German Derby/Oaks Entries Close Wednesday

Nominations for next season's G1 154th IDEE Deutsches Derby and G1 Henkel-Preis der Diana (German Oaks) close Wednesday. The former contest, scheduled for July 2 at Hamburg, has already attracted a swathe of notable entries including Paul Vandeberg's hitherto unraced filly Tiara Hilleshage (Ger) (Adlerflug {Ger}), who is a homebred full-sister to last term's G1 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe hero Torquator Tasso (Ger). “She is an elegant filly who, like her brother, needs time and the focus is on her 3-year-old season,” said trainer Marcel Weiss earlier this year. Another eyecatching nominee is Gestut Rottgen's 'TDN Rising Star' Aspirant (Ger) (Protectionist {Ger}), who remains engaged in Krefeld's Nov. 13 G3 Herzog von Ratibor-Rennen. Tiara Hilleshage is on the Derby list alongside fellow distaffers Quantanamera (Ger) (Lope De Vega {Ire}), the impressive 8 1/2-length winner of last month's G3 Preis der Winterkonigin, and Sunday's 'TDN Rising Star' Naila (Fr) (Adlerflug {Ger}) with the trio also holding entries for the Aug. 6 Preis der Diana at Dusseldorf.

The post German Derby/Oaks Entries Close Wednesday appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Breeze-Up Goliath Back At Keeneland As David

LEXINGTON, KY–You may have seen in the news last week how they've just realised that a Mondrian masterpiece has been hanging the wrong way round for 77 years. That's just a year longer than Willie Browne has been accumulating his own perspectives on life and, when he looks at the filly he has brought to the Breeders' Cup, he pretty much knows that same, upside-down feeling. Because his long quest for the secrets of equine potential–which has so often brought him to this same town, wearing a very different hat–has now produced perhaps its deepest puzzle yet.

Browne, who processes as many as 90 breeze-up pinhooks through his Mocklershill nursery every year, seldom finds himself with more than two or three left over to send onto the racetrack himself. Among all the young horses to have passed through his hands, however, including many who went on to prove elite performers, none has shown him more talent than Spirit Gal (Fr) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}). So where does it come from?

“I trained this filly's mother,” he mused, after supervising her jaunt round the Keeneland training track on Tuesday morning. “And it wouldn't be doing a disservice to say she was as bad a racemare as I've ever had. She hadn't the mind for the job: she was a box-walker, she travelled bad to the races. So I said to Chuck, 'Listen, there's no future in this one.'”

“Chuck” is Charles E. Fipke, the Canadian geologist who had diamond strikes at the Breeders' Cup with Forever Unbridled (Unbridled's Song) in the 2017 Distaff and Perfect Shirl (Perfect Soul {Ire}) in the 2011 Filly and Mare Turf. Browne can't remember quite how or when they met. But it was at least 20 years ago, and in this same town, while Browne was engaged his own brand of prospecting–as a pioneer in a trade he had more or less patented in Europe. And for a long time now Fipke has been sending Browne young stock, typically out of his mares over the water, to be broken and then prepared either for sale or training.

“Chuck being Chuck, he said, 'Okay, I'll send her to Sir Mark Prescott,'” Browne remembers of Awesome Gal (Ire). “Which he duly did. But Sir Mark ran her up to two miles with the same result, nothing. So I kind of lost contact with the filly then. But not alone did Chuck keep her, he put a 120 grand cover on her. Then I got a phone call in January this year, asking me would I take two fillies up from France. When they arrived, I looked at their breeding and thought: 'Here we go again!'”

Browne pauses and shakes his head. “But right from the get-go this filly was special,” he says. “All those years trying to figure things out, looking at pedigrees, how does it all work. And it's a filly out of that mare has turned out quicker than any breeze-up horse I've ever had. Now, listen, she goes back well. The mare has a good pedigree, she's by Galileo (Ire). But it's strange, all the same.”

It's true: Awesome Gal (Ire) has a striking shape to her pedigree, replicating Urban Sea's dam Allegretta (GB) (Lombard {Ger}) as close as 3 x 3. Full credit to Fipke, then, for rolling the dice on such a purposeful cover for this dismal runner.

Soon after their arrival, even so, Browne received an email instructing him to prepare both Awesome Gal's daughter and the No Nay Never filly who had accompanied her from France for the Goffs UK Breeze-Up Sale at Doncaster.

“Well, the way Spirit Gal was training at home, I knew what was going to happen,” Browne recalls. “Sure enough, she was third-fastest in the breeze and everyone was all over her. She'd have topped the sale by a mile.”

As it was, she had to be scratched. Seldom has a touch of sore shins proved such a blessing.

“I was disappointed of course,” Browne says. “I wasn't going to get my commission. But to keep me happy Chuck said, 'Listen, you can train this if you want.' He'd often have said that before, without me taking up the offer. Joseph [O'Brien] trains most of them [in Europe] now, and he had John Oxx before, plus a few with Sir Mark. But I said, 'Yes, this filly I will keep!'”

As a rule, the only horses that keep things ticking over at Browne's Co. Tipperary base through the summer will be mediocre types that have for one reason or another missed their sales slot.

“I'd have maybe two or three winners every year but they'd be rated 65 or so,” Browne explains. “You do well to win one of those low-grade handicaps every year, it's so competitive in Ireland. But while it might sound contradictory, I wouldn't want to be seen doing too well at this. People would say this fella's keeping the best and selling the worst. I hope people know me well enough to know that would never be the case, but human nature being what it is, there would be a bit of that.”

But the exception has, in any case, arrived in another's service.

“We knew she was good after the breeze-up, so after her little break we started to train her and it has all just continued on from there,” Browne says. “I used to get Seamie Heffernan in to sit on her. He's such a good judge, if he likes something you can sit up and take notice. She was fourth on her first run and then has just improved and improved. It was a good class of race she won in Dundalk [7f Listed] last time. Fillies don't normally beat the colts and she hammered the one that went on to win the [G3] Killavullan S.”

That was none other than Ballydoyle's one-time GI Juvenile Turf contender Cairo (Quality Road). There's no denying that Secret Gal matches her dashing style with plenty of substance, then, and those who assume that trainers need tiers of “punchbags” to work a horse up the grades must accept that this one has thrived for her solitary regime.

“She trains on her own,” Browne confirms. “I've become a bit American, train her on the clock. But she's very forward-going. People might normally train in pairs, but you'd never do that for the breeze. Yes, you do your initial preparation in groups, but once they start breezing, they all do it on their own. And she's so forward-going that doesn't need help. She'd use herself too much, with other horses. But not alone is she quick, she stays to a good level.”

There are, admittedly, new factors this time. For one thing she must gel with her local jockey, Ricardo Santana, Jr., and the hectic style of racing round the sharp inner track may demand versatility.

“There are a lot of ifs and buts,” Browne acknowledges. “We're in a bit of a quandary, in that she has a reputation as frontrunner back home. But it's a different ball game here. Going to the bend as quick as they will, you'd be using a lot of petrol to lead them there. So ideally you'd maybe look to break well and then just tuck in. But she should travel. And, you know, if she does everything right, she could hang around.”

While the many trainers who shop annually from Mocklershill are grateful that Browne has never deployed his mastery in meaningful competition, he does claim more satisfaction in winning a small race with a moderate horse than in the celebrated pinhooks that have made him the doyen of the sector. (First consignor to sell a seven-figure breezer in Europe? Willie Browne. Second consignor to sell a seven-figure breezer in Europe? Willie Browne.)

So you can imagine how he feels to be bringing Spirit Gal, last month his first ever starter in a stakes race, to a challenge as momentous as the GI Juvenile Fillies' Turf on Friday.

“I was here for the September Sale, not having a clue this was going to happen,” he says. “And I walked out there [out of the sales barns to view the track] and thought to myself, 'Damn, this side will always be different.'”

His tone is poignantly laced with the implication that “different” might equally read “better”. But then he can comfort himself that few trainers in Europe have saddled as many good horses in their time. And the system continues to function smoothly: subsequent 'TDN Rising Star' Sakheer (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}), picked up right here last year after failing to meet his September reserve at $65,000, was sold on to Oliver St Lawrence for €550,000 at Arqana in May and has since proved himself among the best of the crop with his G2 Mill Reef S. success for KHK Racing and Roger Varian. From the previous cycle, Light Infantry (Fr) (Fast Company {Ire}) has earned his passage to Australia after consecutive runner-up finishes in Group 1 company this summer. He was found for just €25,000 as an Arqana October yearling, and sold to Blandford for £82,000 at the Goffs UK Breeze-Up.

Browne is proud of the expertise of those fellow horsemen who have helped the breeze-up sector in Europe achieve spectacular maturity. And he should be assured of a reciprocal goodwill, among the countless trainers indebted to his academy, now that he has a belated opportunity to slay a giant or two with his tiny residue of part-time ammunition. He is too immune to self-indulgence, however, to dwell pointlessly on what might have been.

“The problem we had, in '77, was there were three families at home: my father, myself and my brother Michael,” he says with a shrug. “My father did moderately okay, always had his few winners. But we weren't making any kind of money to sustain three families. We had to do something different, and that's why we started what we started. But listen, at this stage of my life, it is kind of a fairy story. I got the full-sister up from France last week. She's not as pretty. But who knows? That's the thing. You never know. I hope I don't let anyone down on Friday. Where we fit in here, I don't know. But she has brought us here, at least, and we'll take that.”

The post Breeze-Up Goliath Back At Keeneland As David appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Breeders’ Cup Notes: Aidan’s Army, Other European Contenders Step Out At Keeneland

The European contenders for this year's Breeders' Cup World Championships touched down at Keeneland racetrack's quarantine barn Saturday. The Godolphin shipment arrived in quarantine at 4:15 p.m with the remaining horses, including Aidan O'Brien's, arriving at 9:30 p.m. All connections reported their horses traveled over well and there were no issues.

The European horses cleared quarantine Monday afternoon and all exercised Tuesday.

The first horses out were the Richard Fahey duo The Platinum Queen (Juvenile Turf Sprint) and Midnight Mile (Juvenile Fillies Turf). Regular rider of The Platinum Queen, Oisin Orr said, “She seems in great form, moved well and feeling good so everything is great.”

Dramatised (Juvenile Turf Sprint) trained by Karl Burke exercised with the Fahey horses. Karl's daughter Lucy who is overseeing preparations said, “Dramatised has taken all travel and quarantine as well as we could ask for. She was happy to be out this morning and just did a light exercise, but everything is good with her so far.”

John Quinn who trains arguably the European's biggest hope, Yorkshire's racing royalty, Highfield Princess (Turf Sprint) was on track this morning.

“It's wonderful to be back at the Breeders' Cup,' Quinn said. “Highfield Princess has traveled over great and Con Foley who is with her reports he couldn't be happier. She did some light exercise this morning and moved well. She's eaten up and drinking well so all is good. I'm delighted with the draw in gate six. Obviously Golden Pal sets the standard but there's also some very good horses in the race which you have to respect. Tomorrow she'll do similar as today, light exercise and her jockey Jason Hart will be here to ride her. She'll go for a spin on the turf on Thursday with an easy day Friday. Her owner Mr. (John) Fairley arrives with his family on Thursday and they're very excited, and why shouldn't they be!”

Aidan and Joseph O'Brien were also on track to watch their horses. O'Brien Sr. said,

“It's great to be back here, it's always a highlight of our year to come to the Breeders' Cup. The lads are delighted with the horses and how they traveled so we're ready for a big week. They just had a hack around the main track this morning which is what we'd always do on the first day of training just to let them have a look around.”

John and Thady Gosden are represented by Mishriff (Turf) and Nashwa (Filly & Mare). Their traveling head lad Anthony Proctor said, “I'm very happy with both horses. They traveled over great and have settled in well. Nashwa looks to have a big chance in the Filly & Mare and you can't discount Mishriff. It'll be his last race on Saturday before retirement. He's been a wonderful horse who has taken us around the world so he will be a big loss to the yard. He's wearing blinkers for the first time on Saturday which should sharpen him up.”

Charlie Appleby arrives in Kentucky later today and will be trackside Wednesday. Maria Murphy who is overseeing his horses said, “The team are very happy with the horses. They traveled over very well and seem in good form. They went out on the turf this morning doing light exercise. Charlie arrives today so he will be here tomorrow for training.”

The post Breeders’ Cup Notes: Aidan’s Army, Other European Contenders Step Out At Keeneland appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Aidan O’Brien String Exits Quarantine And Steps Out At Keeneland Ahead Of The Breeders’ Cup

Tuesday marked the first day the seven-strong Aidan O'Brien string got a taste of the Keeneland track ahead of the two-day Breeders' Cup on Nov. 4-5.

Leading the Coolmore partners septet after their quarantine period was Group 1 winner Broome (Ire) (Australia {GB}) and G3 Derby Trial S. hero Stone Age (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), who both line up in the GI Longines Breeders' Cup Turf and will leave from stalls four and three, respectively. Second in the 2021 Turf to Godolphin and Charlie Appleby's Yibir (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) at Del Mar, Broome took the G2 Hardwicke S. from six starts this term and enters the Breeders' Cup having run eighth in the G1 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe last out at the beginning of October.

“Looking at the team, we have two horses in the Turf,” O'Brien said. “Broome ran very well in the race last year. Conditions have not always been in his favour, but I think he will enjoy the ground if it's quick.

“His one flaw is he misses the break. He's a late loader, but he can get on the back foot. We are trying to do things to help him break better. He broke badly at Del Mar under Irad [Ortiz, Jr.] and he rides him again. That day he gave him a chance and said he couldn't believe he got beat.

“Stone Age ran well [when fifth] in the heavy [G1 Champion S.] and is comfortable over a mile and a half, but I think there'll be no more rain this week and the going will be different for him.”

Already a Breeders' Cup winner after taking the GI Mile in 2020, Order Of Australia (Ire) (Australia {GB}) aims to take his second Mile. The 5-year-old entire ran second in the G1 Prix du Moulin to Dreamloper (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}) in September and he was third to the re-opposing Annapolis (War Front) and Ivar (Brz) (Agnes Gold {Jpn}) in the GI Coolmore Turf Mile S. over this course and distance on Oct. 8. He exits stall 10 in the 16-horse field.

“We have Order Of Australia in the Mile, going for a repeat of two years ago,” O'Brien said. “I was very happy with his run at Keeneland and he was drawn out a bit. I've taken my time with him all year and have just gently turned the screw on him and his last work was very pleasing. We bred him and still own a leg in him.”

O'Brien also has a pair of fillies entered in the GI Maker's Mark Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Turf in listed winner and G1 Irish Oaks runner-up Toy (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) and G1 Cazoo Oaks victress Tuesday (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}). Ryan Moore will be aboard Tuesday and will leave from barrier five, while Wayne Lordan has the call on Toy. The latter pair have drawn gate seven.

O'Brien said, “Tuesday is very well, she has a nice draw. It was bad ground when she ran in France [G1 Prix de l'Opera], but her work has been very good.

“Toy has made very good progress since her last race, she has a good draw and the trip and ground should be fine for her.”

Consistent filly Meditate (Ire) (No Nay Never), who is four-for-six, flies the flag for O'Brien in the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies. Besides winning her first four starts in succession, including group victories in the G3 Coolmore Stud Fillies Sprint S., G3 Albany S., and the G2 Debutante S., the dark bay rolled a pair of twos in the G1 Moyglare Stud S. and the G1 Cheveley Park S. both in September.

“Meditate is one I really like stepping up in trip and I think that, coupled with going round a bend, will help her,” he said. “She's a No Nay Never out of a mare by Dalakhani (Ire) and we are still learning about these No Nay Nevers who are fast, precocious horses. Meditate has plenty of stamina on the dam's side, we are still working out about what we do with her next year.

“She's never lost a kilo since her last run, we've given her the chance to back out in her work but there are no negative signs. She's also got a good mind and is a hardy filly whose constitution will also help her with the distance.”

The master of Rosegreen also saddles G3 Prix de Conde hero Victoria Road (Ire) (Saxon Warrior {Jpn}) in the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf. He's drawn in stall one and will be ridden by Ryan Moore.

“Our 2-year-old colt [Victoria Road] came from a good bit back at Chantilly and we think he could develop into a [G1] French Derby horse,” O'Brien said. “The main thing is that we don't want him to get lost early in his race on Friday, but I feel it's only when he goes further that we will see him in a better light.”

O'Brien also reflected on the strong European Breeders' Cup participation, and added, “It's always good to see Charlie Appleby with his team at the Breeders' Cup. He's a very good trainer, he's doing a great job and has an adept team of horses and people to bring with him.

“We love coming to Keeneland because its weather can be similar to ours and everyone here is horsey minded, like we are in Ireland. You have to be tactically quick around here, but you need to be able to finish off your race as well.

“We will be looking at the ground, but in my opinion I prefer it quick because Flat horses should be all about speed.”

The post Aidan O’Brien String Exits Quarantine And Steps Out At Keeneland Ahead Of The Breeders’ Cup appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights