The Weekly Wrap: Old Guard, New Blood

When we wrapped up last Flat season, the lofty assumption was that by the start of this new one we would be back to some semblance of normality. How wrong could we have been?

After a brutal winter, the pandemic is only now easing to the point where a limited number of owners were permitted to attend racecourses in England and Scotland from yesterday (Monday). 

There are not too many areas within racing in which Britain is ahead of Ireland or France—witness the Irish domination of the Cheltenham Festival and France's enviable prize-money situation. But one of the few consolations for much of Britain at the moment is the accelerated Covid vaccination programme which has hastened the return of owners. May is being pencilled in for the same to happen in France, while there is no clear indication in Ireland as to when owners can be welcomed back to the races for the first time since the initial lockdown began in March 2020.

In England, the two owners per horse rule has been increased to four for the Good Friday fixtures at Lingfield and Newcastle, and from April 12 it is the BHA's intention to increase that limit to six per horse. The planned June return of spectators at sporting events in Britain can't come soon enough. Holidays can be eschewed, but the prospect of another summer not being able to mill around the racecourse, eyeing up the runners in the parade ring and bumping into friends, would be too miserable to contemplate.

With the backdrop of Covid restrictions made even more onerous by the ludicrous amount of red tape and extra expense inflicted on horse movement between the UK and EU by Brexit, it has been a gloomy enough start to the year. This situation will ease, however. What cannot be rectified is the enormous loss for the racing and breeding industry brought about by the sad deaths of David Thompson, Prince Khalid Abdullah and Sheikh Hamdan Al Maktoum. 

When Sheikh Hamdan's passing was announced on Wednesday, the notable aspect to the many glowing tributes paid to the founder of the Shadwell breeding empire was the genuine emotion in the voices of those who had worked for him—usually over a period of many years. That in itself speaks volumes of a loyalty between boss and employee, owner and trainer, which can be all too sadly lacking in modern-day life.

It is why, across a blockbuster weekend of racing, the most pleasing result was that of the Lincoln. Of course for Flat racing fans in Britain, the Lincoln meeting is a longed-for annual marker which says goodbye to winter and all those slow jumpers. But these days it has to compete with its glitzier and much richer cousin, the Dubai World Cup.

An hour after winning the Lincoln with Haqeeqy (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}), the partnership of John and Thady Gosden, with the ink barely dry on their joint training licence, had added both the G1 Dubai Turf and G1 Dubai Sheema Classic to an impressive weekend haul. But it was the Lincoln which gave perhaps the most important pointer towards the future.

Yes, the steady hand of the multiple champion trainer John Gosden is still on the tiller, but he made it plain when joining the TDN Writers' Room last month that he intends to step back completely in a few years after completing a transition period with his youngest son. Thus, Thady's name appeared on the stable's first heritage handicap winner of the new era, and is was alongside that of Haqeeqy's owner, Sheikh Hamdan's young daughter Sheikha Hissa, who had eight runners from the Gosden stable last season. Add to the mix a first win on turf for one of the most eye-catching young jockeys on the scene, 18-year-old Benoit de la Sayette, who is apprenticed at the Gosdens' Clarehaven stable. In many respects, it's the old team, but one boasting plenty of young blood.

Haggas Goes Walkabout

Three years ago, William Haggas used the Lincoln—a race he has won on four occasions—to set Addeybb (Ire) (Pivotal {GB}) on his way from being a decent handicapper to a Group 1 star. Some may sniff at the gelding's soft-ground form, others may point to the dearth of top-class homegrown middle-distance horses in Australia. But fans of the 7-year-old—and there's one right here—will appreciate his ability to take the travel between hemispheres with apparent ease and perform up here or down there with admirable consistency.

Addeybb was at it again at the weekend, this time not quite managing to avoid having the tables turned on him by the classy galloper but poor speller Verry Elleegant (NZ) (Zed {NZ}) when attempting to defend his crown in the G1 Ranvet S. at Rosehill. The 5-year-old mare has finished second to him in both Addeybb's Group 1 victories in Australia last year but he was relegated to the runner-up spot this time around. 

Haggas loves an international challenge and in December he told TDN that he felt the progressive 4-year-old Favorite Moon (Ger) (Sea The Moon {Ger}) was just the sort to send on an Australian mission. He was right, and the trainer duly won the G3 N E Manion Cup on the same Rosehill card for the second year running, following the success of Young Rascal (Fr) (Intello {Ger}) in 2020.

If Haggas was smarting at being beaten by Chris Waller in the Ranvet, the latter did at least provide some consolation for him at Doomben, the scene of the fifth Australian victory for Humbolt Current (GB) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}). Haggas formerly trained the 6-year-old for his breeder The Queen and, when recommending him to Waller was talked into taking a share in him. Perhaps Haggas can now talk Waller out of running Verry Elleegant back in the G1 Queen Elizabeth S., when Addeybb will be joined at Sydney's Championships meeting by Favourite Moon, who heads next to the G1 Sydney Cup.

The Other Sir Mark

It was a good day for ex-pat trainers at Rosehill on Saturday, as Haggas and Waller, a New Zealander, was joined in the list of winners by British-born Annabel Neasham, who celebrated her first Group 1 success in the Rosehill Guineas with Mo'unga (Aus) (Savabeel {Aus}).

Waller's fellow Kiwis Sir Mark Todd and Peter Vela teamed up in Britain on Friday with the patriotically named Tasman Bay (Fr) (Le Havre {Ire}), an easy winner at Newcastle on his second start, and a colt with a Derby entry. 

Those who have followed British racing for the last 50 years will be of the opinion that there is only one Sir Mark and his surname is Prescott. In fact, if you've been following three-day eventing during much of that same period, you'll know the other Sir Mark better as 'Toddy'. 

The latter, who retired from the eventing scene in 2000 with two Olympic Gold medals to his credit, made good use of the break from riding by training the New Zealand Oaks winner Bramble Rose (NZ) before making a comeback and competing at another three Olympics up to 2016. 

The potential excitement of Sir Mark Todd, who is already revered as one of the greatest horsemen of our time, turning up at Epsom with a Derby runner might be all too much for some horsey ladies of a certain age to bear.

Winter Warmers

We see plenty of high-priced yearlings change hands at Tattersalls in October, but those who do their homework properly have proved the benefit of hanging around to the end of the month in a bid to try to find a bargain at the Horses-in-Training Sale.

Indeed, two of the busiest and most successful horses of this winter's all-weather season were bought for a total of 15,000gns and have subsequently won 11 races between then since Nov. 24.

Nortonthorpe Boy (GB) (Swiss Spirit {GB}), like the dependable Spare Parts (Ire) (Choisir {Aus}) before him, is a product of the Phil McEntee academy which espouses the ethos of letting the horses roll in the mud between racing as frequently as possible. Now three, Nortonthorpe Boy was bred by Eleanor Kent, matriarch of the Kent dynasty of Co Cork. He'd already managed eight starts at two for Tim Easterby, including two placed runs, when he was sent to the sales. 

A month after buying him for 7,000gns, McEntee sent his newly gelded recruit to Lingfield for the start of a sequence of 14 runs in the last four months, while has included six victories, most recently at Kempton on Saturday off a mark of 84. For his first win on Dec. 30, Nortonthorpe Boy was rated 58.

Another to have shot up the ratings is Khatm (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}), bought from Shadwell by the astute partnership of George Boughey and Sam Haggas for 8,000gns as a once-raced gelding. Khatm won for the first time on his fourth start for Boughey when rated 50. He has now won five times from six starts in the last month to improve his mark to 79 and is entered on Tuesday at Wolverhampton and again at Chelmsford on Friday. He needs just one more victory to join Nortonthorpe Boy at the top of the leaderboard for the winningmost horse in this year's All Weather Championships which conclude on Friday with Finals Day at Lingfield.

A Classic Family In The Reckoning

When winning the G1 Prix Royal-Oak last October, Subjectivist (GB) (Teofilo {Ire}) became the second Group 1 winner in three years to have emanated from Susan and Barry Hearn's Mascalls Stud following Urban Fox (GB) (Foxwedge {Aus}).

On Saturday, the 4-year-old backed up that success with a rout in the G2 Dubai Gold Cup and he will be a fascinating contender in the major Cup races this season. 

The establishment of Subjectivist's family as a force to be reckoned with is largely down to Mark Johnston. The trainer bought his year-older sibling Sir Ron Priestley (GB) (Australia {GB}) for 70,000gns at the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale and returned a year later to buy Subjectivist for 62,000gns. Johnston duly beat a path to the New England Stud draft again in 2019 to buy their half-sister Alba Rose (GB) (Muhaarar {GB}) for 100,000gns, and it is easy to see why. By that stage Sir Ron Priestley had already won the G3 March S. and finished second in the St Leger. Subjectivist followed his example by also winning the March S. and, though he could only finish seventh in the St Leger, he has since surpassed his brother with his Group 1 success. 

Though last year's yearling, by another son of Galileo (Ire) as a member of the first crop of Ulysses (Ire), was bought back by Hearn, she too has joined Johnston's Kingsley Park stable from which she will race in the colours of her breeder. Alba Rose, meanwhile, who was third in last year's G2 Rockfel S., could yet become the third Classic runner from the first four foals of her dam Reckoning (Ire) (Danehill Dancer {Ire}).

Pat Smullen Remembered

As our accompanying story details, Pat Smullen will be remembered on the first day of racing in Newmarket in 2021 with a race named in his honour.

It is scarcely believable that almost 18 years have passed since Smullen rode Refuse To Bend (Ire) to glory in the 2000 Guineas, carrying the Moyglare Stud colours with which he would become so strongly associated during his long tenure at Dermot Weld's stable. 

A lifelong Irish resident, Pat Smullen was nevertheless revered throughout the racing world, and he will be in the thoughts of his many friends and admirers in Newmarket and beyond as racing returns to the Rowley Mile in a fortnight's time.

The post The Weekly Wrap: Old Guard, New Blood appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Australia: With Sydney Carnival Reset, Golden Slipper And Five More Group 1s On Tap

Fans of Australian racing can wager with confidence on Friday night's rescheduled Golden Slipper (Group 1) card in Sydney, as drying conditions were expected across the second half of this week. And, if every cloud has a silver lining, the Rosehill program boasts even more star power after fields were redrawn for the four other G1 races on the card.  The “Slipper” card is available to stream on the new Sky Racing World App and will be broadcast live on TVG (First Post: 9:30 p.m. ET / 6:30 p.m. PT).

Racetracks in three states have cancelled dozens of programs since late last week, with the biggest casualty being the postponement of last weekend's Golden Slipper, the world's richest 2-year-old race. The entire program has been transplanted on the calendar to this Friday night, pushing back each subsequent card for the duration of Sydney's “Autumn Racing Carnival.” (This means that “The Championships” at Randwick, a two-day Breeders' Cup-style event offering more than $21 million in purses, will now be staged on April 9 and 16). Only the Golden Slipper field remained intact, and the extra week has suited the schedule of several high-profile horses, whose inclusion in the “supporting” stakes races has further bolstered the program's appeal.

The G1 sequence begins with the Ranvet Stakes (Race 4). Quirky and intractable in her younger days, Verry Elleegant has furnished into a top-class professional athlete under the tutelage of Sydney's leading trainer, Chris Waller. The 5-year-old mare has won five G1 races in the past year, exhibiting tigerish tenacity to clinch four of them in heart-stopping photo finishes. Her ½-length loss to English stayer Addeybb in the 2020 Ranvet was the “Race of the Carnival,” and the pair will lock horns again Friday night in the weight-for-age contest at 1 1/4 miles. Each horse follows an identical preparation to last year, with Addeybb (even-money favorite) unraced since winning the G1 Champion Stakes at Ascot in October and Verry Elleegant (9-5) making her third start of the year.

Despite Rosehill's excellent drainage, the surface will still be in the “soft-to-heavy” range after being inundated with some 15 inches of rain. There are few racehorses in the world with a more pronounced preference for wet tracks than Colette (5-1), a Godolphin mare whose record on firm footing is 8:1-2-0 but who seemingly grows an extra leg — or flipper — on wet surfaces (6:5-1-0). The redrawn Ranvet field now also includes Sir Dragonet (13-1), who is struggling for form this campaign but gets race and surface conditions that resemble his triumph in last October's Cox Plate.

Race 5 is the Rosehill Guineas (G1) at 1 1/4 miles for 3-year-olds, a natural progression from the one-mile Randwick Guineas three weeks ago. Mo'unga is 5-2 favorite to turn the tables on Lion's Roar, after finishing a desperately unlucky second behind the 25-1 upset winner of the Randwick Guineas. Lion's Roar is 7-1 to repeat, and each colt has won his only start on a “heavy” track. Splitting them in the wagering are Montefilia and Grandslam (each at 6-1). Montefilia is a dual G1-winning filly who defeated colts – including Lion's Roar – at this distance last year. Grandslam is an addition to the original field who is coming off a six-length G2 win. He is a full-brother to elite staying mare Jameka, winner of the 2016 Caulfield Cup.

Race 6 is the George Ryder Stakes (G1), a weight-for-age race at 7 1/2 furlongs. Wagering is headed by 7-year-old Godolphin warhorse Avilius (3-1), an earner of $3.5 million who is two-for-two on “heavy” tracks. Avilius (whose damsire is Sunday Silence) hasn't won since 2019, but showed his old spark with a close third-place finish off a layoff.

Friday's final G1 race is the most open: The Galaxy (Race 8) is a handicap at 5 1/2 furlongs, boasting co-favorites at 4-1. The Waller-trained Haut Brion Her is primed to enhance her excellent record fresh, while Tailleur is a rapidly rising talent for Godolphin who has won six of eight starts.

The Rosehill card will be broadcast live on TVG this Friday night (First Post: 9:30 p.m. ET / 6:30 p.m. PT) alongside cards from Doomben, Wyong and Gold Coast. All races will be livestreamed in HD on the new Sky Racing World Appskyracingworld.com and major ADW platforms such as TVG, TwinSpiresXpressbet, NYRABets, WatchandWagerHPIbet, and AmWager. Wagering is also available via these ADW platforms. Fans can get free access to livestreaming, past performances and expert picks on all races at skyracingworld.com.

A native of Brisbane, Australia, Michael Wrona has called races in six countries. Wrona's vast U.S. experience includes race calling at Los Alamitos, Hollywood Park, Arlington and Santa Anita, calling the 2000 Preakness on a national radio network, and the 2016 Breeders' Cup on the International simulcast network. Wrona also performed a race call voiceover for a Seinfeld episode called The Subway.

The post Australia: With Sydney Carnival Reset, Golden Slipper And Five More Group 1s On Tap appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Ghaiyyath Crowned Longines World’s Best Racehorse

Godolphin's Ghaiyyath (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) was officially named Longines World's Best Racehorse on Tuesday having been assessed to have posted the top two performances of 2020. His high mark of 130 was gained in the G1 Juddmonte International S. at York, which was also named Longines World's Best Horserace for the first time. The former Charlie Appleby trainee also recorded a mark of 127 in the G1 Hurworth Bloodstock Coronation Cup which, in a pandemic-disrupted season, was moved from Epsom to Newmarket.

Bred by the Weld family's Springbank Way Stud from the 2006 Irish 1000 Guineas winner Nightime (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), Ghaiyyath won his first four starts in 2020, starting out with a facile victory in the G3 Dubai Millennium S. at Meydan in track record time. Returning to the UK, the 5-year-old beat the previous season's Derby winner Athony Van Dyck (Ire) in the Coronation Cup before claiming an even bigger scalp with his victory over Enable (GB) in the G1 Coral-Eclipse. His championship performance came with his three-length strike in the International, in which fellow Group 1 winners Magical (Ire), Lord North (Ire) and Kameko filled the minor places. Ghaiyyath has now retired to his owner Sheikh Mohammed Al Maktoum's Kildangan Stud in Ireland.

“In some ways he was the perfect racehorse; he had so many positive attributes,” said Joe Osborne, managing director of Godolphin Ireland. “He campaigned internationally and he was at that age to have reached his peak form. He was the kind of brand ambassador that Godolphin has been famous for down the years. His high cruising speed and his ability to find acceleration at the end of his races was what really set him apart.”

Charlie Appleby added, “It was a great privilege to be involved with a horse like Ghaiyyath. Right from the start he was one of the horses we were very find of and to train a horse like this for His Highness Sheikh Mohammed and for Godolphin was a great honour.

“The most pleasing victory in 2020 was the Juddmonte International. I felt it just confirmed what we had seen in the Eclipse when he beat Enable.”

The ongoing Covid-19 restrictions meant that for the first time the awards, organised for the eighth year in tandem by Longines and the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities (IFHA), were presented in an online ceremony hosted by Francesca Cumani as Newmarket's National Horseracing Museum instead of in London.

A stellar season for the Bob Baffert-trained Authentic (Into Mischief) saw him win the GI Kentucky Derby and GI Haskell S. but it was his 2 1/4-length victory in the Breeders' Cup Classic which was judged to be his standout performance of the year on 126,. This placed him second overall in the rankings and made him the world's best 3-year-old and highest-rated dirt horse.

Authentic is now at stud at Spendthrift Farm, which comprised one part of his large syndicate of owners during his racing days. The group included Myracehorse Stable, with members in every state in America and from more than 20 countries around the world.

“I used to love looking forward to making that trip to London even though it was always freezing,” said Baffert via video link from his home in California. The trainer was also responsible for Triple Crown and Breeders' Cup Classic winner American Pharoah, who was the Longines World's Best Racehorse of 2015, as well as Arrogate, the world's top-rated horse of 2016 and 2017.

He continued, “Authentic was just getting better and better and better. He had a lot of speed and he could carry a mile and a quarter effortlessly. It takes a really good horse to win the Derby and the Breeders' Cup Classic. Is it's just an honour to be involved in this. Racing is all about bragging rights so to have a horse as good as this is what it's all about.”

There was a seven-way tie for third between horses trained in Britain, France, America and Australia on a ranking of 125. Addeybb (Ire) (Pivotal {GB}) won three Group 1 races in two different hemispheres for the William Haggas stable in 2020 but it was his season-closing victory in the QIPCO British Champion S. for which he gained top marks, alongside fellow Newmarket resident Palace Pier (GB) (Kingman {GB}). The latter was the top-rated European 3-year-old, gaining his mark for his run in the G1 Prix du Haras Fresnay-le-Buffard Jacques le Marois at Deauville. Juddmonte's Kingman is also the sire of Persian King (Ire), ranked equal to Palace Pier on 125 after winning the G1 Prix du Moulin de Longchamp, while Palace Pier's stablemate Stradivarius (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) is again the top stayer in the world having run to 125 when winning the G1 Gold Cup for the third time at Royal Ascot.

The Barclay Tagg-trained Tiz The Law (Constitution) was also awarded 125 for his GI Runhappy Travers S. victory, and  that mark was also achieved by Australian sprinters Bivouac (Aus) (Exceed And Excel {Aus}) and Classique Legend (Aus) (Not A Single Doubt {Aus}) in the G1 Darley Sprint Classic and The TAB Everest respectively. 

Japan's recently retired Horse of the Year Almond Eye (Jpn) (Lord Kanaloa {Jpn}), trained by Sakae Kunieda, was judged to have run to a mark of 124 on two occasions, when winning the GI Victoria Mile and GI Longines Japan Cup for the second time. That same mark was awarded to her compatriot, the Triple Crown winner Contrail (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}), whose first taste of defeat came when finishing runner-up to Almond Eye in the Japan Cup.

Also in equal-tenth place on 124 was Hong Kong star Golden Sixty (Aus) (Medaglia d'Oro), now the winner of 15 of his 16 races and gaining his top mark in the G1 Longines Hong Kong Mile. The impressive victory of Mohaather (GB) (Showcasing {GB}) in the G1 Qatar Sussex S. and of Nature Strip (Aus) (Nicconi {Aus}) in the G1 TJ Smith S. also gained marks of 124.

The Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe winner Sottsass (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}) headed a quintet in joint-15th place on 123.  They included Sheikh Hamdan Al Maktoum's crack sprinter Battaash (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}), G1 Prince of Wales's S.winner Lord North (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}), and the Japanese duo of GI Tenno Sho runner-up Fierement (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) and Glory Vase (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}).

Breeders' Cup Classic runner-up Improbable (City Zip) was another to reach 123, a mark he gained twice, in the GI Whitney S. and GI Awesome Again S.

The best performance of 2020 for Juddmonte superstar Enable (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}) was her record third victory in the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth S, for which she was awarded a mark of 122. This same rating was given to Love (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) for her victories in the Oaks and Yorkshire Oaks, as well as 2000 Guineas winner Kameko (Kitten's Joy) for his G2 Shadwell Joel S. success, and to the previous season's European champion 2-year-old Pinatubo (Ire) (Shamardal). Also on 122 were Maximum Security (New Year's Day), Anthony Van Dyck (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), Beauty Generation (NZ) (Road To Rock {Aus}), Gamine (Into Mischief), In Swoop (Ire) (Adlerflug {Ger}), Magical (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), Tarnawa (Ire) (Shamardal), Swiss Skydiver (Daredevil) and Tom's d'Etat (Smart Strike).

Of the 56 horses in the world with a rating of 120 or more in 2020, 14 were trained in Britain, 11 in America, 10 in Ireland, and seven in Japan, while France, Australia and Hong Kong accounted for four apiece, and two were trained in South Africa.

Frankel (GB) (Galileo {Ire}), who was the Longines World's Best Racehorse of 2011 and 2012, achieved the highest-ever rating of 140.

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Addeybb Being Primed For Australian Return

Only three horses in the world finished the season with a rating higher than Addeybb (Ire) (Pivotal {GB}), and certainly none of them have won Group 1 races in two hemispheres within 2020.

Sheikh Ahmed Al Maktoum’s homebred 6-year-old may not have received the recognition he deserves for his exploits throughout the year, but it is safe to say that he is fully appreciated by his trainer William Haggas and jockey Tom Marquand. It is also not an exaggeration to say that, as much of the racing world went into lockdown and the start of the British turf season was delayed by more than two months, Addeybb’s first Group 1 strike, in the Ranvet S. at Rosehill in March, brought a collective cheer to his home town of Newmarket when it was badly needed. 

“It was extraordinary really,” says Haggas as he reflects on an ambitious Australian raid with Addeybb and Young Rascal (Fr) (Intello {Ger}), who won the G3 Manion Cup and was seventh in the G1 Sydney Cup before joining the Ballarat stable of Archie Alexander.

“Essentially I thought that was the place for Addeybb as he had struggled to win a Group 1 in England, and I thought that if it rained he must have a chance of winning a Group 1 in Australia,” he continues. 

“The only blip we had was in the Sydney Cup [with Young Rascal] but the rest of it went absolutely swimmingly. I said to [former assistant trainer] Harry Eustace when he got back, ‘We’ll try it every year now but it will probably never go that well again’. We had the right people, the right conditions, and the right horses for the right races. And we had a jockey who knew the place and who was English and hungry and was able to come and sit on the horse a few times before he ran. It just went to plan, it was very fortunate.”

For Marquand, who is not officially stable jockey to Haggas, but who rides out for him regularly and is generally first preference for the stable’s mounts, the Ranvet victory was an important milestone in an extraordinary season. From that first Group 1 success, he added another two on Addeybb, in the Queen Elizabeth S. at Randwick and the QIPCO British Champion S. back home at Ascot. He also notched a first British Classic in the St Leger aboard Galileo Chrome (Ire) (Australia {GB}), as well as a first win at Royal Ascot. All that, and still Marquand has been somewhat usurped by his equally high-achieving girlfriend Hollie Doyle, with the pair currently sitting in second and third position in the jockeys’ table for the year.

“It has been a remarkable year for them,” says Haggas. “For Tom, who I know better and have obviously worked with a lot this year, it has been a really interesting year. He’s obviously still a very young man but he lost the ride on English King (Ire) in the Derby then finished second on an outsider. Then the real irony was that he took the ride back on English King for the St Leger and then they rerouted [the horse] on declaration day to the Grand Prix de Paris. Tom was going to be without a ride in the St Leger but then Shane Crosse tested positive for Covid and Tom got the ride on the winner. The luck has to go your way in life, and in racing in particular luck went his way this year.”

He adds, “Both the jockeys we are using at the moment, Tom and Cieren [Fallon Jr], have had nothing but progression all their racing lives but we have to prepare them for the bump in the road, which is inevitable.

What Hollie has achieved is remarkable, and she and Tom are both very level-headed, normal people. And all the stories that can be gleaned from Hollie’s success in particular are fantastic for our sport.”

While Doyle stayed in Britain through last winter, plying her trade on the all-weather, Marquand became quite the darling of the Australian race fans and media during his fruitful spell in Sydney. His return to the UK and continued association with Addeybb saw the pair score their biggest home win on British Champions Day, the same day that Doyle landed her first Group 1 in the Sprint with Glen Shiel (GB), trained by Haggas’s former assistant Archie Watson.

Haggas is understandably protective of Addeybb. He says, “He’s sort of been a little bit under the radar for most people because of his love of soft ground. The more dour performances come on this type of ground but you’ve still got to win it. Champions’ Day, rightly or wrongly, is often run on soft ground, so that’s an obvious target. A lot of the field were known to be suited by soft ground too, so it’s not as if they all failed. I watched him the whole way and, I shouldn’t really say this because it sounds arrogant, but it was never really in doubt. He got a good position, travelled well and waited until the two, then he kicked and that was it.”

Addeybb has subsequently enjoyed a well-earned spell in the paddock but has recently returned to Haggas’s Somerville Lodge in preparation for another trip to Australia in 2021.

“I think we’re going to try for the same again,” says the trainer. “The beauty of last year was the travelling. He travelled immaculately and when he came back he was eight kilos lighter than when he left, which is extraordinary. He’s old and he’s a gelding, but he’s a dude now and he doesn’t take too much out of himself. He’s had a little time in the field, he looks big and well and his preparation will be geared up towards returning.”

The return of Addeybb may not be music to the ears of Chris Waller, whose Verry Elleegant (NZ) (Zed {NZ}) finished runner-up to him in both his Group 1 victories, but Sydney’s champion trainer can at least count Haggas among the many owners in his stable. Humbolt Current (GB) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}) joined Waller’s stable from Haggas after the 2018 season and his former trainer ended up buying a share in the Queen’s homebred, who, appropriately, has won three times in Queensland this year.

Haggas explains, “Chris bought a horse from Her Majesty, and he bought him at the right time. I said to him that I thought he was the soundest horse I’ve ever trained. When Mathilde [Texier] vetted him she said she couldn’t find one bit of him that wasn’t perfect. So I rang the two people who had owned [G1 Doomben Cup winner] Beaten Up (GB) with us and I said ‘Your trainer has just bought this horse and I think you should buy a share in him’. So they did, and then Chris rang me and said, ‘If he’s such a nice horse would you like a share?'”

Addeybb is likely not to be Haggas’s lone challenger in Sydney next year. The trainer also hopes to send Sinjaari (Ire) (Camelot {GB}) and Favorite Moon (Ger) (Sea The Moon {Ger}).

“Sinjaari was just beaten in a listed race the other day and is a good, solid 106,” he says. “He should be competitive in mile-and-a-quarter races but probably not the Queen Elizabeth. And I’m looking at sending Favorite Moon, who won two staying handicaps at Haydock last year. He’s done really well and I quite fancy going for the Manion Cup with him, and trying to win it, and then going for the Sydney Cup.”

Though many in British racing have ongoing concerns over prize-money, which falls way below the pots on offer at Sydney’s The Championships, Haggas points to the fact that it is not only the UK which has suffered Covid-related cuts at the top end.

He says, “I am concerned but I think we are far too negative at the moment. The bookmakers, the racecourses and the government will sort it out. This industry isn’t going to collapse overnight. We just have to be more positive because negative talk puts the fear of God into the customers.”

He continues, “Although the Queen Elizabeth was a huge prize to win, it got chopped in half, so it was a $4 million race when we left England and it was £2 million by the time we raced. I know that is still a lot of money, I’m not saying it’s not. I’d also like to point out that One Master has won the Prix de la Foret three years in a row and in 2018 she won €176,000, in ’19 she won €181,000, and this year she won €101,000, so it’s not a problem only for England. I think we mustn’t forget that.”

While the gelding Addeybb remains in training with another global campaign in his immediate future, his main rival for the title of stable star, Lael Stable’s One Master (GB) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}) has now been retired to the paddocks after her honourable career. Her owner-breeders Roy and Gretchen Jackson recently purchased promising 2-year-old Aunty Bridy (Ire) (Camacho {GB}) through Haggas’s son Sam of Hurworth Bloodstock at Tattersalls’ December Sale and she will be joining the team at Somerville Lodge.

“The Jacksons have been wonderful,” says Haggas. “They’ve been fabulously loyal ever since they bought into Superstar Leo in 2000—so that’s 20 years—and every member of each branch of the family that they train comes to us. They never interfere and they deserve every bit of success.”

He adds, “They are very sporting as well. They came out last year for the Foret, and they are in their mid-80s but they flew over to Paris, and they came to Hong Kong the year before, and to Ascot. They absolutely love it. It was Roy’s idea to race One Master as a 6-year-old. I said, ‘ No you can’t do that, she needs to go off to stud,’ and he said, ‘Well we’re old and we might not be around to see her children.’

“Aunty Bridy is coming to me to start with. Hopefully she’ll be a top filly and they can race her here and then we can come for the Breeders’ Cup or for the Beverly D. We’ll see how we get on with that.”

The trainer also has One Master’s 2-year-old half-sister Arousing (GB) (Kodiac {GB}), who won her only start comfortably, as well as the promising York maiden winner Ready To Venture (GB) (Kingman {GB}).

He says, “I’ve had some nice 2-year-olds for the Jacksons this year so they have a bit to look forward to next year.”

The post Addeybb Being Primed For Australian Return appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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