8-Year-Old Almanaar Repeats In Monmouth Stakes Off Lengthy Layoff

Despite being idle for more than 16 months Almanaar reinforced two well-known beliefs in Saturday's Grade 3 Monmouth Stakes at Monmouth Park in Oceanport, N.J. One is that age is just a number. The other is that trainer Chad Brown has the rare ability to have a turf horse ready no matter how long it has been between races.

Almanaar made his 8-year-old debut a winning one in capturing the Monmouth Stakes for the second straight year, rallying stoutly from next-to-last after three quarters of a mile to give Brown a 1-2 finish in the $150,000 feature race on the 11-race card.

The gelded son of Dubawi, who rolled home one length ahead of stablemate Serve the King in the nine-furlong turf stakes, had last raced on May 25, 2019, at Monmouth Park when he won the Monmouth Stakes, then a Grade 2. Prior to that race, his only start in 2019, he had been idle for four months.

None of that mattered as the 3-2 favorite in the field of nine 3-year-olds and up used his strong late kick to overpower the field.

Serve the King finished 2 1/4 lengths ahead of Bal Harbour.

“He has been training well at Belmont the whole time,” said Luis Cabrera, who oversees Brown's string at Monmouth Park. “The guys there really like the way he has been training. So he has been doing well. These type of horses know what to do. They know where the wire is. So you don't worry about the layoff with those types. And he has a lot of class. We know that.

“He ran great. I'm very happy with his performance. I can't say I'm surprised because this horse has been training consistently. He has not missed a work. He was fit and he was ready. Chad always makes sure the horses are 100 percent ready to run.”

Owned by Shadwell Stable, Almanaar won for the eighth time in 21 career starts, a record that includes a victory on the Grade 1 Gulfstream Park Turf Handicap in 2017.

Though far back in the field early, jockey Joe Bravo said he knew exactly what he was sitting on and tried to be patient through fractions of :48.82 to the half, 1:12.93 to three quarters and 1:37.31 for the opening mile.

The final time for the nine furlongs over a firm turf course was 1:49.22

It was just two weeks ago that Brown trainees finished 1-2 in the $100,000 Violet Stakes on the grass at Monmouth Park, with She's Got You winning off a 12-week layoff.

“Only Chad Brown does this. He's amazing,” said Bravo. “This is the second time this year that he has done this in a stakes race at Monmouth Park by winning off a long layoff. (This is) an old horse but he's a trouper. He's so strong and powerful that I just wanted to give him some daylight turning for home. Class prevailed.”

Almanaar paid $5.00 to win, boosting his career earnings to $900,349.

After the opening half mile, and even after three quarters had been run, Almanaar had just one horse beat until he made his explosive move coming out of the turn, overhauling Bal Harbour while having more than enough in reserve to hold off Serve the King.

Racing resumes at Monmouth Park with a special eight-race holiday card on Monday, Oct. 12, with the $100,000 Born to Run Stakes for 2-year-olds serving as the feature. First race post is 12:50 p.m.

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Dubawi Colts Tops Second Day Of Tattersalls October Book 1

Book 1 of the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale continued in solid fashion on the second day with Godolphin buying the top four priced lots.

Demand for yearlings by the superstar stallion Dubawi continued unabated on the second day of Book 1 of the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale and leading the way was his son of the Group 1 Moyglare Stud Stakes winner Intricately at 1.1 million guineas (US$1,491,247).

The Highclere Stud consigned colt's dam Intricately was purchased at the Tattersalls December Mare Sale in 2017 for 1.7 million guineas (US$2,304,702) by John and Jake Warren on behalf of Mike and Michelle Morris. The Dubawi colt on offer today was her first foal and was knocked down to Anthony Stroud on behalf of Godolphin after he saw off a determined effort by trainer Kevin Ryan.

“It is very exciting, I am absolutely thrilled for the Morris's, they stepped up and bought a fantastic mare and she has really repaid them today. He is a gorgeous colt and has been since the day he was born, he has the most fantastic temperament,” said consignor Lady Carolyn Warren of Highclere Stud. “I am thrilled for the breeders and everyone.”

Her son Jake Warren, who selected the mare in 2017 with his father John, added: “It is a real group affair, a lot of team-work is involved in this. Mike and Michelle bought the mare, she is a beautiful quality mare. She has a stallion in her pedigree, she was a Group 1 2-year-old winner, she is by one of the best stallions in the world, and she is an outstanding looker. She had everything as a broodmare, which is why we stepped up to buy her then. And she has done nothing but please us since. It is testament to that, and to the efforts by stud manager Rachel Spindlow and the staff at Highclere.

“It was the intention through this process to be playing at this end of the table and thank you very much to Anthony Stroud for buying him. I want to say thank you to him and the underbidder – he is a fantastic horse, and it was wonderful that two people valued him to such a level.

“He really was as good a first foal as you would wish to see,” said Warren, adding: “She has got a colt foal who is equally as good who might be coming back here next year, and she is in-foal to Kingman. Down the line some of the progeny might be kept to race, but the mare owes a few quid so she needs to clear the balance sheet first! And she needs to produce a filly!”

Hillwood's Lope De Vega Colt Sells For 900,000 Guineas

Charlie and Tracy Vigors' Hillwood Stud were celebrating after their Lope de Vega colt out of the Teofilo mare Moi Meme sold for 900,000 guineas (US$1,220,197) to the bid of Anthony Stroud on behalf of Godolphin after he saw off underbidder David Redvers.

“It is beyond our wildest dreams to get a result like that!” said a visibly emotional Charlie Vigors.

“We put what we thought was a sensible reserve on him as we knew we had lots of interest in him, and you could see from the live bids around the ring that there were plenty of people on him. There were plenty in up to 400,000 guineas to 500,000 guineas and we were hoping to fetch in that range. That is the beauty of public auction, isn't it, when two people then lock on.”

The son of the Listed winning mare Moi Meme had received a significant catalogue update when his two-year-old own-brother King Vega finished second in the Group 2 Solario Stakes in August.

“I think the plan is to run him in the Pertemps Futurity, if the ground is okay,” said Vigors. “I know Andrew [trainer Andrew Balding] thinks very highly of him. He has got his black-type, if he could be a Group 1 winner it would be even better!”

Dam Moi Meme is certainly enjoying something of a lengthy love affair with the Ballylinch Stud stallion Lope de Vega – all her four foals are by the son of Shamardal.

“The mare has a lovely Lope de Vega filly on the ground and she is back in-foal to him again,” said Vigors. “She has been married to him because the first ones were so nice! I don't think there is a much better sire to be married to at the moment – he is one of the top young sires around. We picked him out as a sire 'on the up' a few years ago and these were bred off a €60,000 nomination, and he has gone up to €100,000 now. You need pay days like this to keep going back to him!”

This colt was bred by a Hillwood Stud-managed syndicate called Fortescue Bloodstock, and Vigors explained: “The syndicate has been buying high dollar mares, and it is bunch of investors, mainly London based. They enjoy it very much and will certainly enjoy a day like today! There are three mares in the syndicate, with some more in another group – there are about seven or eight mares across two groups.”

The Tattersalls October Yearling Sale, Book 1 continues at 11 a.m. on Thursday, Oct. 8 with the third and final session.

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Four Top 1 Million Guineas On Opening Day of Tattersalls October’s Book 1

Book 1 of the eagerly anticipated Tattersalls October Yearling Sale got off to a strong start with the highest priced yearling in Europe or North America this year as four lots sold for 1 million guineas (US$1,354,134) or more.

Leading the way was the Kingman half-brother to the 2,000 Guineas winner Galileo Gold who was knocked down to Oliver St Lawrence for 2.7 million guineas (US$3,656,382). The colt, who was consigned by Robin Sharp's Houghton Bloodstock on behalf of Colin Murfitt's Pantile Stud, was purchased on behalf of Fawzi Nass and Bahraini interests.

Pantile Stud's stud manager Bo Hicks-Little said: “He has never put a foot wrong. He is a superstar, and not just physically, he is so mentally strong too, he is such a professional. He was a late April foal and we had a bad night when he was born as we nearly lost the mare. We had to bottle feed him for 24 hours.”

The Pantile yearlings always go to Houghton for the last eight weeks of their prep and consignor Robin Sharp was thrilled with the sale.

“That is the best price for Houghton – our previous best was 500,000 guineas (US$676,661) last year,” said Sharp. “I am delighted for Colin – he has been a friend and a client for a long time. This is a lovely, lovely colt. He has taken his prep so well and he is so much like Kingman, which is what I think made people take notice of him. He really stood out and is a class-looking horse.

“It is unbelievable, you always approach sales with an amount of trepidation, especially this year. But this is what makes this game – it is like snakes and ladders!”

Oliver St Lawrence, who had been underbidder on the Fleche d'Or filly a few lots earlier, saw off a determined effort from agent Ross Doyle standing next to MV Magnier.

Following his purchase, he commented: “He has been bought for Fawzi Nass and Bahraini interests. He is a gorgeous horse, he has a stallion's pedigree and he will go into training with Roger Varian.”

Floors Stud's Dubawi Colt Sells for 2.1 Million Guineas

The second highest priced lot on the opening day was the Dubawi colt out of the Grade 3 placed Galileo mare Cushion, a daughter of the dual 1,000 Guineas winner and Floors Stud stalwart Attraction. The colt was knocked down to Anthony Stroud on behalf of Godolphin for 2.1 million guineas (US$2,841,536) after a prolonged bidding battle with underbidder MV Magnier, the pair going head-to-head via bid-spotters from outside the sale ring.

“This is a lovely horse, obviously by Dubawi,” said Stroud. “He moves incredibly well, he is from a very good stud, and we collectively all really liked him. It just shows that when a very nice horse comes up to the ring, there are lots of good people there for them, they are collectors' items.”

Stroud added: “It is so sad that the Duke is not here because he was a wonderful breeder, a wonderfully good friend, a wonderful enthusiast; he would have loved to have been here, and he's done a fantastic job. He is probably looking down.”

The sale represented the highest price achieved by Floors Stud in the sale ring, topping the 1,600,000 guineas (US$2,164,882) sale of the 2015 Frankel colt out of Attraction, subsequently named Elarqam and a multiple group winner for owner Sheikh Hamdan Al Maktoum.

The Duchess of Roxburghe, taking well wishes from many of the assembled crowd, said: “This family means a huge amount to us, and Attraction is an absolute heroine, we are all very emotionally attached to her. The Duke adored this Dubawi colt as a foal so I hope he is watching upstairs!

“My son George runs the stud with me, but he has a new job and was not able to be here today, which is a real shame. Ed [Sackville] has been a fantastic support and with Simon Marsh too, and all the team at Floors has been amazing, Chris [Gillon] and his team. Chris deserves a special mention, he has produced the horses to perfection, every single one of them. I was so pleased it was him leading up the colt today.

“I am thrilled for my late husband who did nothing but dream of Attraction and she has really done us proud. They were two really lovely horses, and they have been since they were foals. My husband always thought they were two of the best he had ever produced – and he has been proven right. We wish Anthony Stroud and the team all the success.

“I have spoken to George and he is sitting biting his desk, he is chuffed to bits! I watched in the ring and it is not quite as it is normally, but it was still very exciting and it was tear-jerking stuff. I had some really old dear friends were with me, and it was special to have them supporting me.”

Ed Sackville, Floors bloodstock advisor, said: “It is a hell of a result, we are incredibly grateful to Anthony Stroud for buying him, and it is very nice to be standing back here again and talking, I hope it continues through the week! He is a very nice horse, by Dubawi who needs no introduction – a phenomenal sire who has just done amazingly and continues to deliver year after year.

“And he is out of a Galileo mare, who is a tremendous broodmare sire, and she is a daughter of Attraction so there is a hell of a pedigree to go with it, and Cushion was also a good racemare. Everything was in our favour, certainly on the pedigree, but we were also very lucky as he was also an outstanding individual and two high profile buyers decided to take each other on.”

Floors Top Million Again with Frankel Colt

Floors Stud had earlier been celebrating when their Frankel colt out of the aforementioned five-time Group 1 winner Attraction topped a million guineas when selling to Godolphin after Anthony Stroud outbid trainer Andrew Balding at 1.1 million guineas (US$1,488,246).

Attraction was also bred by Floors Stud, the farm so successfully developed by the late Guy Innes-Ker, the 10th Duke of Roxburghe, and Chris Gillon, the Floors stud manager was at Tattersalls today to oversee the sale of this colt. A stand-out on pedigree ahead of the sale, the good-looking colt certainly lived up to his star billing.

“It's absolutely brilliant, absolutely fantastic,” said Gillon, who has been stud manager at Floors for eight years. “We loved him as a foal and he came perfect all the way through his prep. He got down here and everything went so well. He is a beautiful-looking colt. He never stopped and was so popular with everyone. Just to see him go through the ring and do that – it is the icing on the cake.

“The late Duke saw him as a foal and he loved him and thought he was the best yet that Attraction had had, but for the colt to come here and do exactly that – the Duke will be up there smiling, that's for sure. It is brilliant for everyone involved, the late Duke, the Duchess, everyone, it is brilliant and we couldn't ask for any more.”

An understandably emotional Duchess of Roxburghe said: “He is such a lovely colt, we are thrilled. He has such an easy temperament, and has taken it all in his stride, and we are delighted as would my late husband be.”

Bloodstock advisor Ed Sackville added: “That was absolutely amazing, we are all delighted. We are very grateful for the support from the buyer and hope the horse is lucky – as lucky as Elarqam has been for Shadwell. There was plenty of interest from all the big players, but you never know what to expect. Chris and his team have done a brilliant job.

“This is a lovely horse and has been since he was a foal. Let's hope he is as successful on the track.”

Frankel Sister to Golden Horn to Godolphin for 2 million Guineas

The top priced filly for the day was the Frankel sister to the 2015 Derby winner and European champion 3-year-old colt Golden Horn who was knocked down to Anthony Stroud on behalf of Godolphin for 2 million guineas (US$2,706,097).

Stroud secured the daughter of the Dubai Destination mare Fleche d'Or after seeing off a determined underbidder in Oliver St Lawrence. The filly was bred by the Fleche D'Or Partnership and consigned by Norelands Stud.

“We were really in two minds whether to race her or sell her, we'd have been very happy to have raced her,” said Harry McCalmont of Norelands Stud. “We were only going to sell her if we felt she was fetching what we thought she was worth. If we had kept her to race she was going to John Gosden, so we thought we might as well bring her to Newmarket – if we didn't sell we could have taken her straight to Johns!”

McCalmont added: “We are delighted that Sheikh Mohammed has bought her and delighted to see him here.”

Fleche d'Or has proven a goldmine for her owners who purchased her at the 2012 Tattersalls December Mares Sale for 62,000 guineas (US$83,890) through BBA Ireland with her 2018 colt realizing 3,100,000 guineas (US$4,194,528) in this ring last year. Now named Dhahabi, he has run twice and was most recently second in the Listed Denford Stakes.

Fleche d'Or has a Sea The Stars filly foal at foot, and is in-foal to Kingman.

“We will definitely be keeping the foal this time, I know I said that last year about this one!” laughed McCalmont. “It was not a bad purchase!”

Matt Gilsenan, Norelands' stud manager, was a little more rueful as admitted he had been looking forward to racing this Frankel filly.

“She is an absolute queen, but it is all positive and a great result for the stud. Fleche D'Or is a magnificent mare and this filly looks the real deal.”

Day 2 of the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale continues at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 7.

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Kingman Brother To Galileo Gold Leads Book 1 Opener

By Emma Berry & Alayna Cullen

NEWMARKET, UK—Any doubts as to the participation of some of the leading buyers at Tattersalls’s flagship October Sale were largely dispelled as Book 1 got underway on Tuesday with four seven-figure lots and the most expensive yearling sold in Europe or North America this year. That honour went to the sole, emotional offering from Colin Murfitt’s local Pantile Stud (lot 174) in the Kingman (GB) half-brother to 2000 Guineas and G1 St James’s Palace winner Galileo Gold (GB) (Paco Boy {Ire}), who sold for 2.7-million gns to Oliver St Lawrence acting on behalf of Fawzi Nass and Bahraini interests. The Kingman colt will be trained by Roger Varian.

“He didn’t put a foot wrong from the moment he was born,” said Bo Hicks-Little, stud manager for breeder Colin Murfitt’s Pantile Stud. “He’s just been a superstar and he’s so straightforward. He’s not just a great specimen physically but mentally he’s so professional. He’s been very easy to look after. To me he’s just ‘Goofy’, it was a Disney naming theme that year. I’m going to go back to the stable to see him now.”

The colt’s dam Galicuix (GB) (Galileo {Ire}), a half-sister to G1 King’s Stand S. winner Goldream (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}), had herself been bought by Murfitt from the same ring back in 2013 for just 8,000gns. A non-winner herself, she hit the bullseye with her first foal, Galileo Gold, and has produced five winners from her five runners to date. She did not produced a foal in 2020 but is back in foal to Too Darn Hot (GB). The Kingman colt was consigned for Pantile Stud by Houghton Bloodstock.

In what felt a strong market throughout the first session of Book 1, figures did predictably take a dip from last year’s buoyant trade but Sheikh Mohammed’s bullish return to the yearling sales accounted for approximately a quarter of the day’s turnover of 27,250,000gns, which was down by 22% on 2019. The clearance rate held up respectably for an elite sale at 73%—or 124 sold from 158 yearlings offered. The average was down 14% at 223,790gns and the median fell by 33% to 120,000gns.

Floors Stud The Main Attraction

The name Godolphin appeared alongside three lots at Arqana’s Select Sale last month and was absent entirely from the Goffs Orby Sale, Keeneland September and Fasig-Tipton’s Selected Yearlings Showcase but Sheikh Mohammed returned with intent to Tattersalls October Book 1, with Anthony Stroud signing for eight lots on his behalf for a total of 7.22 million gns, including three of the four seven-figure lots of the session.

Two of those yearlings hailed from Floors Stud, whose star broodmare Attraction (GB) (Efisio {GB}) was upstaged only by her own daughter when the Dubawi (Ire) colt out of Grade III-placed Cushion (GB) (Galileo {Ire}) elicited a duel between his co-breeder Coolmore and Anthony Stroud. With both interested parties based outside the ring, MV Magnier made his last play at 2-millions gns before the hammer came down on lot 109 in Stroud’s favour at 2.1-million gns.

Earlier in the session, Stroud had outbid Andrew Balding for Attraction’s colt by Frankel (GB), who was the first yearling of the week to breach the million mark at 1.1-million gns. Sold as lot 41, the colt is a full-brother to Elarqam (GB) and half-brother to dual winner Maydanny (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}), each of whom also sold for seven-figure sums to Shadwell as yearlings in the same ring.

“I wish Guy was here,” said Floors Stud owner Virginia, Duchess of Roxburghe, of her late husband Guy Innes-Ker, the 10th Duke of Roxburghe, who died in August 2019. He has been succeeded in the dukedom by his son Charles, while younger son George now assists his mother in the running of the stud.

She continued, “This means a huge amount. Everyone knows the story of Attraction and we are very emotionally attached to her. This is really my husband’s legacy. He adored the Dubawi colt as a foal so I hope he’s watching from upstairs.”

Attraction was famously the filly who was too crooked to go to the yearling sales herself but she was a star on the track for the Duke of Roxburghe and Mark Johnston, winning the 1000 Guineas in Britain and Ireland as well as the G1 Coronation S., G1 Sun Chariot S. and G1 Matron S. Returned to her birthplace near Kelso she has continued to repay her breeder handsomely, both in the sales ring and on the racecourse, via her eight winning offspring, which include Bearstone Stud stallion Fountain Of Youth (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}) and G2 York S. winner Elarqam, a 1.6-million gns yearling in 2016. Cushion, who won twice for John Gosden and was twice Grade 3-placed in America after being transferred to Christophe Clement, raced in partnership for the Duke of Roxburghe and Sue Magnier.

“My son George runs the stud with me, but he has a new job and was not allowed to be here today, which is a real shame,” said the Duchess of Roxburghe. “Ed [Sackville] has been a fantastic support and with Simon Marsh, too, and all the team at Floors has been amazing. Chris [Gillon, stud manager] deserves a special mention. He has produced the horses to perfection, every single one of them. I was so pleased it was him leading up the colt today.”

She continued, “I am thrilled for my late husband who did nothing but dream of Attraction and she has really done us proud. They were two really lovely horses, and they have been since they were foals. My husband always thought they were two of the best he had ever produced and he has been proved right. We wish Anthony Stroud and the team all the success.”

Chris Gillon has managed Floors Stud in the Scottish Borders for eight years and commented after the sale of Attraction’s colt, “It’s absolutely brilliant. We loved him as a foal and he came perfect all the way through his prep. He got down here and everything went so well. Just to see him go through the ring and do that, it’s the icing on the cake.”

He continued, “The late duke saw him as a foal and he loved him and thought he was the best yet that Attraction had produced, but for the colt to come here and do exactly that, the duke will be up there smiling, that’s for sure.”

Golden Touch For Norelands

Harry McCalmont’s decision to buy Fleche d’Or (GB) (Dubai Destination) from her breeder Anthony Oppenheimer has proved to be an incredibly wise one. It wasn’t long before her champion son Golden Horn (GB) (Cape Cross {Ire}) had improved the pedigree immensely and, though he was famously unsold as a yearling, the mare’s subsequent offspring have been understandably in demand. Last year, her colt by Frankel was the second-top lot of Book 1 when sold to Godolphin for 3.1- million gns. Now named Dhahabi (Ire), he won on debut for Charlie Appleby at Newmarket and has since been listed-placed. This time around the only thing that changed was the price, as Stroud outbid Oliver St Lawrence at 2-million gns to sign for his full-sister (lot 162).

“Once she finishes racing she will be a lovely addition to the broodmare band,” Stroud said. “These sort of fillies rarely come on the market.”

For Norelands Stud manager Matt Gilsenan the result was bittersweet. He said, “I’m slightly disappointed to be honest, as we’d have loved to race her but at that level, in this market and at these times you have to be realistic. It’s very important to the farm to keep everything going. The mare has been absolutely amazing and this filly has been bombproof. She had over 120 shows and a lot of vetting and everyone loved her.”

McCalmont added that Fleche d’Or has a Sea The Stars filly at foot. “I promise she is not coming here next year,” he said. “The mare is back in foal to Kingman.”

McCalmont added, “We’re very pleased to see Sheikh Mohammed here. He saw the filly the other day and I’m very glad he bought her.”

Oakgrove Strikes Again With Dubawi

The cross of Dubawi and Galileo has worked notably well through Group 1 winners Ghaiyyath (Ire) and Night Of Thunder (Ire) and the top lot of the day wasn’t the only yearling bred this way to be signed for by Anthony Stroud. Oakgrove Stud’s Dubawi (Ire) filly out of the G3 Prix de Psyche winner Be My Gal (GB) (Galileo {Ire}), offered as lot 53 by her breeder John Deer, was another to be added to the list at 525,000gns.

Oakgrove Stud manager David Hilton said, “I think it’s a very strong price in what has been a tricky year for everybody. We’re delighted she has been bought by a great judge and thank you to Sheikh Mohammed. She was probably bigger than you would expect for a typical Dubawi but everything was in proportion and she has a bombproof temperament.”

Oakgrove Stud is responsible for breeding one of Dubawi’s best sons, the treble Group 1 winner Al Kazeem (GB), who has returned to stand at his birthplace and is responsible for Group 1 winner Aspetar (Fr) as well as Deer’s Listed Denford Stud S. winner Saint Lawrence (GB).

Stroud’s busy start to the day also included the purchase of lot 36, from Newsells Park Stud, at 480,000gns. A close relation to G2 Prix Guillaume d’Ornano winner Eminent (Ire), the son of Frankel is out of the young Oasis Dream (GB) mare As Good As Gold from the family which includes Group 1-winning Sadler’s Wells sisters Yesterday (Ire) and Quarter Moon (Ire).

Another Sea The Stars For Miss Yoda Team

Georg Von Opel’s Westerberg operation has been a new name on the buyers’ bench in recent yearling seasons and the owner’s outlay on well-bred fillies with a long-term intent of establishing a broodmare band was rewarded this season with the victory of Miss Yoda (Ger) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) in the G1 Preis der Diana in Von Opel’s native country.

Tom Goff of Blandford Bloodstock, who bought Miss Yoda at the BBAG Yearling Sale, was with Von Opel and the filly’s trainer John Gosden when he signed for another daughter of the Aga Khan Studs stallion.

The filly in question was lot 124, consigned by Camas Park Stud, whose 500,000gns price tag was a significant profit on her foal price of 220,000gns last December when sold by her co-breeder Tinnakill House. Out of the Group 2-winning Acetanango (Ger) mare Diamond Tango (Fr), she is a half-sister to the hardy G2 Doncaster Cup winner Desert Skyline (Ire) (Tamayuz {GB}) and three other black-type performers.

The filly’s sale came two lots after another good result for Camas Park Stud which sold a sister to champion stayer Capri (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) for 850,000gns to Jamie McCalmont.

“We bought her for an associated client of ours. She is a really classy filly, a bit immature at the moment but will develop into a beautiful racehorse. She has plenty of residual value as well,” said Kelsey Lupo, who signed the docket for lot 122 on McCalmont’s behalf. “She’s a very nice physical, Galileo is the best stallion in the world and a very good broodmare sire. It was a no-brainer.”

Bred by Camas Park and Lynch Bages from the Anabaa mare Dialafara (Fr), the filly is also a sister to G3 Loughbrown S. winner Cypress Creek (Ire) and to Passion (Ire), who was third in this year’s G1 Irish Oaks.

McCalmont Bloodstock also signed for the leading lot for Coolmore’s first-season sire Highland Reel (Ire), who could hardly have had a more eye-catching Tattersalls yearling debut than the half-brother to Group 1-winning miler Palace Pier (GB) (Kingman {GB}). Offered by Highclere Stud as lot 55, the colt was bred in partnership with Floors Stud and is a son of the unraced Nayef mare Beach Frolic (GB), a half-sister to Group 2 winners Bonfire (GB) (Manduro {Ger}) and Joviality (GB) (Cape Cross {Ire}). He was sold for 320,000gns.

Another relative of a recent Group 1 winner to register a good result for Highclere Stud was lot 148, the Zoffany (Ire) half-sister to G1 Commonwealth Cup winner Golden Horde (Ire) (Lethal Force {Ire}). She was bought by MV Magnier for 580,000gns and is also a half to the Listed Pipalong S. victress Exhort (GB) (Dutch Art {GB}).

Frankel In Demand

It was a good day in the ring for Frankel (GB) with another highlight aside from the two millionaire yearlings being the sale of lot 66 from Fittocks Stud to Juddmonte Farms for 450,000gns. Bred on the same cross as Frankel’s leading son Cracksman (GB), the colt is the second foal of Blue Waltz (GB) (Pivotal {GB}), a half-sister to the treble Group/Grade 3 winner Fantasia (GB) (Sadler’s Wells), who has in turn produced this season’s G3 Classic Trial winner Berlin Tango (GB) (Dansili {GB}).

As such a prominent owner-breeder, Juddmonte Farms is a rare name on the buyers’ sheet at yearling sales but its most high-profile purchase of recent years was Arrogate (Unbridled’s Song), the four-time Grade I winner who sadly died earlier this year after three seasons at stud in America, while stud director Simon Mockridge signed for a Kingman (GB) filly at £280,000 at last week’s Goffs Orby Sale.

Frankel had nine yearlings sold through the first session of Book 1 for an average of 590,000gns.

American Presence Well Received

From as early as the second lot in the ring, it was clear that there would again be a strong American influence in Book 1. Fresh from winning the Arc on Sunday, Peter Brant’s White Birch Farm was represented on the buyers’ sheet via Demi O’Byrne, who signed for Hillwood Stud’s Lope De Vega (Ire) filly out of the listed-placed Yarrow (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) (lot 2) at 220,000gns.

Later in the session, Brant also secured a full-sister to the G3 Prix du Lys winner Volkan Star (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) (lot 89) for 350,000gns. The filly had previously been bought by Yeomanstown Stud for €200,000 at the Goffs November Foal Sale and was one of the most profitable pinhooks of the day.

Proven sires were generally the order of the day for Mike Ryan, whose previous Tattersalls October purchases include the Grade I winners Newspaperofrecord (GB) (Lope De Vega {Ire}) and Digital Age (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}). He signed for four fillies during the first session, including Newsells Park Stud’s Siyouni (Fr) daughter of GIII Robert G Dick Memorial S winner Ceisteach (Ire) (New Approach {GB}) (lot 84) at 250,000gns. The quartet was completed by a daughter of Dark Angel (lot 86) and two Frankel fillies (19 and 38). Late in the session, Ryan added a first-crop son of Almanzor (Fr) (lot 155) to the list at 150,000gns.

Ben McElroy had been active at last week’s Goffs Orby Sale for Stonestreet Stables and he signed for four lots at Tattersalls on Tuesday, including lot 22, a colt by Iffraaj (GB) for 250,000gns. The son of the unraced Dansili (GB) half-sister to Group/Grade 1 winners Power (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}) and Curvy (GB) (Galileo {Ire}) was a successful pinhook for Luke Barry’s Manister House Stud, who bought him as a foal for 110,000gns from Barronstown Stud.

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