‘Shout For Survival’: Paralyzed Jockey Freddy Tylicki Takes The Stand In Lawsuit Against Fellow Rider

Jockey Freddy Tylicki, a former champion apprentice, has been confined to a wheelchair since a racing incident at Kempton in October of 2016. The 35-year-old has filed a £6 million (about US$6.77 million) lawsuit against rider Graham Gibbons, with Tylicki alleging that rider's negligence breached the “duty of care” owed by one jockey to another.

Testimony in the case began on Monday in the High Court before Judge Karen Walden-Smith, according to BBC Sport.

Tylicki was on the stand to relive the moment of his life-altering injuries, watching video of the incident from multiple angles while on cross-examination by Gibbons' attorney, Patrick Lawrence.

Tylicki and his mount, Nellie Deen, were against the inside rail, while Gibbons and the eventual winner Madame Butterfly were to the outside. Tylicki made a move to go up the inside, and there were several moments before the two horses made contact.

“After I squeezed and I couldn't get upsides him, the pressure was just building up and building up and building up,” said Tylicki. “I took a pull and shouted 'Gibbo.' It was a shout for survival if I'm honest because I knew what was going to happen next. But there was no response.”

Gibbons' defense contends that the contact was not caused by his actions, and instead was “a racing accident occasioned by the horses coming together, as described, as they travelled at speed around the bend.”

Gibbons' attorney added: “If what we say is a racing incident of the type that occurred here, albeit one with absolutely tragic consequences for one of the jockeys concerned, if that type of incident will tend to generate litigation and interest from the lawyers, then it is not difficult to see that that will have multiple ramifications which may create all sorts of difficulties for professional sport, not just horse racing.” 

The hearing is scheduled to continue for four more days, and will include testimony from Gibbons, as well as  jockeys Jim Crowley and Pat Cosgrave, who also took part in the race. Top jockey Ryan Moore prepared expert testimony for Tylicki's team, while Gibbons' team will have testimony from steward and former amateur jockey Charlie Lane.

Read more at BBC Sport.

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Tattersalls July Ends With ‘Genuinely Vibrant’ Feel

NEWMARKET, UK–Whatever problems British racing faces, a lack of demand at its bloodstock sales is not one of them. That in itself may only exacerbate the exodus of talent, particularly decent young handicappers, to far-flung nations with lucrative pots on offer, but if sales are your business, as is the case for Tattersalls, then this week can only be described as a highly successful one.

From Friday's two sessions of the July Sale, however, the majority of the pricier lots will remain in training in Britain, merely switching from one stable to another and, in some cases, from the Flat to the jumps. This correspondent has been in the chair for plenty of TDN sale reports since the July Sale of 2012 and, during that time, a clearance rate of 100% has never been witnessed–until today. That came during the morning session of trade at Park Paddocks, before time was temporarily called to allow for some truly excellent action on the July Course.

During those pre-lunch hours, 71 horses were put through the ring and all found buyers. By the close of play, as dusk danced in around 9pm, the scene wasn't too far removed. A final-day clearance rate of 98% was brought about when only four horses remained unsold, and throughout the three days 94%, or 538 horses, were sold.

“Perhaps more importantly than figures alone, it has also been a sale with a real sense of business returning to something resembling normality,” said Tattersalls chairman Edmond Mahony in his end-of-sale statement.

“We cannot make meaningful comparisons with last year's abbreviated and Covid-ravaged July Sale, but this year's sale has produced a level of trade that compares very favourably with both the 2019 and 2018 renewals and crucially has yet again achieved a remarkable clearance rate in excess of 90%.”

The Godolphin and Shadwell drafts combined contributed more than 3.5 million gns towards the sale's final turnover of 12,301,300gns. The final average was 22,865gns (+27%) and the median 12,000gns (+20%).

Mahony added, “Even in a sale of genuinely vibrant trade from start to finish, the penultimate session stood out with an extraordinary 100% clearance rate driven by strong domestic demand mixed with the sort of international participation which has been so encouraging, considering the widespread travel restrictions which are still in place. Significant consignments from some of the world's leading owner/breeders, including Godolphin, Juddmonte Farms and Shadwell Estates, have been as popular as ever and buyers from all over the world have continued to make full use of the Tattersalls live internet bidding platform as well as telephone bidding through our team on the ground.”

Brothers Play Leading Roles…

We are coming to realise that we are living through the year of Frankel (GB). While his daughter Sky Lantern (GB) rightly gained all the plaudits on the racecourse on Friday afternoon, one of his sons was among the leading lights in the ring. Cap Francais (GB), bred by the late John Pearce, will remain in training in Britain, switching from Ed Walker to the highly successful dual-purpose stable of Ian Williams, who bought the 5-year-old (lot 677) for 88,000gns with Richard Ryan.

“We've been very fortunate with a Frankel who came from a Tattersalls horses-in-training sale,” said Williams, referring to Royal Ascot winner The Grand Visir (GB). “We love the stallion, as does everybody.”

He added of his new recruit, a 100-rated treble winnner, “He is a horse who has had a good break having come back from Dubai, and looks set to be competitive in a lot of the winter festivals abroad. He could possibly go jumping next spring.”

In this rare instance, however, Frankel was outdone by his brother Noble Mission (GB), who featured as the sire of the day's top lot Laafy. The 5-year-old gelding (lot 796) was bought for 105,000gns by trainer Mark Campion to go jumping. Previously in training with Sir Michael Stoute, Laafy has won four races at up to 1m6f, a profile which naturally endeared him towards the National Hunt crowd.

“My son Arthur spotted him and told me I had to have a look at him,” said Campion, who trains in North Yorkshire. “He's a lovely big horse and we have put a team of owners together for him.”

King For A Day…

Recent Thirsk novice winner King Triton (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) is also relocating to Yorkshire after selling for 100,000gns. The Sheikh Mohammed Obaid Al Maktoum homebred will race on from the stable of Grant Tuer, who signed for the 3-year-old on behalf of owner Edward Ware.

King Triton's erstwhile Roger Varian stablemate Pierre Lapin (Ire) (Cappella Sansevero {GB}), the half-brother to Harry Angel (Ire) who won the G2 Mill Reef S. of 2019, was bought for 80,000gns by Shamrock Thoroughbreds, which had also purchased the progressive Bringsty (GB) (Muhaarar {GB}) on the first day of the sale.

The 4-year-old (lot 767) has run just once so far this year when fourth in a conditions race at Thirsk. He will now be exported to Ireland, where he will be trained by Adrian McGuinness, who has successfully campaigned the listed winner Harry's Bar (GB) (Exceed and Excel {Aus}) for the same syndicate.

Stephen Thorne of Shamrock Thoroughbreds said of Pierre Lapin, “He had a massive profile and was a very talented 2-year-old. We have a great relationship with Roger Varian and have bought two stakes horses from him, and we were very keen to do business again. It is great to build relationship with these consignors and a trainer like him leaves a little bit left for the next man.”

Price Boost For Bargain Mare…

Joseph O'Brien has signed for three horses over the last couple of days, including lot 675, Royal Dynasty (GB) (Charm Spirit {Ire}), from Mohammed Moubarak's Newmarket stable for 80,000gns.

The 5-year-old mare is already a seven-time winner, her latest success coming after the publication of the catalogue on June 17 over six furlongs at Chelmsford. Her sale price represented a decent return on Moubarak's outlay in December 2919, when he bought her as a maiden in the same ring for just 1,000gns. The sprinter boasts a decent pedigree, too, as she is a grand-daughter of Meon Valley Stud's G1 Queen Elizabeth II S winner Milligram (GB) (Mill Reef), from a family which includes the Oaks winner Anapurna (GB) (Frankel {GB}) and dual Group 1 winner Speedy Boarding (GB) (Shamardal).

O'Brien's former weighing-room colleague and Speedy Boarding's regular partner  Freddy Tylicki is now combining his TV presenting duties with his role as a bloodstock agent, and he has been similarly active this week at Tattersalls, where he celebrated his 35th birthday on Friday.

Together with his former boss, trainer Richard Fahey, Tylicki signed for lot 638, the Fascinating Rock (Ire) 3-year-old Life On The Rocks (Ire), also for 80,000gns.

There will not be the usual hiatus between the July Sale and October Yearling Sales at Tattersalls. Last year's disrupted schedule included the launch of another mixed auction, the August Sale, which will remain in place for this year, and the rebranded Ascot Yearling Sale, now known as the Somerville Yearling Sale will kick off the yearling season in Newmarket.

Edmond Mahony concluded, “All the signs now suggest that we can look forward to returning almost to normal for the forthcoming Tattersalls August Sale and for the market-leading Tattersalls yearling sales which begin at Park Paddocks with the new Somerville Yearling Sale on Sept. 7.”

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Tylicki Joins RacehorseClub

Former Group 1-winning jockey and Sky Sports Racing presenter Freddy Tylicki has joined RacehorseClub's executive team.

Tylicki said, “I'm absolutely delighted to be joining RacehorseClub and feel honoured to have been given this great opportunity. I am wholly behind the club's ambitions and truly believe that it is going to be a great success. RacehorseClub gives anyone and everyone the chance of owning an affordable share of a top-class racehorse in the UK and Ireland at the highest level with the assurance of enjoyment and great fun along the way. I'm really looking forward to getting started and meeting members to share my enthusiasm and knowledge.”

RacehorseClub's Create Belief (Ire) (Awtaad {Ire}) and The Lir Jet (Ire) (Prince Of Lir {Ire}) are set to run at Royal Ascot on Friday, with shares available in each at £59 and £84, respectively.

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Classic Win Still A Success Story For Sellers

There are good reasons for smaller trainers, owners and breeders to do their equine shopping at the drafts of the major breeding operations at horses-in-training and breeding stock sales. If buying a filly or young broodmare there is the potential for updates from well-managed families, members of which likely remain in their breeders’ broodmare bands. For the colts and geldings there is always the hope that a slower-maturing individual may well just have been deemed surplus to requirements and can go on to be a star in another stable over time. There are umpteen examples of this—the £2,800 purchase Sceptical (GB) (Exceed And Excel {Aus}) being just one who has made headlines since being bought from Godolphin and continuing his career for James McAuley and trainer Denis Hogan.

Juddmonte, Shadwell and Godolphin routinely have large drafts catalogued for formal sales as well as conducting private transactions for certain individuals and, while a number of Ballydoyle trainees will be offered at the Tattersalls Horses-in-Training Sale each autumn, many more will be sold privately throughout the season.

It is not uncommon for there to be multiple runners from Ballydoyle in some of the top races in Europe. The best fillies naturally eventually retire to the Coolmore broodmare band, but only a handful of the very best colts will secure a berth in the stallion yard. Those below that level, however, can present some decent opportunities for other connections, as the recent G2 Derby Italiano victory of Tuscan Gaze (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) highlighted.

The colt, who was bred by Coolmore in partnership with Lady Bamford’s Daylesford Stud, was previously unbeaten in two starts for John Gosden and was bought by jockey-turned-bloodstock agent Freddy Tylicki for Italian-based Mag Horse Racing SRL just weeks before his Classic success.

Jamie Moriarty of Coolmore’s racing office is in regular contact with agents and trainers on the lookout for such prospects. He says, “Some may be of the opinion that we wouldn’t be overjoyed at selling winners like that but in fact nothing could be further from the truth. Results like this bolster the relationships we are continually seeking to develop and maintain, and of course there’s also the pedigree update for the horse’s dam and relatives at home. So all in all, we couldn’t be happier for everyone concerned.”

He adds, “Tuscan Gaze’s recent success in the Italian Derby has received some great coverage, and rightly so. I suppose it could be perceived as something of a fairytale, and for none more so than Freddy Tylicki, but in reality we would like to think that this fairytale is played out with increasing regularity.”

There has long been a flow of horses from Ballydoyle to the Australian stable of leading owners Lloyd and Nick Williams, whose thirst to win the Melbourne Cup appears to be unquenchable. Rekindling (GB) (High Chaparral {Ire}) provided the father and son with their sixth victory in the Cup and was a memorable first for Joseph O’Brien, whose stable he has recently rejoined after a stint in Australia under the care of Liam Howley, who now trains the G2 Herbert Power S. winner Yucatan (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}). Last year’s eye-catching third-place finisher Il Paradiso (Galileo {Ire}), who was just a neck behind the winner Vow And Declare (Aus) (Declaration Of War), has remained in Australia and has joined Chris Waller’s stable after being sold to a syndicate which includes Ozzie Kheir. Among the other Ballydoyle graduates now in Australia are Galileo’s sons Southern France (Ire), who won the G2 Zipping Classic for Ciaron Maher and David Eustace, and G1 Caulfied S. winner Cape Of Good Hope (Ire), who is now trained by David and Ben Hayes and Tom Dabernig.

“Many will remember Rekindling and Johannes Vermeer going head-to-head in the Melbourne Cup, two Coolmore horses that had been sold to Australians Lloyd and Nick Williams,” says Moriarty. “The Melbourne Cup provides one of the best examples through the likes of Rekindling, Johannes Vermeer and Il Paradiso, a horse I suspect will be very much in the reckoning again this year.”

He adds, “As we retire only two or three new stallions each year to Coolmore, there are plenty of horses for sale and this presents terrific opportunities for clients old and new to get involved.

“Our team here takes calls and enquiries every day from the most far-reaching countries about prospective sales of racehorses and breeding stock alike. If clients have races they would like to target, be it on turf or dirt, Northern or Southern Hemisphere we will have plenty of options for them. Freddy had a week to find an Italian Derby winner and we were able to work it out.”

Hong Kong has also been a happy hunting ground for former Ballydoyle trainees, with River Dancer (Ire), the Sadler’s Wells half-brother to Dar Re Mi (GB) (Singspiel {Ire}), having won the G1 Audemars Piguet QE II Cup for The Hon. Ronald Arculli following his export from Ireland. Four years later, Archipenko, now the sire of Group 1-winning brothers Time Warp (GB) and Glorious Forever (GB) in Hong Kong, won that same race after he was sold to Sheikh Mohammed Bin Khalifa Al Maktoum and joined Mike de Kock’s team of globetrotters. The same owner-trainer team also won the G1 Hong Kong Cup with Eagle Mountain (GB) (Rock Of Gibraltar {Ire}), who was runner-up to Authorized (Ire) in the Derby when trainer by Aidan O’Brien.

A little closer to home, the one-time Derby fancy Amedeo Modigliani (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) is now in the stable of Spain’s champion trainer Guillermo Arizkorreta and has won his only start in Spain’s premier mile race, the Gran Premio Claudio Carudel.

“If you look at any of the bigger races across the globe, you will note Coolmore graduates amongst the rolls of honour,” says Moriarty. “Master of Hounds, Mikhail Glinka (GB), Stagelight (Ire) and Viscount Nelson went on to score at the highest levels in Dubai. Joshua Tree (Ire), Ballingarry (Ire), Frost Giant, Tannery (Ire), Heatseeker (Ire) and Brahms were all at the top of their game on the other side of the Atlantic. So whether it’s a Canadian International, a Singapore, Hollywood, Hong Kong or Italian Derby winner you’re looking for, we have been lucky enough to have them through our hands. Not to mention of course the Cheltenham and Grade 1 winners over jumps.”

Ah, yes. For an outfit so focused on winning Europe’s top middle-distance races, there will be plenty among them with sufficient stamina to excel in the National Hunt division, such as G1 JCB Triumph Hurdle winner Ivanovich Gorbatov (Ire) (Montjeu {Ire}).

“As the primary focus of Ballydoyle each year is to retire the next Sadler’s Wells or Galileo we would rarely have a gelding in training there, although in plenty of instances there will be improvement to come from these animals when they are gelded,” says Moriarty. “We don’t strictly sell colts only. The broodmare band takes continual management and, like the racehorse string, we can’t keep them all. There are a number of fillies that are offered privately each year. In cases where we have the dam and maybe a sister or two at home we would offer some for sale. This is where some of the best opportunities lie.”

One recent fortunate beneficiary of this is the new owner of Peach Tree (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), who was already a Group 3 winner in her own right when sold less than 12 months ago. Since then, her full-sister Love (Ire) has announced herself as arguably the best 3-year-old filly in training.

Another daughter of Galileo was a similarly good purchase for Australian breeder Bob Scarborough, whose purchase of Cabaret (Ire) and her subsequent mating with Invincible Spirit (Ire) resulted in him breeding the 2000 Guineas winner Magna Grecia (Ire), who was bought by MV Magnier for 340,000gns.

Moriarty adds, “We have since gone back to buy a couple of her progeny, including Magna Grecia and the very promising St Mark’s Basilica who looked a smart sort on his debut last week.”

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