‘The Best Thing on the Planet’: Who Are We To Disagree?

ASCOT, UK–Some of us get slower as we get older. Bradsell (GB) is getting faster. So much so that, instead of treading the more obvious three-year-old sprinter route to the Commonwealth Cup, trainer Archie Watson talked the colt's owner Shaikh Nasser Bin Hamad Al Khalifa into supplementing him for the King's Stand S., and what an inspired move that turned out to be.

It takes a good horse to win at Royal Ascot once, but a proper horse to return triumphant, dropped back in trip to the minimum and with a little to prove as his comeback from the injury that curtailed his juvenile season gathered momentum.

Watson will have dreaded the sound of stewards' klaxon not long after Bradsell passed the post in front after he drifted a little towards the runner-up and last season's crack sprinter Highfield Princess (Fr). The trainer had the 2021 Commonwealth Cup all but snatched from his clutches when Dragon Symbol (GB) bumped Campanelle (Ire) in running and was demoted to second. Tension was writ large on Watson's face as he awaited the outcome of a prolonged stewards' enquiry, already in the winner's circle but reluctant to say too much in interviews being conducted as if he had won. Just half an hour earlier, Watson, his stable jockey Hollie Doyle, and Shaikh Nasser had had to settle for second with Army Ethos (GB) in the Coventry, a great run in itself for the Shalaa (Ire) colt who had made just one previous winning start. 

Finally able to relax when it was confirmed that Bradsell had given him his third Royal Ascot victory and, more importantly, a second Group 1, he said, “I know we're seen as a big yard, but for a yard like us to be winning a Group 1 here is the best thing on the planet. There was dread when that bing-bong happened, especially having just been chinned in the Coventry.”

When Watson spoke to TDN last week, he was effusive in his praise of bloodstock agent Tom Biggs, the youngest member of the Blandford Bloodstock team with whom he has formed a strong partnership. Biggs, who appears far too self-effacing for his chosen profession, was another one blowing his cheeks out with relief as the trainer went to collect his trophy.

“We don't have huge budgets, we work hard at the sales and these days don't come along very often. He's just a very fast horse,” he said.

Biggs and Watson bought Bradsell, who became the first Group 1 winner for his Shadwell sire Tasleet (GB), from last year's Goffs UK Breeze-up Sale from Mark Grant for £47,000. He then changed hands privately following his nine-length debut success to make his first start in the Victorious Racing colours in the Coventry S. One run later a mid-race stumble in the Phoenix S. and subsequent leg fracture put paid to the rest of his juvenile campaign.

“It was quite a nasty injury but his temperament is so fantastic,” Biggs added. “When he breezed I loved his action and the way he got his head down and he got better the further he went. He's just a great horse to be involved with.”

Bradsell was bred by Deborah O'Brien, who has moved up two generations in the sire-line for this year's mating for his dam Russian Punch (GB) (Archipenko). The mare is now in foal to Oasis Dream (GB).

Bradsell's successor in the Coventry roll of honour, River Tiber (Ire), was a member of the final French crop of Wootton Bassett (GB) conceived at €40,000 before he joined the Coolmore ranks. It is hard to imagine that there are not bigger and better things to come from this stallion given the line-up of mares he has covered since moving to Coolmore, where his fee has jumped to €100,000 then €150,000. As an extra vote of confidence in Wootton Bassett, MV Magnier and Peter Brant paid 480,000gns last year for the subsequent Coventry winner at Tattersalls October Book 1. His breeder Ger Morrin of Pier House Stud would have been celebrating then, but this is where it's really at, and Morrin was all smiles as he accepted congratulations from the Coolmore camp and many others alongside the winner's circle.

“Fabulous,” he said. “He was always a fabulous-looking horse. He nearly died as a foal and thankfully we were able to save him. These are great people and he was good-looking yearling so they came and bought him.”

Morrin added that River Tiber's dam Transcendence (Ire) (Arcano {Ire}) is now back in foal to Wootton Bassett. 

The Tabor colours carried by River Tiber were soon back in action aboard Paddington (GB), who made it a memorable day for the group of Coolmore owners by handing out a comprehensive defeat to Juddmonte's Chaldean (GB) (Frankel {GB}) in the battle of the Guineas winners in the St James's Palace S. Relatively rarely for these two superpowers of the breeding world, neither colt is a homebred. 

For Aidan O'Brien, Paddington's victory was particularly significant as it took him past Sir Michael Stoute as the most successful trainer at Royal Ascot with 83 wins to his credit, nine of which have come in the St James's Palace S.

While Ryan Moore, with three winners on the day, stole the limelight from the retiring (eventually) Frankie Dettori, the leading owner-breeder honours unquestionably went to Sheikh Mohammed Obaid Al Maktoum. His Triple Time (Ire) (Frankel {GB}) got the meeting off to a great start with victory in the Queen Anne S. for Kevin Ryan and Neil Callan, and a double was completed in the Wolferton with the Roger Varian-trained Royal Champion (Ire) (Shamardal).

The importance of a royal champion to British horseracing cannot be understated and it can only be hoped that the sport now has two. We have grown accustomed over many decades to the welcome message in the front of the racecard being in the name of 'Elizabeth R'. This year, for the first time, a joint message was signed 'Charles R' and 'Camilla R'. 

Significantly, the new King and Queen led the royal procession for the first day of the meeting and will do so throughout. Joining them in the carriages, perhaps symbolically, was Ralph Beckett, their first trainer back in 2008 of a homebred filly bred in the January after they married. Fittingly, she was a daughter of King's Best, named Royal Superlative (GB). The colours of the royal couple have changed now to those distinguished purple and red silks made famous in the modern era by the runners of Queen Elizabeth II. 

This year's royal welcome message was concluded by acknowledging the owners, breeders and trainers who make this meeting possible. The King and Queen said, “It is a huge and rare achievement to have a runner at Royal Ascot and we very much hope that you all enjoy the experience.”

Judging by the scenes of revelry around the bandstand and in the car parks post-racing, a good day was had by many. One down, four to go. 

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Tasleet’s TDN Rising Star Bradsell Wins The King’s Stand

Bouncing back to the form which saw him win last year's G2 Coventry S., Victorious Racing's TDN Rising Star Bradsell (GB) (Tasleet {GB}–Russian Punch {GB}, by Archipenko) survived an inquiry to capture the G1 King's Stand S. to reward Archie Watson's supplementary entry. Always travelling strongly for Hollie Doyle tracking the 7-4 favourite Highfield Princess (Fr) (Night Of Thunder {Ire}) throughout, the 14-1 shot mastered that mare inside the final furlong en route to a length verdict. There was significant interference for the stewards to analyse, as the winner drifted across the runner-up in the closing stages, but the 3-year-old's authority at the line ultimately proved decisive. The 50-1 shot Annaf (Ire) (Muhaarar {GB}) was 1 3/4 lengths away in third. The King's Stand is a “Win And You're In' GI Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint qualifying race.

“Well done to Archie for supplementing him and stepping him back in trip, which he's really relished today,” Doyle said. “All credit to Mick Murphy, who rides him every day because he's really turned a corner in the last few weeks. You can tell. The way he travelled into it was unbelievable and he quickened up nicely.”

Having beaten Persian Force (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}), Royal Scotsman (Ire) (Gleneagles {Ire}) and Blackbeard (Ire) (No Nay Never) in a star-studded Coventry, Bradsell's career went briefly South as he injured himself when fourth in the G1 Phoenix S. at The Curragh and he many have needed his comeback when third in the G3 Commonwealth Cup Trial S. here in April. Beaten 9 1/4 lengths by the Phoenix hero Little Big Bear (Ire) (No Nay Never) when third again in Haydock's G2 Sandy Lane S., this was his first try at five and the early signs showed why connections had come to that decision.

Whereas Jason Hart was moving on the eventual runner-up two out, Hollie still sat motionless as they pulled away from the rest up the centre with the speed dying out on both wings. Soon in command, Bradsell drifted left to intimidate Highfield Princess and while there was definite interference, the officials saw enough to let Archie Watson's colt keep the race and banish memories of his heartbreaking loss of the 2021 G1 Commonwealth Cup with Dragon Symbol (GB) (Cable Bay {Ire}) in the stewards' room.

“When Dragon Symbol had the race taken away, it was terrible and I know we're seen as a big yard, but to be winning a Group 1 here is the best thing on the planet,” the trainer said. “There was dread when that bing-bong happened, especially having just been chinned in the Coventry, but it's amazing and I'm so pleased for everyone involved. This horse was like a bull in a china shop over the winter and Michael Murphy had to put up with a lot. He had to trot for months and Michael does a fantastic job with him, day in, day out.”

“We just felt this year he was showing a lot more speed in his races and not getting home over six,” Watson added. “I thought we'd get a proper tow into the race today and I didn't want to sound arrogant, but nothing could take us off the bridle until deep into the race and it was kind of what we really felt with him. I thought he showed up best of the horses in the Commonwealth Trial and got a bit tired late, but I knew it couldn't have been tiredness in the Sandy Lane so it was an easy decision to pull back to five. I imagine the Nunthorpe will be the plan.”

John Quinn is considering coming back on Saturday for the G1 Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee S. “Jason thought she was getting going again and he's certainly got a case,” he said. “The only thing that's holding us back is–and I don't make excuses, whatever the result is, well done to whoever–when you can run her and run her, she's better. If she ran well today, Saturday was always right in mind. We are leaving her down tonight and I'll go and have a look at her–if she's okay, she will run.”

 

Pedigree Notes

Bradsell's Listed Radley S.-winning dam Russian Punch, whose 2-year-old colt Tribal Rhythm (GB) (Ulysses {Ire}) was a £150,000 purchase by Manor House Farm at the Goffs UK Premier Yearling Sale. From the extended family of the G1 Phoenix S. runner-up Run To Jenny (Ire) (Runnett {GB}), her 2022 foal by Twilight Son (GB) unfortunately died.

Tuesday, Royal Ascot, Britain
KING'S STAND S.-G1, £627,500, Ascot, 6-20, 3yo/up, 5fT, 1:00.91, gd.
1–BRADSELL (GB), 127, c, 3, by Tasleet (GB)
1st Dam: Russian Punch (GB) (SW-Eng), by Archipenko
2nd Dam: Punch Drunk (GB), by Beat Hollow (GB)
3rd Dam: Bebe De Cham (GB), by Tragic Role
1ST GROUP 1 WIN. TDN Rising Star. (12,000gns Ylg '21 TATSOM; £47,000 2yo '22 GOFTY). O-Victorious Racing; B-Mrs D O'Brien (GB); T-Archie Watson; J-Hollie Doyle. £355,855. Lifetime Record: 6-3-0-2, $612,660. Werk Nick Rating: A. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree, or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.
2–Highfield Princess (Fr), 130, m, 6, Night Of Thunder (Ire)–Pure Illusion (Ire), by Danehill. (29,000gns RNA Ylg '18 TATDEY). O/B-Trainers House Enterprises Ltd (FR); T-John Quinn. £134,913.
3–Annaf (Ire), 133, c, 4, Muhaarar (GB)–Shimah, by Storm Cat. 1ST GROUP 1 BLACK TYPE. (16,000gns 2yo '21 TATAHI). O-Fosnic Racing; B-Shadwell Estate Company Ltd (IRE); T-Michael Appleby. £67,519.
Margins: 1, 1 3/4, HF. Odds: 14.00, 1.75, 50.00.
Also Ran: Twilight Calls (GB), Equilateral (GB), Desert Cop (GB), Marshman (GB), Mitbaahy (Ire), Existent (GB), Raasel (GB), Coolangatta (Aus), Vadream (GB), Mooneista (Ire), Happy Romance (Ire), Dramatised (Ire), Twilight Gleaming (Ire), Cannonball (Aus). Scratched: Chipstead (GB), Manaccan (GB).

 

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Watson: ‘Ascot’s Been Pretty Big in the Storyline of my Career’

Bradsell (GB) (Tasleet {GB}) was the juvenile star of the opening day of Royal Ascot last year and the G2 Coventry S. winner has been supplemented to return next week in the G1 King's Stand S. for Archie Watson.

“I guess Ascot's been pretty big in the storyline of my career,” admits the Lambourn trainer, who also won't be short of two-year-old runners at the royal meeting in an attempt add to a record which includes the Windsor Castle S.

“Soldier's Call (GB) was obviously our first big winner. I know it was a Listed win, but it was a Royal Ascot winner. And the fact he then went on and won a Flying Childers and was very good in those Group 1 sprints, being only narrowly beaten in the Abbaye and then the following year he found Battaash (Ire) a few times, but he was a very good horse and he put us on the map for sure.

“Ascot has really been very important in the few years I've been training because we've had a Coventry winner, a British Champions Sprint winner and then obviously the whole Dragon Symbol debacle as well, winning a Commonwealth Cup and then not winning a Commonwealth Cup.”

Glen Shiel (GB) (Pivotal {GB}) was the first Group 1 winner for Watson and for his stable jockey Hollie Doyle on Champions Day in 2020, two years after Soldier's Call had brought his trainer to wider prominence at Royal Ascot. Though Watson is still only in his seventh full season with a licence, the cyclical nature of the business means that his stable now contains a number of youngsters by the Ballyhane Stud stallion, who currently leads the European first-season sires' table with 12 winners.

“Soldier's was such a dude of a horse to train,” he recalls. “It was in my second season training that we got sent that first batch of Clipper Logistics horses, and Soldier's was one of them. That was massive for us. 

“He had such a lovely character and I'm just glad that he is really taking off as a stallion. We've got eight by him and we've won with three of the four that we've run. He's going great guns and it's really great to see, for Steve Parkin and Joe Foley and everybody involved in the horse.”

Watson has nine juvenile winners on the board already for the year, with a selection of those being primed for next week. These include Army Ethos (GB) (Shalaa {Ire}), who will aim to give the stable a second Coventry success in the same colours as Bradsell, for Victorious Racing and Fawzi Nass. 

“He's a very talented horse,” says Watson. “I do really think that he can be a proper stakes horse in six-furlong sprints this year. 

“We're going to run two in the Queen Mary, a Zoustar (Aus) filly called Out Of The Stars (GB) for Qatar Racing. She's out of a mare called Out Of The Flames (GB), who was third in the Queen Mary. She's a homebred. She won at Kempton and she's very talented. 

“She goes to the Queen Mary along with the Mehmas (Ire) filly called Ba'Hoa (GB), who won at Newcastle for the Cool Silk Partnership.”

For the Windsor Castle, Watson will be saddling Action Point (Ire), who was the first winner for another freshman sire, Blue Point (Ire).

“He's a very nice horse,” says the trainer. “He won on debut and then was second in the Royal Ascot two-year-old trial. He's come on plenty since then, physically.

“We had a Soldier's Call winner called Reveiller (Ire) at Salisbury a couple of weekends go. He won impressively, he came from the breeze-ups, and he's going to go to the Norfolk, all being well.”

Watson also fields Lightning Leo (GB) (Night Of Thunder {Ire}) in the Chesham S. for Lone Star Investments. “He won the first seven-furlong race of the year at Yarmouth, which was a very strong field,” he says.

“I'm not going in there with one like Bradsell who'd won his maiden by 10 lengths last year. But I think we're going with some nice horses. It does look on paper that a few of the races are very strong this year, but it probably does every year, doesn't it?”

He continues, “Bradsell is probably our main hope. I took him out of the Commonwealth. He's run two very solid races, third in both his runs this year, but he's really sharpened up and has looked like a five-furlong horse. It's very sporting of Sheikh Nasser to roll the dice and supplement him for the King's Stand, and then he will hopefully have a campaign over five furlongs for the rest of the season.”

 

While Watson has been successful with juveniles runners from the start, and in 2019 alone trained 76 two-year-old winners, he says that it is not something he specifically set out to do. 

“I don't like to be defined by it, and we've had plenty of jumps winners and good staying winners,” he says. “I wouldn't want to be emphasising that it's just speedy horses, but it's obviously something that we've done well with.

“This year we've had a good start with the two-year-olds because they're a quality group of horses, and I think that's the main thing. We had a quieter couple of years but we always manage to find a good one. Bradsell last year, and obviously Eddie's Boy (GB), and Nazanin (GB) won a Group 3 the one year, Mighty Gurkha won a Group 3 the year before that.”

Watson adds, “But I think this year the quality is definitely up. We've been very fortunate to have been sent a nice bunch of horses and Tom Biggs has done his job well buying a nice group of horses for me. He works very, very hard. Whilst I'm obviously there and making decisions with him, it does take 99% of the work out of my hands in terms of the sales.”

While he can lean on Biggs, of the Blandford Bloodstock team, Watson takes sole responsibility for the placing his horses. 

” I was assistant to William Haggas and he always did the placing and entering himself. And that's something that I've always been adamant that I should do, and I do enjoy it. But obviously when you've got large numbers of horses and large numbers of race meetings, it takes up a lot of time figuring out where to run them all.”

Archie Watson with his wife Brodie Hampson, Hollie Doyle and Glen Shiel

 

Watson takes pride in the upward trajectory of the career of Hollie Doyle, whom he says has been “massive for the yard”.

He continues, “She'd ridden out her claim and wasn't really getting the rides at Richard Hannon's because they've got nice apprentices coming through every year, so I said, 'Come and ride out for us.' 

“We just always got on very well, and when Eddie [Greatrex] got injured, Hollie took over, riding a lot more, and it's just gone from strength to strength. She's a great rider. She understands exactly how I like the horses ridden and I think the one thing about her is that she's very consistent and she very rarely makes mistakes. 

“For me, she's a top-five jockey and it's just a massive bonus for a yard like ours, that's only been training seven years, to have a top-tier jockey in the country riding for us day in, day out. We had our 200th winner together the other day.”

Doyle is not the only talented female jockey in the Watson yard. Straight after last year's Royal Ascot the trainer married amateur rider Brodie Hampson, who rides under both codes but has a particular affinity with National Hunt racing. 

“I've always had an interest in it but Brodie loves it,” says Watson, whose success over jumps includes the G2 Leamington Novices' Hurdle winner Stag Horn (GB) (Golden Horn {GB}). 

“Brodie trains the jumps portion of the string and she does a great job. It's something we enjoy and it's great. Originally it was just a few handicappers that Brodie rode herself, but then Simon Turner said, 'Let's buy a couple of point-to-pointers', and we've been very lucky so far. I think we'll have a team of eight or 10 jumpers next year.”

In the meantime, however, the tweeds have been cast aside for top hats and tails next week at Ascot.

“We've always been fortunate enough to have a good team to take,” Watson says. “I try not to send horses that are just there as social runners. I'd say we'll have 15 or so runners this year and I hope that they've all got a squeak in some way, for sure.”

 

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Freshman Sire Soldier’s Call Off The Mark At Ripon

Minutes after freshman sire Phoenix Of Spain (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}) notched his first winner at Leicester, Ballyhane Stud incumbent Soldier's Call (GB) (Showcasing {GB}) repeated the feat when Archie Watson trainee Dreadpirateroberts (Ire) (Soldier's Call {GB}–Gangster Squad {Fr}, by Astronomer Royal) graduated in Saturday's Black-A-Moor Inn Half A Mile Away EBF Restricted Novice S. at Ripon.

The 85-40 favourite ran second in his Brighton debut last week and broke sharply to seize an immediate lead in this return. In command throughout, he was last to come off the bridle after halfway and kept on strongly under a final-furlong drive to hold the late bid of Innvincible Friend (Ire) (Inns Of Court {Ire}) by a length.

Dreadpirateroberts is the fifth of six foals and third scorer out of a winning half to Listed Landaluce S. third Ridemetothemoon (Malibu Moon). The April-foaled bay's dual stakes-placed third dam Catcher (Storm Cat) is a full-sister to G1 Breeders' Cup Classic and GI Swaps S.-winning sire Cat Thief.

 

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