Arqana August Sale Set For Takeoff

 

DEAUVILLE, France-There were times at Arqana on Friday when it felt as though navigating your way through the Champs-Elysees roundabout during rush hour would present a far more straightforward task than slaloming between the scores of yearlings around the sales complex on the eve of the August Sale.

It was predictably busy at Barn B, where Felix Lepeudry of Elevage de Tourgeville, readied a six-strong draft to be inspected by two heavyweights from either corner of the globe underneath a clear blue sky and a welcome breeze.

Getting their shows in were Henry Field of Newgate Farm in Australia and leading American trainer Kenny McPeek, with their presence in Deauville speaking to the international feel to what is Europe's first major yearling sale of the year.

Yoshito Yahagi, William Haggas, Joseph and Donnacha O'Brien, Francis Graffard and Freddy Head have all been seen to be getting their steps in over the past few days and even leading owner-breeder Andreas Putsch described the atmosphere on the ground as “the best I've ever seen” in between viewings.

The hefty footfall may have had some consignors channeling their inner air traffic controller as future aeroplanes were sent flying from one corner to the next but Lepeudry remained grounded.

“We have been gifted by nature to have such lovely-looking animals,” he said when asked to sum up his draft. We were lucky that we made some clever matings; sending two mares to Iffraaj (GB) in the same winter was a tough decision but there are only two in the catalogue and we have them both.

“Iffraaj had a Group 2 winner recently with My Prospero (Ire) in the Prix Eugene Adam and the filly [lot 50] and the colt [lot 95] that we have by him are being pulled out quite a lot.”

He added, “The Iffraaj filly is out of Ming Zhi Cosmos (Fr) (Duke Of Marmalade {Ire}), who was bred at home obviously, and she then went to Australia.

“She was covered four times down there by China Horse Club and we decided to buy her back and bring her home. She had a stop in Newmarket and visited Iffraaj so the result is quite pleasant.

“That's her first northern hemisphere foal. We are a small farm so it's exciting to be able to fly a horse. It was just a crazy experience.”

It's a dangerous thing when, as well as making clever decisions, lady luck shines down on you, and Lepeudry is in no doubt that the stars have aligned for the family-run stud this year.

He explained, “We have a Zarak (Fr) filly [lot 121] as well. We sent the mare [Santa Louisia (GB) Highest Honor {Fr})] to Zarak thinking, maybe, and now he is flying. He is red-hot and thankfully we have such brilliant breeders in France still like the Aga Khan.

Lot 166 is an Oasis Dream colt out of Tilett (GB) (Rock Of Gibraltar {Ire}) and she was named after my great grandfather's friend, Colonel John Tilett, who was a famous war hero. He fought on D-Day and the Oasis Dream is the eighth generation of that family that we nursed on our farm. As a son of Oasis Dream, it brings a bit of Lyphard and Mill Reef into that mating, and that makes the inbreeding that we had with Robin Of Navan (Fr).

“Lilliside (Fr) (American Post {GB}), the dam of Lys Gracieux (Jpn) (Heart's Cry {Jpn}) who lost the French 1000 Guineas in the stewards' room to Special Duty, is also in the family so it keeps the pedigree rolling for us. He is a lovely animal. I love him actually.”

He added, “We only paid £20,000 for Oasis Dream. He is the most proven sire, top-class, so we are gifted. Wakika (Fr) (Whipper) was sent to Wootton Bassett (GB) when he was standing for just €40,000. We are just lucky. The stars are shining down on us. Look at Wootton Bassett now–he is standing for €150,000.”

With 24 yearlings to sell, Haras D'Etreham will offer one of the biggest consignments at the sale, with executive director Nicolas de Chambure excited about what the next three days will bring.

He said, “It's a diverse group of people looking at our horses so we can be optimistic. We have a nice filly [lot 98] who is from the first crop of Blue Point (Ire). She is from a good family and we're looking forward to her. There is a lovely Frankel (GB) filly [lot 247] out of a Dubawi (Ire) mare [Crystal River {GB})} and we've a couple of lovely fillies [lot 30 and lot 155] by Night Of Thunder (Ire) as well.

“There is also an Adlerflug (Ger) filly [lot 163] there and, of course, there are very few of them left. The other one I really like is the New Bay (GB) [lot 267] filly. It was also the last French crop of Wootton Bassett and we have plenty of those to sell as well. Obviously, many people have said that, not only our Wootton Bassetts, but this current crop, is the best they have seen. That is logical as the mares he got improved.”

De Chambure added, “There are a lot of Americans here. Arqana organised a plane for them and it helps. These days, with so many sales on, it can be hard to get people's attention. But if you make it easier for people to travel, it makes a difference. If they come once, the likelihood is that they will come back.”

Nothing keeps the clients coming back to Arqana better than results on the track. The sale is set for takeoff at 2 p.m. on Saturday and it promises to be one-way traffic.

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August Debut for Haras de Beaufay

DEAUVILLE, France — Haras de Beaufay is one of the new names on the list of consignors this August at Arqana and its debut draft of two yearlings is in line with the farm manager's ambition to take things “step by step” as the new team carves out a reputation in a competitive field.

The stud, based near Gace in Normandy, was bought in 2016 by Czech breeder Jiri Travinicek, who set about turning it into a semi-commercial broodmare farm for his own mares and those owned by clients. Three years ago that dream became reality when Haras de Beaufay became fully operational under the management of Emmanuel Talvard, who grew up nearby on his family's famed Haras du Cadran.

“Our main target now is improving the quality of the broodmares and welcoming new clients,” said Talvard during a quick break between showing yearlings at Arqana on Friday. “We have some German, French, and Czech clients. This is just the beginning. We have been in operation for three years but we are taking it step by step.”

From the original farm purchase, Travinicek, has subsequently added two new parcels of lands to expand Haras de Beaufay to 160 hectares spread across two separate farms. 

“This is a new place and it is a lovely farm with nice barns and good pasture,” Talvard added. “We have 100 hectares for broodmares and 60 for yearlings. Mr Travinicek has a real passion for it. He visits regularly from Czech and he loves his horses. We are in touch every week.”

Talvard's own education in the thoroughbred business came not just under his father, Pierre, the breeder of dual Group 1 winner Qemah (Ire) (Danehill Dancer {Ire}), but also at Haras du Logis.

“I worked for my father for 14 years; he was my mentor and he taught me everything I know,” he said. “He's a hard worker so you have to be a hard worker to work for Pierre. I also worked for Julian Ince for three years and it was great to see the stallion side of the business. They were two good schools for me.”

Haras du Cadran is one of the bigger consignors at Arqana, and is selling 25 yearlings over the next three days, but Beaufay will be starting with a more modest draft of two. Lot 80, a colt from the final French-conceived crop of Wootton Bassett (GB), is being sold on behalf of his breeders Gonzague Baijot and Jean-Jacques Rahier and is out of the winning Harbour Watch (Ire) mare Paradise Cove (GB), herself out of a half-sister to the Arc winner Peintre Celebre. The colt's half-brother Sheer Rocks (GB) (Iffraaj {GB}) has added a third win to his tally since the catalogue was printed. 

Beaufay is also selling a homebred daughter of Australia (GB), the only yearling by the stallion in the catalogue, as lot 301. A daughter of the listed-placed treble winner Holly Polly (Ger) (Dylan Thomas {Ire}), she is a half-sister to two multiple winners from the mare's trio of racing age offspring, including the twice listed-placed Qaiser (Fr) (Charm Spirit {Ire}).

“The Wootton Bassett colt we have prepped for a client and the filly by Australia is homebred and she has always been my favourite since the beginning,” said Talvard, who foaled the bay filly himself. “They are both really good movers so fingers crossed for both of them. We'll see what happens tomorrow.”

He continued, “Right from Wednesday we have had lots of people looking. I thought that might have been a quieter day but it was not the case. It's really good news though for everybody, and the market is really high at the moment.

“It's a nice challenge and it is good to have been involved with Haras de Beaufay from the beginning. To be here in August after only three years is just very exciting for us. We know we have to find our place. There are so many big consignors here but we have to start somewhere and try to do a good job, and hopefully it will work.”

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‘Few Make A Living Doing What They Love – I am Lucky To Be One Of Them’

He has been crowned British racing's best broadcaster of the year an astounding eight times but Nick Luck remains as hungry as ever.

From talking about the success of his daily podcast, the Nick Luck Daily Podcast, revealing that he will make his Melbourne Cup debut this year and providing his own thoughts on the major issues affecting British racing, Luck makes for fascinating reading in this week's Q&A.

Brian Sheerin: You sat down with Lee Mottershead for the Big Read in the Racing Post almost two years ago. A lot has changed in that time as the Nick Luck Daily Podcast, which you had just launched at the time, has emerged as being required listening for anyone in racing or breeding. 

Nick Luck: When I did that interview with Lee, we were emerging from lockdown and there were still a lot of restrictions so, sitting down and doing the podcast every day was challenging enough but I had the time to do it. When life started to get back to normal, there was as much racing as there's ever been, and there was something of an explosion of material online. But people's lives were getting busier again. The execution of the podcast became that bit more difficult. At that point, the question was, can we keep it up? I had got myself into a position where I was in sufficiently deep and I am really glad that I did keep going because, with the help of the small team who are absolutely crucial to me, it's gone okay.

BS: I have this vision in my head of you cramming like a teenager about to sit a college exam before you cover a range of different topics on the show but I gather it all comes pretty natural to you and you can do everything from memory?

NL: I do have quite a retentive memory but I don't think that I am alone in that, especially with people who are working in an industry that they love. With people working in horse racing and bloodstock, something that they are passionate about, they tend to find that their brain will retain a lot of information. When it's something you love, it tends to sit there more readily than if it was something that you found was a bit of a chore. I do have a good memory and I can think about a lot of different things at the one time but the podcast is no different than what the wider racing media is doing because you can never plan too much. You never quite know what is going to drop and when it will happen. The medium allows you that bit of agility and you've got to play up to that. I could sit there and plan everything the night before the podcast but I try and leave the real meaty content to as late as I can possibly get away with. I am always thinking about it–it's always there bubbling away, wherever I am or whatever I'm doing–but I couldn't tell you what tomorrow's podcast is going to be called or what the lead news item will be. I can tell you who will be on the podcast but that's about as far as I can go. 

BS: You obviously adopt the same principles to live television?

NL: Yes and no. For example, say I am doing a big interview on the Sunday programme for Racing TV. You've got to book your guests some way in advance of and you'd be thinking about them-the sort of person that they are, what to make of the person or personality that they've become and you really just try and get underneath that. I am someone who tends to ruminate on it for some period of time. I am not someone who sits down and writes out a series of precise questions because I want to have a good all-round understanding of who that person is and, when they are actually sitting there in front of me, be light enough on my feet to go with the conversation and not be too linear. I want to be able to be responsive. I think it's all about being prepared for anything but not so much that you become overprepared and rigid. That's just the way I like to work. 

BS: I can hear one of your young daughters in the background making her presence felt!

NL: If you listen to the podcast carefully enough, you'll pick up all sorts of background noise. My desk is right beside the front door in our house and, when I started doing the podcast, I attempted to close all the doors and make things as quiet as possible. I soon realised that it was completely pointless. If I was going to impose this ridiculous commitment upon my family, well then I just had to suck it up and carry on with whatever background noise was going on. That's completely fine by me-it's more authentic anyway. You are allowing people into your life. I am usually intruding into theirs. Quite often, a trainer will ask me to call them back if they're on the gallops because the sound of wind, rain or hooves in the background. I always say, 'no, it's fine,' as it makes it a bit more real. Sometimes, some of the best interviews we do and some of the best items we have got on there are when somebody is in the middle of something else. They might even let you have an interesting snippet of information when they're only half-thinking of the questions!

BS: I'd put it to you that some people will find it hard to believe that you do have a young family and a life outside of racing because, the one thing people say when your name is mentioned is work ethic. I know you're just back from Saratoga for example. It's a lot of balls to be juggling at once, including family life, so how do you manage everything?

NL: I don't know to be honest. I never think too far ahead and sometimes that can be an advantage as you never get too stressed about your schedule or how busy you might be in the coming weeks or months. You just try to concentrate on the job at hand and make sure everybody is alright. I don't have an awful lot of time for hobbies now, that is for sure. But when you are working in a sport and an industry where it's your passion, well then that compensates for that. When I am at home, I want to be spending as much time with Laura and the girls as I possibly can. I'm getting a bit better at planning holiday time. 

BS: I remember you said that losing the terrestrial television gig with Channel 4 made you even more hungry to attack new opportunities. Nobody could accuse you of failing to do that and I saw NBC's coverage of the Whitney at Saratoga generated over one million viewers. 

NL: I am coming up to 20 years in the job. I started at the end of October in 2002 and, genuinely, I have never reached a point where I felt, 'I don't want to do this anymore, I want to try something else.' Contracts have come and contracts have gone and I have shifted between networks but I have never once thought about packing it all in and doing something different. There's so much variety in racing and it keeps you fresh. I'm going to broadcast the Melbourne Cup for the first time this year. That will be my first time doing that and I'm excited about it. I'm slightly terrified about the logistics of getting to Melbourne and then Breeders' Cup in Kentucky right off the back of it, but my NBC producer Lindsay Schanzer has been very encouraging. And making the racing world a little bit smaller, which is something that you guys do [TDN] on a daily basis, was one of the driving reasons behind doing the podcast. You have that opportunity now to do what you simply couldn't do 20 years ago. For very little outlay, you can speak to anybody in the world and try to bring people from all over the globe a little bit closer. People must feel much better connected with racing internationally now more so than ever. 

BS: Another thing you have brought to the podcast is the breaking of news stories. Often, it's the podcast that leads the agenda on a given day. Is that something you set out to do, not only react to news but to break it?

NL: It wasn't necessarily a goal of mine starting out. I was just trying to produce a nice audio digest of the day's news and events. Also, it is a luxury being your own editor and having the freedom to chase what you might be interested in. Then you just have to hope that it will be reflected by the people who tune in. Needless to say, we are very lucky with the small group of regular contributors who are always providing insight. I conceived of it as a nice, sharp digest of the racing news that you could listen to while you are walking the dog, having a bath or whatever you're doing wherever you are in the world. That's what I was going for. But I think the scope for the podcast is pretty limitless and, part of the beauty of it, is because there are so many dimensions to the sport. It's very unlikely that one podcast or newspaper can cover everything. There's always something new for somebody to cover every day. As I said, I never set out to be the person who breaks all the news, but there will always be something there for you. For example, this morning the TDN had a nice story about the sales at Deauville, the Racing Post led with the Paddy Power story, Matt Chapman tweeted about Maljoom (GB) (Caravagio) missing the Prix Jacques le Marois and I was on the phone to Philippa Cooper who told me that she was winding down her breeding operation. I actually rang Philippa about something completely different and that happened to come out. The more people you talk to, the more likely these stories will drop into your lap. 

BS: What about the times when it didn't go so well; are there many interviews you'd like a second crack at?

NL: I rang Andre Fabre to ask him for a quote on Lester Piggott. I've got to say, because I am an English journalist, he is normally very friendly and he was on this occasion. However, I found myself asking him some fairly stupid questions. He kindly, but very firmly told me, 'I don't mean to be mean, but I am afraid the questions that you are asking me are completely pointless.' There was a very long pause before I said merci and quietly put the phone down. It was lucky I had the luxury of editing that bit out of although it may have given people more of a laugh if I'd left it there. 

BS: Well you are a braver man than me for interviewing him in the first place. 

NL: To that point, he was very charming about it and I think I had asked him a couple of clunkers. But the beauty about this sport is, everyone will answer their phone and, if they don't, they will send you a message saying they don't feel like talking or they may ask to arrange a different time or whatever it is. The access is really good. 

BS: I agree but sometimes you earn that access. When I think of the late Barney Curley, I think of the interview he gave you on Luck On Sunday. Patrick Veitch was another. 

NL: The credit for that Barney Curley interview largely goes to Barney himself, as he clearly had a distinct idea in his own mind about what he wanted to say and what he wanted to get off his chest. There were things that he was thinking about for years and he wanted to say them out loud as he knew he wasn't very well. So, there was a slight feel of the last will and testament about it and I just happened to be there at the right time to do the interview. However, my producer Bruce Clements had been curating that relationship for a little while and I always had a reasonably good understanding with Barney. I knew he wanted to do it, it was just a question of when. That's part of the job; you build a level of respect with people over time and you hope that respect is reciprocated. That doesn't mean you go around sucking up to people, not at all, but you build a trust so that when you do want to do something with that person if they are in the news for whatever reason, you might be in the right slot. Genuinely, people who know me know that I am quite social, love chatting and I am naturally very interested in people's lives and what makes them tick. Hopefully that's the driver behind what I am doing. 

BS: Can you let us in on who you're working on next? Do you have a list of ideal candidates you'd like to interview?

NL: There are people I would like to interview who I haven't had on before but, whether they will ever do it, I don't know. The nice thing about it now is that there are people who will sometimes approach us and say that they would like to be on the show. 

BS: As well as your extensive television work, you also have skin in the game and are involved in the breeding side of things. Can you tell us about that?

NL: My own little mare hasn't exactly been a startling success! Her first runner was a winner and I walked around thinking I was a cross between John Magnier and Marcel Boussac! The barren three and a half years that followed have swiftly eradicated that notion. I am full of admiration for anyone who can go in at any level and make any sort of success out of breeding because it's a good game for humbling you. I helped out my late mother, who we sadly lost this year, with the jumps mares. Ironically, that came good latterly with some of her progeny making a lot of money albeit for other people. We still have Grainne Ni Maille (GB) [the dam of Madmansgame (GB) (Blue Bresil {Fr}) and Gentlemansgame (GB) (Gentlewave {GB})] and she has a filly foal at foot. I'd like to carry that on for my mum. We own Grainne Ni Maille in partnership with Yorton Stud. It's funny, Dave Futter said we should keep the Blue Bresil filly out of Grainne Ni Maille as a foal but I said a bird in the hand is better than two in the ditch. We sold her for £16,500 at Goffs in January 2020 but she made €195,000 at the Land Rover Sale in June. That shows what kind of a judge I am! The filly foal is a full-sister to Gentlemansgame so hopefully she can do well for us. 

BS: We hear a lot of doom and gloom about racing in Britain and Ireland right now. You're normally the one pitching the questions as you take the pulse on the industry on an almost-daily basis but what are your own thoughts?

NL: I have been considering this while looking at some of the data that's around on the number of horses there are in training, how many races there are, races not filling, various ideas about races being chopped off the bottom end and the Peter Savill plan for the industry. We have been encouraging people to breed a lot of horses for a very long time and it's a very reductive solution to turn around and say 'let's just chop the races off at the bottom.' On top of everything else, you then present yourself with an enormous horse welfare problem if that's the solution. Yes, you need to take an intuitive approach to the fixture list to ensure that races will fill but it's not as straightforward as just cutting fixtures. I feel that the basic principle of the Savill plan is the right one in that you are trying to make the top end of your sport the envy of the world. You get that slimmer part of that pyramid much more intense, much more competitive and enjoyable, and then it becomes something you can sell and people will always be able to anticipate it. Just slicing off the bottom end will not in itself create that environment. You then need to incentivise the racecourses to put on the most attractive opportunities possible for the rest of the horse population and actually make things easier. People are in this sport because they want to win. They love their Class 6 horse dearly, but they'll love it even more if they're winning races with it so that they can go and reinvest in the sport. I'm not sure that I buy this idea by removing a whole load of “bad races” that you automatically make the top any better. You have to treat the different parts of the pyramid accordingly. 

BS: So we need to bolster the product but not at the detriment of lower grade racing.

NL: We have encouraged the production of a lot of horses in Britain and Ireland. We need to have enough opportunities to cater for these horses and also a robust enough plan in place to cater for their aftercare when their racing days are over. Or, we need to breed fewer horses–it is not feasible to complain we have too many moderate horses while at the same time thinking it's just fine to cover 250 low to medium grade mares a season with cheap and cheerful stallions. What are you expecting?

BS: You mentioned earlier that you never thought in over 20 years working in racing about doing anything different. I know you may have been advised to do something different at one point in time but you remain fascinated by the sport. 

NL: There are things I would have loved to have done and there are other areas of television that I am sure would give me a huge thrill. Foremost, I love the business of broadcasting, otherwise I wouldn't have been in it for so long. It's not to say I wouldn't enjoy doing other things and wouldn't look at doing other things but I find it impossible to think about walking away from horse racing. There are very few people who make a living at something they love doing and I am lucky to be one of them.

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‘Blue’ Tops Tattersalls August Online Sale

Barbados Blue (Ire) (Getaway {Ger}) (lot 8) topped the Tattersalls Online August Sale on Wednesday, selling for 90,000gns to Richard Venn Bloodstock. In foal to Golden Horn (GB), the Crimbourne Bloodstock-consigned 8-year-old sports wins on the Flat, over hurdles and jumps, and was second in the Listed Lady Godiva Mares' Novices' Chase. She is also a half-sister to More Buck's (Ire) (Presenting {GB}), a listed-chase winner.

A breeding right in successful Flat stallion Showcasing (GB) was offered as lot 34, and made 60,000gns on a bid from Tinnakill House Stud. Hyde Park Stud shelled out 17,500gns after the sale for a breeding right in Group 1 sire Aclaim (Ire) (lot 35).

At the close of trade, 17 lots sold from 28 (60.7%) through the ring for a gross of 231,500gns. The average was 13,618gns and the median was 3,800gns.

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