Observations: Deauville Sept Star Debuts

Observations on the European Racing Scene turns the spotlight on the best European races of the day, highlighting well-pedigreed horses early in their careers, horses of note returning to action and young runners that achieved notable results in the sales ring. Tuesday's Insights features Arqana graduate Mascaret (GB).

3.35 Saint-Cloud, Debutantes, €27,000, 3yo, f, 8fT
MASCARET (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) is one of two Andre Fabre representatives in this intriguing affair and at €620,000 was the fourth-highest-priced filly to sell at the Arqana Deauville September Yearling Sale. Out of the G3 Hamburger Stuten-Preis winner Daytona Bay (GB) (Motivator {GB}), Godolphin's April-foaled bay is joined by the stable's Queenmania (Fr) (Frankel {GB}), the Wertheimers' half-sister to the G1 Prix Saint-Alary heroine Queen's Jewel (GB) (Pivotal {GB}).

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Godolphin Strikes As Dubawi Filly Heads Arqana Opener

DEAUVILLE, France—The more things change, the more they stay the same or, as our French friends here in Deauville would say, plus ça change. Sheikh Mohammed buying the top lot by Dubawi (Ire) at a yearling sale is not exactly a surprise, but it is also not a situation that could have been taken for granted ahead of a sales season shrouded by uncertainty.

The elite end of the yearling sales market stuttered into action on Wednesday at Arqana, where vendors’ pre-sale jitters appeared to be justified through the first few hours of trade. It’s not unusual for sales to take some time to spring to life, but by the normal standards of this particular auction, the early rounds felt particularly trying before trade gathered momentum towards dusk.

But this is no normal year, despite the name alongside the day’s leading lady. In fact, the sale has a new name—the Deauville Select Sale—and direct comparisons are not being made by Arqana to its traditional August Sale. For the last seven years in August, the average price has been a six-figure sum, hitting a record high of €187,671 in 2019. There was always going to be some market adjustment during the ongoing coronavirus crisis and indeed, on paper, Thursday’s session appears to be stronger, but a first-day average of €147,739 can be viewed as a decent start to the sale, even if there will be some vendors licking their wounds.

The median of €115,000 also stood up to last August’s across-the-sale figure of €125,000 on a day when 92 of the 126 horses offered-or 73%—went down on the sheet as sold, bringing an opening tally of €13,592,000.

Before the start of the season, there had been much discussion regarding potential Maktoum involvement at the yearling sales and, though it remains to be seen to what level Sheikh Mohammed’s Godolphin operation will be active, it was responsible for two significant purchases as Arqana got underway.

An outlay of 300,000gns on a foal as a pinhook is always a bold gamble but, as is so often seen, the bolder the call the bigger the reward. David Cox’s last-minute decision to come to France with his own select Baroda Stud draft for the first time, transpired to be a sound one as lot 61, the Dubawi (Ire) filly out of German Group 3 winner Daytona Bay (GB) (Motivator {GB}) became the second purchase of the afternoon by the sheikh’s buying team of Anthony Stroud and David Loder, who held off underbidder Fawzi Nass at €620,000.

“As it happened four people followed her in so there was plenty of action for her,” said Cox. “We had been worried when it looked like a lot of the English people wouldn’t be able to travel to the sale but plenty have made the trip and this filly showed herself well all week. It’s a great result.”

Daytona Bay, winner of the G3 Hamburger Stutenpreis for breeder Gestut Hof Itlingen, had foaled two previous fillies by Kingman (GB) and Pivotal (GB), both of whom are in training in their native Germany. The 10-year-old mare is herself a daughter of the treble listed winner Daytona (Ger) (Lando {Ger}) from a dynasty which has served the Ostermann family well over the years and includes the grandam’s full-brother, G1 Deutschland Preis winner Donaldson (Ger).

Stroud had stepped in early in the day to sign for lot 14, a son of Lope De Vega (Ire) from Haras d’Etreham at €260,000. The colt is out of the G2 Park Hill S.-placed Alta Lilea (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) and was bred by Federico and Jennifer Bianco.

Love For Lope
Ballylinch Stud’s Lope De Vega has been enjoying another good season and at Arqana his colts in particular were in demand on the opening day, with three of his most expensive horses being out of mares by Galileo or by his son Teofilo (Ire).

Sebastian Desmontils, buying under his Chauvigny Global Equine banner, was pushed to €480,000 for lot 23, a son of the winning Teofilo mare Attractive Lady. The 8-year-old mares’s half-siblings include the GI Woodford Reserve Manhattan H. winner Desert Blanc (Fr) (Desert Style {Ire}) and to listed winner Lumiere Noire (Fr) (Dashing Blade {GB}), who is in turn the dam of this year’s 2000 Guineas runner-up Wichita (Ire) (No Nay Never).

Desmontils said of the Haras du Mezeray-bred colt, “I was very happy to be able to buy him for my Japanese client because there were lots of people on him. He was a great mover and he has such a lovely page—from one of the best French families.”

An easy-moving colt by the same stallion and offered by Haras des Capucines (lot 93) will eventually make his way to Hong Kong after being bought by Mick Kinane on behalf of the Hong Kong Jockey Club for €420,000.

“He was my pick of the sale and looks every inch a racehorse,” Kinane said. “The stallion has international appeal and he works for us.”

Bred by a partnership which includes Eric Puerari, Michel Zerolo and OTI Racing, the colt is a son of the Galileo mare Foreign Legionary (Ire), whose best offspring, Mantastic (Ire) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}), won the listed C. S. Hayes Memorial Cup in Australia. Foreign Legionary is herself a half-sister to Alexander Goldrun (Ire) (Gold Away {Fr}), who will be remembered by the fans at Sha Tin for her victory in the G1 Hong Kong Cup. Her outstanding career for Jim Bolger included top-flight wins in the Nassau S., Pretty Polly S. and the Prix de l’Opera.

Lope De Vega had five yearlings sell on Wednesday for an average of €310,000.

Kinane was back later eight lots later for lot 101, a colt from the first crop of Haras d’Etreham’s champion galloper Almanzor (Fr) and a half-brother to GI Shadwell Turf Mile winner Miss Temple City (Temple City). Offered by the sale’s regular leading vendor Ecurie des Monceaux, the son of Glittering Tax (Artax) was the most expensive by his sire on day one at €280,000.

Golden Future
The champion sire Galileo may well take a starring role in Thursday’s action when his son out of Prudenzia (Ire) takes to the ring, and his leading light on the first day was lot 103, the first foal of G3 Prix Minerve winner Golden Valentine (Fr) (Dalakhani {Ire}). 

It almost goes without saying that the offspring of Galileo are well bred but this particular colt, offered by Ecurie des Monceaux and bought by David Redvers for €450,000, hails from one of France’s most celebrated families. His third dam Born Gold (Blushing Groom) has produced not only the outstanding miler Goldikova (Ire) (Anabaa) but also her full-brother, GI Breeders’ Cup Mile runner-up Anodin (Ire), and their Group 1-winning half-sister Galikova (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}).

LNJ Foxwoods raced Golden Valentine, whose four wins also included the listed Prix de Thiberville, and the American owners bred the mare’s first foal in partnership with Monceaux.

Another of the Monceaux draft, lot 95, will be on the way to the Chantilly stable of Hiroo Shimizu who, with Daniel Cole, went to €340,000 for the Siyouni (Fr) colt out of a daughter of the Argentinean dual Grade 1 winner Safari Queen (Arg) (Lode). The first foal of Frame Of Mind (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), he will race for Shigeo Nomura, whose colours have been carried to success this year by TDN Rising Star Midlife Crisis (Fr) (Wotton Bassett {GB}), a €120,000 graduate of the 2019 August Yearling Sale who won on debut at Deauville by five lengths and runs in Thursday’s G3 Prix du Chene at ParisLongchamp.

“He’s a very attractive colt by Siyouni, who is a very good stallion,” said the Japanese-born trainer Shimizu. “We hope he will follow in the footsteps of Midlife Crisis.”

Strong Finish
Trade certainly gathered pace towards the end of the day, and Haras du Mezeray, the consignor of the top-priced colt of Wednesday, was rewarded with a €350,000 sale of the Invincible Spirit (Ire) filly out of Lucrece (GB), a Pivotal (GB) half-sister to G1 Prix Maurice de Gheest winner Signs Of Blessing (Fr), who shares his sire with the yearling filly in question.

Robson Aguiar is a name more familiar as a buyer of relatively inexpensive yearlings for the breeze-up market and he has had made handsome profits in this field in recent years, with some notable results on the track. This year, he was responsible for the G2 Norfolk S. winner Prince Of Lir (Ire) (The Lir Jet {Ire}), whom he bought for £8,000 and sold privately to Nick Bell before the colt was sold on to Qatar Bloodstock. 

Aguiar’s skills have obviously not been lost on his new, undisclosed client, who has entrusted him to attempt to buy a Royal Ascot winner.

“There were two I liked today and I particularly liked this filly, who looks like she could do the job. I will take her home and pre-train her and in March we will start to think about which trainer she will go to,” he said of lot 143.

Gestut Ammerland was also well rewarded for its Dark Angel filly (lot 140), who was bought by Charlie Gordon-Watson on behalf of Palestinian-born Ahmed Abu Kadra.

The daughter of Group 3-placed Light The Stars (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) represents one of the German stud’s best farms as her grandam is responsible for dual Classic winner Lope De Vega, whose named featured prominently throughout the day as the sire of a number of the more expensive yearlings of the session. And indeed, the new purchase of Abu Kadra will be trained in the same stable as Lope De Vega, by Andre Fabre, who, like the owner is a keen polo player.

Lone Arrogate
The only son of Juddmonte’s late stallion Arrogate in the Arqana catalogue, lot 124, was offered by breeder Guy Pariente’s Haras de Colleville and sold for €260,000 to SARL Trotting Bloodstock. The colt is the first foal of the Kendargent (Fr) mare Kenriya, a Group 3-placed treble winner.

Colleville also offered a full-sister to its up-and-coming young stallion Goken (Fr) (Kendargent {Fr}) as lot 105, and the filly, who is also a half-sister to exciting 3-year-old Hurricane Cloud (Fr) (Frankel {GB}), was bought by Marc-Antoine Berghgracht for €210,000.

Haras de Bouquetot’s young stallion Shalaa has enjoyed a good run of winners over the last fortnight and one of his daughters, lot 36, was an early highlight of the sale, bought for €300,000 by Frederic Sauque from Haras des Sablonnets. The agent will be keeping a keen eye on events at Irish Champions Weekend as the filly’s half-sister, Bolleville (Ire) (Camelot {GB}), trained by Jospeh O’Brien, has entries in the G1 Irish St Leger and G2 Blandford S. at the Curragh.

He said of his purchase, “She is magnificent and I hope she will be as good as she is beautiful. I’ve bought her for a client who has already invested in trotters and now wishes to also be involved in the Flat. I hope he will have lots of luck.”

The filly is a daughter of Brasilia (GB) (Dubai Destination), a dual listed winner and half-sister to G3 Prix Cleoaptre victrix Sandbar (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}).

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TDN Q & A With Nicolas de Watrigant

With the yearling sales now in full swing TDN quizzes industry figures on past purchases, life during lockdown and gets their perspective on the sales for the next few weeks. Nicolas de Watrigant answers our questions today.

TDN:  What was your best yearling purchase over the last few years? And your favourite?

NDW: From the 2014 Arqana August sale, Qemah (Ire) (Danehill Dancer {Ire}) was definitely one of the very best horses I have purchased. Winning both the Prix Rothschild G1 at Deauville and the G1 Coronation S. during Royal Ascot, in front of Her Majesty The Queen, is one of my fondest racing memories and it was an amazing moment for H.E Sheikh Joaan Al Thani and all of the filly’s connections.

TDN: Is there any positive you have taken from how the sales have been conducted this year?

NDW: Absolutely, I think the different sales companies in the world have managed to adapt really well to the problem, whether with re-arranging sales dates and locations, but also giving more information to the buyers online and the opportunity to buy online. This is a great step for the future. The sales companies who have combined their efforts and worked together, have in my opinion, shown true intelligence in a difficult moment.

TDN: How has your business adapted?

NDW: As we couldn’t move from home during lockdown, it gave me the opportunity to spend time with my family while I was getting news on the phone from the different trainers that we’re working with. It enabled me to continue reporting to our clients. As soon as lockdown was over we got back to a nearly normal life, on mornings going to the various training centers in France to check clients’ horses and sourcing new horses for others clients. We realized that, in France, we were lucky that racing resumed shortly after, even though we weren’t able to attend racing.

TDN: In general what are your thoughts on the 2020 yearling catalogues? And what progeny of new stallions are you most looking forward to?

NDW: The 2020 Arqana Select Sale catalogue appears to be a very good vintage with the offspring of many proven stallions such as Galileo (Ire), Dubawi (Ire), Sea the Stars (Ire), Frankel (GB), Kingman (GB), Lope de Vega (Ire), Invincible Spirit (Ire), Le Havre (Ire), Siyouni (Fr), Kodiac (GB), Wootton Bassett (GB), Dark Angel (Ire), etc. I believe that it really is a year of opportunities, and the chance for owner/breeders to get into big European families from England, Ireland, Germany and Italy at more reasoned prices.

The Arqana Select Sale has proved over the years that it is a great source of top class horses, more recently with G1 horses like Sottsass (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}) who won the French Derby for Peter Brandt, or with Uni (GB) (More Than Ready) who is a Breeders’ Cup Mile & triple Grade I winner in the USA, which I was lucky to purchase in association with Bradley Weisbord for Madaket and their partners.

As for the new stallions, I am naturally looking forward to see the first yearlings of Al Wukair (Ire), whom I purchased as a yearling for Al Shaqab Racing. Al Wukair won the G1 Jacques le Marois as a 3-year-old just like Kingman and Dubawi, and was a close third in the G1 2000 Guineas to another young and talented horse, Churchill (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}).

TDN: Did you develop any new interests or hobbies during lockdown?

NDW: I think my wife, Meryl, was hoping for me to improve my cooking skills during that time, but it didn’t happen. I love gardening, during lockdown it was a great excuse for me to exercise this passion with my kids.

TDN: Who’s the most interesting person you know?

NDW: Without hesitation I would say Mrs. Tsui, the owner of Sea The Stars, who I am lucky to work with. I have a lot of admiration for what she has achieved in her life. Mrs. Tsui won the Arc twice with both the incredible mare Urban Sea (Miswaki) and her son Sea The Stars, nearly three times with Sea Of Class (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) beaten a nose by Enable (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}). She is a women who is very knowledgeable in many sectors of many industries.

TDN: What’s one mistake (if any) you made in your career, and what did you learn from it?

NDW: I am always following my instinct to make the right decision but not listening to my wife was my mistake in the past, as she is great adviser. I now make sure I listen to her.

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Arqana Yearlings: Select By Name And Nature

DEAUVILLE, France—Another tranche of prospective buyers appeared on the sales grounds at Arqana on Tuesday. As second looks, third looks and vettings are being completed, there is now just the nervous wait for vendors until 2pm local time on Wednesday when the Arqana Select Sale finally gets underway and they begin the learn their fate.

There is not one member of the bloodstock fraternity who believes that this sales season will be in any way easy. As one major breeder observed on Tuesday morning, “If we get through this year and find that the market has dropped by a third then that would actually be a relief.” 

Set against world events, just to be healthy in 2020 is a win, and there will be some breeders and pinhookers who fare well in the next six weeks and those who will not. Most people with a horse to sell are accepting of that situation, and all that remains to be seen now is which of the major buyers decide to participate in Deauville, or perhaps keep their money in pockets for later sales.

There should be plenty here in Normandy to tempt them, however. No shortage of well-related individuals can be found in what is usually known as the August Sale. One standout simply has to be the Galileo (Ire) half-brother to last year’s €1.625 million sale-topper, whose other siblings include his full-sister Magic Wand (Ire) and her fellow Group 1 winners, Chicquita (Ire) (Montjeu {Ire}). This is Ecurie des Monceaux’s signature family, stemming from the purchase 16 years ago of the colt’s grandam Platonic (GB) (Zafonic) from Fittocks Stud for 100,000gns. As such, he needs little introduction, though there will be plenty of fanfare when the colt enters the ring on Thursday as lot 199 and, just to gild the lily, last year’s leading lady, now known as Philomene (Ire), won on debut for Andre Fabre last Thursday.

The siblings and half-siblings to Group 1 winners are plentiful in the pages of the Arqana catalogue. Lot 27 from Fairway Consignment is the Dariyan (Fr) half-sister to Danceteria (Fr) (Redoute’s Choice {Aus}), from a family which Dariyan’s sire Shamardal has worked so well with, namely as the father of Lope De Vega (Ire), who is a half-brother to this filly’s dam Bal De La Rose (Ire) (Cadeaux Genereux {GB}).

Another filly with enhanced claims this season is lot 39, Haras de Montaigu’s Dream Ahead half-sister to dual Australian Group 1 winner Addeybb (GB) (Pivotal {GB}). Then there’s the jewel that is the full-sister to dual Arc winner Treve (Fr) (Motivator {GB}), who right from her first show on Sunday had all the composure of a horse who will be ready to face far busier environments than a sales ground. As lot 269, she follows 18 lots behind the Dubawi (Ire) (251) filly out of Starlet’s Sister (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), and of course the starlet in question as the half-sibling of this filly is Sistercharlie (Ire) (Myboycharlie {Ire}), but then she has a pretty famous brother, too, in last season’s G1 Prix du Jockey Club winner Sottsass (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}).

The catalogue for the three-day sale also features the offspring of no fewer than 23 first-season sires, with the biggest representation among the pack coming from the former champion 3-year-old Almanzor (Fr). Bred by Haras d’Etreham where he now stands, and whence his sire Wootton Bassett (GB) recently departed for Coolmore, he naturally features strongly among his home farm’s draft, which has eight catalogued, including a half-brother to GI Breeders’ Cup Mile winner Uni (GB) (More Than Ready) (lot 274).

Watch This Family
The draft of Haras du Petit Tellier, the Normandy farm which has belonged to Patrick Chedeville’s family for five generations, boasts not just a half-sibling to a Group 1 winner but also a number of offspring from the stud’s own freshman sire, the G1 Prix du Jockey Club and G1 Irish Champion S. winner The Grey Gatsby (Ire).

Lot 286 from the Petit Tellier consignment is a half-brother to the dual Group 1 winner Watch Me (Fr) (Olympic Glory {Ire}), who was bred and raced by Chedeville’s partner Antoinette Tamagni-Bodmer, who now offers the colt by another of the stud’s residents, Elvstroem (Aus). 

“In many ways it has been a wonderful year,” reflected Tamagni-Bodmer, who in 2017 welcomed the first crop of foals at her own private farm, Haras de Saint Julien, where Watch Me, the recent winner of the G1 Prix Rothschild, now resides. 

“She had a little problem in February in her fetlock, so then COVID for her was not a problem as I knew she would not be running before July. In the Rothschild the track was really fast and she likes it a bit softer, but she’s such a fighter and she won. She wasn’t lame coming straight out of the race but afterwards when we realised there was a problem with the fetlock again we said ‘stop’ straight away. By the Friday she was back home in the paddock.”

It is Tamagni-Bodmer’s intention to keep a select clutch of well-bred black-type mares at Saint Julien, and her operation could hardly have welcomed a better newcomer than the filly who also won last year’s G1 Coronation S., giving her trainer Francis Graffard, as well as her owner-breeder, a first Royal Ascot success.

Tamagni continued, “To me she is really a champion. To have bred a filly like this and then to have her back not long after I have created a completely new stud from scratch is a dream. If you want to make a proper breeding operation you need to have black-type fillies at the stud. My plan is mainly to sell the colts and to race the filies.”

One filly who will certainly be a keeper is the current foal of Watch Me’s dam Watchful (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), who is by Golden Horn (GB). The mare is now in foal to Almanzor. For her newly-retired daughter, Tamagni still has her thinking cap on regarding her first mate next season.

She said, “I have some ideas for Watch Me and, with all the concerns about Brexit, I will send her to a stallion in France rather than go to Britain or Ireland. We have good stallions in France and it is important to support them with good mares.”

She added, “In this business, which I would call a passion, you always have to go forward and always ask questions about what you could do better. Every day you have to learn and you have to ask what you can learn from someone else.”

It is clear that Tamagni-Bodmer has learned plenty from Chedeville, whom she describes as a “traditional breeder”.

She says, “He doesn’t like to see the yearlings in their boxes. We prepare the yearlings from Petit Tellier and from my stud in exactly the same way. We don’t put them on a walker, they are only walked in hand and they go out in the paddocks, which is a risk, but I think it is very good for them mentally to do this.”

It’s not only Watch Me who has provided an update for the draft since the catalogue was printed but also Sunday’s winner of the British EBF Future Stayers Novice S. At York, Lenny’s Spirit (Fr) (Intello {Ger}), who is a half-brother to another Haras de Saint Julie-bred, lot 419. The chestnut colt by The Grey Gatsby is out of the G3 Prix des Reservoirs winner Moon Valley (Fr) (Aqlaam {GB}).

“The Grey Gatsby has such a good temperament and he is really stamping his yearlings with that same mentality and plenty of bone,” Tamagni-Bodmer said. 

“He was syndicated in five days when Patrick first bought him and had around 100 mares in his first crop. He had 99 mares again this year. We have supported him with our good mares and we are looking forward to seeing how the market accepts his yearlings.”

In an uncertain year, the same can be said for all yearlings, but the breeder and consignor was quick to praise Arqana in its rescheduling of the sale not once, but twice.

She said, “I don’t think Arqana could have done more than they have. It’s very hard to say what will happen but I’m sure with fewer trainers able to travel then fewer yearlings will be sold, even though the agents are all here. The quarantine in England is not helping as a lot of trainers aren’t here, but when I look around I see beautiful yearlings and I see clients, so we just have to be hopeful.”

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