Arqana Yearlings: Select By Name And Nature

DEAUVILLE, France—Another tranche of prospective buyers appeared on the sales grounds at Arqana on Tuesday. As second looks, third looks and vettings are being completed, there is now just the nervous wait for vendors until 2pm local time on Wednesday when the Arqana Select Sale finally gets underway and they begin the learn their fate.

There is not one member of the bloodstock fraternity who believes that this sales season will be in any way easy. As one major breeder observed on Tuesday morning, “If we get through this year and find that the market has dropped by a third then that would actually be a relief.” 

Set against world events, just to be healthy in 2020 is a win, and there will be some breeders and pinhookers who fare well in the next six weeks and those who will not. Most people with a horse to sell are accepting of that situation, and all that remains to be seen now is which of the major buyers decide to participate in Deauville, or perhaps keep their money in pockets for later sales.

There should be plenty here in Normandy to tempt them, however. No shortage of well-related individuals can be found in what is usually known as the August Sale. One standout simply has to be the Galileo (Ire) half-brother to last year’s €1.625 million sale-topper, whose other siblings include his full-sister Magic Wand (Ire) and her fellow Group 1 winners, Chicquita (Ire) (Montjeu {Ire}). This is Ecurie des Monceaux’s signature family, stemming from the purchase 16 years ago of the colt’s grandam Platonic (GB) (Zafonic) from Fittocks Stud for 100,000gns. As such, he needs little introduction, though there will be plenty of fanfare when the colt enters the ring on Thursday as lot 199 and, just to gild the lily, last year’s leading lady, now known as Philomene (Ire), won on debut for Andre Fabre last Thursday.

The siblings and half-siblings to Group 1 winners are plentiful in the pages of the Arqana catalogue. Lot 27 from Fairway Consignment is the Dariyan (Fr) half-sister to Danceteria (Fr) (Redoute’s Choice {Aus}), from a family which Dariyan’s sire Shamardal has worked so well with, namely as the father of Lope De Vega (Ire), who is a half-brother to this filly’s dam Bal De La Rose (Ire) (Cadeaux Genereux {GB}).

Another filly with enhanced claims this season is lot 39, Haras de Montaigu’s Dream Ahead half-sister to dual Australian Group 1 winner Addeybb (GB) (Pivotal {GB}). Then there’s the jewel that is the full-sister to dual Arc winner Treve (Fr) (Motivator {GB}), who right from her first show on Sunday had all the composure of a horse who will be ready to face far busier environments than a sales ground. As lot 269, she follows 18 lots behind the Dubawi (Ire) (251) filly out of Starlet’s Sister (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), and of course the starlet in question as the half-sibling of this filly is Sistercharlie (Ire) (Myboycharlie {Ire}), but then she has a pretty famous brother, too, in last season’s G1 Prix du Jockey Club winner Sottsass (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}).

The catalogue for the three-day sale also features the offspring of no fewer than 23 first-season sires, with the biggest representation among the pack coming from the former champion 3-year-old Almanzor (Fr). Bred by Haras d’Etreham where he now stands, and whence his sire Wootton Bassett (GB) recently departed for Coolmore, he naturally features strongly among his home farm’s draft, which has eight catalogued, including a half-brother to GI Breeders’ Cup Mile winner Uni (GB) (More Than Ready) (lot 274).

Watch This Family
The draft of Haras du Petit Tellier, the Normandy farm which has belonged to Patrick Chedeville’s family for five generations, boasts not just a half-sibling to a Group 1 winner but also a number of offspring from the stud’s own freshman sire, the G1 Prix du Jockey Club and G1 Irish Champion S. winner The Grey Gatsby (Ire).

Lot 286 from the Petit Tellier consignment is a half-brother to the dual Group 1 winner Watch Me (Fr) (Olympic Glory {Ire}), who was bred and raced by Chedeville’s partner Antoinette Tamagni-Bodmer, who now offers the colt by another of the stud’s residents, Elvstroem (Aus). 

“In many ways it has been a wonderful year,” reflected Tamagni-Bodmer, who in 2017 welcomed the first crop of foals at her own private farm, Haras de Saint Julien, where Watch Me, the recent winner of the G1 Prix Rothschild, now resides. 

“She had a little problem in February in her fetlock, so then COVID for her was not a problem as I knew she would not be running before July. In the Rothschild the track was really fast and she likes it a bit softer, but she’s such a fighter and she won. She wasn’t lame coming straight out of the race but afterwards when we realised there was a problem with the fetlock again we said ‘stop’ straight away. By the Friday she was back home in the paddock.”

It is Tamagni-Bodmer’s intention to keep a select clutch of well-bred black-type mares at Saint Julien, and her operation could hardly have welcomed a better newcomer than the filly who also won last year’s G1 Coronation S., giving her trainer Francis Graffard, as well as her owner-breeder, a first Royal Ascot success.

Tamagni continued, “To me she is really a champion. To have bred a filly like this and then to have her back not long after I have created a completely new stud from scratch is a dream. If you want to make a proper breeding operation you need to have black-type fillies at the stud. My plan is mainly to sell the colts and to race the filies.”

One filly who will certainly be a keeper is the current foal of Watch Me’s dam Watchful (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), who is by Golden Horn (GB). The mare is now in foal to Almanzor. For her newly-retired daughter, Tamagni still has her thinking cap on regarding her first mate next season.

She said, “I have some ideas for Watch Me and, with all the concerns about Brexit, I will send her to a stallion in France rather than go to Britain or Ireland. We have good stallions in France and it is important to support them with good mares.”

She added, “In this business, which I would call a passion, you always have to go forward and always ask questions about what you could do better. Every day you have to learn and you have to ask what you can learn from someone else.”

It is clear that Tamagni-Bodmer has learned plenty from Chedeville, whom she describes as a “traditional breeder”.

She says, “He doesn’t like to see the yearlings in their boxes. We prepare the yearlings from Petit Tellier and from my stud in exactly the same way. We don’t put them on a walker, they are only walked in hand and they go out in the paddocks, which is a risk, but I think it is very good for them mentally to do this.”

It’s not only Watch Me who has provided an update for the draft since the catalogue was printed but also Sunday’s winner of the British EBF Future Stayers Novice S. At York, Lenny’s Spirit (Fr) (Intello {Ger}), who is a half-brother to another Haras de Saint Julie-bred, lot 419. The chestnut colt by The Grey Gatsby is out of the G3 Prix des Reservoirs winner Moon Valley (Fr) (Aqlaam {GB}).

“The Grey Gatsby has such a good temperament and he is really stamping his yearlings with that same mentality and plenty of bone,” Tamagni-Bodmer said. 

“He was syndicated in five days when Patrick first bought him and had around 100 mares in his first crop. He had 99 mares again this year. We have supported him with our good mares and we are looking forward to seeing how the market accepts his yearlings.”

In an uncertain year, the same can be said for all yearlings, but the breeder and consignor was quick to praise Arqana in its rescheduling of the sale not once, but twice.

She said, “I don’t think Arqana could have done more than they have. It’s very hard to say what will happen but I’m sure with fewer trainers able to travel then fewer yearlings will be sold, even though the agents are all here. The quarantine in England is not helping as a lot of trainers aren’t here, but when I look around I see beautiful yearlings and I see clients, so we just have to be hopeful.”

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That’s More Like It, as Tattersalls Ascot Posts Gains

NEWMARKET, UK-Every cloud has a silver lining, even one as black and pervasive as this accursed pandemic. And the transfer of the Tattersalls Ascot Yearling Sale from its eponymous base to the headquarters of its parent brand, as part of an emergency revamping of the yearling sales calendar, worked so well on Monday that conceivably it might prove tempting to make the relocation permanent.

On the other hand, prospectors will go anywhere for the right animal. Mouse O’Ryan put it well. “You can sell a good horse at a crossroads,” the agent said. “You tell us where it is, we’ll make it our business to get there.”

Certainly there were other valid factors in play, besides the congenial setting.

Though only in its fourth year, this auction had momentum of its own through the racetrack endeavours of its graduates, notably group winners at Glorious Goodwood and the Ebor Meeting this summer acquired for a combined £22,500.

Nor was it too demanding to build on that success from such a low base, with both the character and cost of the stock holding appeal even to trainers who may find themselves shorter of orders than usual.
All that said, it felt like no mean feat–especially after those bruising opening skirmishes at Doncaster last week–even to tread water in terms of the average, never mind actually to advance it.

Conversion was required to compare this sale with 2019, one having traded in guineas and the other in sterling. But the indices were very positive: the average up 13%, from £10,684 to the equivalent of £12,110; and the median up five% to an effective £8,400 from £8,000. A much-expanded catalogue, however, was the principal driver to turnover soaring all the way up to £2,458,418 from £1,356,850.
Last year, three lots made £40,000 or more; this time round, selling with “the extra shilling”, there were eight that realized 40,000gns and above. Even allowing for the extra 90 lots into the ring, that ratio suggests the quality has more than kept step.

In a week when so many professionals are prospecting bigger sales at Deauville and Lexington, just the sheer bustle about the place was heartening. Remember that yearling vendors had embarked on the sales season in a spirit of grim pragmatism, an 84% clearance rate at Doncaster indicating a willingness to cut losses and start over. A similar outlook here appeared to be reflected in just seven scratchings from 257 catalogued, quite apart from another healthy ratio of 81% finding new homes.

The thrust of business can be judged from the fact that a son of Ribchester (Ire), winner of four Group 1 prizes over a mile, was announced from the rostrum as being by “a Mill Reef winner.” It remains to be seen whether demand can keep up with so much supply across that commercial, sharp ‘n’ early sector. For now, however, there will be plenty of people out there willing to welcome any sign of resilience at any level of the market.

“We have witnessed robust trade throughout the day, and it is hugely pleasing to see gains made across the board,” said Matt Prior, Head of Tattersalls Ascot. “Vendors have noticeably increased the quality on offer and have been rewarded with both strong domestic and international participation.

“Our thanks go to Tattersalls for accommodating the sale at its headquarters in Park Paddocks, along with Great British Racing International, who have assisted in the promotion and airport transfers for those travelling from farther afield. We look forward to charting the progress of this year’s graduates, from a sale that goes from strength to strength.”

Congratulations to Prior not only on a sale that gave fresh confidence to a nervous market, but also on the birth of his first child, James, safely delivered by wife Amanda only at the weekend. A time of new hope all round.

Ringfort Continues Profitable Run

The poster girl for last year’s sale was Miss Amulet, winner of the G2 Sky Bet Lowther S. at York after being picked up for just £7,500, and her half-sister by El Kabeir duly featured in the top echelon here when sold as lot 143 for 45,000gns. But she was only the second leg of a productive quarter-hour for her breeder Derek Veitch of Ringfort Stud, who had just realized the top price of the day of 58,000gns for a Profitable (Ire) filly presented as lot 135.

Veitch was self-deprecating enough to remind the press that he had written off both Miss Amulet herself (a €1,000 Goffs November pinhook as a foal) and her dam Sheena’s Dream (Ire) (Oasis Dream {GB}) for virtually nothing last year. But to make six figures from two lots here is consistent with the rare skills that produced a second Group 2 winner within 24 hours at the Ebor meeting, through Minzaal (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}) in the Al Basti Equiworld Gimcrack S.; never mind that Veitch had bred the winner of that race last year as well, in Threat (Ire) (Footstepsinthesand {GB}).

The Profitable filly actually shares a second dam with Minzaal, and it is a productive family overall. Her mother is sibling to four black-type operators, while the third dam produced two elite-placed foals in Polar Bear (GB) (Polar Falcon) and Dance To The Top (GB) (Sadler’s Wells).

“The pick of what we’ve seen,” said Kevin Ross, who signed the docket on behalf of Paul and Clare Rooney. “I thought she was a lovely filly. The sire’s stamping his stock, we bought one at Doncaster as well, and this was a lovely walker. We like a nice athlete, and she has a lovely temperament too.”

Though a May foal, Veitch expects her to be the more forward of the pair. “I felt the Profitable was going down best, she was getting the better interviews and comments,” he said. “And she did look a queen up here: it wouldn’t have mattered what sale she was at, she’d have stood out. She looks a May, June sort, whereas the other one will need a bit more time. But she’ll have residual value for sure, and if Miss Amulet wins the Cheveley Park she’ll be worth a lot more than that.”

Potentially, indeed, the El Kabeir filly could prove well bought even if she were never to race, and Michael Bell was duly gratified to secure her–through son Nick–on behalf of Chris Wright. After all, despite her cheap export to Italy here last December, Sheena’s Dream is out of a half-sister to GI Arlington Million winner Mill Native (Exclusive Native) and French Classic runner-up French Stress (Sham).

“Chris is a longstanding owner, and he’s got a stud farm, so we’re delighted,” Bell said. “Annoyingly, we did look at Miss Amulet last year but didn’t buy her. I must admit I have precious little recollection of doing so, but I know we looked at all the grey fillies. And I do know this is a bigger individual. I bought an El Kabeir at Doncaster as well, so I’m putting a few eggs in his basket.”

Wright’s “grey filly” formula has worked at this sale in the past, notably through listed winner Flippa The Strippa (Ire) (Outstrip {GB}), a £10,000 graduate of the 2018 edition.

“It’s great for Tattersalls, the way this sale has expanded,” Veitch remarked. “I thought it might go backwards, with those numbers, by diluting it. But actually I think the horses have stepped up. Big vendors who are at all the other sales are supporting it, and I think that’s a sign the sale’s going the right way.”

As for Ringfort’s own remarkable month, he said with a grin: “Somebody might think I know what I’m doing soon! This here was a great few minutes–a magic few minutes, in the current climate.”

Kildangan Pair in Demand

It was Michael Donohoe of BBA Ireland who found Miss Amulet last year, and he returned to the well for lot 166, a 40,000gns Profitable colt consigned by WH Bloodstock. In the process he added to the laurels of the sale-topper’s young sire, whose first yearlings must work off a fee of €12,000.

“There are a couple of nice Profitables in the sale, and I think he has a chance,” said Donohoe, who was operating for a Middle-Eastern client. “This one was certainly a nice physical, a lovely individual. He has the premiums so he may well end up in France, he looks like he could be an early sort for there.”

Profitable will certainly live up to his name if he can match his Kildangan buddy Night Of Thunder (Ire). The way he is going, Night Of Thunder is threatening to become a rarity at this level, and Joe Foley was duly delighted to pick up his daughter out of a winning Singspiel (Ire) mare for 44,000gns as lot 93.

Foley, acting for Clipper Logistics, reiterated his admiration for Singspiel as a broodmare sire, citing the prolific Suedois (Fr) (Le Havre {Ire}) as well as Lady Kaya (Ire), the Classic runner-up by Ballyhane’s own Dandy Man (Ire).

This was Foley’s first visit to the sale, but he was one who felt he would have been equally likely to attend at the usual venue. “Nice horses have been coming out of it every year,” he said. “So we thought we had better come and take a look.”

Night Of Thunder also stoked up the embers of the session when Mark Grant gave 42,000gns for a colt (lot 254) out of an unraced Pivotal (GB) mare to prep for the breeze-ups. “That’s a great cross: I love a Pivotal mare and the sire’s on fire,” Grant said. “I’ve been waiting all day for this one, he’s a lovely horse. We did well with a Night Of Thunder last year, but I didn’t think I’d be able to get another one.”

Rookie Sires All the Way

Predictably enough, other new sires contributed to the higher yields of the day. One was Ardad (Ire), whose daughter out of a young, unraced Poet’s Voice (GB) mare made 43,000gns from Peter and Ross Doyle as lot 105.

Consigned by Britton House Stud, she brought a strong page: most conspicuous, among other brisk performers, being her granddam’s half-brother, champion sprinter Sakhee’s Secret (GB) (Sakhee).

“Nice, racy filly who fits the bill physically for us,” declared Ross Doyle. “She has a good bit of size to her and a good, tough attitude, and that nice back pedigree too. We like the Ardads. He was a well-bred horse, and fast, and it’s a good sign when you see a first-season sire stamping his stock.”

Pick of the early trade, meanwhile, had been the Cotai Glory (GB) colt sold to Robson Aguiar for 40,000gns as lot 36 through Owenstown Stud. “He’s a very strong colt,” said the breeze-up pinhooker. “We’re here looking for Ascot horses and he looks the right kind.”

This is the first foal of the stakes-placed Island Vision (Ire) (Arcano {Ire}) and John Tuthill was delighted for the client who owns her. Tuthill reports that the farm’s star mare Choose Me (Ire) (Choisir {Aus}), dam of Persuasive (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}), has a full-brother to that Group 1 winner heading to Book I here next month. “He’s a strong, good-looking colt,” he said. “My big dream.”

A World of Encouragement

The last word goes to Mouse O’Ryan, who caught the upbeat mood of proceedings after giving 47,000gns late in the day for a January colt by another young sire in Mondialiste (Ire), consigned as lot 225 by Norris Bloodstock. The dam is also just getting started, but her mother is G2 German 1000 Guineas winner Penny’s Gift (GB) (Tobougg {Ire}).

“Lovely horse,” said the agent, who was acting for Richard Fahey. “Really sold himself, and you have to give the sire a chance: he was a very good racehorse, and a very good-looking one too. Trade is good. I think trade at every sale since lockdown has been good. The clearance rate is high, and the breeze-up men are reinvesting, which is great. People are realistic. They want to get business done. This is a great game to defy anything that’s going on in the world. People are very resilient. Long may it continue.”

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Pyledriver Stands Ground for St Leger

MGSW Pyledriver (GB) (Harbour Watch {Ire}) is vying for favourtism in the G1 Pertemps St Leger S. at Doncaster, as he is one of 15 horses to stand their ground in the final British Classic of the season on Saturday. A listed winner at two, Pyledriver was second in the June 3 G3 Classic Trial S. over the Kempton all-weather to open his 3-year-old account and captured the G2 King Edward VII S. at Royal Ascot by two lengths on June 16. The July 5 G1 Investec Derby did not go as planned with an unplaced run after denied a clear passage, but the colt bounced back with a 3 1/2-length win in the G2 Great Voltigeur S. at York on Aug. 19.

Said Muir, “He’s in great order and has done all the work he needs to do. As long as he stays like this for the rest of the week, I couldn’t be taking him there in better shape. I’ve always been a glass-half-full kind of person–my glass is always overflowing, to be fair.

“I think he will stay and I think we’ve got a great chance, but it is a horse race. I thought we had a great chance in the Derby, and it all went wrong, but you shake yourself down and go again…if this horse could go and win on Saturday it would be fantastic for the whole team and everyone around it.”

“The owners have turned down some big offers,” he continued. “If the offers had been accepted I don’t think he would have stayed in this country– places like Australia and Hong Kong wanted him really badly. If one person had owned him, you couldn’t have said no to the kind of offers we got–it was life-changing money–but there’s three of them, and they wanted to keep him.”

His charge’s plans, both for this year and next year are already taking shape.  However, a crack at the 2020 G1 Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe is not in the cards.

“He’ll go for the Champion S. at Ascot [on Oct. 17] after Saturday, as long as the horse is fine. That will be his last run of the year, because we’re not going abroad–it’s too difficult with the COVID.

“Next year is mapped out already in my mind. You could start off at Newmarket in the G2 Jockey Club S., then you’d go G1 Coronation Cup S. at Epsom, G2 Hardwicke S. at Royal Ascot, the King George [VI and Queen Elizabeth S.]–and at the back-end of the season, if we’re out of this COVID, we could go for the Arc.”

Aidan O’Brien could saddle as many as four horses in the Leger-G1 Irish Derby hero Santiago (Ire) (Authorized {Ire}), Irish Derby third Dawn Patrol (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), G1SP Mythical (Fr) (Camelot {GB}) and Tiger Moth (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), who was second in the Irish Derby. Shadwell’s Group 3 winner Hukum (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) from Owen Burrows is also entered, as is Aug. 29 G3 March S. victor Subjectivist (GB) (Teofilo {Ire}) for Mark Johnston and stakes winner English King (Fr) (Camelot {GB}) from the Ed Walker yard. The latter could instead contest the Sept. 13 G1 Grand Prix de Paris.

“He’s in great form and is all set to run somewhere this weekend,” said Walker. “We’ll have a look at both races during the week, see what the ground is looking like and decide where we go. We’ll make a decision much closer to the time.”

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Brother to Search for a Song Headlines at Galway

Observations on the European Racing Scene turns the spotlight on the best European races of the day, highlighting well-pedigreed horses early in their careers, horses of note returning to action and young runners that achieved notable results in the sales ring. Tuesday’s Insights features a full-brother to 2019 G1 Irish St Leger heroine Search For a Song (ire) (Galileo {Ire}).

4.00 Galway, Mdn, €16,500, 2yo, 8f 123yT
KYPRIOS (IRE) (Galileo {Ire}) is the latest Ballydoyle trainee to represent the partnership of Moyglare Stud Farm, Susan Magnier and Michael Tabor and is a significant presence on pedigree,  being a full-brother to last year’s G1 Irish St Leger heroine Search For a Song (Ire) and a half to the G1 Prince of Wales’s S.-winning sire Free Eagle (Ire) (High Chaparral {Ire}) and the classy Custom Cut (Ire) (Notnowcato {GB}) and Sapphire (Ire) (Medicean {GB}). Aidan O’Brien also saddles another debutante of note in Cleveland (Ire) (Camelot {GB}), a son of the dual Group 3-winning G1 Irish Oaks runner-up Venus de Milo (Ire) (Duke of Marmalade {Ire}).

6.50 Newcastle, Mdn, £6,300, 2yo, f, 7f 14y (AWT)
FIRST SMILE (IRE) (Dark Angel {Ire}) is a daughter of the G2 Queen Mary S. winner Jealous Again (Trippi), which makes her a half-sister the ill-fated Sceptical (GB) (Exceed and Excel {Aus}) who was placed in this year’s G1 July Cup and G1 Diamond Jubilee S. Saeed bin Suroor introduces Godolphin’s April-foaled grey against John Dance’s Abundant Moon (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), a Jedd O’Keeffe-trained close relative of the G1 Prix Jean Romanet winner Romantica (GB) also by Galileo, and Jaber Abdullah’s Baby Alya (Ire) (Rio de la Plata), a Kevin Ryan-trained son of the celebrated Queen’s Logic (Ire) (Grand Lodge).

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