Oxted Out of G1 Betfair Sprint Cup S.

Oxted (GB) (Mayson {GB}), winner of the G1 Darley July Cup S. last out on July 11, will not line up in the G1 Betfair Sprint Cup S. at Haydock on Sept. 5, trainer Roger Teal announced on Twitter Tuesday. The 3-year-old, who was one of the top contenders for the race did not please Teal in a work on Tuesday morning. Oxted also won the G3 Abernant S. in June.

“As to not mislead the punters out there, Oxted is a non-runner on Saturday,” Teal tweeted. “He wasn’t his usual self this morning and we have made the decision to pull him out. We are desperately disappointed for the whole team and connections. It’s better to let people know straight away.”

Teal is awaiting the results of some tests after the sub-par work.

Added Teal, “We’ve had a trach wash done, and we’re still waiting on the results of that. Everything was fine yesterday, and the horse worked really well on Saturday, but didn’t this morning.

“We always let him tell us in his final bit of work before a race whether he’s ready for it, and I just wasn’t happy, and you can’t go into a Group 1 if you’re not 100% confident the horse is at the top of his game.

“It’s devastating for all of us, because we’ve been looking forward to going to Haydock for a long time–but with the ground on the softer side as well, we have to be 110% sure, because if he did run and disappointed I’d kick myself to the church and back.”

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Doncaster a Weathervane in Tempestuous Times

DONCASTER, UK–Well, this is the day when perhaps we’ll start to know. Only perhaps, mind. Each auction is a market in its own right and, besides, everyone has over recent months become accustomed to such wild fluctuations in outlook that the world can look a very different place between breakfast and dinner, never mind between the opening session of the yearling sales season, at Doncaster on Tuesday, and its conclusion two months hence.

All that said, the opening skirmishes of the Goffs UK Premier Yearling Sale are bound to be treated as a barometer for what lies ahead. During these uniquely challenging times, vendors and consignors will watch the early returns with far more than even their customary trepidation. Equally, the likelihood of “a buyer’s market” will not assuage the anxieties of core clients such as trainers, nervously awaiting orders, or pinhookers, who have to gamble on a return of economic confidence as soon as next spring.

So while the whole community has demonstrably been at pains to hold its collective nerve and work together, not least the rival sales companies, it is only when the gavel comes down that we can begin to know whether we have merely been helping each other to rearrange the furniture on the Titanic; or have actually managed to board a serviceable lifeboat, with a functioning motor and plenty of buckets.

For the little it may be worth, the ambience on the sales grounds on the eve of the sale seemed positive. The consensus was that there were more prospectors, relatively speaking, than has been the case at sales staged in other sectors since the lockdown. Nobody was foolhardy enough to be making predictions, and the ongoing fidelity of the Maktoums–perennial mainstays of the industry–is being monitored with more angst than ever.

But perhaps there was something auspicious about the change in the weather: horses had been unloaded over the weekend into a bitter north wind, like a sadistic downpayment of the coming winter. On Monday, they were being displayed in the kind of perfect late-summer weather–high, slow clouds occasionally filtering warm sunshine–that could only be more flattering to cricket on the green than it was to the shimmering flanks of a meticulously groomed yearling.

At the best of times, Henry Beeby approaches the sales season with a candid paranoia about picking up any kind of infection that might compromise his resonance from the rostrum. As a friend said to the Goffs CEO: “You must be delighted: nobody’s touching you, everyone’s washing their hands the whole time–and nobody thinks you’re weird anymore!”

But the pandemic has been a rollercoaster to challenge even Beeby’s trademark dynamism.

“An ex-colleague, who has retired, rang me up recently and said: ‘I bet you’d like a bit of foot-and-mouth!'” Beeby says. “And I said: ‘Well, I’m not sure I’d like it. But yes, by comparison, having seemed an absolute nightmare at the time, foot-and-mouth now seems like the mildest of inconveniences.’ When we moved a sale, someone said: ‘At least you’ve given us certainty.’ And I replied: ‘In the COVID world, there is no such thing as certainty.'”

That clearly extends to the next two days. While it would clearly be unfair to invite public commitment to any specific number, even in private it is presumably difficult for the Goffs management to agree what might pass as a tolerable loss of momentum after the relentless bull run of recent years. In broad brush-strokes, however, Beeby explains that the accountants will be measuring the year against an established “worst-case scenario.”

“I’ll be quite open,” Beeby declares. “Our financial year is Apr. 1 to Mar. 31 so, if there could be such a thing, I suppose from that point of view it happened at the right time. It meant we could recalibrate all our budgeting for the year. Rather than base it on the last couple of years, we said: ‘What is the worst year we have had, in terms of ring turnover, in recent memory?’ In Ireland, it was 2010; in England, 2013. So we worked everything backwards from there: if we can hit those targets, having worked out our costs to a break-even position, then we can just tread water and hopefully move forward again after COVID.”

Beeby remarks that last year’s Irish turnover of around €123 million matched almost precisely the business done in 2007, having slumped to €45 million in 2010 after the financial crisis. In other words, a perfect U-shaped recovery had been completed. What the whole global economy is craving now, of course, is a much narrower, steeper “V” revival.

“It does put everything in perspective,” Beeby reflects. “Normally, you’re deeply upset if your sale hasn’t grown by at least inflation. But now it’s a question of leading with the clearance rate, because our primary focus–going into every sale–is to deliver liquidity to the market, to let the vendors sell their horses for a price they can accept.

“The Land Rover Sale was down 36%. In a normal year, that would have me virtually suicidal, though actually, compared to its competitors, it wasn’t too bad. But the clearance rate on day one was 84%. Slightly less on the second day, but it was a question of just keeping the wheel turning, keeping the market going, keeping the liquidity, helping people through their cycles. Because of course a yearling is only a yearling once, and same with your 3-year-old store, or your breeze-up horse.

“So what it needs from us, and from our clients, is adaptability, flexibility, reactivity. It’s about not being afraid to act quickly, to make quick decisions; but equally to be unafraid of saying: ‘No–we need to change it again.'”

And Beeby speaks warmly of how the industry, as a whole, has stepped up to the plate. He is also perfectly aware that a lot of people looked to the sales houses for a lead. He stresses that Goffs and its principal rival Tattersalls already tend to work together, in the interests of their clients, more routinely than people may realise.

“We are competitive, of course we are, but this year in particular it’s been a question of putting that to one side and helping each other,” Beeby says. “Because we know we’re in it together. There was a period of a week or 10 days when I think I must have spoken more to [Tattersalls chairman] Edmond Mahony than some of my colleagues. We’re swimming in a very small pool, most of the clients are mutual clients, and in various categories–be it the breeze-ups, be it stores, be it yearlings–most major vendors sell in all places. So it just makes enormous sense to co-operate and co-ordinate and harmonise.”

The toughest nettle to be grasped, perhaps, was the decision to transfer the Orby and Sportsman’s Sales here to Doncaster from Co Kildare.

“The Orby used to be called the Irish National Yearling Sale,” Beeby notes. “It’s a major event in Ireland. The modern-day Goffs was set up in 1975 to provide high-class facility in Ireland for Irish breeders, so it was a big decision to move. But aren’t we lucky that we had this complex here? First of all, prior to 2007, it wouldn’t have been as easy because D.B.S. [Doncaster Bloodstock Sales] was a separate entity; and prior to 2008, we were across the road with 290 stables that weren’t to a high enough standard for these horses, and certainly the Orby and Sportsmans. So we’re very lucky that we are served by two such high-class sales facilities. And largely people have said: ‘That makes sense, let’s do it.'”

No market, of course, can sustain perennial growth. Nobody could have anticipated quite what it was that eventually broadsided the bloodstock bonanza, but everyone always knew that cycles are inevitable. In our industry, moreover, too many sectors are too interdependent for the headline figures to show “pure” gain. Many Thoroughbreds are sold many times over: in utero, even, and certainly as foals, yearlings, breezers, horses-in-training, breeding stock. And then everything starts over. But an apparently booming yearling market, for instance, always raises the stakes for the breeze-up sector. In turn, that will often mean that even a corresponding boom in the 2-year-old market is illusory; that margins have remained pretty stable.

Certainly pinhookers here are treading warily. “We have seven months for everything to turn round,” said one. “But we don’t even know what things will look like in seven days.”

Another, who had actually come out ahead from the breeze-up sector’s delayed calendar, was hoping that these initial yearling exchanges may be particularly cagey, saying: “If they do wait and see, then I’m hopeful I might get one or two early on. But nobody knows what’s going to happen. If we had another lockdown of racing, then we’re all in trouble. But we’re here. That’s a start!”

And it is in these times, when the soil seems thinnest, that the seeds of subsequent fortune will often be sown.

“Absolutely,” says Beeby. “There will be great opportunities. These horses were bred in pre-COVID times, when things were going really well, and there are some beautiful horses here.”

As detailed by colleague Kelsey Riley in yesterday’s edition, moreover, Premier Sale graduates have been excelling even in the constricted programme contrived after lockdown. As ever, they have been doing so where the emphasis is on speed; but they have been doing so at the highest level, with consecutive wins in both the GI Commonwealth Cup and GII Norfolk S. at Royal Ascot. Already nine graduates of last year’s sale have won stakes.

Beeby feels that the bloodstock market, so far as it has been tested, has so far stood up surprisingly well at a time when owners have been deprived of their customary adrenaline at the racetrack; and when prizemoney dividends have made even less sense than usual of the investment demanded of them. That gives him “quiet hope” for the next two days.

“There’s going to be a market here,” he says with a shrug. “Quite what it is, remains to be seen. But it’s the old cliché. All you can do is your best. We are a very resilient industry. And why is that? It’s because for most of us, it’s not a job, it’s our life; it’s what we live and breathe. Even if we wanted to, most of us probably couldn’t do anything else. I certainly can’t: I’ve done this for 38 years, don’t want to do anything else, and am certainly not qualified to. And I daresay that’s true of most of us here. So what do you do? You make hay when the sun shines. You have a good time, you make the most of it. And when things go badly, you knuckle down and make sure you get through it.

“There was a time, before the breeze-up sales, when the previous year we had already turned over £46 million–and this time it stood at zero. But what’s been heartening has been the calmness of so many people. There’s never really been a sense of panic, which you could have understood. People have said: ‘Just give us something to aim for.’ And even though sometimes we’ve had to change even that, there has just been that feeling that we have to keep the wheel turning. People have been prepared to knuckle down and work together, put their normal differences or individual ambitions to one side. That’s been refreshing.

“We have to keep trying, to keep as much normality as we can in an incredibly abnormal world. And I suppose someday we’ll look back and say: ‘Do you remember 2020?'”

He gives a wry grin. He knows how few of us will do so in tones of nostalgia. But even though his father, DBS stalwart Harry, will be missing for the first time since 1964, he will be avidly following proceedings on Beeby’s mother’s “machine”.

“So the message,” concludes Beeby, “is really to keep calm and carry on.”

The first of 423 lots catalogued over two sessions enters the ring at 10 a.m. on Tuesday.

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Oxted One of 15 Entered for Betfair Sprint Cup

Roger Teal‘s Oxted (GB) (Mayson {GB}), who won the G1 July Cup in the colours of Stephen Piper, Tony Hirschfield and David Fish, is one of 15 standing their ground for the upcoming G1 Betfair Sprint Cup on Sept. 5.

“All seems good–fingers crossed, we’ll get there in one piece,” said the conditioner. “I’ve had a quick look at the entries. I was watching them come in, and it’s what was expected. If the ground tightens up it would help no end. I have tried him twice before on an easier surface, and he hasn’t run to form, but I don’t think it was the ground. There were other reasons. It’s not that he has to have the ground rattling fast–but if it was good to soft, it’d be perfect.”

Since his victory in the July Cup, Oxted had an ulcer removed from the back of his throat and Teal remains confident the procedure would not mar his horse’s chances.

“He had a little wind op after Newmarket,” he said. “He had an ulcer on the back of his throat. We had that removed. He was scoped after the July Cup, so he must have run with it. It was a simple procedure.”

Hollie Doyle, who rode a five-timer at Windsor on Saturday, has the call aboard G3 Phoenix Sprint S. hero Glen Shiel (GB) (Pivotal {GB}) for trainer Archie Watson. It will be Doyle’s first ride in a British Group 1.

Doyle told Sky Sports Racing, “I’m really looking forward to riding Glen–he’s been a flag-bearer for the yard really. He keeps on surprising us. He’s improving with age and he’s got quicker the older he’s got, which is strange. He’s going the right way. He’s an old legend. The ground is the key to him really, and he’ll get his ground at Haydock and a stiff enough six [furlongs]. I’m hoping for a good run.”

Others entered include G1 Diamond Jubilee winner Hello Youmzain (Fr) (Kodiac {GB}), who won the 2019 edition of the Haydock Sprint Cup, as well as his stablemates Brando (GB) (Pivotal {GB}) and Queen Jo Jo (GB) (Gregorian {Ire}). All three are trained by Kevin Ryan.

James Fanshawe saddles 2018 winner The Tin Man (GB) (Equiano {Fr}) and Archer’s Dream (Ire) (Dream Ahead). G1 Commonwealth Cup S. winner Golden Horde (Ire) (Lethal Force {Ire}) for Clive Cox and G2 Hungerford S. winner Dream Of Dreams (Ire) (Dream Ahead) are also slated to line up, among others.

 

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The Weekly Wrap: What Hollie Did Next

It has been both a good week and a bad week for women in British racing. Hollie Doyle has already featured in this column on several occasions this season but when her achievements make the evening news bulletin on BBC Radio 4, then it’s worth revisiting the subject of this fast-rising jockey.

When lockdown started, and racecourses in Europe were shuttered for at least two months, it was Doyle’s partner Tom Marquand who grabbed the headlines with his Group 1-winning rides in Australia. Marquand is still 10 wins ahead of Doyle in the abridged Flat jockeys’ championship which started in June, and they are both some way adrift of leader Oisin Murphy, but within a top-five pack which also includes William Buick and Ben Curtis. However, Doyle wasn’t idle while Marquand was wintering in Australia, and she had already notched a decent tally before racing was called off. She now only needs another fives wins to record her second consecutive century in a calendar year.

Judging by Saturday’s performance, she could easily do that in one day. Jockeys are currently restricted to riding at just one meeting per day—a COVID-inspired rule which some hope will remain in place—but Doyle has been making the most of her full books of rides. On Saturday, she set a new record for a female jockey in Britain when winning five of Windsor’s nine races, including the two stakes races on the card. Especially pleasing for Doyle was doubtless the fact that she bagged a second Group 3 win aboard Extra Elusive (GB) (Mastercraftsman {Ire}) for Imad Al Sagar, with whom she recently signed a retainership. It is said that the Lord rested on the Sabbath, but that wasn’t the case for Doyle, who followed up her five-timer 24 hours later with a hat-trick at Yarmouth.

It is fully understandable that female jockeys wish to be referred to simply as jockeys, and there should of course be no distinction between the two sexes. That ridiculous old argument of women not being strong enough has thankfully been consigned to the dustbin by a string of eminently capable riders.

But it is a sad fact that Doyle is the only female in the top 50 in the British jockeys’ table. Nicola Currie, Josephine Gordon and Hayley Turner all make it into the top 70, and at a certain stage in recent years, each was very much flavour of the month. It should also be said that the problem of dwindling rides is not one faced solely by women—plenty of young male apprentices have struggled to make that leap into riding as a professional.

The fact that women represent only nine per cent of the top 100 jockeys riding in Britain and 13 per cent in Ireland shows that there is still much room for improvement and encouragement. Thankfully for those following behind her, Hollie Doyle isn’t just politely knocking on the door, she’s charging through it with a battering ram.

Trouble At The Jockey Club
From the statements issued over the weekend by the Jockey Club and its erstwhile group chief executive Delia Bushell, who resigned her post on Sunday, it is hard to ascertain which is the aggrieved party in what is undoubtedly a sorry tale for racing, whatever the truth may be. Indeed, for the second time in 24 hours, a racing-related story was reported in the wider media, though for a far more negative reason.

Bushell’s resignation came after an independent barrister appointed by the Jockey Club apparently upheld allegations made against her by a colleague of bullying, racist remarks and the sharing of offensive material. A sub-committee of three of the Jockey Club board members, referred to as stewards, determined that the review’s findings should result in disciplinary action against Bushell, including for gross misconduct.

In effect, she has jumped before she was pushed, but Bushell is clearly not prepared to go gently into what would certainly be a very dark night for her future career if the allegations against her remain unchallenged. Instead, she issued a stinging resignation letter which included counter-bullying claims against the Jockey Club as well as referring to the barrister in question ignoring “evidence of collusion by a number of male witnesses, all senior executives in the Jockey Club, both ahead of the filing of the grievance and during the investigation process itself.”

Bushell, a former managing director of BT Sport who also held several senior roles with the broadcaster Sky, became the first female head of the Jockey Club in September 2019 and acknowledged the potential difficulties faced by racing.

“The years to come will be critical for the sport, as we embrace the opportunities and challenges of innovating for fans and racegoers, appealing to new and more diverse audiences, broadening revenue streams, and driving inward investment,” she said at the time of her appointment.

Nobody could have foreseen the even greater challenges posed by a global pandemic, or indeed that turmoil within British racing’s most prestigious organisation, which oversees 15 racecourses and the National Stud, would lead to such a premature and controversial departure. In its former role as racing’s rulemaker, the Jockey Club, established in 1750, did not allow women to hold training licences until 1966 or to ride against men in races until the 1970s, a situation admittedly not out of keeping with the more general societal attitudes of that time.

It is concerning however to note in Bushell’s resignation letter her comment regarding her former employer as a “male-dominated organisation that has a troubling history of ignoring serious complaints against senior men and which seeks to discredit and ostracise anyone challenging its status quo.”

It seems likely that when more details of this story eventually come to light, it will be in a court of law. Hopefully we might also find out how the details of this matter, which really should have been confidential between employer and employee, have come into the public domain.

Cox Provides First For Many
Ballylinch Stud gave an important helping hand to Lope De Vega (Ire) in his first season with runners when his son Belardo (Ire), who was bred by the stud, became his sire’s first Group 1 winner in the Darley Dewhurst S. of 2014.

Belardo, who raced initially for Prince Faisal, was bought by Godolphin while he was still in training and is now at Kildangan Stud with his own first runners in action. But it is Ballylinch which is once again playing a part in the success of a young stallion, with Belardo’s first group winner, Isabella Giles (Ire), having been bred at the stud from the G3 Laundry Cottage Stud Firth of Clyde S. winner Majestic Dubawi (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}). The 12-year-old mare was bought by Ballylinch Stud from Rabbah Bloodstock for €260,000 at Goffs in 2015.

Isabella Giles was also continuing a great season for the juveniles representing Clive Cox’s stable. A week earlier, the trainer had sent out Cobh (Ire) to win the listed Stonehenge S. and become the first stakes winner for Belardo’s fellow freshman sire Kodi Bear (Ire), who was also trained by Cox. This followed the G2 Richmond S. victory of Supremacy (Ire), who was in turn the first group winner for this year’s leading first-season sire Mehmas (Ire).

Cox has also won this season’s G2 Coventry S. with Nando Parrado (GB) (Kodiac {GB}), who was sent off at what now seems an extraordinary price of 150/1 and subsequently finished runner-up to Campanelle (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) in the G1 Darley Prix Morny.

Important Test For Yearling Market
Today (Tuesday) sees the start of the European yearling sales season, a little over two weeks late, and in Doncaster rather than Deauville. A congested autumn calendar has become even more condensed than usual owing to the reshuffling necessary to facilitate the ever-changing coronavirus quarantine restrictions.

Despite great flexibility shown by sales houses and vendors, it remains impossible for buyers and/or agents to get to all the sales in the coming weeks even with most of the Irish sales having been moved to the UK. People returning to Britain following Arqana’s postponed Select Sale (Aug. 9 to 11) are still required to undergo 14 days of isolation.

What has become evident following the latest round of horses-in-training action at Tattersalls last week is that buyers are increasingly willing to bid online—though it is certainly less unsatisfactory to do this for horses with racing form rather than young, untested yearlings. At the Tattersalls August Sale, 60% of all lots offered received bids via the internet bidding platform: 79 horses were sold this way, amounting to 1.6 million gns of the sale’s total turnover of 8.43 million gns. The underbidders on a further 93 horses in the sale were also online rather than at the sale in person.

The other more notable factor of the last two sales at Tattersalls in July and August has been the remarkably high clearance rate of above 90% for each. This can be construed as both good and bad news. On the one hand, demand remains strong for horses trained in this region. On the other, a high number of the better horses offered in these catalogues were sold to race on abroad, primarily in the Middle East, on top of a fairly steady flow of privately purchased horses throughout the season. This is nothing new, but it certainly feels like it is happening more than ever, particularly when prize-money has plummeted further still in Britain since the resumption of racing after lockdown. Simply, for many owners of British-trained horses rated in the 70 to 100 bracket, the rewards are far greater if you sell rather than continue to race, even successfully.

It’s no secret that yearling vendors are approaching the coming weeks with trepidation, a situation exacerbated by rumours of a potential reduction in spending by the Maktoum family. It is also fairly likely that we haven’t seen the worst of the repercussions for racing from the desperate and ongoing scenario that is COVID-19. Over the next few weeks a picture will begin to be painted which may not be finished until this time next year.

But, as we have seen in the past, the bloodstock business remains a remarkably resilient industry. The breeze-up and horses-in-training sales of this year have so far held up better than most people expected, though there has of course been a downturn from what has been a fairly buoyant market since bouncing back from the global financial crisis of 2007-2008. Let’s hope that the yearling sales can follow suit.

 

 

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