Barberini Lands Goffs Topper

KILDARE, Ireland–Different day, different trade. As expected, business at Goffs on Saturday proved a good bit more lively as pin-hookers and end users alike did battle for some quality foals. Although last year’s corresponding top price of €135,000 was exceeded by a €155,000 Sea The Stars (Ire) filly foal, other sale indicators suggest the market continues to struggle in the face of uncontrollable circumstances. The clearance rate of 79%, while considerably improved from Friday was still a little shy of last year’s 86%. Similarly, the aggregate of €4,855,900, average of €27,907 and median of €20,000 all failed to keep tabs on 2019’s figures, though these numbers are still perfectly respectable in the current grand scheme of things.

Lot 451, the only foal by Sea The Stars catalogued on the day, was bound to attract a lot of interest and, when the filly in question hails from the immediate family of the Gilltown stallion’s brilliant but ill-fated daughter Sea Of Class (Ire), then it was no surprise that agent Federico Barberini was pushed to €155,000 to secure the Oak Lodge & Springfield House Stud consigned foal. The Razza Del Velino bred filly is out of Mooney Ridge (Ire) (Indian Ridge {Ire}), a half-sister to G1 Irish Oaks winner Sea Of Class who is already the dam of two stakes performers in Italy.

Barberini, acting for an undisclosed client, said, “She has been bought to race and her page speaks for itself. She has lots of residual value and her 2-year-old half-brother by Australia (GB) is highly regarded.”

A return to a sale ring next year is also not the plan for Lot 354 rather a racing career in Sheikh Hamdan’s silks is in store as the son of Whitsbury Manor Stud stallion Havana Grey (GB) was knocked down to Shadwell’s Stephen Collins for €135,000. The grey colt is a half-brother to Martyn Meade’s quality sprinter Method (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}) and his yearling half-brother by Belardo (Ire) sold at the Orby Sale in Doncaster for £60,000.

After getting the better of a series of determined bids from Ger Morrin Collins said, “He was our pick of today. He is a very nice colt, forward, mature and athletic with a great attitude. He will go to Derrinstown to be raised and we’ll start to think about where to send him this time next year.”

The sale was a fine return for breeder Michael Phelan of Pipe View Stud in Kilkenny with the foal bred from the inexpensive mare Darsan (Ire) (Iffraaj {GB}) off an advertised 2019 covering fee of £8,000.

The Mehmas (Ire) factor kicked in with Lot 512 when the Morrin family’s Pier House Stud dug in to acquire the first foal out of unraced Single Thought (GB) (Teofilo {Ire}) for €130,000.

It was a huge result for breeder Mick Buckley who consigned the colt foal through his Curragh based Harefield Cottage Stud and who picked up the dam for very small money at Tattersalls in 2018.

“I’m delighted, absolutely over the moon,” said Buckley. “He is a lovely horse and a lot of it is a case of the right sire at the right time. I think I got lucky at Tattersalls when I bought the mare as England were playing in the semi-final of the World Cup when she went through the ring and a lot of people were pre-occupied and I managed to get her for 2,000gns. My luck didn’t end there as when I brought her to Tally-Ho to get covered by Kessaar (Ire), my original choice, he was busy so I had to make do with Mehmas! Lots of luck involved but there can be plenty of bad luck in this game, so I’ll gladly take today’s result. All the right people liked him, he vetted well and I’m delighted he is going to a good home and I hope he is lucky for the Morrins. He’ll be a right bull of a yearling next year and I look forward to seeing him wherever he turns up,” Buckley added.

Coolmore stallion Saxon Warrior (Jpn)’s first foal to be offered at Goffs was certainly well received and Lot 329 was eventually knocked down to MAB Agency and Larry Stratton for €88,000. The Castlebridge consigned bay filly is the first produce out of Cascella (Ire) (Iffraaj {GB}), who in turn is out of the multiple stakes winner Lily’s Angel (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}). Another Coolmore sire to have a good day was Australia (GB) and Luke Barry of Manister House Stud will be monitoring the American racing results with interest over the coming months after parting with €80,000 to purchase a son of the Classic stallion from Irish Emerald Stud. Lot 301 is a full-brother to Counterparty Risk (Ire), who broke her maiden last month at Aqueduct for the powerful combination of Chad Brown and Klaravich Stables.

Bigger targets will no doubt await that 3-year-old filly having cost 325,000 gns as a yearling at Tattersalls and this colt’s page, which already features GI Canadian International winner Sarah Lynx (Ire) (Montjeu {Ire}) could look even better in 10 months’ time. For breeder and vendor Irish Emerald Stud it was a fantastic result having purchased the 11-year-old mare Anklet (Ire) (Acclamation {GB}) at Tattersalls 12 months ago carrying this foal for just 18,000gns. While obviously delighted with the price, Gary Duffy, owner of Kildare based Irish Emerald Stud said he wouldn’t have been surprised if the colt had made even more.

“He is a cracking foal and it’s a great pedigree, so I was expecting him to be popular,” said Duffy. “Luckily for me Australia had hit a bit of a flat spot this time last year and the mare was at a bit of a crossroads, so I was able to get her for what is now great value. Australia then had plenty of good success on the track this year and the filly winning in America was also a great help and I believe there are plans to run her in a Grade I. The mare is in foal to Ribchester (Ire) but after today, and with Counterparty Risk, I’d say she’ll have to go back to Australia (GB).”

Baroda Stud also found favour with an Australia colt when selling Lot 504, a half-brother to the stakes-placed American Lady (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}) for €72,000 before making an impact as a purchaser when buying lot 530 for €90,000. This colt by Teofilo (Ire) was consigned by Clare Manning’s Boherguy Stud on behalf of her grandfather Jim Bolger and is a full-brother to the smart stakes placed 3-year-old Agitare (Ire).

Friday’s top price was equaled early Saturday morning when the fourth foal into the ring, Lot 291 was bought by BBA Ireland’s Eamonn Reilly for €75,000. By the ever popular Dandy Man (Ire) the Milestream Stud offered colt is the second produce out of the Raven’s Pass mare Zehrah (Ire), who is a half-sister to stakes winner Sameem (Ire) (New Approach {Ire}).

Another Dandy Man (Ire) colt, Lot 380 fetched the same price of €75,000 when selling to Yeomanstown Stud. Offered by Airdreigh Stud the colt is out of Fancy Feathers (Ire) whose five winners to date include the stakes winner Elnadim Star (Ire) (Elnadim). Not long after Joe Foley rowed in to support his own stallion when going to €67,000 to buy J.P Condren’s son of Dandy Man, Lot 428 before yet another Dandy Man colt, Lot 464, out of a winning half-sister to G2 Queen Mary S. winner Elletelle (Ire) (Elnadim) was knocked down to Euro Ventures for €72,000. Rounding off a quintet of high end foals by the super dependable sire lot 491 from Ballinacurra Stud also reached the €72,000 mark when selling, like a previous one by the stallion, to Yeomanstown Stud. That quintet grew to a sextet late in the day when one of the bravest pin-hookers in the business Philip Stauffenberg gave €72,000 for Oak Leaf Stud’s Dandy Man filly (Lot 525) from the family of Quarter Moon (Ire) (Sadler’s Wells).

Some much needed festive cheer will be added to Sunday’s session when well known sales groom Brenda Shortt will don a Mrs. Claus outfit while leading up the final foal in the sale Lot 759, a Dark Angel (Ire) colt offered by the McEnery’s Vinesgrove Stud. Shortt is raising money for mental health in a year that has been understandably tough for so many. To contributions to the worthy cause, click here.

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Tara Stud’s Homecoming King

On part of its 70-mile journey across Ireland, the River Boyne flows not far from Tara Stud in County Meath, but the stallion named in its honour has taken a far more meandering course simply to return to source.

Approaching his sixth birthday, River Boyne (Ire) (Dandy Man {Ire}) is back home from America and about to embark on a stallion career five years after he was sold by his breeder Derek Iceton at the Goffs November Foal Sale. On Sunday, his full-brother will pass through the same sale ring, and potential buyers would do well to reflect on the career of his elder sibling, described by Iceton as a “hard-knocking horse”.

While River Boyne had the speed and precocity so beloved of the commercial market, he also had the durability which should be high on the list of pre-requisites for a new stallion. In this regard, his racing career was markedly similar to that of his perennially popular sire Dandy Man, who retired to Ballyhane Stud at the age of seven with 30 races under his belt. 

It is perhaps no surprise to see the name of Ballyhane’s Joe Foley in the sales returns as the pinhooker of River Boyne—a €20,000 foal who became a €65,000 Goffs Sportsman’s yearling and had his first three starts at two in Ireland for Gordon Elliott. But it was following his reappearance in the ring at the Tattersalls Horses-in-Training Sale that his career really started to flow. 

Bought by Red Baron’s Barn and Rancho Temescal, River Boyne moved to the Californian stable of Jeff Mullins and won his first two starts at Santa Anita, including the listed Pasadena S., followed later in his 3-year-old season by victory in the GIII La Jolla H. From that day on, he never finished out of the first four, winning two Grade II contests as a 4-year-old before earning his Grade 1 laurels with victory in the  Frank E Kilroe Mile in March this year.

“I followed him through all of his racing career,” recalls Iceton, who has recently welcomed River Boyne home to Tara Stud. “He is a really noble, proper, hard-knocking horse. Tough, sound and consistent throughout his whole career. So that’s the sort of horse I wanted for my customers here.”

He added, “What they’re looking for is a sprinter/miler type, who is correct. And I often say that the cheaper the horse is, the more correct the individual has to be. Dandy Man has served Irish breeders incredibly well over the last number of years. And this is the first son of Dandy Man to come to stud. So I’m delighted he’s back. Obviously, I’m delighted we bred him. I think he’s exactly what the market wants and we stood him at a very competitive price to try and keep my customers happy.”

River Boyne enters stud at €5,000, standing alongside Tara’s two sons of Dark Angel (Ire), Alhebayeb (Ire) and Estidhkaar (Ire). Despite the obvious sentimental lure of standing a stallion he bred, Iceton insists River Boyne had to pass other tests first.

He says, “You know, the first question you ask yourself when you bring a colt to stud is, would I use that horse myself? And, if you have to think more than two nanoseconds about it, you shouldn’t be standing him. So, whether I bred him or not, he was always a horse I was going to go for. I was very fortunate, I had a lovely line of communication with his owners in California, who have been incredibly kind to us during his racing career. And then when he was being retired I got in very quickly  and got on board. So I’m going to stand the horse on his own merits. We breed plenty of good horses around here. He’s been an exceptional one in the last couple of years but he wouldn’t be here [other than for the fact that] he’s the right horse for the job.”

Iceton continues, “The people who are buying the foals and the yearlings are looking for those foals that have a walk and fill the eye. [River Boyne] has got the walk. There’s no reason why his progeny won’t have a walk. So, it’s important, again, if somebody comes to look at a stallion here, they can make up their mind within about three steps of him walking out the door. Is this horse for me or not? Does he fill your eye? Does he have that little bit of zing about him that you’d like to use? You know, if you have to look at him a couple of walks up and down, I think the answer then will be a ‘no’.”

As well as that “little bit of zing”, there’s no doubt that sire power counts for an awful lot when launching a new stallion and, in this regard, River Boyne can rely on some reflected glory from the exploits of Ballyhane Stud’s flagship horse.

“Dandy Man is a hell of a sire,” Iceton says. “And, I suppose one other thing about Dandy Mans, they’re very good looking, colts and fillies, but they’ve done particularly well in Hong Kong. So a lot of those good colts were getting bought to go to Hong Kong, and of course they have been gelded, so there is no coming back from that. It just goes to show how sound and tough they are. Because, unless they x-ray properly, unless they were sound enough through and through, they wouldn’t be there. Look at any decent card in Hong Kong and just look at the number of Dandy Man’s [offspring] that are running there at the highest level. So I was lucky this fellow went west rather than east.”

River Boyne’s brother goes through Goffs on Sunday as lot 602, one of three foals being brought to the sale by Tara Stud.

“He’s a grand foal. He really is a little carbon copy. When people see what the foal is like, and see what daddy is like, it’s probably a relatively unique marketing ploy,” says Iceton. 

Reflecting on River Boyne’s younger days, he adds, “As a foal, he always had that great walk. He always had a great attitude. And, to be quite honest, I hadn’t seen him from the time he went from Europe to America and came back here. And, with a certain degree of trepidation when the truck arrived in, I thought, God, I hope I’m going to like this horse. I hope he’s everything he was. So once he got off the truck, he was absolutely clean-limbed, he still has the walk, he still has a great attitude, which actually comes from his mother. His mother’s just a lovely, lovely mare.”

Their dam Clytha (GB) (Mark Of Esteem {Ire}) was bred at Usk Valley Stud by Kevin Mercer and, though she was winless in her five starts, she has proved to be far more adept in her second career. River Boyne is clearly the best of her five winners to date, but she has also produced the six-time winner Harome (Ire) (Bahamian Bounty {GB}), who earned a top rating of 93, as well as the 79-rated Brosnan (Ire) (Champs Elysees {GB}) and dual winners Incendiary (Ire) (Excellent Art {GB}) and Keukenhof (Ire) (Dutch Art {GB}). The mare’s yearling filly by Divine Prophet (Aus) has been retained by Iceton and is going into training with Eddie Lynam, while the 10-year-old Xerxes (Ire), by former Tara resident Key Of Luck, is alongside her mother back at the farm. Clytha is not in foal at present but will return to Dandy Man in 2021.

In the meantime, Iceton has the job of assembling the key first book for River Boyne, and he says that early signs are encouraging. 

“I’m just back from Newmarket and I was amazed in particular at the number of English farms, and very significant English farms, that spoke to me about him,” he states. “I actually was sorry that I hadn’t brought him over and put him on show in Newmarket. Anybody that’s come into the yard loves him. He’s certainly not going to be a difficult prospect to fill. I’m syndicating him to breeders, and breeders only, which I think is a very important thing to do. So I’m selling shares, not breeding rights because, again, I think it’s important that whoever buys into a stallion buys equity rather than a breeding right. I have a good customer base and I’m hoping I can attract plenty of those back again. Of the stallions that have stood here previously, I think everybody [who bought shares] has made money. Some of them have made very significant money out of the stallions I stood. On balance, if you sell equity to somebody and they’ve more than one mare, they are going to send the better mare to the horse that they have equity in, I presume.”

For Flat breeders, there is one final sale to come in a year which has presented plenty of challenges for the world at large, and of course for the racing and breeding industry. The Goffs November Sale is traditionally the first to offer foals in Europe; this time it will be the last after its rescheduling to this week to coincide with the easing of restrictions in Ireland. Like most in the industry, Iceton expresses relief that the business of buying and selling horses has been able to proceed, albeit in a somewhat different style to usual.

“It’s been a very difficult year,” he says. “I am delighted that we’ve managed to get through the yearling sales as well as we have. So I’m very grateful to two lots of people here. First of all, the sales companies are to be thanked and congratulated for all they’ve done. All the changes in terms of sales dates, the expenses that they all had to go to to put the sales on for us in the first place.

“The other people that I really want to thank are my own staff. I have some guys here that have been to England four or five times at this stage. They only go and they come back, they get their Covid test, they do the 14 days and then they’re back in England again. And they’ve done that without a whimper.”

Iceton adds, “It just goes to show how resilient a business we are in, whereas most entertainment businesses are really struggling. The people who own horses and have them in training couldn’t go to see them run for the last year and yet, maybe at a slightly lower level, but not a significantly lower level, the business took place, horses got sold and, please God, we will have a better 2021.”

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Kavanagh Makes Consigning Debut At Goffs

The Kavanagh family of Kildaragh Stud have been esteemed breeders and vendors for many years, so when an offshoot of the Kildaragh brand begins a new venture one should definitely sit up and take notice.

Step forward AK Thoroughbreds, the fledgling consigning business launched by Alice Kavanagh, daughter of the farm’s owners Peter and Antoinette. AK Thoroughbred makes its consigning debut at the re-scheduled Goffs November Foal Sale at next week with an 11-strong draft of foals, and the young consignor is keen to get things underway.

“I’m very excited and even a little bit nervous,” admitted Kavanagh. “I’m full of optimism though as it’s the fruition of a long-term plan to set up my own consignment.”

Kavanagh’s education and work experience to date has been 100% tailored to developing a career in the bloodstock industry, and launching her own consignment has been the goal since she returned home to Kildaragh Stud earlier this year having spent a number of years around the world honing her craft.

“I came back this year to basically be assistant manager of Kildaragh Stud and that role also gives me the leeway at this time of the year to prep and sell foals and hopefully also mares going forward,” Kavanagh said.

Knowing exactly what you want to do with your life is a focus devoid in most teenagers, but Kavanagh’s path was clear and her third level education centred around an Equine Business Management degree from Enniskillen College in Fermanagh.

As soon as college was finished, Kavanagh expanded her horizons and joined the Vigors family at Hillwood Stud for a stint of yearling prep before embarking on her next step even further afield.

“From England I went to Australia and worked a season at Yarraman Park Stud which was a brilliant experience,” Kavanagh said. “I then did two months travelling before making my way to New Zealand where I worked the breeding season and yearling sale season at Brighthill Farm. I really loved working there; it kind of reminded me of Ireland, but a bit warmer.”

Brighthill Farm is run by Irishman Nick King and is home to the former Martyn Meade-trained Group 2-winning son of Frankel (GB) Eminent (Ire) among other stallions, and the role proved a valuable learning curve for Kavanagh.

“I found it was a very different approach to prepping horses to what I was used to,” she said. “There were three stallions there at the time and we were prepping yearlings during the covering season so there was a huge amount going on. We were certainly kept on our toes as regards planning the prepping schedule around the three covers a day. Over here we obviously have our separate seasons and you can spread the workload a bit better. The bigger operations over there probably have separate teams for each function but Brighthill was a smaller farm so we all had to juggle everything. I loved the challenge though, as it was something new that I hadn’t experienced.

“From a prepping point of view I think the horses spend more time outdoors, probably get more hand walking and there is quite a bit more presentation of the horses to potential buyers at the farm. That is a concept that seems to be gaining some traction over here, though perhaps the pandemic fast tracked it slightly.”

Kavanagh rounded out her apprenticeship by spending a year at Newsells Park Stud in England where she began working with yearlings and progressed to running the ‘Wertheimer Barn’ for the breeding season.

“The quality of stock at Newsells was a real eye-opener, proper blue blooded pedigrees and it was a pleasure to work with them,” she said. “Then I came home in June and helped with the Kildaragh yearlings and now I’m ready for this new challenge. We have 11 foals, some are being prepped here at home and the rest we will meet at Goffs.”

AK Thoroughbreds certainly has some interesting foals to help get the brand off to a good start and the eye is immediately drawn to lot 653, one of only four foals catalogued in the sale by Roaring Lion. The colt is out of stakes winner Kanes Pass (Ire) (Clodovil {Ire}), who posted seven victories in total and whose first foal made €85,000 at Goffs in 2018.

“Roaring Lion’s first foals sold well in Newmarket so it’s nice to have one by him out of a young stakes-winning mare going to the sales,” Kavanagh said. “Hopefully he will go down well with buyers.”

Kavanagh must have enjoyed watching the prolific exploits of the Dermot Weld-trained Tarnawa (Ire) (Shamardal) this year, which saw her claim three Group  1 contests and crown her season with a magnificent win in the GI Breeders’ Cup Turf at Keeneland. AK Thoroughbreds’s lot 745 by Dark Angel (Ire) is out of Tarakala (Ire) (Dr Fong), whose stakes-winning daughter Tarana (Ire) (Cape Cross {Ire}) is the dam of Tarnawa.

“I couldn’t have asked for a better update from Tarnawa for this colt who I’m selling on behalf of a client,” Kavanagh said. “He is a typical Dark Angel which shouldn’t do him any harm. I’m also looking forward to selling the only foal in Goffs this year by Almanzor (Fr). He [lot 664] is out of a stakes-placed Azamour (Ire) mare and we are selling him on behalf of a Swiss client. The mare hasn’t done much wrong yet breeding two winners and the sire is proving quite popular at the moment.”

Indeed, sire power seems to be a key factor among Kavanagh’s first draft and lot 569 is another that should prove popular being a colt by the in vogue Night Of Thunder (Ire). The four-time winning dam Arabescatta (GB) (Monsun {Ger}) has bred three winners from four runners and Kavanagh said she is keen on his prospects.

“He is a Kildaragh homebred and is a super walker and is a really good physical,” she said. “I am quite excited about him to be honest.”

Kavanagh added, “I better give a mention also to lot 537, a colt by Harry Angel (Ire). He belongs to my brother Roderick and is out of a Dalakhani (Ire) mare from a great back pedigree of Footstepsinthesand (GB). I saw a few foals by Harry Angel in Newmarket and they seemed nice big physical horses with plenty of presence and I think this foal is in a similar mold.”

Going it alone in the bloodstock world can be a daunting prospect regardless of whether one has family connections in the game or not, and Kavanagh said she is very appreciative of the support and encouragement she has received so far.

“I have to mention a thank you to Madeline Burns of Rathasker Stud who pointed a few people who were looking for a consignor in my direction,” she said. “It’s a great help when someone like her gives you an endorsement and in fairness I have experienced nothing but goodwill within the industry since I decided to branch out and I guess that should act as encouragement for anyone else harbouring similar ambitions. I am lucky I have a very good team of people showing for me next week so that means I can focus more on selling the horses. I will get next week out of the way before I make any grand plans about growing the business, but hopefully we will get off to a good start.”

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Ghaiyyath Half-Brother Anchors Goffs November Foal Sale

The Goffs November Foal Sale catalogue, which includes a Kingman (GB) half-brother to €1.1 million Goffs November alum and MG1SW Ghaiyyath (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}), is now online.

Scheduled for Nov. 16-18, the three-day sale features 759 foals going under the hammer at Kildare Paddocks in Ireland. The sale will be conducted using the “rising tide” format.

The Ghaiyyath half (lot 683), also a half to GI Man O’War S. heroine Zhukova (Ire) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}) and out of Classic scorer Nightime (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), hails from the draft of The Castlebridge Consignment.

Other Goffs November graduates that have gone on to top level success in 2020 are Alcohol Free (Ire) (No Nay Never) and River Boyne (Ire) (Dandy Man {Ire}), with a supporting cast featuring Group 2 winners Dark Vision (Ire) (Dream Ahead), Lemista (Ire) (Raven’s Pass), Ubettabelieveit (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}), Aloha Star (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}), Dandalla (Ire) (Dandy Man {Ire}) and GSW & G1SP Miss Amulet (Ire) (Sir Prancealot {Ire}).

Quality pedigrees abound in the catalogue, among them a full-brother (lot 636) to Classic heroine and champion Sea of Class (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) from Oak Lodge & Springfield House Stud; and lot 707, an Footstepsinthesand (GB) half-brother to G1 Phoenix S. hero and Goffs November grad Lucky Vega (Ire) (Lope de Vega {Ire}) offered by Baroda Stud. Also flying the flag for Kingman is a Moyglare Stud-consigned colt out of a SP full-sister to GI Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup S. winner Together (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) as lot 748. Ballintry Stud sells a full-sister to GII Mrs. Revere S. victress Nay Lady Nay (Ire) (No Nay Never), and GSW & G1SP Arizona (Ire) (No Nay Never) as lot 659; and Swordlestown Little brings a Frankel (GB) sister (lot 673) to MGSW & G1SP Terebellum (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}). Finally, a Make Believe (GB) colt (lot 750) out of MGSW Uncharted Haven (GB) (Turtle Island {Ire}) will sell from the draft of Ballylinch Stud. He is a half-brother to MGSW & G1 Oaks third High Heeled (Ire) (High Chaparral {Ire}) and the dam of G1 Irish 1000 Guineas winner and GI E.P. Taylor S. heroine Just the Judge (Ire) (Lawman {Fr}).

Established sires are also well represented, among them Kodiac (GB), Dark Angel (Ire), Invincible Spirit (Ire), Lope De Vega (Ire), Zoffany (Ire) and Night Of Thunder (Ire), as well as younger sires Mehmas (Ire) and New Bay (GB). There are also plenty of stallions bringing their first foals to the sales ring including Saxon Warrior (Jpn), Roaring Lion, Zoustar (Aus), US Navy Flag, Havana Grey (GB) and Expert Eye (GB).

During the first part of last year’s sale, 524 weanlings grossed €25,721,800, with an average of €49,087 and a median of €30,000. Topping the sale was a full-brother to Ghaiyyath, who went to Godolphin on a bid of €1.2 million.

“We are delighted with the consistent level of quality throughout this year’s November Foal Sale catalogue which is simply unmissable for buyers seeking world class foals to resell or race,” said Goffs Group Chief Executive Henry Beeby. “Goffs November is one of our true success stories and has enjoyed a level of trade that has been unrivalled in recent years. We pride ourselves on providing excellence for all buyers whatever their budget. In this year like no other, we have taken great heart from the fact that Irish foal vendors have overwhelmingly maintained their support of the November Foal Sale with drafts of real depth, diversity and quality.

“We look forward to welcoming vendors and purchasers back to Kildare Paddocks. The November Foal Sale is dominated by Irish buyers while we are also working to ensure the attendance of valued foal purchasers from the UK and further afield along with key international end-users. In addition, Goffs Online will allow participation from all corners of the globe as international buyers link in with agents on the ground to chase the best foals on offer.”

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