Curlin Colt Heads Inaugural Dubai Breeze-up

DUBAI, UAE–A sale hosted at Meydan just a few days in advance of the Dubai World Cup meeting always promised to have an international feel to it, and though many of the 2-year-olds purchased at the inaugural Goffs Dubai Breeze-up Sale will remain in the Middle East, others will head to Japan and back to Europe as they head into training.

“A first for Dubai and a first for Goffs,” said Goffs Group Chief Executive Henry Beeby, as the initial batch of horses was ushered into the parade ring before a large crowd gathered around the paddock restaurant.

With Sheikh Mohammed arriving just before the off, as the next few hours unfolded, 69 horses were offered for sale in the winner's enclosure, with 52 (74%) having found a buyer by the close of play, bringing an aggregate of AED31,580,000 (€8,200,409) at an average price of AED609,412/€157,700. The median was AED400,000/€104,128.

The evening's top lot (45), a colt by Curlin, began life in Kentucky before being bought at Keeneland from Denali Stud for $150,000 and travelling to Ireland to Tom Whitehead's Powerstown Stud. He is now likely to remain in Dubai after Mohammed Al Subousi went to AED2,500,000 (€619,808) to secure the son of the dual winner Saucy Dame (Distorted Humor). The Dubaian owner will be represented on Saturday in the G1 Dubai Golden Shaheen by the well-bred Eastern World (Ire), a Dubawi (Ire) half-brother to dual G1 Dubai World Cup winner Thunder Snow (Ire) (Helmet {Aus}).

“That was beyond my expectations,” said Whitehead. “We've had a very good sale. He was just a bit babyish when we bought him but he matured into a lovely horse.”

He added of the breeze, in which the horses were asked to stretch out at a steadier pace than is the norm at breeze-up sales, “This is much easier for us because you can get the horses here in one piece and hopefully they will train on. I think it's a very good idea. If you're buying a classy horse like that you don't want them doing 10-second furlongs.”

Whitehead's shopping trip to Keeneland last September proved to be a fruitful one as he also sold lot 59, bought for $110,000 as a yearling, to Prince Faisal Khalid Bin Abdulaziz for AED2,000,000 (€495,846). The son of Mo Town is out of Tizza Trick (Tiznow), a half-sister to GIII Bashford S winner Exfactor (Exchange Rate).

The second-most expensive colt of the sale will be heading to Japan for his racing career after Hirokazu Okada of Big Red Farm gave AED2,100,000 ($520,638) for lot 30. The only son of Frankel (GB) in the catalogue, he is a half-brother to the Group 3 winner Lily's Angel (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) and listed victrix Zurigha (Ire) (Cape Cross {Ire}).

“He has to go to Europe for 60 days before he can go to Japan,” Okada explained. “We like Frankel and he was a very masculine colt and a good walker.”

Bred by Nick and Alice Nugent, the son of the unraced Noyelles (Ire) (Docksider) from the family of the George Strawbridge-bred Group 1 winners We Are (Ire), Call The Wind (GB) and With You (GB), was sold for €360,000 as a foal at Goffs to Oneliner Stables. Unsold when offered at the yearling sales, he was then prepared as a breezer by Church Farm & Horse Park Stud.

John Cullinan, one half of the consigning duo with Roger Marley, said, “We've had a marvellous night. We've sold a Tapiture and a Mastery well, so we've been very lucky, and then to have this horse.”

He continued, “Some friends of ours bought him as a foal so there was a lot of pressure, but he's a marvellous horse. They weren't expecting a rocket type–these are next year's horses, and we've trained him accordingly. He did very little galloping, Roger Marley looked after all of that, but this horse was just naturally talented and he has improved physically.

“I'm all for anything that will bring new money into the sport, and fair play to Goffs and the Dubai Racing Club to establish this. It's another dimension to the whole season and they have been fantastic hosts. They have looked after us so well. There's a great crowd here.”

Another of the Juddmonte stallions, Kingman (GB), found his name on the leaderboard as the sire of lot 40, a half-brother to G3 Geoffrey Freer S winner Agent Murphy (GB) (Cape Cross {Ire}), knocked down to Ross Doyle for AED2,000,000 (€495,846).

“He's for an existing client,” said Doyle of the Aguiar Bloodstock consignee. “He's a lovely colt with a very nice pedigree and he breezed particularly well. He may stay here but there's a chance he'll go back to Europe–a good chance, I'd say.”

The colt was bought by Robson Aguiar and Amo Racing for 110,000gns at Tattersalls October Book 1.

Scottish-born owner Dr. Jim Hay, a full-time resident of Dubai, made a little piece of bloodstock history as the successful bidder on the first lot through the ring. The colt by Gun Runner out of the dual Grade II winner Bank Audit (Wild Rush), already the

dam of seven winners, sold for AED1,400,000 (€347,092).

After his agent Alex Cole had signed for the colt, Dr. Hay said, “I think the sale is a brilliant concept and I know it's something that Goffs have been hoping to do for a while. The horse has a lovely pedigree. We're looking for horses who will go on the dirt in Dubai. We bought three in Ocala last week to go to Bhupat Seemar and he will train this horse as well.”

Lot 1 was offered by Mickey Cleere of MC Thoroughbreds, who understandably expressed relief at a positive start to his breeze-up season. After the colt was unsold at $70,000 at Fasig-Tipton last October, he was bought privately for $50,000.

“I was a bit worried about being the first lot in but that's a lot of money,” said Cleere. “We certainly bought him with this sale in mind and we were after one of those fashionable pedigrees.”

The colt is from the second crop of Breeders' Cup Classic winner Gun Runner, who was also runner-up to Arrogate in the Dubai World Cup of 2017.

Towards the end of the evening Cole and Hay later returned to the MC Thoroughbreds draft to buy a filly by Into Mischief out of the Grade III winner Ageless (Successful Appeal) (lot 67) for AED1,600,000 (€396,677).

The progeny of Dubawi (Ire) have posted some pretty impressive results at Meydan over the years and his sole juvenile in the sale, a filly out of the listed winner Joyful Hope (GB) (Shamardal), was bought by Yousuf Salem Saeed Saqer Al Kaabi for AED1,400,000 (€347,092).

Malcolm Bastard, who consigned lot 24 for her breeders Lord and Lady Lloyd Webber of Watership Down Stud, said, “We are pleased with the price, which is only the price of the nomination and keep, and we hope she's very lucky for the people who race her.

“I was a bit nervous coming in but it has worked out well. We were told to breeze at a three-quarter pace and that's what we did.”

Reflecting on the inaugural Dubai Breeze Up Sale, Goffs Group Chief Executive Henry Beeby said, “The first Dubai Breeze-Up Sale has laid the most solid foundations for future evolution following a vibrant evening in the winner's enclosure at the iconic Meydan racecourse.

“Goffs would like to thank the Dubai Racing Club for the trust and confidence placed in our service and we salute the vision of HH Sheikh Mohammed in adding the sale to this amazing weekend of racing. The Dubai World Cup is the focal point of the racing and bloodstock world this weekend and the global appeal of Dubai was clearly reflected in the international nature of the list of buyers who literally travelled from every corner of the world.

“We have learned a huge amount in our first year and look forward to growing the sale in future years with the Dubai Racing Club. It was some evening, some privilege, and some atmosphere.”

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Uberleben Ends White Filly Sodashi’s Unbeaten Streak With Japanese Oaks Triumph

Winning her first graded stakes in her seventh career start, K. Thoroughbred Club Ruffian's Uberleben handed the white filly Sodashi her initial defeat in Sunday's 82nd running of the Grade 1, $2.3 million Yushun Himba (Japanese Oaks) at Tokyo Race Course.

Ridden by Mirco Demuro for trainer Takahisa Tezuka, the 3-year-oid filly by Gold Ship (a grandson of Sunday SIlence) scored by one length over Akaitorino Musume as the 8-1 third betting choice in the field of 18 runners. Hagino Pilina finished third, a nose behind the runner-up and 1 1/4 lengths ahead of Tagano Passion in fourth. Sodashi, the eye-catching white daughter of Kurofune who came into the race unbeaten in five starts, finished eighth after being forwardly placed until deep stretch. Coming off a victory in the G1 Oka Sho (Japanese 1000 Guineas), Sodashi was the 9-10 favorite.

Time for the 2,400 meters (about 1 1/2 miles) on good to firm turf was 2:24.50, compared to the race record of 2:22.80 set by Loves Only You in 2019.

The victory was the eighth in a G1 race for trainer Tezuka and the 33rd G1 in Japan for Demuro, who rode Loves Only You to her record-setting win.

“She suffered from colic in February and has shown a slow but steady recovery,” Demuro said after the Oaks. “She broke smoothly today and it did worry me a bit that we were dead last in the backstretch but she responded well when the pace accelerated from the third corner and showed her tenacity in steadily advancing in the straight. She was strong pulling away and holding off the others. The added distance wasn't a problem for her at all. I'm thrilled—it's always wonderful to win a G1 race.”

The win was the second in seven starts for Uberleben. She was bred by Shigeyuki Okada's Big Red Farm. The victory was the first in a G1 race for the offspring of Gold Ship, a six-time G1 winner whose victories included the first and third legs of the Japanese Triple Crown in 2012. He stands at Big Red Farm. Uberleben was produced from Meine Theresia, a daughter of G1 Whitney Handicap and G1 Dubai World Cup winner Roses in May (by Devil His Due) for trainer Dale Romans and owners Kenneth and Sarah Ramsey. Roses In May also stands at Big Red Farm.

With attendance at Japanese race courses still limited because of COVID-19, an on-track crowd of 4,791 was reported. Wagering on the race was US$161 million with US$248.5 million bet on the day's 12-race program.

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Illness Claims Champion Conduit at 15

American and English champion Conduit (Ire) (Dalakhani {Ire}-Well Head {Ire}, by Sadler’s Wells) passed away last week after a short illness at Tullyraine House Stud, Racing Post reported on Wednesday. The Ballymacoll Stud homebred was 15.

“Three weeks ago he was bouncing and his usual self, but within a short space of time it became apparent he had suffered a very acute brain injury, ” Hugh Suffern, principal of Tullyraine House Stud, told Racing Post. “He fought very hard for around three weeks, but eventually he succumbed in the middle of last week.”

A winner of the 2008 G1 St. Leger and GI Breeders’ Cup Turf for trainer Sir Michael Stoute, he was named the 2008 English Highweighted 3-year-old from 10 1/2-13 1/2 furlongs and 13 1/2 furlongs and up and the Eclipse Champion Grass Horse Stateside that year, too.

The chestnut returned as a 4-year-old and added Ascot’s G1 King George VI & Queen Elizabeth S. and another edition of the Breeders’ Cup Turf to his resume and was awarded another championship in England, as the Highweighted Older Horse from 11-14 furlongs, while he was also third in the 2009 G1 Coral-Eclipse S.

Breeding rights in Conduit had been acquired by Big Red Farm prior to his second Breeders’ Cup win. Retired after a fourth-place finish in the G1 Japan Cup with a mark of 15-7-2-3 and $5,815,813 in earnings, Conduit served six seasons at Big Red Farm (2010-2015) before moving to Tullyraine House Stud in Ireland from 2016 onwards. At stud, he sired the GSP Daiichi Terminal (Jpn) and SP Kineo Pegasus (Jpn) in Japan, but his offspring have so far found more success in the jumping sphere.

Already responsible for G2 Great Voltigeur S. hero Hard Top (Ire) (Darshaan {GB}), MSP Spray Gun (Ire) (Octagonal {NZ}) and the dams of G1 MacKinnon S. hero Glass Harmonium (Ire) (Verglas {Ire}), MGSW Arab Spring (Ire) (Monsun {Ger}), and G3 Tattersalls Musidora S. heroine Liber Nauticus (Ire) (Azamour {Ire}), as well as the granddam of English highweight, GI E. P. Taylor S. and G2 Middleton S. winner Blond Me (Ire) (Tamayuz {GB}), Well Head produced Conduit as her final foal.

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Two-Time Breeders’ Cup Winner Conduit Dies At Age 15

Conduit, twice the winner of the Breeders' Cup Turf at Santa Anita Park, died after a short illness at Tullyraine House Stud in Northern Ireland, Racing Post reports.

The 15-year-old son of Dalakhani was the only Thoroughbred stallion in Northern Ireland at the time of his death, having moved to Tullyraine House Stud in 2016 after standing the first six seasons of his stallion career at Big Red Farm in Japan.

Conduit was a globetrotter for trainer Sir Michael Stoute and owner/breeder Ballymacoll Stud, but his two stops in the U.S. were both successful. Following a win in the 2008 English St. Leger Stakes, Conduit tested the 2008 Breeders' Cup Turf and won by a length and a half. The effort earned him the Eclipse Award as that year's champion turf male.

He picked up a win in the G1 King George VI & Queen Elizabeth Stakes during the Royal Ascot meet the following year, and he ran fourth in the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, which propelled him into the 2009 Breeders' Cup Turf as a heavy favorite. Conduit ran down pacesetter Presious Passion to win by a half-length. The horse added one more stamp to his passport in his final career start, finishing fourth in the G1 Japan Cup.

In total, Conduit retired with seven wins in 15 starts for earnings of $5,815,813.

Conduit proved to be quite versatile with his Japanese-born runners, siring stakes-caliber runners on both the flat and over the jumps. He was used primarily as a National Hunt sire at Tullyraine House Stud.

Read more at Racing Post.

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