Machmer Hall Sales To Debut Consignment At September Yearling Sales

Machmer Hall Farm, one of Kentucky's leading Thoroughbred nurseries and breeders of champion Tepin and Grade 1-winner Gift Box, Vyjack, Money Multiplier, So Perfect, etc. announced Saturday they have developed a sales consignment operation to focus specifically on yearling sales in North America.

Machmer Hall owners, Sandy Fubini and Craig and Carrie Brogden, along with Amy Bunt and Mullikin Thoroughbreds are the principals of the new company, named Machmer Hall Sales. The group has enjoyed success pinhooking international star Mind Your Biscuits and ultra-talented Flat Out.

The new organization will focus on attention to detail and also concentrate on the yearling market and long-term relationships with established clients. Advice on matings, sale placements and pinhooking are among the full range of services available. They are scheduled to offer 20 Thoroughbred yearlings at the upcoming Fasig-Tipton Yearling Showcase, scheduled for Sept. 9 and 10 as well as a larger consignment for the following Keeneland September Sale in Lexington, Ky. 

Yearlings by noted stallions Into Mischief, American Pharoah, Constitution, Malibu Moon and Street Sense are among the initial offerings.

“I am glad that with Machmer Hall Sales, I can focus on my passion for selling yearlings,” Carrie Brogden said.

“I'm grateful for my continued relationship with Machmer Hall,” Amy Bunt said. “Their outstanding broodmare band and well-prepared individuals makes my job easier and more pleasurable. Carrie and I have worked together for a long time and I look forward to giving our clients even more personalized service.”

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Kingman’s Persian King Dominates the Moulin

In the absence of Palace Pier (GB) (Kingman {GB}), Kameko (Kitten’s Joy) and the retired Mohaather (GB) (Showcasing {GB}), Sunday’s G1 Prix du Moulin de Longchamp boasted almost everything else that still held some claim to elevated status in the mile category and it was TDN Rising Star Persian King (Ire) (Kingman {GB}) who emerged supreme. Long deemed more than capable of a performance such as this, Godolphin SNC and Ballymore Thoroughbred Ltd’s imposing specimen just needed things to fall right and with conditions in his favour and an ideal target horse in Circus Maximus (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) it was all set up ideally here. Sunk in the heavy ground when fourth behind Palace Pier in the G1 Prix Jacques le Marois at Deauville Aug. 16, the 18-5 second favourite who is unbeaten at this track tanked along with relish in the hands of Pierre-Charles Boudot in a close second with the rest detached throughout the early stages. Left in front two out, the 4-year-old was in total control from there with the winning margin eventually narrowed to 1 3/4 lengths by the sole closer Pinatubo (Ire) (Shamardal), as Circus Maximus faded to be six lengths behind in third. “Persian King’s victory was expected, to be fair. I don’t want to play the genius, but I was very confident because I could train him properly for the first time,” Andre Fabre said. “The surfaces were better than in August and it was less warm, so I could train him harder.”

Sporting these same Ballymore silks as a juvenile, Persian King registered a brace of conditions wins at Chantilly by a cumulative margin of 11 lengths before denying Magna Grecia (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) by a neck, with Circus Maximus three lengths away, in a strong renewal of the G3 Autumn S. at Newmarket. Bought into by Godolphin, he reappeared to take the course-and-distance G3 Prix de Fontainebleau on fast ground in race-record time last April before securing the expected Classic victory in contrasting testing conditions in the G1 Poule d’Essai des Poulains also over this track and trip the following month. Denied the Poulains-G1 Prix du Jockey Club double by Sottsass (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}) at Chantilly last June, the bay sustained an injury there which kept him off the track until racing’s resumption in 2020. Turned over by the subsequent Listed Gala S.-winning stablemate Magny Cours (Medaglia d’Oro) in the Listed Prix de Montretout over a mile back at Chantilly June 10, he built on that comeback effort to beat Pretreville (Fr) (Acclamation {GB}) and Skalleti (Fr) (Kendargent {Fr}) in G2 Prix du Muguet at Saint-Cloud June 28.

Moving back beyond a mile for only the second time in the nine-furlong G1 Prix d’Ispahan at Chantilly July 19, he made light work of dispatching of the veteran Stormy Antarctic (GB) (Stormy Atlantic) there but was out of the first two for the first time in his career in the Marois on Deauville’s sapping ground. Coming forward from that slog rather than it setting him back, Persian King was able to sit on the tail of the aggressively-ridden Circus Maximus with ease as the remaining quartet found themselves adrift. Siskin (First Defence) had become worked up in the stalls as he did in the G1 Middle Park S. last term and was awkwardly away, while Persian King’s year-younger stablemate Victor Ludorum (Ire) (Shamardal) again blew the start as he had in the G1 Prix du Jockey Club. Pinatubo and last year’s runner-up Romanised (Ire) (Holy Roman Emperor {Ire}) made up the four that were separated from the front duo, but none of their jockeys could be accused of giving them too much to do as there were no visual signs that they were under restraint.

Last year’s hero Circus Maximus was probably striding on a touch too energetically for the first half of the contest, but with no other pace available in the line-up Ryan Moore had understandably opted to grasp the nettle. Unfortunately for that triple group 1 winner, he was being utilised as a lead horse by Boudot whose every body signal throughout suggested the race was wrapped up even before they turned for home with that comfortable gap still intact to the chasing pack. Letting Persian King rip as soon as he felt the Ballydoyle challenger under stress, the considerable talent Boudot had judged the race to perfection as he so often does and as eyecatching and reaffirming as Pinatubo’s customary determined charge was, it was never going to be enough.

Andre Fabre is looking at stepping the winner back up in trip and, surprisingly, was not ruling out a tilt at the G1 Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe back here in four weeks’ time. “You can blame the ground for his below-par performance in the Jacques le Marois and the best horse on the day won today,” he said. “He’s entered in [G1] Champion S. and the Arc and all is possible. We have different options and I think he can step back up in distance, so we will see closer to the time which way we go. I don’t know if a mile and a half would be better, as there is obviously a question mark over the distance.”

Charlie Appleby said of the runner-up, “Pinatubo has run another solid race and seen the mile out. We will see how he comes out of the race and discuss it with connections, but I think the plan will be to come back to Longchamp for the [G1] Prix de la Foret and then hopefully on to the Breeders’ Cup Mile.” The Niarchos Family’s Alan Cooper said of Circus Maximus, “We have no complaints, he’s run a very good race and we’ll take him back home and see what Aidan wants to do with him. I suppose there are only two options now, the [G1] Queen Elizabeth II Stakes or the Breeders’ Cup Mile.” Siskin’s jockey Colin Keane commented, He ran well and to the pound of his Sussex form if you compare with Circus Maximus. It wasn’t an ideal race, as I was left in no mans’ land in front of the main pack.”

Persian King is the second foal out of Pretty Please (Ire) (Dylan Thomas {Ire}), a half to the G1 Prix Ganay hero Planteur (Ire) (Danehill Dancer {Ire}) who was also second in the G1 Prix du Jockey Club. Their dam Plante Rare (Ire) (Giant’s Causeway) is a half to three pattern-race winners headed by the four-times group 2 scorer Policy Maker (Ire) (Sadler’s Wells) who was also twice runner-up in the G1 Grand Prix de Saint-Cloud. The third dam Palmeraie (Lear Fan) is kin to the GII Long Island H. heroine Peinture Bleue (Alydar), who in turn is the dam of the 1997 G1 Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe and Prix du Jockey Club hero and leading sire Peintre Celebre (Nureyev).

Sunday, ParisLongchamp, France
PRIX DU MOULIN DE LONGCHAMP-G1, €270,000, ParisLongchamp, 9-6, 3yo/up, 8fT, 1:36.73, g/s.
1–PERSIAN KING (IRE), 129, c, 4, by Kingman (GB)
1st Dam: Pretty Please (Ire), by Dylan Thomas (Ire)
2nd Dam: Plante Rare (Ire), by Giant’s Causeway
3rd Dam: Palmeraie, by Lear Fan
O-Ballymore Thoroughbred Ltd & Godolphin; B-Dayton Investments (Breeding) Ltd (IRE); T-Andre Fabre; J-Pierre-Charles Boudot. €85,710. Lifetime Record: GSW-Eng, 12-8-3-0, €1,137,740. Werk Nick Rating: A. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Pinatubo (Ire), 125, c, 3, Shamardal–Lava Flow (Ire), by Dalakhani (Ire). O/B-Godolphin (IRE); T-Charlie Appleby. €61,722.
3–Circus Maximus (Ire), 129, c, 4, Galileo (Ire)–Duntle (Ire), by Danehill Dancer (Ire). O-Flaxman Stables Ireland Ltd, Susan Magnier, Michael Tabor & Derrick Smith; B-Flaxman Stables Ireland Ltd (IRE); T-Aidan O’Brien. €30,861.
Margins: 1 3/4, 6, 1. Odds: 3.60, 1.40, 5.20.
Also Ran: Siskin, Victor Ludorum (GB), Romanised (Ire). Click for the Racing Post result or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. Video, sponsored by Fasig-Tipton.

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Precocity The Key At New-Look Ascot

The yearling sale caravan rolls onto Newmarket on Monday for the relocated Tattersalls Ascot Yearling Sale, where 257 commercial youngsters will go under the hammer. The fledgling sale which celebrate its fourth renewal rides the momentum of a pair of group-winning 2-year-olds at major meetings over the summer, with Steel Bull (Ire) (Clodovil {Ire})’s victory in the G3 Molecomb S. at Glorious Goodwood preceding Miss Amulet (Ire) (Sir Prancealot {Ire})’s score in the G2 Lowther S. at York’s Ebor meeting, which followed a victory in Naas’s Listed Marwell S. Both have already turned a profit for connections: Steel Bull, a £15,000 yearling, was sold privately to Chantal Regalado-Gonzalez after his Molecomb win, while Miss Amulet, with the residual value of black-type aside, has earned in excess of £84,000 off a £7,500 purchase price. Miss Amulet is set to appear in the G1 Cheveley Park S. on Sept. 26, while Steel Bull also looks bound for Group 1 company in the autumn.

“Those kinds of flagship horses are crucial for any sale,” said Matt Prior, Tattersalls Ascot’s head of sales. “Last year we sold approximately 150 horses and within that we’ve got a real flagship colt and a flagship filly. It’s been an ideal showcase for the sale-Steel Bull was bought for £15,000, won the Molecomb hugely impressively and looked unlucky in his last start and like one to keep an eye on in the later Group 1s in the year.

“Miss Amulet has been a revelation for a filly that cost £7,500. She’s a great bargain buy type of advert, which is what Ascot has the reputation for. Summer Sands was that the year before. Miss Amulet looks like she’s going to take all the beating in the Cheveley Park having won the Lowther, so she’s a dream filly to have come out of the sale. I think that will give people confidence to come back this year, and they should know that there is no doubt that some of next year’s high-class juveniles are in the catalogue and they can go out there with confidence and find them.”

With siblings to 96 2-year-old winners and 69 yearlings out of 2-year-old-winning mares catalogued, buyers won’t have to dig too deep to find precocious types, and two that should make most short lists are Ringfort Stud’s half-sister to Miss Amulet (lot 143) from the first crop of Yeomanstown’s Scat Daddy son El Kabeir; and Linacre House Stud’s full-sister to prior stakes-winning Ascot yearling graduate Flaming Princess (Ire) (Gutaifan {Ire}) (lot 116) (more on her in yesterday’s TDN). They are among 20 siblings to black-type performers catalogued.

“I think it says a lot about where the sale has come in four years that now we’re starting to offer the siblings to black-type winners that we’ve sold, such as James Kelly’s Linacre House Stud’s smashing Gutaifan full-sister to Flaming Princess,” Prior said. “It’s a really good filly family and she looks like she could be a Queen Mary filly next year; she’s that kind of filly. As an individual people won’t be disappointed when they see her; she’s by a stallion that’s really kicked on this year with Fev Rover coming out recently. I think she’s going to be on people’s short lists.

“And Derek Veitch of Ringfort Stud, who bred Miss Amulet, he’s returning this year with a filly from the first crop of El Kabeir, so there’s a bit of residual value as well. Reports are she’s a really nice individual that I think is going to be popular and could go to any sale, so we’re lucky to have them in our sale. It’s a real feather in the cap for the sale this year to have those vendors that have been rewarded by selling nice horses with us to come back and have confidence to bring the siblings to the market.”

Whitsbury Manor Stud has been a regular supporter of the Ascot Yearling Sale, and the Harper family’s nursery brings eight yearlings this year including a colt from the second crop of Goken (Fr) (lot 245), the leading first-crop sire in France this season and second only to Mehmas (Ire) currently among all European first-crop sires. Goken sired Sunday’s G3 Prix la Rochette victor Go Athletico (Fr). Lot 245 is a three-quarter brother to Kendargent (Fr) stakes winners Kendam (Fr) and Kenfreeze (Fr) and is the only progeny of his sire thus far offered at a UK yearling sale. Ed Harper purchased the dam, Damdam Freeze (Fr) (Indian Rocket {GB}), for €50,000 carrying this colt at Arqana December in 2018 and, with the addition of some updates from Kendam’s G3 Prix La Rochette victor Kenway (Fr) (Galiway {GB}), she was sold to Mags O’Toole at Tattersalls July this year for 70,000gns in foal to Showcasing (GB).

“I had an inkling that Goken might surprise a few people amongst the first season sires so I was keen to buy the best quality mare I could that was in foal from his second season,” Harper explained. “We’ve been fortunate the mare has provided us with an athletic colt, he’s compact but has a lovely way of going and there’s also been a nice update on the page with Kenway picking up more group race placings under the first dam. He should attract good attention from anyone that has seen how well Goken’s runners have been performing.”

With Showcasing as its flagbearer, Adaay (Ire) and Due Diligence having gotten off to promising starts and the G1 Flying Five S. winner Havana Grey (GB) also coming up through the ranks, Whitsbury Manor has laid its foundations with speed, and thus the Tattersalls Ascot Sale is a natural fit.

“This sale has been specifically positioned to offer precocious 2-year-old types, which is exactly the section of the market that we aim to focus on with our stallions,” Harper confirmed. “In addition, the usual location of the sale at Ascot is only an hour from Whitsbury which is considerably closer to home than all the others. Therefore, if this sale is able to continue as a good outlet for our stock it provides us with a very efficient market as far as travel, staff, hotels, etcetera are concerned.”

Whitsbury Manor offers two of the three yearlings by Showcasing in the sale-a filly, lot 69, and a colt, lot 127-and Harper described them both as “great walkers.” Another he pointed to in the consignment was a Due Diligence filly who is the first foal out of the unraced Eshq (Ire) (Oasis Dream {GB}) (lot 7), a granddaughter of American champion mare Fleet Indian. Whitsbury Manor scooped her up for 1,500gns at Tattersalls December last year.

“She is the absolute image of what I think the sale is looking for: strong, compact, and a ready-made 2-year-old,” Harper said. “I just hope she goes to a trainer that won’t be afraid to push on with her as she’s ready to go.”

The likes of Showcasing and Gutaifan represent a strong sire profile at the burgeoning Tattersalls Ascot Yearling Sale. There are similarly three yearlings catalogued by young sensation Night Of Thunder (Ire), with representation as well from the likes of Acclamation (GB) and his red hot son Mehmas (Ire); Dandy Man, Holy Roman Emperor (Ire), Iffraaj (Ire) and Zoffany (Ire).

“We’re over the moon; three Night of Thunders tells you how far the sale has come,” Prior said. “He’s been a revelation as a sire and we feel very lucky that we have that calibre of stallion not only once but three times. That sire power makes such a difference. Mehmas is off to a flyer and we have nine of those so buyers will have plenty to go at there.”

As the third European yearling sale on a re-shuffled calendar in an unprecedented year, all eyes will be on Park Paddocks on Monday before the action shifts to Deauville on Wednesday. Last week’s Goffs UK Premier Yearling Sale achieved a solid clearance rate of 84%, but with turnover nearly half of what it was last year and other markers significantly down, vendors will be hoping the desire for bloodstock grows as the season marches on.

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