Johnny Collins: ‘I Bounce Out Of Bed Every Morning – I Love This Job’

No shortage of hard work and bundles of perseverance lie behind Johnny Collins's achievement in turning his Brown Island Stables into one of the finest nurseries of equine talent there is.

It is all the more remarkable in that he achieved this with no racing background and just his own eye and pocket to get the whole thing off the ground.

Competitive and ambitious, the 46-year-old counts several million euros worth of stock at his County Cork base, which is the culmination of over 15 years producing top-class horses over both codes.

And when it comes to identifying young stock, few do it better. Mshawish (Medaglia d'Oro), a dual Grade I winner and the best Flat horse that Collins has had through his hands, cost just $10,000 as a yearling at Keeneland but rocked into €170,000 at the Arqana breeze-up sale the following summer in 2012.

“You have to experience the disappointment for when they don't work out to appreciate the satisfaction for when it does,” – Johnny Collins

Then there has been mammoth success over jumps as well. Irish Champion Hurdle winner Petit Mouchoir (Fr) (Al Namix {Fr}) and Champion Bumper winner Relegate (Ire) (Flemensfirth) were the first big names to fly the flag in that sphere for Collins, who is now a regular sale-topping consignor at the major breeze-up and store sales in Europe.

With this year's breeze-ups on the horizon, Collins can count 24 2-year-olds to represent him from Dubai to Deauville. But it's not a case of just turning up. Oh no. Last year was forgettable to say the least as Collins took a haircut on a lot of his breezers and it was the stores that came to his rescue later in the spring.

It takes a certain amount of resolve to make this game pay. A great deal more of the stuff is required when things aren't exactly going your way. Taking his medicine is something Collins became accustomed to in the early days and, while success has been more plentiful in recent times, he has dealt with the disappointments the same right the way through: by building back bigger and stronger.

“My horses weren't good enough last year,” says Collins, straight to the point. “Even in tough years, if we had good horses and they performed well, we never had any trouble selling them. It's when your stock is below average, that's when you'll suffer.

“But, every now and then, you need a shake to keep yourself focussed in this game. That will open your eyes and remind you that it's not that simple. If it was only a matter of going around and buying them with your eyes closed, well then anyone could do it.”

He added, “You can get complacent at this job. You could think you can walk on water sometimes and that everything you touch will turn to gold. We didn't have a good year last year. Our first sale was our best sale at the Craven and after that we probably just held our own. I probably just about washed my face with the breezers. But then I'd a very good year with the stores.

“The one thing you wouldn't want to do when you've had a bad year is to go and change too many things. What we've done in the past few years in developing horses and the system here, it works, so there's no point in changing that. All that part of it is fine. We just didn't have enough good horses last year. It's all about the horses.”

An operation the size of Brown Island Stables is only ever a few bad years away from hitting the rocks. This is a ship that navigates the most unpredictable of waters and one that carries millions of euros worth of cargo. With so much at risk, one would forgive Collins for resembling a German Shepard with a headache on a mid-February work morning, but he and his loyal bunch of staff are unfailingly helpful.

One by one, 20 2-year-olds whizz up the grass gallop close to Collins's base, with crucial notes made on the closest thing he has to hand, which in this case is a white envelope.

“I like to see them dropping their heads there now and going about their work,” says Collins in between lots. “If they are doing that and trying for you, there's a good chance they will go the right way because they'll do the same in their races.”

In the group of workers we have colts by Twirling Candy and Blame, who are bound for the first breeze-up of the year in Dubai on Mar. 21. There's six for the Craven and the same number will go to Doncaster with the remainder being divided up between France, Fairyhouse and Newmarket.

Johnny Collins and Norman Williamson | Tattersalls

“When I started breezing horses, we were buying ready-to-rock 2-year-olds. They were little five and six-furlong horses. It's changed an awful lot now. Look at last year for example, an Irish Guineas winner [Native Trail (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB})] and a St Leger winner [Eldar Eldarov (GB) (Dubawi {Ire})] came through the breeze-ups. It's amazing really.

“The yearlings were a great trade last year and it was hard to get them. I bought five at Book 2, two at Fairyhouse, two at the Somerville Sale, two at the Orby and the lads helped me out with six from America.”

The lads, as referenced by Collins, are international bloodstock agent Chad Schumer and his European representative Nancy Sexton, who have helped him to source stock from America while he was unable to travel to the States.

He continued, “I like a horse with a bit of strength and a bit of movement. There probably are sires who I wouldn't buy the progeny of because they haven't been lucky for me or they aren't commercial enough but I do try and go to the sales with as open a mind as possible. I'd cast a broad net and would look at as many as I could at a yearling sale.

“You can't overthink it, either. When you've your bundle of horses bought, you can only do the best with the horses you have. Of course it gets to you when they're not progressing the way you'd like them to be. For me, the beauty of it with the breezers is that I have a bunch of National Hunt horses to sell every year as well. So, even if you didn't have a great year with one code, you would be hoping to have a better year with the other. I'd be telling you a lie if I said that, coming close to the sales, there isn't an odd night where I'd be lying awake in bed thinking about it all. Of course there are.”

Collins endured his share of sleepless nights at the start. Whilst riding trackwork in America, he began to trade a few horses on the side but, by his own admission, was forced to learn by his mistakes.

“I went buying horses not really knowing what I was doing,” he explains. “I knew how to ride a horse but that was as far as it went. I had to make all of my own mistakes. I was at this a good while before I started making money. But, if you can sustain it, you won't keep making those mistakes. It would sharpen up your ideas and you won't make the same mistake twice. You get to look at your mistakes all year. Now, I wouldn't always buy a horse with perfect conformation but I'd know now what I could live with and what I could work with.”

So, when did the tide turn?

“For the first five or six years I really struggled. Even though I sold a couple of good horses, I was only barely making ends meet. The year I sold Mshawish, I also sold a horse by Street Boss, who made around €260,000. That really got the thing going.”

He added,  “I was only making enough to survive and that was with no staff. Hopefully we can keep it going now. It takes a while to break into it. You've to make a lot of mistakes and you need connections, too. It doesn't happen overnight. It takes time to build up a relationship and a bit of trust. It's easy to break it then as well.

“With the best will in the world, you can never be sure what a horse will do when it's put to the pin of its collar. You could have a horse working well but he might not deliver on a racecourse. That happens to trainers as well. You could genuinely think you have a good one but they let you down. Horses have a habit of doing that.

“When push comes to shove, they might not have the heart or the mind to go through with it. That's why it's so satisfying when they work out because, you know, everything is on the line as a trader. You have to experience the disappointment for when they don't work out to appreciate the satisfaction for when it does.”

Like most people who are good at what they do, Collins lives for his work and that passion fuels a hectic but rewarding lifestyle surrounded by horses.

“I love it. I enjoy this job, I must say. I like bringing on young horses and watching them progress. Even the National Hunt horses, I love bringing them on as well. And if they go on to do well for the next man, it's just a great feeling. That's what defines success for me but, at the same time, you can't do it if it's not financially viable.

“Especially when you start off, you need to have good results in the sales ring to keep the whole thing going and to develop the business. Luckily enough, we've sold a few nice horses but you're always looking for the next Cheltenham winner or the next good horse on the Flat.”

He added, “When you have the operation built up, bar you have it in your head to scale down, you have to buy the same amount of stock each year if you want to keep the same number of staff and the thing going the way you have it.

“Look it, I'm happy with the way I have it. As long as I have enough help, I've no interest in scaling back. I wouldn't see myself slowing down ever, as long as my health allows, because I do live for it. I could retire if I sold all my stock but it wouldn't make me happy.

Johnny Collins with his son Daniel | Barbara Collins

“You could kick up your feet but what would you do then? I'm a late starter with regards to my family. My wife Barbara and I have a son, Daniel, and he's only 18 months old.

“I've a lot of friends working in jobs they don't like. They get up every morning to go to work and it's a struggle. I bounce out of bed every morning to go at this. It's not like work at all. It's very enjoyable.”

Facing the reality that comes with preparing over 120 horses for resale and the need to clear a couple of million euros annually to keep the business afloat would be enough to make most people baulk. Not Collins, whose search for a star–and to make a few quid along the way–sustains him.

“There was an old man I used to drink with below in the pub in Middleton, Denis Twomey was his name. He's since passed away but he used to have a great saying, and it stuck with me.

“He'd say, 'There are 20 years to come and there are 20 more to back it, now where is the man who can tell the man who wore the ragged jacket?' Every time I'd see Denis, I'd ask him to say it for me. No matter how many times I'd heard it before, I loved listening to it. It's a great saying, you know, and it's very true.”

The post Johnny Collins: ‘I Bounce Out Of Bed Every Morning – I Love This Job’ appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Tattersalls Releases Craven Breeze Up Catalogue

Tattersalls has released a catalogue of 163 juveniles for its Craven Breeze Up Sale, which takes place on Apr. 12 and 13 with the breeze happening on the Rowley Mile on Apr. 11. This year's graduates will have big shoes to fill, as last year's sale produced not only the champion 2-year-old and unbeaten G1 Dewhurst S. and G1 National S. winner Native Trail (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}), but also Group 2 winners Asymmetric (Ire) (Showcasing {GB}) and Go Bears Go (Ire) (Kodi Bear {Ire}).

Among the Group 1 siblings catalogued is a filly from last year's sale-topping consignment, Tally-Ho Stud, by its resident sire Mehmas (Ire) who is a half-sister to last year's G1 Phoenix S. winner Ebro River (Ire) (Galileo Gold {GB}) (lot 65). Among the Mocklershill draft is a daughter of No Nay Never who is a half-sister to G1 Australian Cup winner Harlem (GB) (Champs Elysees {GB}) (lot 111); a first-crop son of Sioux Nation who is a half-brother last year's GII Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint victress Twilight Gleaming (Ire) (National Defense {GB}) (lot 84); and a Zoffany (Ire) half-brother to the multiple group winning Lemista (Ire) (Raven's Pass) (lot 59). Brown Island Stables offers a Lope De Vega (Ire) half-sister to Classic winner Just The Judge (Ire) (Lawman {Fr}) (lot 144), and Longways Stables brings an Adaay (Ire) half-brother to Dragon Symbol (GB) (Cable Bay {Ire}) (lot 103), who after being disqualified from the win in last year's G1 Commonwealth Cup due to interference was runner-up in the G1 July Cup.

Daughters of Group 1-winning mares catalogued include a Showcasing filly out of the G1 Preis der Diana winner and black-type producer Penelopa (GB) (Giant's Causeway) (lot 35) and a War Front filly out of GI Alcibiades S. winner Dancing Rags (Union Rags) (lot 125). Lot 160 is a Lope De Vega colt out of Hibiscus (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), a stakes-placed full-sister to GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf winner Line Of Duty (Ire).

Kingman is well represented in the catalogue by three colts and a filly: lot 32, a son of Australian Group 3 winner One Last Dance (Aus) (Encosta De Lago {Aus}); lot 124, a daughter of G3 Nell Gwyn S. winner and G1 1000 Guineas third Daban (Ire) (Acclamation {GB}); lot 138, a colt out of Earring (Dansili {GB}), a group-placed daughter of GI Queen Elizabeth Challenge Cup winner and multiple Classic-placed Together (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}); and lot 145, a colt out of G3 Prix de Flore winner Fate (Fr) (Teofilo {Ire}), a half-sister to the champion mare Pride (Fr) (Peintre Celebre). There are also colts and fillies catalogued by leading sires like Australia (GB), Camelot (GB), Dark Angel (Ire), Exceed and Excel (Aus), Invincible Spirit (Ire), Kodiac (GB), Night Of Thunder (Ire), Sea The Stars (Ire), Shamardal, Siyouni (Fr) and Starspangledbanner (Aus). American-based sires represented, in addition to the aforementioned War Front, include American Pharoah, Distorted Humor, Honor Code, Kitten's Joy, Medaglia d'Oro, Nyquist and Speightstown. First-season sires represented include Cracksman (GB), Expert Eye (GB), Harry Angel (Ire), Havana Grey (GB), James Garfield (GB), Kessaar (Ire), Saxon Warrior (Jpn), Sioux Nation, Smooth Daddy and Tasleet (GB).

All lots are eligible for the £250,000 Royal Ascot/Group 1 Bonus and the £15,000 Craven Breeze-Up Bonus.

Tattersalls Chairman Edmond Mahony said, “2021 was a benchmark year for the Tattersalls Craven Breeze Up Sale with the unbeaten European champion 2-year-old Native Trail landing a huge Craven Group 1 Bonus when winning the National S. and two additional Group 2-winning juveniles further enhancing the global reputation of the sale. The sale has been strongly supported by Europe's leading breeze-up consignors and the combination of an outstanding catalogue and unrivalled bonuses makes the Tattersalls Craven Breeze Up a compelling prospect for both domestic and overseas buyers.”

The post Tattersalls Releases Craven Breeze Up Catalogue appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

A Joke to Be Taken Very Seriously

NEWMARKET, UK—After such giddy disruption to the last cycle, the first session of the European breeze-up calendar gave the sector a comforting sense that its world might be easing back on its axis. But those seeking continuity could find it, not between the market that was eventually salvaged last summer and the one that was tested here on Tuesday, but extending from the 2-year-old sales already staged this year across the ocean.

Practical Joke has been the toast of the Florida sales, not least with the $750,000 filly who topped the OBS March Sale, and the rookie son of Into Mischief achieved a remarkable mirror distinction when another of his daughters dominated the opening session of the Tattersalls Craven Sale at 360,000gns.

This was an exciting moment for those of us who deplore the modern schism between the American and European gene pools. After all, it was with a turf breeze that this filly had arrested so much attention. In the event, however, it turned out that she will now be repatriated to her native land to join Chad Brown.

Presented by Tally-Ho Stud as lot 71, she was bought by Alex Elliott on behalf of White Birch Farm.

“The 2-year-old guys in Florida were raving about Practical Joke all winter,” the agent said. “But it's another thing then to go and do it. And they seem to be doing it. This is a beautiful filly and will be going back to Chad, who trained Practical Joke. She has been very highly thought of from day one. Roger has raved about her all along.”

Of course, the phenomenal Into Mischief initially had to make his name with mediocre mares and his encouraging start as a sire of sires suggests that his genetic alchemy is not necessarily going to be confined by their limitations. Practical Joke won three stallion-making Grade Is, at two and three, and was in corresponding demand from the outset with commercial breeders. This filly is a half-sister to Group 2-placed Rebel Tale (Tale Of The Cat) and boasts a Grade I winner as the third dam.

“The sire line is magic,” enthused Roger O'Callaghan of Tally-Ho. “And this is as good a filly as I have had to breeze. She has been a genuine natural from the start. I bought her as a foal with Archie St George [$185,000 Keeneland November weanling]. She didn't make the yearling sale, and we brought her here.”

Elliott noted that the complexion of this catalogue has responded to the new Royal Ascot bonus, but felt that this filly was a more traditional Craven type.

“She is a May foal, and is going to need a bit of time,” he reasoned. “She is scopey, with quality, and the more time you can give those, the better they can be. But she was the one. She did everything.”

Overall the session represented a very positive reset after the traumas of last year, when the sector was exposed to the first wave of the pandemic. In the end a Craven Sale was staged after Royal Ascot, so direct comparisons would not be valid. But the 65 lots sold of 75 offered (86%) this time turned over an aggregate 6,485,000gns for a 80,000gns median and 99,769gns average. The 2019 and 2018 sales finished with medians of 85,000 and 75,000, respectively, so while the averages then tipped 120,000gns and 140,000gns, this definitely felt like a bold step in the right direction.

Night Improves Swann's Evening

Though this sale is dominated by colts, the most conspicuous demand through its first half was for fillies. One thing is for sure: Peter Swann will be hoping that his outlay of 265,000gns for a daughter of Night Of Thunder, presented as lot 50 by Star Bloodstock, ultimately gives his evening a more auspicious look than it had achieved to that point. As chairman of Scunthorpe Football Club, he was obliged to report that his team was already 4-0 down to Morecambe.

In this sphere, however, his Cool Silk Partnership is in the Premier League. Swann reckons he is now up to 62 winners from the breeze-up sales, and one of them is already being targeted at the richest prize on the planet next January. Working with agent Matt Coleman, Swann has found the likes of Royal Ascot winner Prince Of Lir (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) and Group 1 winner Sands Of Mali (Fr) (Panis) at the breeze-ups; while now the ongoing success at Meydan for Midnight Sands (Speightstown) sets him up for a crack at the Saudi Cup.

Not that rocket science had been required to identify the exuberance of this filly's breeze the previous morning. But their record has allowed Swann's team to be confident in their focus.

“We've been doing it a long time now,” he said. “We just use everything we can, and ensure the horse is sound if we can. We though this filly's breeze was excellent. And she has a great pedigree, so if we can win a race then we're halfway there. But she's definitely the sort of thing we're looking for, the way she's built: a real specimen, very strong and not too tall in the leg.”

She is the first foal of a sister to G1 July Cup runner-up Main Aim (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}), the pair out of G3 Prix de Sandringham winner Orford Ness (GB) (Selkirk). The dam, who had a light career in France, offered relatively affordable access to a Juddmonte family when picked up by Rabbah Bloodstock for 38,000gns at the December Sale here in 2016. She was sent to Night Of Thunder in his second season at stud, and her daughter could duly ride the wave with the Kildangan stallion after he made a flying start from his first couple of crops (fee trebled to €75,000 this spring). She was picked out of Book II here last October by Byron Rogers / Star BS for 95,000gns.

Coleman signed a 210,000gns docket a few minutes later for lot 56, a son of Oasis Dream from Oak Tree Farm bought by Mags O'Toole for 67,000gns in Book 1 last October. But this time he was acting on behalf of colleague Anthony Stroud and Godolphin.

“Anthony and David Loder thought he was one of the picks of the sale,” Coleman said. “He breezed very well, and obviously has a good pedigree: his mother is a sister to the dam of Calyx (GB) (Kingman {GB}). And this is the same cross as Calyx. He is a grand-looking horse, Norman [Williamson] has done a good job with him.”

Dabirsim Filly Is Different Class

Dabirsim (Fr) has had an interesting career as a breeze-up stallion, his first-crop daughter Different League (Fr) having been rejected at 14,000gns at Doncaster before entering training in the colours of his consignor's wife and winning at Royal Ascot. There was rather more interest next time she entered a ring, making 1,500,000gns at the December Sale here.

So prospectors nowadays know to take a second look at this rare European outlet for the Sunday Silence line, and there was corresponding demand for a charming filly pinhooked by Robson Aguiar as lot 25. Picked up for €50,000 at Arqana last summer, this daughter of an unraced sister to French Listed winner Oriental (Jpn) (Smart Strike) (next dam a half-sister to Classic winner Falco (Pivotal {GB}) realised a handsome profit from Roger Varian at 240,000gns.

“She did a good breeze but wasn't blitzed,” the hometown trainer noted. “It looks like there is plenty of horse left to train. She has plenty of scope, she moves nicely and it looks like she has a good mind on her. That's what I liked: that she's not just a rock-and-roll bullet.”

Auctioneer Ollie Fowlston put down the hammer declaring that he looked forward to seeing the filly at Royal Ascot, where a new £125,000 sale bonus will be up for grabs.

“Who knows?” said Varian with a shrug. “But she looks the sort that could be out in May. She's mature, she's strong, there's no reason not to move on.”

Varian is always considered in his judgement and his observations on the bonus scheme are worth heeding.

“She's for an existing client and I don't know that the bonus was the absolute thing that brought him to the market,” he said. “Those bonuses are jolly hard to win. But we're in a very bleak time, regarding prizemoney, a very dangerous time. So we can't knock any incentives, whether through bonuses or other schemes.”

Radcliffe's Tall Order

No pressure on lot 34, a daughter of Toronado (Ire) presented by Kilminfoyle House Stud. She only has to be another Lady Aurelia (Scat Daddy).

Kerri Radcliffe, who gave 210,000gns for the filly, was acting on behalf of Peter Leidel—one of the co-owners of Lady Aurelia, whose consecutive scores at the royal meeting were by an aggregate of 10 lengths.

“Peter hasn't been to Ascot since Lady Aurelia,” explained Radcliffe. “So that was a factor for him. She's very racy filly from a good consignor who gets results, and that makes a big difference. She behaved well and did everything right. Hopefully she can be an Ascot filly, that's what we were looking for, and she'll be trained in England though no decisions have yet been made as to where.”

Whether she will retain her first registration is another matter: she arrived here as Babycri (Fr). Regardless she was a splendid pinhook, bought by Federico Barberini for just €33,000 at Arqana last October. She's out of a young Acclamation (GB) mare, but the second dam was a clue to the dash she exhibited in her breeze as a half-sister to another dual Royal Ascot winner Equiano (Fr), himself of course also by Acclamation.

Kilminfoyle celebrated a remarkable supplementary dividend after the sale when sealing a deal for lot 8, a Kingman colt who had been scratched after breezing. Tattersalls added him to its listed transactions as a 335,000gns private sale to Manor House Stud. Bred by Frank Dunne from listed winner Flying Fairies (Ire) (Holy Roman Emperor {Ire}), his physique can be judged from the fact that he made €310,000 as a foal at Goffs November.

Marnane Lands Running

The first proper “touch” of the new circuit was celebrated by the Bansha House team, who pinhooked a Kodiac colt out of the Tattersalls Ireland Yearling Sale (transferred here) for £38,000—and brought him here as lot 7, to make 160,000gns from Stephen Hillen and Kevin Ryan. “A good start after a dodgy time last year,” said Con Marnane, with the wry smile of one who knows there is still a long way to go. “Amy picked him out, he came from a very good farm in Egmont Stud, and I suppose we were just in the right place at the right time.”

The buyers bought the evergreen Brando (GB) (Pivotal {GB}) at this sale back in 2014 and Marnane is confident they have one of similar calibre here.

“I think he's a right candidate to win that Royal Ascot bonus,” said Marnane. “He has just been a pleasure to have around, a real gentleman of a horse who did everything right all the way through. I'm thrilled he's going to such a good team and they can run him straightaway from here.”

His evident precocity augurs well for this Apr. 26 colt, and he has the page to back him up too: his dam is a half-sister to the dam of the flying machine Battaash (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}); and therefore also to the G2 Champagne S. winner Etlaala (GB) (Selkirk), and to the dam of multiple Group 1-placed sprinter Tasleet (GB) (Showcasing {GB}).

“He'll look a cheap horse if he wins that bonus,” Marnane said. “Because he has a stallion's pedigree as well.”

The Hillen-Ryan combination later went to 200,000gns for lot 62, a Mehmas colt from Longways Stables.

“Mehmas is doing wonderful things,” Hillen remarked. “And this horse has a good stride pattern, he's a very nice individual and never put a foot wrong, he has a great attitude.”

He is from the family of Mount Nelson (Ire) and ultimately Reference Point (GB) but Hillen said with a shrug: “At the breeze-ups I want to buy the individual, to be honest I don't even look at the pedigree: they can even run or they can't.”

Donohoe Hopes to Be Lucky Again

Not every headline number represents a headline sale and while 240,000gns looked a good price for lot 10, the fact is that he only mildly advanced similar bids made twice for him in the past in this same ring. The Lope De Vega (Ire) colt was first bought by Woodford Thoroughbreds as a foal at the 2019 December Sale, only to be bought in for 200,000gns in Book I last October. Entrusted to a man who would give him every chance in Willie Browne of Mocklershill, he responded with a breeze persuasive enough for Michael Donohoe of BBA (Ireland).

The agent has a happy history with this stallion, having bought last year's G1 Keeneland Phoenix S. winner Lucky Vega (Ire) as a yearling.

“And this colt is a very good physical,” Donohoe reasoned. “I liked him as a yearling, just thought he might have been a bit raw, but Willie has done a great job with him. I saw him at Willie's before he came over: Willie was quite high on him, and the horse breezed the way he thought he would. He looks precocious, as though he has plenty of speed and won't take too long.”

Donohoe was acting for a Middle Eastern client with an international presence and no decision has yet been made on which trainer will be fortunate enough to receive this fellow. Repeated interest in this colt is easily explained, his second dam boasting none other than Classic winner Speciosa (Ire) (Danehill Dancer {Ire}) as half-sister, with that wonderful mare Pride (Fr) duly lurking in the next generation.

Practical Joke is not the only Coolmore youngster now trying to make his name and, in the middle market, John Gosden appeared to make an astute early strike in giving 95,000gns for lot 3, a colt from the first crop of the admirable Highland Reel. With a second dam by Rainbow Quest out of Ebadiyla (Ire), the G1 Prix Royal Oak-winning half-sister to two G1 Ascot Gold Cup winners, he hardly had the most obvious profile for this environment. But he did a bright breeze for Malcolm Bastard and he'll be in good hands to show that this sector can produce performers of every stamp.

The post A Joke to Be Taken Very Seriously appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Tattersalls Craven Breeze-Up Catalogue Online

The catalogue for the Tattersalls Craven Breeze-Up Sale, which features 168 juveniles to breeze on the Rowley Mile on Apr. 12 before selling at Park Paddocks on Apr. 13 and 14, is online. The Craven sale has produced 49 stakes winners in the last five years, and in addition to black-type, graduates of this year's Craven sale will be chasing two bonuses: the £250,000 Craven Royal Ascot/Group 1 Bonus, and the £15,000 Craven Breeze Up Bonus.

The catalogue includes 20 2-year-olds out of group or listed-winning mares including a Frankel (GB) colt out of G1 Prix Jean Romanet winner Ribbons (GB) (Manduro {Ger}) (lot 79) and a Dubawi colt out of Stellar Path (Fr) (Astronomer Royal) (lot 95), a Group 3 winner in France and the U.S. There are a pair of colts out of American Grade I-winning mares: a colt from the first crop of Arrogate out of American Oaks scorer Funny Moon (Malibu Moon) (lot 11), and a Union Rags son of Alabama S. winner Careless Jewel (Tapit) (lot 145).

There are siblings to 32 group or listed winners catalogued, including Siyouni half-brothers to GI Jamaica H. winner Western Aristocrat (Mr. Greeley) (lot 135) and French listed and American Grade II winner Mrs Sippy (Blame) (lot 75). Other highlights include an Aclaim (Ire) half-brother to G1 Sussex S. winner Here Comes When (Ire) (Danehill Dancer {Ire}) (lot 73); and a half-sister to the Group 2-winning and Classic-placed Laughing Lashes by American first-season sire Mastery (lot 120).

Other leading sires represented include Camelot (GB), Dark Angel (Ire), Invincible Spirit (Ire), Kingman (GB), Kodiac (GB), Le Havre (Ire), Lope De Vega (Ire), Mehmas (Ire), No Nay Never, Oasis Dream (GB), Pivotal (GB), Sea The Stars (Ire) and Showcasing (GB). Other American sires with progeny on offer include American Pharoah, Bernardini, Distorted Humor, Empire Maker, Hard Spun, Kitten's Joy, More Than Ready, Street Boss and Street Sense.

Sires with their first crops on offer comprise Aclaim, Almanzor (Fr), Ardad (GB), Caravaggio, Churchill (Ire), Cotai Glory (GB), Ectot (GB), El Kabeir, Galileo Gold (Ire), Highland Reel (Ire), Profitable (Ire), Recorder (GB), Ribchester (Ire), Time Test (GB) and Ulysses (GB), as well as the American-based Arrogate, Gormley, Mastery and Practical Joke.

“The combination of the new £250,000 Craven Royal Ascot/Group 1 Bonus and the £15,000 Craven Breeze Up Bonus makes the 2021 Tattersalls Craven Breeze Up Sale a compelling prospect for owners,” said Tattersalls Chairman Edmond Mahony. “We are committed to rewarding owners in as many innovative ways as we can and a quality Craven Breeze Up catalogue, well supported by Europe's leading breeze up consignors, as well as unprecedented bonuses provide the perfect ingredients for owners, especially in the current climate. The Tattersalls Craven Breeze Up has always been a prolific source of top-class 2-year-olds and they stand to be rewarded like never before in 2021.”

The post Tattersalls Craven Breeze-Up Catalogue Online appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights