardly a news flash to say that Dark Angel (Ire) is an excellent stallion but Yeomanstown Stud's 17-year-old somehow seems to be a little overlooked. He shouldn't be, for he is currently riding high in the European sires' table in fourth position behind Dubawi (Ire), Frankel (GB), and Sea The Stars (Ire). That leading trio can perhaps be percieved more as 'Classic' sires, but Dark Angel has also been among the Classic winners this season via his daughter Mangoustine (Fr), winner of the Poule d'Essai des Pouliches, in which she narrowly beat the 1,000 Guineas winner Cachet.

The son of Acclamation (GB) was among the major winners on three continents on Saturday. In Canada, Dark Angel's two-year-old son, the Godolphin homebred Mysterious Night (Ire), strolled to victory in the G1 Summer Stakes to become his sire's twelfth Group/Grade 1 winner. This followed Mysterious Night's triumph in last month's G3 Prix Francois Boutin and was one of three graded stakes winners for Charlie Appleby in North America on Saturday, along with Modern Games (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) and Nations Pride (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}). 

Another of his juveniles, Barefoot Angel, bred by Guy O'Callaghan, landed the G3 Firth of Clyde Fillies' Stakes at Ayr, while earlier that day in Australia, the six-year-old Top Ranked (Ire), a former Group 3 winner for James Tate in Britain, had claimed his first southern hemisphere stakes win in the G3 Bill Ritchie Handicap for Annabel Neasham and Australian Bloodstock. 

Bravo, Mon Ami

Cracksman (GB) is making a pleasing start to his stud career with ten winners already on the board from his 26 runners to date, including the Listed winner Dance In The Grass (GB). It will also be worth following the progress of another son of Frankel (GB) bearing Anthony Oppenheimer's colours who made the most eye-catching start to his racing career last week. 

Courage Mon Ami (GB), out of a full-sister to Group 2 winner Bronze Cannon (GB) (Lemon Drop Kid), was well adrift of the main pack in the early stages when making his debut at Kempton on Friday, but that slow start gradually turned into a steaming finish as the three-year-old passed all his rivals with a ground-eating stride that saw him win eased down by five lengths. Certainly one for the notebook.

Tijuana's Record Enhanced by Tunnes

It would seem that the fairytale of the small breeder Paul Vandeberg still has a few chapters to be written. Vandeberg's lone broodmare Tijuana (Ger) (Toylsome {GB}) is already the dam of Arc winner Torquator Tasso (Ger) (Adlerflug {Ger}), and her three-year-old son Tunnes (Ger) (Guiliani {Ger}) has now added the G3 Deutsches St Leger to his victory last season in the G3 Herzog von Ratibor-Rennen. 

The latter had seen him made winter favourite for the Deutsches Derby, but a setback ruled him out of a spring campaign. Trainer Peter Schiergen indicated on Sunday that the colt will now be aimed at the G1 Grosser Preis von Bayern in early November, the race in which his elder brother was second two years ago after winning the G1 Grosser Preis von Berlin. Before that, Tunnes could head to Longchamp for the G2 Prix du Conseil de Paris, a fortnight after Torquator Tasso will attempt to defend his Arc crown.

Meanwhile, Vandeberg is sitting pretty with a yearling full-brother to Torquator Tasso and a weanling full-brother to Tunnes at home.

The Americans are Coming

Lope De Vega's excellent run, which has seen him recently notch his 100th stakes winner, was extended on Sunday across the pond with the victory of Faith In Humanity (Fr) in the G3 Pebbles Stakes at Belmont at the Big A (so named for the races held at Aqueduct while Belmont Park undergoes development work).

Faith In Humanity, bred in partnership by Ecurie des Monceaux and Lordship Stud, is yet another European-bought stakes winner for Klaravich Stables to add to the list which includes the Grade 1 winners McKulick (GB) (Frankel {GB}), Domestic Spending (GB) (Kingman {GB}), Digital Age (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) and Newspaperofrecord (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}).

Word has it that American buyers will be out in force for the Orby and October Sales, and who can blame them? With a seeming reluctance from American breeders to use turf sires based in the US, and the exchange rate for the dollar against euros and sterling currently extremely favourable, the best place to shop for horses for an expanding turf programme is in Europe. 

Farewell to Her Majesty

As this column was being written, the solemnities of the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II had brought much of Britain to a near standstill. 

On Sunday in Newmarket during the Henry Cecil Open Weekend, the public gallops which preceded a morning of stable tours were led by two of the Queen's horses, Educator (GB) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) and Saga (GB) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), ridden respectively by Michael Hills and Rab Havlin wearing the royal silks in tribute.

A number of the Queen's racehorse trainers were observed among the congregation at St George's Chapel in Windsor Castle for the service of committal. For many involved in racing, the last we saw of the Queen in public was at Ascot last October for Champions Day when she presented the trophy for the Queen Elizabeth II Stakes and was herself awarded with a commemorative medal to mark her induction in the British Horseracing Hall of Fame. Her Majesty's fellow inductee Lester Piggott was also at Ascot to be honoured that day. Now, in a mournful time for the sport, both are gone, but neither will ever be forgotten.

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Longtime Mid-Atlantic Sale Vet Randall Brandon Dies

Randall Gatlin Brandon, 80, passed away Aug. 15, 2022 in his hometown of Camden, South Carolina. He was the son of the late Gatlin Randall and Frances Johns Brandon. Randy  is survived by his wife Kirsty May Brandon, daughters Julie Carter (Andrew) and Lisa Boyle, both of Portland, Oregon, grandchildren Katie and Emma Carter, brothers Dr. Jeff Brandon (Nancy) of Palm Coast, Florida and Kyle Brandon of El Paso, Texas.

He graduated from Washington State University and followed with an internship at Auburn University. After completing his internship, he was a member of the Teigland Vet Group in South Florida where he attended to Thoroughbred racehorses at tracks in the area.

The following year, Randy moved to Maryland where he established his own vet practice serving owners and trainers at tracks including Laurel, Bowie, Pimlico and Delaware Park.  His equine clientele not only included the bread-and-butter horses but also stakes winners and classic contenders. Randy was very “old school” when it came to giving veterinary advice to his clients as he chose good horsemanship and to unnecessary procedures and medications. The horse came first and if the best medicine for the day was some turnout time, that is what he prescribed for the horses.

After 30 years on the racetrack, Randy sold his practice and made South Carolina his home. The focus of his vet practice turned to assisting his clients in their pre-purchase needs at Thoroughbred auctions throughout the country. From coast to coast, if there was a horse sale, Dr. Brandon would be there.

Although the horse auction schedule kept him busy and on the road for weeks on end, he enjoyed planning the matings for his and Kirsty's small broodmare operation which awarded them many bonuses from their New York bred foals who competed and won on the New York circuit. They would foal in New York, be bred back in Kentucky and then raised to be sales yearlings at their Dixie Farm in Camden. He enjoyed watching his homebreds develop under his watchful eye and Kirsty's attention to detail.  Whenever there was an open week, Randy enjoyed going on hunting and fishing trips with colleagues. He loved and appreciated the  outdoors and all that went with it.

“Dr. Brandon was an integral and highly-valued member of the St. Elias Stables' team and even more importantly, a dear friend,” said Rory Babich, CEO of St. Elias Stables. “Our thoughts and prayers are with his wife Kirsty, his children, grandchildren and other members of his family during this difficult time. He will be sorely missed by his many friends, family, clients and his devoted pack of dogs.”

Contributions may be made in his memory to Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation (TRF), 261 State Farm Road #8200, Rembert, SC, 29128 or to New Vocations, 719 Dolan Lane, Lexington, KY, 40511 (newvocations.org)

A Celebration of Life is scheduled for Sunday, Oct. 2 at the Fasig-Tipton sales pavilion at Timonium. Further details will be announced.

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Making Claims: The 2022 Regional Stallion Expansion Draft

In “Making Claims,” Paulick Report bloodstock editor Joe Nevills shares his opinions on the Thoroughbred industry from the breeding and sales arenas to the racing world and beyond.

A few years ago, I posed a question on social media that got quite a bit of participation from folks in the bloodstock sphere: Let's say you've just opened up a new stud farm in Kentucky, and you're allowed to “expansion draft” three stallions from other North American states or provinces to start your own roster. Who do you take and why?

It was fun to see the varied responses and justifications for their rosters, but I never ended up giving my own list. Time to do something about that.

Of course, any list like this is going to be highly subjective, and will vary based on how seriously you take it. If you're just making a list of the best regional stallions, then a horse with a deep and proven resume like Sequel New York's Freud is a no-brainer.

However, if you're drafting as if you're actually going to stand the stallions and try to make a living off it, taking a stallion in his age bracket to start a new farm would be quite the risk, operating under the assumption that the 24-year-old only has a handful of years left in service compared with one just getting started.

This list will resemble the latter. I'm going to attempt to draft a roster of five current, active North American stallions standing in states or provinces outside of Kentucky that would attract immediate attention from breeders, while also setting up my business to succeed for years to come.

For the purposes of simplicity, real-life factors such as cost, contracts, or the politics of the horse racing business will not be taken into account. If I want a stallion, I get it. I'm sure the farm would be compensated fairly.

I will, however, follow two guidelines. First, I can only take a maximum of two stallions from a single state, and I can't double-dip more than once. If I take two stallions from New York, I've hit my limit for that state, and can only take single stallions based in other jurisdictions.

Second, I'll be drafting by position, just like any fantasy draft. Here are the slots I'll look to fill:

1) The Veteran: A stallion who has been active for five or more years. They have at least a few crops at the track, and are a proven commodity. The cornerstone of this new operation.
2) The Freshman Sire: A member of this year's freshman class, whose first foals are 2-year-olds of 2022. This is the heatseeker of the group.
3) The Prospect: A stallion who stood his first season at stud in 2021 or 2022, with their oldest foals being weanlings at the most. The future of the farm rests with this one.
4) The Turf Stallion: Self-explanatory. Can come from any age bracket.
5) The Value Play: A stallion in any age bracket who stood for an advertised fee of $3,500 or less in 2022.

And now, I'm on the clock. Let's get to work.

The Veteran: Central Banker

B. h., 2010, Speightstown x Rhum, by Go For Gin
Standing at McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds, N.Y.
Advertised Fee: $7,500

There may be no stallion outside of Kentucky right now that I trust more than Central Banker. All he does is get winners amongst arguably the most competitive state-bred scene in the country.

Central Banker is New York's leading sire by general earnings through Aug. 24, with $3.2 million, well ahead of second-place War Dancer with $1.9 million. Nearly two-thirds of his 202 lifetime starters are winners, and he's proven that he can get a graded stakes-level performer, with seven-figure earner Bankit. Horses like Bank On Shea have also gotten notable stakes wins outside of New York, so you know Central Banker's not just a state-bred star.

From a commercial standpoint, Central Banker is a son of Speightstown, and that's one of those names where every serious farm is trying to get a son on their stallion roster. Bringing a proven one into Kentucky with plenty of gas left in his tank would set a solid foundation for my roster.

The Freshman Sire: Bucchero

Ch. h., 2012, Kantharos x Meetmeontime, by General Meeting
Standing at Pleasant Acres Stallions, Fla.
Advertised Fee: $5,000

This was going to be the easiest category for me to pick: Girvin was lighting the world on fire from Florida, and was an obvious choice to bring to Kentucky. As it turns out, Airdrie Stud had the same idea, and recently announced that he'd been moved to the Bluegrass State to stand in 2023 and beyond.

Fortunately, there are other strong candidates still on the board.

I'm staying in Florida for my freshman pick, and going with Bucchero. He got a ton of mare support in his early seasons at Pleasant Acres Stallions, and that'll give me plenty of opportunities to market his successful runners while I wait for my books of mares to take over.

What I like about Bucchero is that he's displayed incredible versatility in practically every aspect of his career. Though he was best known as a turf sprinter during his on-track career, he was also extremely proven going a route of ground on the dirt. His sire, Kantharos, has also been diverse in his success with runners, which suggests a breeder could send just about any type of mare to Bucchero and have an honest chance at a runner.

That versatility has also been impressed on his first runners. He's had winners at Gulfstream Park, Monmouth Park, Lone Star Park, and Horseshoe Indianapolis, and he's had stakes-placed runners at Gulfstream and Prairie Meadows. Toddchero probably would have won any other running of the Prairie Gold Juvenile Stakes in Iowa, but the winner, Tyler's Tribe, looks like a Breeders' Cup-level buzzsaw. No shame there.

There is a great deal of value in having a stallion where if a breeder asks, “will my mare work with him?” the answer is always “yes.” At this stage of the game, Bucchero seems like that type.

The Prospect: Honest Mischief

B. h., 2016, Into Mischief x Honest Lady, by Seattle Slew
Standing at Sequel New York, N.Y.
Advertised fee: $6,500

The market demands Into Mischief right now, and I'd be crazy not to give it to them. Honest Mischief might be the best option to do that outside of Kentucky.

New York breeders have turned up in droves to send their mares to Honest Mischief during his first two seasons at stud, so he'd have a strong pipeline of foals to hopefully build his resume and create demand while we wait for his foals under my purview to arrive.

In the meantime, he cuts a lovely figure, and he's got the backing of one of the taproot Juddmonte Farms families. He's a half-brother to Grade 1 winner and established sire First Defence, and his second dam is the 2002 Broodmare of the Year Toussaud, which puts him on a direct line to Empire Maker and Chester House.

Honest Mischief is on the path to be a top sire in New York for a long time. That is, unless I take him to Kentucky first.

The Turf Stallion: Sir Prancealot

B. h., 2010, Tamayuz x Mona Em, by Catrail
Standing at Rancho San Miguel, Calif.
Advertised Fee: $15,000

This stallion took the North American turf by storm to such a degree, they brought him stateside. Now, I'll take him to Kentucky.

Before he's even had a domestic-sired runner hit the track, Sir Prancealot has had three runners win graded stakes races in the U.S., and another finish third in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf. The American commercial market still frustratingly turns its nose up at turf pedigrees, but the possibilities of what Sir Prancealot could do in this country with a full book of mares catered toward winning races at tracks like Kentucky Downs is positively salivating.

What makes Sir Prancealot especially enticing is he's not just a few graded stakes horses and a cloud of dust. Half of his total 329 foals of racing age are winners, and if you're only counting winners from starters, that number goes up to 64 percent.

The only thing that might stall some uncreative breeders is his lack of immediately recognizable North American names in his immediate pedigree that pop an auction page, but the on-track results should be more than enough to attract the ones that know what they're doing.

Kentucky's got an empty throne to fill following the death of Kitten's Joy, the king of American turf sires. With careful management (by my very qualified pretend staff), Sir Prancealot could become an able contender.

The Value Play: Friesan Fire

B. h., 2006, A.P. Indy x Bollinger, by Dehere
Standing at Country Life Farm, Md.
Advertised Fee: $2,500

My pretend farm might be based in Kentucky, but I've still got my eye out for the regional breeders with a low-cost option. For an A.P. Indy-line stallion who is capable of getting you a graded stakes horse the likes of Army Mule and Call Paul, a stud fee double his current $2,500 asking price would be plenty attractive.

Over half of his 282 lifetime horses of racing age are winners, and a whopping 70 percent of his total starters are winners. At that price point, making money on the racetrack or in the sale ring seems very achievable.

For a horse that went off as the favorite in the 2009 Kentucky Derby, I was pretty surprised when he didn't start his career in Kentucky. If I have my pick of stallions, I'd give him a chance to make a go of it.

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Jockey Ry Eikleberry ‘Blessed To Be One Of The Few Riders To Walk Away On My Own Terms’

Saturday's closing day at Canterbury Park was the final day of racing for jockey Ry Eikleberry, who began riding races in 2005.

He won four races on the Saturday card, closing out his Thoroughbred racing career with a total of 2,568 victories with earnings of $45,714,193. Eikleberry also won another 222 Quarter Horse races during his career.

The Minnesota Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association posted the news on its Facebook page.

“As all of us in racing will miss his spectacular rides, we're also very happen for Ry on his outstanding career and for the next chapter in his life,” the post reads.

Eikleberry's social media post about the end of his career is as follows:

“Tomorrow night will be my last time in the saddle as a professional jockey,” he wrote. “It's been a decision that I have given great thought. I feel very blessed to be one of the few riders to walk away on my own terms. I first would like to thank my family who's unwavering support of my career has made my career so enjoyable. Most of all my wife who has unselfishly traveled through thick and thin to be by my side. She has been there to celebrate the wins and talk through the rough patches. To my two young girls, who have been there to welcome me home every night no matter how the day went. Their smiles and squeals as I walk through the door is undoubtedly my favorite part of each day.

“I would like to thank the owners and trainers who have trusted and supported me throughout the years. Thanks to all of my agents and valets who have been part of my team. It really does take a village to get a horse to the winners circle and I truly understand that this is a team sport and I feel fortunate to have been a small part of each horses success. To the fans. One of the greatest thrills of my life was hearing the roar of the crowd when turning for home. This sport is dependent on you. It's been a fun ride and I'm looking forward to the next chapter of my very blessed life.”

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