Dubawi Starlet Steals The Show

By Emma Berry and Kelsey Riley

DEAUVILLE, France—More diva than starlet, the Dubawi (Ire) filly put in a few feisty bucks in the Arqana sales ring, but when one is in as much demand as she was, a touch of high jinks can be forgiven. If Wednesday’s trade spluttered into action, Thursday’s was pretty explosive from the start, but it was the appearance of two blue-blooded yearlings from the sale’s perennial leading consignor Ecurie des Monceaux who really brought the ring to life.

It was a toss-up as to whether the full-brother to Magic Wand (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) or the half-sister to Sottsass (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}) and Sistercharlie (Ire) ( Myboycharlie {Ire}) would play the leading role, but inevitably they each played pretty major parts, sailing easily past last year’s top price on a day which will have had the team at Arqana and a number of vendors breathing a sigh of relief.

Dubawi (Ire) led the way last year and so he did again with his chestnut daughter of Starlet’s Sister (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), the mare who is now challenging more established names in the Monceaux broodmare band for top honours. The sales record of her offspring started in a moderate manner: just €12,000 was needed to buy her first foal at Arqana’s October Sale but, the filly subsequently named Sistercharlie has played her own important part in ensuring that the siblings who follow in her wake will never be overlooked at a yearling sale. Add to Sistercharlie’s seven Grade I victories the French Classic win of Sottsass and the price gets higher and higher: in this case it took €2.5 million to secure the Dubawi filly offered as lot 251.

With Anthony Stroud in his usual spot in the gangway to the right of the rostrum, the consistent bids that came from that direction led to the assumption that this was another Dubawi that would soon be heading Godolphin’s way, but Fawzi Nass and Oliver St. Lawrence had other ideas. They were late to the party but stayed the longest and made the most noise when placing the final bid that had the gavel hit the wood in their favour. The pair had been active throughout the session, signing up new recruits for KHK Racing, the operation of Bahrain’s Sheikh Khalid Al Khalifa. The Dubawi filly will race for him in  partnership with his brother Sheikh Nasser.

“She is a very beautiful filly with an exceptional pedigree,” Nass said. “She will be trained in England, we don’t know where she will go into training yet, but we’ll make up our minds soon. A filly with a profile like that arouses plenty of interest, and we are very glad to have bought her.”

Nass, who trains his own string of horses in Bahrain, also picked up the sole yearling by American Pharoah in the catalogue for €320,000 and said of lot 228, “He’ll be trained in England. He’s an exciting horse, a nice American Pharoah out of a Distorted Humor mare so he should be quite versatile on the turf.”

The colt’s dam Sea Of Snow (Distorted Humor) was third in the Listed Woodcote S and is a grand-daughter of Snow Bride (Blushing Groom), who is also the dam of Derby winner Lammtarra (Nijinsky).

Nass and St Lawrence’s five purchases through the first two days made them the leading buyers with just over €3.5 million spent. Their list also included a colt and a filly from the first crop of Almanzor (Fr), lots 158 and 185, at €260,000 and €250,000 respectively. The former, a colt consigned by Haras de Borgeauville, is a son of the Canadian Grade II winner Minakshi (Fr) (Footstepsinthesand {GB}), while the filly was bred by Steve Burggraf of Ecurie de Montlahuc, who raced her dam, the listed-winning juvenile Penny Lane (Ger) (Lord Of England {Ger}).

Almanzor’s 12 yearlings sold so far in Deauville have returned a highly respectable average of €159,750.

Prudenzia Colt Enhances Extraordinary Record

And what of that other Monceaux blue hen? In time they will erect a plaque to Prudenzia (Ire) somewhere in the grounds of Arqana. The 15-year-old daughter of Dansili (GB) has, through her offspring, shone brightly through so many summers and her staggering sales statistic at Arqana stands at nine yearlings sold for €10,195,000.

In hindsight, her Irish Oaks-winning daughter Chicquita (Ire) (Montjeu {Ire}), as flighty as she was brilliant, now looks inexpensive at her yearling price of €600,000. But don’t forget she made ten times that amount when setting a new record of price of €6 million at the Goffs November Sale during the dispersal of the stock of her owner Paul Makin.

From a raft of Galileo (Ire) fillies at their disposal, the Coolmore team must have a soft spot for the tough-as-teak Magic Wand (Ire), Prudenzia’s 5-year-old daughter who runs in Sunday’s G1 Prix Vermeille and who, through an extraordinary 2019 campaign, raced in Dubai, America, Britain, Ireland, Australia and Hong Kong. Her Group 1 victory was hard-won and, having given €1.4 million for her back in 2016, MV Magnier returned to Arqana to claim her full-brother (lot 199). At €2 million, the colt with a distinctive heart-shaped star on his forehead goes to the head of the list of Prudenzia’s most expensive yearlings, beating last year’s offering, the recent maiden winner Philomene (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}), who topped the 2019 sale at €1.625 million.

To beat that, in this strange year, is quite something but, in the rarefied air of the elite bloodstock market, rare equine jewels retain their value no matter what is unfolding in the outside world. Magnier had a tussle with David Redvers but it was evident that this was one colt he was determined to add to the Ballydoyle battalions for next year.

After being thanked by breeders Henri Bozo and  Lady O’Reilly of the Ecurie des Monceaux team, Magnier said of the colt, “He comes from an excellent family and is by Galileo, who is having another great year. As Lady O’Reilly just said, [Prudenzia] has been an incredible mare and has produced some special horses. We thought he was a lovely horse. He’s got a good hind leg and is a very good mover.”

He added, “Monceaux and Henri, they do an incredible job, they always produce very good horses. It’s great for them and they deserve it for all the work they put in.”

More Monceaux Magic

For the ninth year in a row, Ecurie des Monceaux is at the top of the vendors’ table for Arqana’s flagship sale, with 23 yearlings sold for just shy of €10 million. There was a brief halt in its run of success on Wednesday when Baroda Stud provided the top lot for the opening session, but normal service was resumed on Thursday, and in force, with five of the seven most expensive yearlings of the day hailing from its consignment.

It’s fair to say that Bozo was as relieved as he was pleased when he stated, “We knew coming to the sale that we had something a bit exceptional this year. We thought that we had the best draft ever, and I was a bit worried yesterday, but things have picked up well. The trade is better and there is more atmosphere. I suppose yesterday everybody was waiting to see what would happen but I knew today we had some exceptional horses.”

He added, “We’ve been very spoilt to have those mares like Prudenzia and Starlet’s Sister. They have made Monceaux and they made our team. I’m also delighted for Jordan Tancrede, who has been with us since he was 12 and has taken over as yearling manager from Antoine, who did an amazing job for us for 10 years and has started his own Arcadia Elevage consignment. There was a bit of pressure on Jordan taking over from such a good guy as Antoine so I am delighted for him and the team.”

Bozo also praised the sales company’s efforts in staging the sale in difficult circumstances. He said, “It is great reward for Arqana, too. I know it has been a very tough year for everyone with the dates changing all the time, but I think they have done a great job flying people in and trying to adapt as much as possible. It has paid off. We decided to be loyal to Arqana from the beginning. We started Monceaux when Arqana started and it’s a win-win situation.”

Number Crunching

While the clearance rate, which dropped a little from the first day to 68.5%, tells its own tale in regard to the selectivity of the market, there was no denying the more buoyant feel to proceedings on Thursday at Arqana. The 76 yearlings sold during the session brought €16,625,000 in turnover, at an average of €218,750 and median of €100,000. Last year’s record average for the three days of the August Sale was €187,671 and the cumulative average for the two days so far is now €180,790. That is likely to drop somewhat after Friday’s final session. Overall, the median is currently €105,000, while the two-day aggregate is €30,680,000.

Strong Sale For Capucines

Set against the two million-euro-plus yearlings last year, there were three this time around, with the third of that group almost overshadowed in proceedings for being in the ring immediately before the sale-topping filly. But lot 250, the Kingman (GB) colt out of an unraced Frankel (GB) half-sister to multiple Group/Grade 1 winner Stacelita (Fr) (Monsun {Ger}), had plenty of admirers and he duly became the third purchase by Anthony Stroud on behalf of Godolphin at €1.1 million.

“He’s a lovely strong colt and looks really athletic,” Stroud said of the relation to Frankel’s first Grade 1 winner, the Japanese Oaks heroine Soul Stirring (Jpn). Haras des Capucines consigned the son of Speralita (Fr) and, having been leading vendor on the first day, Eric Puerari and Michel Zerolo’s consignment is now second on the table, having sold 21 yearlings for €3,516,000.

Americans Team For Siyouni Filly

Ecurie Des Monceaux’s Siyouni (Fr) half-sister to G1 Prix Maurice de Gheest winner Polydream (Fr) (Oasis Dream {GB}) (lot 194) will head to the yard of trainer Jean-Claude Rouget and race for the partnership of American-based stables LNJ Foxwoods and Gainesway Farm after Rouget went to €700,000 to secure her on their behalf.

Alex Solis, in non-COVID times a regular visitor to Deauville along with his business partner Jason Litt, joined the team at Anthony Beck’s Gainesway in Lexington earlier this year as director of bloodstock and racing in addition to his ongoing duties with Solis Litt Bloodstock, including the management of the Roth Family’s LNJ Foxwoods’s equine interests. The very first horse Solis and Litt bought for the Roths in France was Goldikova (Ire)’s half-sister Gold Round (Ire) (Caerleon) for €520,000 at Arqana December in 2012. The  Dalakhani (Ire) filly she was carrying at the time turned out to be the G3 Prix Minerve winner Golden Valentine (Fr), whose first foal, a Galileo (Ire) colt, fetched €450,000 on the first day of the sale on Wednesday from David Redvers. The Roths in addition board some of their mares at Gainesway, including last year’s Eclipse champion Covfefe (Into Mischief).

Speaking from Keeneland where he was inspecting yearlings ahead of the September sale that begins on Sunday, Solis noted that in addition to Thursday’s filly, the LNJ/Gainesway partnership had bought another Siyouni filly from Monceaux (lot 75) for €200,000 through Rouget on Wednesday.

“Jason and I couldn’t get there, but Jean-Claude has a great eye for a horse and Henri [Bozo] had been talking with us about doing something with him,” Solis said. “He called with a couple different fillies he liked and we ended up buying two. The filly today has a huge pedigree and Jean-Claude loved her. Henri produces a great horse.”

That huge pedigree, in addition to the aforementioned Polydream, includes two other stakes-winning half-sisters: the G3 Prix Sigy scorer Big Brothers Pride (Fr) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) and Listed Prix Amandine winner Evaporation (Fr) (Red Ransom). Their dam, the French listed winner and Grade III-placed Polygreen (Fr) (Green Tune), was a private purchase by Monceaux from the Wertheimer et Frere draft for €200,000 at Arqana December in 2015 while carrying Big Brothers Pride.

Solis said that Gainesway owner Antony Beck, a South African-born Kentucky resident, will gradually build a stable in Europe and that Solis and Litt will continue to shop at European sales on his behalf.

“Gainesway hasn’t raced much at all in Europe yet,” Solis said. “When Anthony hired me we talked about doing some more international stuff and this is the start. We’re going to continue to look for horses over there through the rest of the year and hopefully next year also. Anthony is sending a really nice War Front filly over there to race for himself and the Roths have their own runners over there. We’re definitely going to keep on building the operations for both of them over there.”

Lot 194 was the highest-price Siyouni filly during Part I of the sale. Earlier in the second session Mags O’Toole and MV Magnier had teamed to secure Monceaux’s half-sister to the G1 Prix Jean Prat winner Intellogent (Fr) (Intello {Ger}) (lot 174) for €400,000. Book-ending the €700,000 filly was Etreham’s third foal out of the listed-placed Power Of The Moon (Ire) (Acclamation {GB}) (lot 196), who was knocked down to Broadhurst Agency for €310,000.

Table Service

Lunch is a serious business. Thankfully, the positioning of the glass-fronted Arqana restaurant directly behind the auctioneer’s rostrum means that, in Deauville, one can eat lunch while also conducting serious business.

And so it passed, half an hour in to the start of the second session of the Select Sale, that Wednesday’s top price was surpassed by the Frankel daughter of Militante (Ire) (Johannesburg), who was eventually knocked down to Sebastian Desmontils of Chauvigny Global Equine at €630,000. The agent’s lunch grew cold as his rival Laurent Benoit, who had left the adjacent lunch table to bid from the ring, ensured there was a proper tussle for the Monceaux-consigned filly. But Desmontils held his nerve and added the half-sister to G3 Prix de Lieurey winner Wind Chimes (Fr) (Mastercraftsman {Ire}) to the string of four horses already in training in France for Japanese owner  Hisaaki Saito.

“[Mr Saito] has two in training with Fabrice Chappet and two with Henri Devin so we will see where this princess will go. We’re not sure yet, but he will decide after they have been broken in,” said Desmontils. “He has already had a winner in Deauville with [the Chappet-trained 2-year-old] Early Light (Fr), and hopefully he will have many more coming.”

Chappet To Train Treve’s Sister

Sheail bin Khalifa Al Kuwari is best known as a champion owner of Purebred Arabians in Qatar, but he has begun to make his way into Thoroughbred ownership in France, his first runner being the Fabrice Chappet-trained 2-year-old Saqr (Fr) (Dutch Art {GB}), who is unbeaten in two tries including a 2 1/2-length conditions score at Deauville on July 12. That colt was a €48,000 selection from last year’s Arqana v2 yearling sale, and Kuwari was clearly encouraged enough to swing at a higher level on Thursday, going to €520,000 to secure Treve (Fr) (Motivator {GB})’s full-sister (lot 269) through Gerard Larrieu of Chantilly Bloodstock. The bay filly from Haras du Quesnay will also go into training with Chappet.

“She’s a lovely filly, maybe better than her sister at the same age,” Larrieu said. “We will find out if she has the same engine, but we’re very lucky and happy to get her.”

The dual G1 Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe and six-time Group 1 winner Treve was the fourth foal out of the dam Trevise (Fr) (Anabaa) and was a €22,000 buyback at Arqana October in 2010. Her trainer Criquette Head shared Larrieu’s view in a pre-sale interview that Treve was more behind than her latest sister at that stage of her life. Another full-sister, Terre (Fr), was offered here in 2014 and brought home by Quesnay at €1.2-million. A winner at three, Terre was bought by Hillwood Bloodstock for 680,000gns in foal to Siyouni from Tattersalls December last year, and Quesnay sold her first foal, a colt by Intello (lot 261), to trainer Jean-Claude Rouget for €85,000 just eight lots prior to Treve’s sister on Thursday. Thursday’s Motivator filly was Trevise’s first live foal since Terre. Treve, meanwhile, has the winning 3-year-old colt Qous (Fr) (Dubawi {Ire}), the unraced 2-year-old filly Paris (Fr) (Shalaa {Ire}), a yearling daughter of Siyouni and a filly foal by Sea The Stars (Ire).

Wootton Bassett In Vogue

The recent announcement of Wootton Bassett (GB)’s sale to Coolmore was followed by a purple patch for the 12-year-old son of Iffraaj (GB) on the racecourse, with Audarya (Fr) becoming his second Group 1 winner in the Prix Jean Romanet and Midlife Crisis (Fr) and Akmaam (Fr) his first two ‘TDN Rising Stars’. There was as such some buzz around his yearlings on offer in Deauville this week, and the dearest of those proved to be Haras de la Louviere’s second foal of the winning Nayef mare Sounaya (Ger) (lot 249), who was signed for by Jamie McCalmont at €300,000. Like Thursday’s €1.1-million Kingman colt, he is from the family of the six-time Group/Grade 1 winner Stacelita and her Classic-winning daughter Soul Stirring (Jpn) (Frankel {GB}). Wootton Bassett’s other transactions on Thursday included colts to Yann Barberot for €240,000 and Chauvigny Global Equine for €200,000, and Wootton Bassett’s 14 sold during Part I of the sale averaged €126,929. His current yearlings are his second crop bred on a €20,000 stud fee.

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Ghaiyyath Confirmed For Irish Champion

Ghaiyyath (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) will line up for Saturday’s G1 Irish Champion S. at Leopardstown after coming through a Thursday morning gallop in good order, according to trainer Charlie Appleby. This season’s G1 Coronation Cup, G1 Coral-Eclipse S. and G1 Juddmonte International winner is the favourite for the 10-furlong contest and will face five rivals including Ballydoyle’s Japan (GB) (Galileo {Ire}) and Magical (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) as well as this season’s G1 Prix Ganay victor Sottsass (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}).

“It was a routine piece of work to check his well-being, and he has come through it without a worry,” Appleby said of Thursday’s move. “It was not a strong work, more a breeze, which is normal procedure three days before a race. He’s telling us that he’s ready now for another big race.

A recent relaxation in Irish quarantine rules for elite athletes means William Buick will be allowed to partner Ghaiyyath.

“We are really looking forward to the weekend,” Appleby added. “He travels to Ireland at the peak of his career, unbeaten in four starts this year, three of them Group 1s, two of which were officially rated the best performances globally in 2020. He’s now a 5-year-old and by any standards he is lightly-raced. He has run only 12 times, winning nine and placing twice. This is his fourth season in training, and I believe what we are now seeing is an outstanding racehorse at the top of his game.

“He’s going to Leopardstown in as good a condition as we have ever had him. I’m as pleased with him as I was before the Juddmonte International at York, where I thought he was very professional in the manner he went about everything.”

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Godolphin Strikes As Dubawi Filly Heads Arqana Opener

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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Italian and Irish Farms Make Deauville Debut

DEAUVILLE, France—In a yearling sales season which has had more reshuffles than the British government’s cabinet, the caravan has finally started rolling in the last week and has now pitched up in Deauville for Arqana’s headline event of the year. As it is taking place three weeks later than usual, it is no longer the August Sale but the Select Sale, though there is a more than familiar feel to the catalogue, which features plenty of France’s leading equine families.

Two consignors have taken advantage of the sale’s later date to try their hand with a debut Arqana draft. Though new to this particular sale, both are familiar names on the wider circuit: Italy’s Allevamento Le Gi and Baroda Stud of Ireland. They also each have a Dubawi filly to sell from just six yearlings in total in the catalogue by the revered Darley stallion.

From Tuscany to Normandy
Giovanni Parri is representing Le Gi in France while his father Massimo has remained at the family’s beautiful farm in the shadow of the Tuscan Hills to oversee a draft of 15 going to their home country’s SGA Sale on Sept. 19.

As the head of Italy’s Thoroughbred breeders’ association (ANAC), Massimo Parri is understandably keen to support the sale in Milan but the family has also succeeded in recent years when selling abroad. Notably, they topped Tattersalls October Book 2 in 2017 when selling a Sea The Stars (Ire) colt out of Biz Bar (GB) (Tobougg {Ire}) for 850,000gns to Shadwell, and it is the Dubawi (Ire) half-sister of this colt who makes up half of Le Gi’s select Arqana draft. Selling within the first two hours of the opening day of the sale on Wednesday, lot 34 is also a half-sister to the G1 Gran Premio do Milano winner Biz The Nurse (Ire) (Oratorio {Ire}) and fellow stakes winners Mysterious Boy (Ire) (Arcano {Ire}), Bullish Glory (Ire) (Roderic O’Connor {Ire}) and Biz Power (Ire) (Power {Ire}). Furthermore, the progeny of Biz Bar have delivered three updates since the catalogue went to press, with the mare’s Golden Horn (GB) 3-year-old Presidential Sweet (ITY), having won her maiden in Italy by seven lengths, and the 99-rated aforementioned Book 2 topper Alfaatik (GB) having returned to winning ways at York’s Ebor meeting.

“The Dubawi filly has a really nice temperament and she’s been doing everything very well since she arrived here,” said Giovanni Parri at Arqana on Sunday. “We took her to be lunged this morning and she behaved just as if she was still at our farm.”

He continued, “We have sold at Tattersalls for the last three years and we decided to come here when Arqana announced that the sale would be moved to September. When we made that decision, Great Britain was in a worse condition than France with Covid and so we through that probably it would be easier for us to come here to Arqana from Italy.

“Also, last year there were a lot of Dubawi yearlings in Tattersalls, so it might have been too much competition. She was born in February so it’s a good time now for her to come to a sale. The family is going well. Alfaatik won again for John Gosden, and the 3-year-old won her maiden well and was then second yesterday [Saturday] in a good conditions race.”

It’s not just this family that has been going well for Le Gi, which has celebrated two Classic winners in Italy this year. Cima Emergency (Ire) (Canford Cliffs {Ire}) won the G3 Premio Parioli (Italian 2000 Guineas) and Auyantepui (GB) (Night Of Thunder {Ire}) landed the G2 Oaks d’Italia. Formerly trained in Italy by Nicolo Simondi, the latter is co-owned by the Parri family with OTI Racing and is now with Chantilly-based young Italian trainer Mario Baratti. She is entered in Thursday’s Listed Prix Joubert at ParisLongchamp.

Parri said, “It has been an exciting year as we won the Oaks as breeder and owner, and also the Guineas, both with the offspring of our young mares, so we are very happy. We are going to sell a Kodiac (GB) half-brother to the Guineas winner in Milan and we are very excited about him.”

The SGA draft also includes yearlings by Pride Of Dubai (Aus), Churchill (Ire) and Mehmas (Ire), while at Arqana, the pair of offerings is completed by a colt by Camelot (GB) (lot 76) out of the four-time winner Dweezil (Ire) (Rip Van Winkle {Ire}), a half-sister to Derby Italiano victor De Sica (Ire) (Sri Pekan).

“The Camelot is a horse for someone who likes to dream: he’s not a 2-year-old type but more a Classic type,” noted Parri. “He’s a first foal but he doesn’t look like a first foal because he is a good size and strong.”

Baroda Branches Out
The second Dubawi filly to take to the ring on Arqana’s opening day, lot 61 is the only one in the sale to have arrived from Ireland, though she started her life in Germany. Bred by Janet Leve-Ostermann’s Gestut Haus Itlingen, the daughter of the G3 Hamburger Stutenpreis winner Daytona Bay (GB) (Motivator {GB}) was a 300,000gns pinhook from the Tattersalls December Sale and she will be the first Baroda-consigned yearling to be offered in Deauville.

“We’ve been coming here for years and we usually sell through Monceaux, but it’s great to have our first draft here,” said stud owner David Cox. 

“The timing of the sales all being on top of each other now, especially with the American sales as well, is difficult, but Arqana has done a very good job of helping to get as many people over here as can come. The statistics for the online facilities so far this year have been very interesting as well.”

He added of the Dubawi yearling, “She’s a lovely filly with scope and she’s a great mover. She’s an exciting one to be selling. Dubawi has enjoyed enormous success with mares by Sadler’s Wells-line stallions: Ghaiyyath (Ire) is out of a Galileo (Ire) mare as is Dubawi’s young stallion son Night Of Thunder (Ire). European champion 2-year-old Too Darn Hot (GB) is out of a daughter of Singspiel (Ire), likewise Group 1 winners Wuheida (GB) and Old Persian (GB), while Barathea (Ire) is the broodmare sire of Dubai World Cup winner Monterosso (GB), Juddmonte International heroine Arabian Queen (GB) and Hunter’s Light (GB).”

Just six lots later, Baroda will be back in action with lot 67, a daughter of another popular British-based stallion, Showcasing (GB). The March-born filly is out of the dual winner Deux Saisons (GB) (Chineur {Fr}), who is herself a half-sister to G1 Poule d’Essai des Poulains winner Tin Horse (Ire) (Sakhee), while the family also includes last year’s Horse of the Year in Germany, Rubaiyat (Fr) (Areion {Ger}).

“She is a fast-looking filly and hopefully she’ll be popular,” said Cox. “It’s a case of finding the right sale for the right horse and we’ve a few Showcasing yearlings so we thought she would suit this market with some good French winners in her pedigree. With the prize-money being so strong in France it’s a great place to be selling horses and it was a natural progression for us as a consignment to come here. It was a last-minute move to come to Arqana but everyone has had to be flexible this year. The breeze-up boys started it and had to move horses around but they showed that it can be done, and we all have to adapt in a difficult year.”

Following the French sale, Baroda turns its attentions to shipping its drafts for the relocated Goffs Orby Sale to the UK, swiftly followed by those for the Tattersalls October Sale.

Cox added, “We will also be welcoming clients to the farm in a socially-distanced manner if they would like to see the Goffs Orby yearlings and Tattersalls yearlings ahead of the sale, especially if they can’t travel to the UK.”

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