Phoenix Clash One To Savour

There is the usual feast of racing across Britain, Ireland and France on Saturday, but The Curragh is where it's at as the G1 Keeneland Phoenix S. provides the first coming together of the elite among Europe's precocious juveniles. It could boil down to a battle of the TDN Rising Stars Bradsell (GB) (Tasleet {GB}) and Little Big Bear (Ire) (No Nay Never), with Hollie Doyle and Ryan Moore in no mood to allow their mount's considerable reputations to slide. Bradsell is in a bit deeper than he was in the G2 Coventry S. at Royal Ascot June 14, but his insatiable appetite for work and racing will take him a long way against Ballydoyle's leading G1 2000 Guineas hope at present.

“I've ridden him in most of his homework since Royal Ascot at Archie Watson's Saxon Gate Stables and have been delighted with his progress,” Doyle said of Bradsell in her attheraces blog. “He's definitely strengthened up and is very professional in the way he goes about his business. It's going to be a tough assignment in what looks a stellar renewal, but Bradsell has a great mind and I wouldn't swap him for anything. The stiff track and the forecasted good ground should be ideal and I'm happy enough with my draw in stall six in such a small field.”

Ryan Moore is happy to be on Little Big Bear over the high-achieving Blackbeard (Ire) (No Nay Never), with his emphatic success in the G3 Anglesey S. over an extended six furlongs here July 16 marking him out as a colt with Classic pretensions. “He really was impressive here last time. He gave me a great feel,” his rider said in his betfair blog. “We will know who the number one juvenile is after this, I would imagine, and hopefully it is one of ours.”

 

The Right Amo?

Outside of the big two in the Phoenix, Amo Racing Limited's Persian Force (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}) retains intrigue having bounced out of the Coventry to take Newmarket's G2 July S. July 7. Richard Hannon rates him alongside the likes of Canford Cliffs (Ire) (Tagula {Ire}) and normal progression could see him usurp the market principals. Amo's racing manager Emily Scott said, “It's a small but select and strong field, we go there with a lot of confidence that we've got a very nice horse and if he's come forward from Ascot as much as Richard thinks he has, hopefully he can put it to Bradsell and the O'Brien duo. As Richard said to me, whatever beats him, if anything beats him, it's going to be good.”

 

Classic Clues Aplenty

It's that time of year that the 2-year-olds really excite and away from the Phoenix, Saturday also sees a cluster across Europe with the pedigrees to enter the Classic picture with prominent displays. On The Curragh's card, the latest offering from Lillie Langtry (Ire) (Danehill Dancer {Ire}) emerges from Ballydoyle in Delightful (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) in the Loder Irish EBF Fillies Race, Newmarket's fixture opens with a maiden that hosts the Juddmonte debutante Jalapa (GB) (Expert Eye {GB}), a half-sister to Westover (GB) (Frankel {GB}), and continues with the feature seven-furlong G3 Jewson Sweet Solera S. In the latter contest, Sheikh Mohammed Obaid Al Maktoum's homebred Novakai (GB) (Lope De Vega {Ire}) bids to back up an impressive 4 1/4-length winning debut at Doncaster July 16 and the Karl Burke-trained descendant of Ela Athena (GB) (Ezzoud {Ire}) is currently favoured over Gallop Racing's June 18 Listed Chesham S. third Lakota Sioux (Ire) (Sioux Nation) from the Charlie and Mark Johnston stable successful three times since 2014. “I was pleasantly surprised she did it so well at Doncaster and I've been delighted with her since,” Burke said of Novakai. “I wouldn't want the ground too quick, so we'll just have to keep an eye on that.”

 

Frankie Takes To The Shergar Cup

During what feels like a long goodbye tour for Frankie Dettori, he is at his favourite venue of Ascot on Saturday to take part in the Dubai Duty Free Shergar Cup for the first time since 2016. Other leading lights in the riding sphere on show include Christophe Lemaire, Kerrin McEvoy and Emma-Jayne Wilson, while at Haydock the G3 Betfred Rose of Lancaster S. sees Prince Faisal Bin Khaled's nine-length July 16 Listed Steventon S. winner Grocer Jack (Ger) (Oasis Dream {GB}) take on Shadwell's July 9 John Smith's Cup scorer Anmaat (Ire) (Awtaad {Ire}) from the Owen Burrows stable.

 

Click here for the fields.

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Six Set For Phoenix Test

Saturday's G1 Keeneland Phoenix S. at The Curragh has attracted a high-class sextet including a duo from Ballydoyle bidding to provide Aidan O'Brien with a 17th renewal. Ryan Moore is booked for the June 15 Listed Windsor Castle S. and July 16 G3 Anglesey S.-winning 'TDN Rising Star' Little Big Bear (Ire) (No Nay Never), with Seamie Heffernan due to partner the stable's May 2 Listed First Flier S., May 21 G3 Marble Hill S. and July 17 G2 Prix Robert Papin scorer Blackbeard (Ire) (No Nay Never). Victorious Racing's June 14 G2 Coventry S.-winning 'TDN Rising Star' Bradsell (GB) (Tasleet {GB}) renews rivalry with Amo Racing Limited's Persian Force (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}), who was second behind him in that Royal Ascot contest before garnering Newmarket's G2 July S. July 7. The Aga Khan's Shartash (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) and E S Racing's Apache Outlaw (Ire) (Churchill {Ire}) complete the field, having been first and third when Blackbeard was second in the course-and-distance G2 Railway S. June 25.

Bradsell's trainer Archie Watson said, “He was obviously very impressive at Ascot and the form has worked out well. He's very, very talented. I do try to keep things understated and let the horses do the talking, but his home work is very good–the best of anything I've trained in terms of what he's done on the gallops. It's very hard to find him a lead horse because he'll just gallop all over Glen Shiel (GB) (Pivotal {GB}), a Group 1 winner, and Tabdeed (GB) (Havana Gold {Ire}), who was second in the Stewards' Cup the other day. They'd struggle to lead him very far at all.”

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Fresh Team At Keeneland Building On Strong Foundations

ASCOT, UK–Racing at Ascot this Saturday may focus on the G1 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth S., but a top-class card gets underway in style with the running of the G3 Princess Margaret Keeneland S., a race now in its fifth year of sponsorship by the American sales company.

Shannon Arvin, who was appointed Keeneland's eighth president and chief executive officer last year, is the first woman to hold that position, and she arrived in the UK earlier in the week to meet some of the company's clients in this part of the world and enjoy a couple of days at the races.

As Ascot on Friday following a lunch celebrating all the winning breeders from the Royal Ascot meeting, Arvin outlined some of the key changes of personnel at Keeneland which took place during 2021. Along with her own appointment, Irishmen Tony Lacy and Cormac Breathnach were appointed vice president of sales and director of sales operations respectively, while Gatewood Bell, a familiar face to many on the European sales circuit in his days as an agent and representative of Goffs, became vice president of racing.

“We're a new team,” Arvin says.  “With Gatewood on board as head of racing, then Tony as head of sales and Cormac as director of sales operations, I think we all just share a common view that Keeneland is a special place. It's special to all of us for different reasons and I know we all see ourselves as stewards.

“And it's neat to come together and approach it from that vantage point because I know that all we are trying to do is to make Keeneland as good as it can be and do as much as we can for the industry, and as much as we can to perpetuate the best in racing. We were founded on that principle, and we all believe so fervently in it that even when we have different ideas of how to get there, we are open to those new ideas and finding new ways, so that we attract more people to the sport.”

Reflecting on a tumultuous few years of international travel disrupted by the pandemic, she adds, “I think as difficult as Covid has been it has also given us some opportunities to try new things that may have been more difficult to have done at other times. People have got more used to change and we have all had to become more flexible.”

The breeze-up pinhookers are a determined bunch, and a group that as a whole has benefited enormously from the buying and selling of American-bred yearlings sourced at Keeneland. Many of them found ways of travelling to Lexington, aided by Keeneland's tireless European representative Ed Prosser, but the planning was by no means simple. This year, happily, should be more straightforward.

“One of my most favourite aspects of this business, from the time when I was a lawyer and even more so now, is the fact that it's such an international business but it's a small world, so our European buyers are such an important part of our buying bench,” says Arvin.

“We sell horses to people from over 52 countries, but our European buyers are so important and when there was a question about whether we could get them over for last year's sales cycle we were all very anxious. Ed Prosser's hair turned whiter and we were in contact daily to work out ways to get them here.

“Last year, in September in particular, the market was so unusual, and usually when you get to the last day of the sale the back ring gets fairly empty but last year the back ring was full, and still with lots of European pinhookers.”

Potential buyers planning their trips for September can rest safe in the knowledge that this year's sale will follow the pattern of 12 months ago.

Arvin continues, “Our consignors and buyers all agree that consistency from year to year in the format would be really helpful, and we haven't been able to do that in past years for a variety of reasons. But we will have the same format this year that we did last September: two-day Book 1, two-day Book 2, one-day break, and on. We will have a Book 6 this year. Our numbers are such that we will need a Book 6 this year instead of consolidating three days for Book 5.”

But before the serious business begins there is some meeting and greeting to be done via two key European race sponsorships for Keeneland, at Ascot on Saturday and at the Curragh in Ireland on Aug. 6.

“We appreciate so much that the European breeders and buyers support our sales, and it goes both ways,” Arvin explains. “That international aspect is so important to a healthy industry. Our sponsorship of racing in Europe goes back to the Nunthorpe S. at York in the 1990s. The Princess Margaret S. we have sponsored since 2018 and of course we sponsor the G1 Keeneland Phoenix S. at the Curragh in a few weeks. That's close to home for Tony so he will be there for that, and it's just fun to see our European customers on their turf as well as at Keeneland.”

Just ahead of the breeding stock sale in November, the sales company's sister racecourse will welcome back the Breeders' Cup for the third time.

Arvin, who spent a day in Newmarket before heading to Ascot, adds, “The temporary structures are already going up and we're getting ready. Even for the few days I've been here in England I've seen lots of trainers who have talked about coming back to Keeneland for the Breeders' Cup, so we're getting very excited about that.”

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Middle Park Remains Target For Ebro River

The Sept. 25 G1 Middle Park S. at Newmarket remains the main goal for Group 1 winner Ebro River (Ire) (Galileo Gold {GB}), Hugo Palmer confirmed on Friday. Racing in the Al Shaqab silks, the colt will bid to add to his Group 1 haul after taking the G1 Keeneland Phoenix S. at The Curragh on Aug. 8.

Said Palmer, who trained Ebro River's sire Galileo Gold to wins in the G1 2000 Guineas and G1 St James's Palace S., “I've left him in the [Sept. 18 G2] Mill Reef [at Newbury] just in case it looks like being soft there and it looks like being firm ground at Newmarket, but I'm not sure many have carried a Group 1 penalty in that race.

“He is very unlikely to go to the [G1] National S. [at The Curragh on Sept. 12] and the [G1 Prix] Jean Luc Lagardere [at ParisLongchamp on Oct. 3] is a possibility, but I think six furlongs is his trip. The Middle Park is the main aim and that is where we want to go but we have kept the other options just in case.”

Successful at second asking at Doncaster in May, Ebro River added the Listed National S. at Sandown on May 27. Only fifth in the G2 Coventry S. at Royal Ascot, the chestnut reported home fourth in the G2 Tattersalls July S. and July 29 G2 Unibet Richmond S. prior to his top-level score.

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