Ioya Bigtime Dies Of Colic In Uruguay At Age 14

Multiple Grade 3 winner Ioya Bigtime died Tuesday of colic at Haras La Concordia in Uruguay, the South American publication Turf Diario reports.

The 14-year-old son of Dynaformer's death comes just before the start of the Southern Hemisphere breeding season. He has resided in Uruguay for his entire stud career, after being exported to the country following the 2013 Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale, where he sold privately to South American connections after finishing under his reserve in the ring.

The Illinois-born homebred for Team Block won six of 25 starts during his racing career and earnings of $540,149, highlighted by a win in the Grade 3 Stars and Stripes Stakes in his home state, as well as the G3 Kentucky Cup Turf Stakes at Kentucky Downs. Though his specialty was on the turf, he also showed ability over the former all-weather main track at Keeneland, finishing second in the G2 Fayette Stakes at Keeneland.

Ioya Bigtime has quickly developed a strong resume at stud in Uruguay, with just four crops to race. He was the country's leading freshman sire in 2018, but his second crop paid even greater dividends.

His showcase runner is Ajuste Fiscal, who was named Uruguay's Horse of the Year in both 2019 and 2020, racking up a trio of Group 1 victories in the process. He won two out of three legs of Uruguay's Triple Crown, the G1 Gran Premio Jockey Club and Grand Premio Polla de Potrillos, and he finished third in the G1 Gran Premio Nacional.

Earlier this year, Ajuste Fiscal ventured outside of South America for the first time to compete in the U.A.E., where his efforts included a third-place finish in the G2 Al Maktoum Challenge Round 2.

Other runners of note sired by Ioya Bigtime include Uruguayan classic-placed Group 3 winner Negrone, and group stakes-placed runners El Curato and Russian Time.

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Dominus Moves To Ohio’s Mapleton Thoroughbred Farm For 2022

Dominus, a multiple Grade 2 winner and veteran sire, will relocate to Mapleton Thoroughbred Farm in Polk, Ohio for the 2022 breeding season.

The 13-year-old son of Smart Strike previously stood at Spendthrift Farm in Lexington, Ky., where he entered stud in 2013. He stood the 2021 season for an advertised fee of $5,000.

Dominus has sired six crops of racing age, with 112 winners and combined progeny earnings of more than $7.3 million.

His most notable runner to date has been Straight Fire, a fast-starting juvenile who finished second in the Grade 1 Del Mar Futurity and third in the G1 FrontRunner Stakes. Straight Fire currently stands at stud in California.

Other runners of note by Dominus include Grade 2-placed Dominant Soul and Parsimony, and Grade 3-placed multiple stakes winner Chanel's Legacy.

Dominus won four of 10 starts during his own racing career, for earnings of $444,717. He won the G2 Dwyer Stakes as a 3-year-old, then he came back the following season to win the G2 Bernard Baruch Handicap.

Bred in Virginia by Edward P. Evans, Dominus is out of the Grade 2-placed stakes-winning Lord At War mare Cuando. He is a half-brother to the multiple graded stakes producer Ask Me When, who is herself the dam of Grade 3-placed stakes winners Aristocratic and Up the Ante.

His extended family includes Kentucky Oaks winner Sun and Snow, Grade 1 winner Honey Ryder, and Grade 3 winners Cuando Puede and Hit It Rich.

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Bloodlines: Northern Dancer’s Sprinting Lines Shine At Royal Ascot

Just in time for Father's Day, freshman sire Ardad received the perfect gift when his son Perfect Power won the Group 2 Norfolk Stakes at Royal Ascot. A winner in two of his three starts, Perfect Power is the first stakes winner for his sire from a dozen winners so far.

Bred in Ireland by Tally Ho Stud, Perfect Power was a 16,000-guinea RNA at last season's Tattersalls October yearling sale, and the colt returned as a 2-year-old in training at the 2021 Goffs UK breeze up and sold for 110,000 guineas to Blandford Bloodstock on behalf of Sheikh Rashid Dalmook al Maktoum.

The colt that Perfect Power beat a head to claim the Norfolk was Go Bears Go, a son of second-crop sire Kodi Bear, who is a son of Kodiac, like Ardad. Last year, Kodiac had four freshmen sire sons, and each sired a group-placed horse or group winner. This year, Ardad already has a group winner and a group-placed, after Vintage Clarets was third in the G2 Coventry Stakes at Royal Ascot.

Ardad, like his son Perfect Power, was a pricey juvenile in training (cost 170,000 guineas) and became a winner at Royal Ascot with a victory in the listed Windsor Castle Stakes, then won the G2 Flying Childers Stakes at Doncaster. Rated 111 by Timeform at two, Ardad won three of his six starts as a juvenile but did not train on.

Sent to stud in 2018 at Overbury Stud in England, Ardad proved popular enough to have a first crop of 91 foals, and he is the current leading freshman sire in Europe by earnings and by number of winners. On that list, five of the top six have stud fees priced at 4,000 or 5,000 euros; Ardad's stud fee for 2021? It was 4,000 euros.

That is history and to what degree depends on how well Perfect Power, Vintage Clarets, and some of the other winners from the sire finish out their first season.

The effect that Kodiac and his sons are having on European racing is evident. They are fast, athletic horses who come to hand early and naturally. The comment of Ardad's trainer John Gosden is appropriate: “a strong, powerful and precocious colt with a great mind. He was an absolute pleasure to train and was a real Royal Ascot 2-year-old.”

Kodiac appears to be taking the legacy of his sire Danehill in a similar direction to some of that sire's Australian sons, with speed and precocity being the key words there. And it is important that Europe has such a wide variety of racecourses and racing distances available because sires and their offspring who have a special preference have a likewise broad opportunity to race effectively and win.

This broad specialization and resulting segregation of sires, and sometimes of entire lines of sires, into stayers or sprinters was much more rigid a century ago in Europe and remained so for much of the 20th century until Vincent O'Brien began training American-pedigreed horses who appeared to have miler pedigrees but nonetheless could win classics and all-age events at middle distances.

As the Northern Dancer revolution swept up European racing and breeding, the old sprinting lines disappeared into the history books, but it is intriguing that the Northern Dancer line is the source of what appear to be the best “sprinting lines” in Europe through Danzig's sons Danehill and Green Desert, as well as through juvenile highweight Try My Best (Acclamation and his sons, especially Dark Angel).

Certainly, Kodiac has been a major-league revelation at stud following a racing career that featured only one stakes-placing. The sire has been a black-type machine, siring 66 stakes winners to this point and another 75 stakes-placed horses. And, although the sire's top colt, three-time G1 winner Best Solution, won a Caulfield Cup in Australia, Kodiac's other G1 winners preferred the shorter side of eight furlongs.

Fairyland and Tiggy Wiggy won the G1 Cheveley Park; Hello Youmzain won the G1 Haydock Sprint Cup and Diamond Jubilee; and Campanelle won the G1 Prix Morny and then the Commonwealth Cup last week at Royal Ascot. Now one of the most popular sires in Europe, Kodiac stands for 65,000 euros at Tally Ho Stud in Ireland.

His is a line of serious speed horses who frequently want five furlongs, rather than six; their complement in the Northern Dancer set of sprint influences comes through Danzig's son Green Desert, a sire of classic winners and top milers himself. He also sired Invincible Spirit, who also won a Haydock Sprint Cup and has become an important sire of speed, with a dash of classic inclination.

Both Invincible Spirit and Kodiac are out of the Prix de Diane winner Rafha (Kris); so, despite all our focus on male lines, should the actual credit for the most persistent expression of specialist sprinting form go to a classic-winning broodmare?

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Catalog For Tattersalls Online June 29th Sale Out Now

The catalog for the Tattersalls Online June 29th Sale has been published online and can be viewed at www.tattersallsonline.com.

A total of 77 lots will feature in the fifth sale to be held on the Tattersalls Online platform, which has seen the number of lots cataloged increase for each sale. Entries include a diverse range of exciting flat and National Hunt prospects, alongside a selection of breeding stock and yearlings.

The headline act amongst horses with smart form on the flat is the Slievebrook House Stud consigned Queens Carriage, a three-time winning daughter of exceptional young sire Mehmas who boasts an Official Rating of 97. A half-sister to the Listed-placed King's Field, Queens Carriage has placed fourth three times in Listed company and is out of a half-sister to the Group 1 Cheveley Park Stakes winner Rosdhu Queen.

Other well-bred fillies to feature are the Archie Watson-trained Jaariyah, a winning daughter of Shamardal out of a half-sister to Grade 1 winner I'm the Tiger, and Let it Bea, a 3-year-old daughter of Zoffany out of a half-sister to the Group 1 Prix Morny second and dual Group 2 winner Gutaifan. Let it Bea will be offered by the Castlebridge Consignment and placed second in a maiden at Leopardstown on her most recent start for trainer Jessie Harrington, earning a Timeform rating of 84.

Slievebrook House Stud will also consign the promising two-year-old Shoebox King, a twice-raced son of Aclaim who was second at Fairyhouse on his most recent start. The progressive three-year-old Abrag is another smart prospect cataloged. The Acclamation colt broke his maiden comfortably last time out for Andrew Balding's Park House Stables and is currently rated 80 by Timeform. They will be joined by the admirably consistent Dawaaleeb, officially rated 88 and the winner of over £67,000 in prize money, who will be offered by Les Eyre's Ivy House Stables. The son of Invincible Spirit won three of his starts and placed four times in 2020 and was beaten a neck into second on his most recent start this year.

Exciting National Hunt prospects entered in the sale include the Coolmeen Stables consigned Sir Jackschiaparel, the impressive winner of a point-to-point at Fairyhouse on his most recent start. The 5-year-old son of Schiaparelli is from a remarkably prolific family including the Grade 1 winner Kylemore Lough and five further Grade 1 performers. He will be joined by Annie Nail, a 4-year-old daughter of Doyen who held every chance when falling at the last on her recent debut in a point-to-point at Ballingarry. Consigned by Cormac Doyle's Monbeg Stables, Annie Nail is out of a half-sister to the Grade 2 winner Bellator who placed in both the Grade 1 King George VI Chase and the Grade 1 Tingle Creek Chase.

The sale will also feature broodmares in foal to stallions who enjoyed stellar weeks at Royal Ascot. The four-year-old Iffraaj mare What is Life is offered in foal to first-season sire Ardad who was represented by the Group 2 Norfolk Stakes winner Perfect Power and the Group 2 Coventry Stakes placed Vintage Clarets and will be offered by Nelson Farm. Genuine Approval, a winner of six races and a half-sister to the dam of the Group 2 Railway Stakes fourth De Bruyne Horse from the direct family of Pivotal, will be offered in foal to Mayson, who enjoyed a Royal Ascot sprint double courtesy of Group 1 King's Stand victor Oxted and the impressive Wokingham winner Rohaan. They will be joined by yearlings by sires including Caravaggio and Brazen Beau.

Commenting on the Tattersalls Online June 29th Sale, Tattersalls chairman Edmond Mahony said;

“The catalog of 77 lots entered in the June 29th Sale is the largest yet for a sale on the Tattersalls Online platform and illustrates the growing confidence that both vendors and buyers are placing in our online product, which has seen six-figure lots sold to Australia, Bahrain, Hong Kong, South Africa and the USA. The entries for the latest sale feature a diverse combination of high quality flat and National Hunt prospects, which look set to attract plenty of interest from domestic and international buyers alike.”

Details of the available lots including photos, videos and veterinary information can be found on www.tattersallsonline.com and prospective purchasers are required to register or logon and join the sale ahead of the commencement of bidding, subject to approval by the Tattersalls accounts team. Bidding on the Tattersalls Online June 29th Sale will open at 12pm (noon) on Monday, June 28 and will close from 12pm (noon) on Tuesday, June 29.

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