Oasis Dream Filly Tops Challenging Orby Sale

DONCASTER, UK—The weather brightened for the final session of the Goffs Orby Sale but it has to be said that the vibe did not. True, the clearance rate remained at a respectable level, with those vendors who decided to sell continuing to be realistic in their reserves. But there was a high number of withdrawals across the two days, with an extra bunch coming on Thursday morning as Wednesday’s results were digested. This, together with a dearth of international participation compared to normal, and minimal activity from the regular major buyers, led to results that are disappointing set against recent good years, though understandable perhaps in this grim year.

Everything about 2020 is out of the ordinary, and for Goffs, moving Ireland’s flagship yearling sale to Britain was described by Group Chief Executive Henry Beeby as “a monumental decision and one that we did not take lightly.”

He added, “I do not think anyone approached the sale expecting anything other than it to be tough but we salute our vendors for the way they adapted and read the market as evidenced by the 80% clearance rate which, whilst not up to recent years, demonstrates that vendors were pragmatic in their approach and worked with us to deliver the best results in the circumstances. That said, we absolutely recognise that the returns of the last two days have been hard on many vendors and we share their pain as we have always prided ourselves on delivering the best prices for the lots we offer. However, we are all aware of the havoc being wreaked on all walks of life by Covid-19 and the impact on the global economy so it is understandable that there are less orders around for racehorses from buying entities, big and small. Those challenges are, of course, exacerbated by the ongoing issues around prize-money that we read about on a daily basis, whilst there are several significant players from recent editions of the Orby Sale that are not present for one reason or another.”

As indicated, figures contracted significantly. Having converted the previous year’s returns to sterling, turnover was down by 44% at £21,142,000. The average of £67,981 was down by 35% and the median dropped by 18% to £47,000. Of the 474 yearlings catalogued, 389 were offered for sale and 311 of those were sold. The clearance rate for the final day was slightly lower than the sale overall, at 77% from 143 sold, bringing a second-day tally of £9,528,000, average of £66,629 and median of £45,000.

Roundhill’s Gem

Roundhill Stud brought just one yearling to the Goffs Orby Sale and the filly from the farm’s signature family duly ended up as the market leader, selling to Angus Gold on behalf of Shadwell for a sale-topping £450,000.

David Redvers had signalled his interest early for the Oasis Dream (GB) filly (lot 343) but Gold joined in the bidding from outside the ring and was intent on signing up the first foal of Princess De Lune (Ire) (Shamardal) as a future broodmare prospect for the Shadwell operation.

“Sheikh Hamdan said to concentrate on finding some fillies. We had a go on the Green Room filly yesterday, but I loved this filly. She is out of a Shamardal mare who had plenty of ability and she is from a tough-running family,” said Gold.

The Shadwell team has not been as active in the 2020 yearling market as it has been in recent years, but Sheikh Hamdan has been a notable supporter of the Orby Sale in particular and it brings a degree of reassurance to see him engage in the pursuit of some select fillies. The page for this particular yearling is chock-a-block with bold black type.

Princess De Lune won her Newbury maiden with ease for Roger Charlton before suffering a setback which saw her never reclaim that early promising form in three subsequent starts. Her full-siblings are the dual Australian Group 2 winner and promising young Swettenham Stud stallion Puissance De Lune (Ire) and the listed winner and Group 2-placed Queen Power (Ire). Then there is her three-parts brother Zabeel Prince (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}), who won the G1 Prix d’Ispahan, and her half-sister Serena’s Storm (Ire) (Statue Of Liberty) is the dam of dual Group 1 winner Rizeena (Ire) (Iffraaj {GB}).

“She’s a stunning filly and I hope she will be good for Shadwell,” said Roundhill Stud owner Bobby Donworth. “We did a lot of head-scratching about which sale to put her in but we felt we should support Goffs and this has worked out well. We also have a half-sister to Rizeena and the brother to Zabeel Prince selling next week in Newmarket so it made sense to split them up. Her dam had a huge amount of ability and she should prove to be a good broodmare.”

Donworth added that Princess De Lune lost her foal by Kingman (GB) this year but is now back in foal to Night Of Thunder (Ire).

Channel’s Sister To Haggas

On a morning with a number of late withdrawals, an early highlight was provided by lot 253, a Sea The Stars (Ire) half-sister to G1 Prix de Diane winner Channel (Ire) (Nathaniel {Ire}) who sold to the Tsui family’s Sunderland Holdings for £360,000.

John Clarke conducted the bidding for the filly bred by Pat O’Kelly’s Kilcarn Stud and said afterwards, “Mrs Tsui absolutely loved the pedigree and though she hasn’t seen the filly herself she was very keen to buy her.”

The filly’s dam Love Magic (GB) (Dansili {GB}) is a daughter of the G1 Cheveley Park S. winner Magical Romance (Ire) (Barathea {Ire}) and thus a half-sister to a decent performer by Sea The Stars in Australia in the exported Werribee Cup winner Tall Ship (Ire). The family also includes Magical Romance’s half-sister, the champion 3-year-old Alexandrova (Ire) (Sadler’s Wells), who landed the Oaks, Irish Oaks and Yorkshire Oaks for Aidan O’Brien.

Clarke added that the filly will join William Haggas in Newmarket next year. Her dam has a filly foal by Saxon Warrior (Jpn) and is now in foal to Frankel (GB).

Channel, who was her dam’s second foal, transpired to be one of the real bargains of the 2017 Orby Sale, where she was bought privately by Ghislain Bozo of Meridian International for just €18,000 before being resold at the Arqana Breeze-Up for €70,000.

No Hiding For This Angel

Peter Brant added to his collection of Orby yearlings on Wednesday when agent Demi O’Byrne outbid Richard Ryan for Yeomanstown Stud’s brother to the G3 Princess Margaret S. winner Angel’s Hideaway (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) at £355,000.

The late April colt (lot 438) is the result of the sixth mating with Dark Angel for the Kheleyf mare The Hermitage (Ire), a black-type earning 2-year-old in her racing days who now has three winners to her name, including G2 Mill Reef S. runner-up Perfect Angel (Ire).

“She’s been good to everybody really,” said breeder and consignor David O’Callaghan of the mare bought for 29,000gns as a 3-year-old at the Tattersalls Horses-in-Training Sale. Offered as yearlings at Goffs, three of her previous offspring have fetched €200,000, €390,000 and €440,000, respectively.

O’Callaghan continued, “She’s turned into a bit of an Orby specialist and she has a colt foal by Dark Angel who will be coming next year.”

O’Callaghan admitted that the last two days of trade have been tricky but said, “We bring them to sell and we’ve got most of them sold. We’ve got to keep clearing the decks.”

Value Galileos

For months now there has been talk of this season’s sales being a buyers’ market and, indeed, for those with some money to spend at the higher level with an eye on the future, some lovely broodmare prospects can be found at a much more reasonable rate than usual.

That is certainly the case for lot 311, the Galileo (Ire) three-parts sister to Irish Derby winner Trading Leather (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}), who was acquired by Yuesheng Zhang’s Yulong Investments for  £185,000.

“With a pedigree like that she is worth that all day long,” was the assessment of agent Michael Donohoe of BBA Ireland. “She’ll go to Jessica Harrington and she may take a little bit of time but she’ll make a lovely broodmare for Mr Zhang, who has mares in Ireland and Australia. He was very keen to support this sale.”

The March-born filly was sold by Manister House Stud on behalf of Coolmore and the same breeder also offered another daughter of Galileo through Baroda Stud (lot 305). The filly is out of the Australian G1 Ascot Vale S winner Nechita (Aus) (Fastnet Rock {Ire}) and was bought by Cathy Grassick for £140,000.

Churchill Gets The Nod

The first crop of the dual Guineas winner Churchill (Ire) will take to the track next season and a number of those nascent racehorses found favour with Orby buyers. Thirteen of the Coolmore sire’s 16 horses offered over the last two days were sold at an average of £86,423.

At the head of that list was lot 336, a colt bred by Brian O’Neill and pinhooked last year by Hamish Macauley for €125,000 at the Goffs November Sale. Returned to the ring by Glenvale Stud, the half-brother to Group 3 winner Onenightidreamed (Ire) (Footsetpsinthesand {GB}) was bought for £220,000 by Jamie McCalmont.

Johnny Murtagh, Jessica Harrington, Paddy Twomey and Keith Dalgleish are among the trainers taking charge of Churchill’s Orby graduates, while Peter and Ross Doyle went to £140,000 to buy lot 321, the Kildaragh Stud-bred and -consigned colt out of the listed-placed Orcia (Ire) (Shamardal). The Kavanagh family has raced three generations of the colt’s female family, including his grandam, the French listed winner Amathia (Ire) (Darshaan {GB}), who is a multiple black-type producer.

The National Stud’s freshman sire Time Test (GB) had just one filly at the Orby Sale but she made it to the list of six-figure lots when sold to Daithi Harvey for £100,000 on behalf of Highland Yard. The daughter of Sunny Again (GB) (Shirocco {Ger}) (lot 425) was offered by Mount Coote Stud and is a half-sister to this season’s St Leger runner-up Berkshire Rocco (Fr) (Sir Percy {GB}). She will head back to Ireland to be broken in by Ben Harvey before being trained by Gavin Cromwell.

From No To Yes

Lot 388, the full-brother to champion sprinter and young stallion Ten Sovereigns (No Nay Never), was marked as withdrawn from the sale on Wednesday morning but later appeared among the results as a private sale to Mitsuru Hashida, the trainer of Deirdre (Jpn) (Harbinger {GB}) who runs in Sunday’s Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe.

No Nay Never recorded another Group 1 winner at the weekend when Jeff Smith’s Alcohol Free (GB) landed the Juddmonte Cheveley Park S. and his offspring at the Orby Sale included lot 314, the second foal of the Pivotal (GB) mare Novantae (GB), who sold for £125,000 to David Redvers on behalf of Cornthrop Bloodstock. The filly was consigned by Luke Barry’s Manister House Stud, which bred her in partnership with American agent Gatewood Bell, who bought Novantae for €33,000 at the Goffs November Mares’ Sale. Though only placed in her racing days, the first three dams of the 7-year-old are all black-type winners and her immediate family includes this season’s exciting juvenile Master Of The Seas (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}), winner of the G2 Superlative S. for Godolphin.

Sale Transfer Essential

Reflecting on the two days of trade at Goffs’s sister complex in Doncaster, Henry Beeby said, “The Irish National Yearling Sale has long been part of the fabric of Irish life as it is a significant occasion with a rich history and tangible relevance to the bloodstock community as well as the wider Irish public. So to move the Orby Sale to the UK was a monumental decision and one that we did not take lightly. However, we had to take action in what we felt were the best interests of every vendor given the circumstances in which we all find ourselves as so many had entrusted us with many of their best yearlings despite the uncertainty that existed at the time of entry.

“We are, of course, fortunate to have the world’s newest sales complex in the UK and it is a source of some considerable pride that so many newcomers to Doncaster this week have been so complimentary about the facility we built as DBS. It allowed us to showcase the superb yearlings that made up Orby 20 and we repeat our thanks to each vendor for their support. We recognise that the move presented huge logistical issues and extra costs for everyone, and that it caused some debate, but our feeling is that the large crowd of potential purchasers that arrived from Sunday demonstrated the enduring appeal of the Orby Sale as a rich and consistent course of quality.”

He added, “It is plain that Orby 20 is way behind its recent predecessors. Whether that is mirrored elsewhere in the coming weeks remains to be seen but we send our best wishes to everyone selling in Newmarket as this is one interlinked industry whilst we have worked with closely with Tattersalls throughout this crisis as both organisations have done everything in our collective power to provide as near as normal a market place as possible.

“In fact if there is one achievement from this week it is in the staging of a Thoroughbred auction, and we are indebted to many people and entities for their hard work, adaptability and cooperation, not least Doncaster Council who worked with us to find solutions rather than problems. So I want to repeat our sincere thanks to every attendee for their good humoured acceptance of the protocols in place to protect everyone and ensure compliance with the latest Government directives. I know they were irksome, annoying and tiresome but we are grateful that everyone acknowledged their necessity. Let’s hope that Orby 21 is back where it belongs. In Ireland doing what it does best—selling the best for the best to the best.”

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New Goffs P2P Sale Set for Nov. 6

The inaugural November P2P Sale, scheduled for Nov. 6, was announced by Goffs on Monday. The sale will offer Irish and UK pointers, as well as bumper horses and young horses with form at either Kildare Paddocks in Ireland or the Doncaster Sales Complex in the UK, depending on COVID-19 restrictions.

“With the latter part of 2019-20 point-to-point season cancelled, as well as our highly successful Aintree and Punchestown Sales, we have been working to find a solution to get our P2P sales back up and running,” said Goffs Group Chiev Executive Henry Beeby. “Handlers too are very keen to see a return of P2P sales and this new date sits well with the commencement of P2Ps this coming autumn.”

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Ringfort’s Fast Track To Success

DONCASTER, UK—Against a backdrop that would have been neither envisaged nor desired, the 2020 Flat may have had a hesitant start with a drastically reduced number of participants, but the wheels have at least kept turning, which in turn has allowed some sort of momentum to be continued in the sales ring.

We’ve had Royal Ascot at York, so why not the Orby Sale at Doncaster? While the transfer from Ireland to Britain of the Tattersalls Ireland September Sale, and the Goffs Sportsman’s and Orby Sales will have cost Irish vendors dear, it is an extra expense worth bearing considering the other option would have been for those sales not to have taken place at all. 

Breeder and consignor Derek Veitch is likely to look more favourably on Yorkshire than most this year as it is the county which has been the scene for three Group 2 triumphs this season for juvenile graduates of his Ringfort Stud in County Offaly. First came the triumph of Miss Amulet (Ire) (Sir Prancealot {GB}) in the Lowther S., 24 hours before Minzaal (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}) landed the Gimcrack S. at York’s Ebor meeting. The following month it was the turn of Ubettabelieveit (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) to strike in the Flying Childers S. on the racecourse directly alongside the Goffs UK sales ground, the temporary host of this week’s Orby Sale.

“It’s a great leveller, the way everything is at the moment,” says Veitch at the sales ground on Monday. 

Coronavirus has not been the only upsetting element to this year for Veitch and his wife Gay, who lost their great friend and neighbour Pat Smullen a fortnight ago.

He continues, “On the racing front it has been fantastic for us and internally we are quite excited about some of those horses. We don’t think they are just this year’s horses—hopefully they are going to go forward a wee bit and that’s exciting. There are some nice, unexposed horses out there, too, from that same crop, and I think they are interesting. We’re very happy with that side of things, but life is a great leveller.”

With a reasonable number of potential buyers already in situ in Doncaster ahead of the start of what would normally be Ireland’s premier yearling sale on Wednesday, Veitch sounds a note of cautious optimism ahead of a key few weeks for the European sector. 

He says, “Everybody has been resolved to the idea that the sales have had to happen here [in the UK] and I have actually been pleasantly surprised as to how well the Ascot and Fairyhouse sales went. The [Goffs UK] Premier Sale here was okay but if you think back it was the first yearling sale and everyone was a bit sceptical about how it would go, but I think at the end of the day a drop of 30% was acceptable. It certainly has not got any worse for the last few sales.”

He adds, “There are some lovely horses here so I think it is going to be a really good test of the top end of the market and the higher tier of the commercial market.”

Veitch will know his fate relatively early at Doncaster as his three Orby yearlings all feature on the first day. He then has another nine to offer at the Tattersalls October Sale. The season started well for Ringfort Stud, which topped the relocated Tattersalls Ascot Yearling Sale with a daughter of Darley’s first-season sire Profitable (Ire) and was also among the top lots with Miss Amulet’s half-sister from the first crop of Yeomanstown Stud’s young son of Scat Daddy, El Kabeir. 

Profitable features again in the Ringfort drafts for Goffs and Tattersalls. At the Orby, his daughter out of the nine-time winner Emperors Pearl (Ire) (Holy Roman Emperor {Ire}) is catalogued as lot 134.

On the subject of her sire Profitable, Veitch says, “We’ve had a few of them and they are very workmanlike, practical horses with good minds. When they go into a trainer’s yard they will come out and do their work and then go in and go back to bed. I don’t know whether they’ve any ability—we’ll only find out when they come out on the track—but they’ve all the criteria you need in a horse starting out at this stage. He has enough soldiers, enough quality in terms of the individuals, they’ve great minds and they are muscularly mature horses, which is a good thing, so I think they are practical 2-year-olds, not necessarily all 3-year-olds. He could be the Mehmas of next year. There’s nothing about the horse that puts me off.”

Ringfort Stud, as the breeder of Minzaal, has of course played its part in the success story of Tally-Ho Stud resident Mehmas, who is odds-on to be this season’s champion freshman sire. Minzaal, now owned by Sheikh Hamdan, followed his Gimcrack victory with a third-place finish in Saturday’s G1 Juddmonte Middle Park S. behind another son of Mehmas, the winner Supremacy (Ire). Minzaal’s relaxed demeanour at a blustery Rowley Mile certainly gave him the appearance of a horse who is as mentally equipped as he is physically to have a successful racing career beyond this season, and this is one of the traits which particularly endears Veitch to youngsters that come through his hands.

“There are certain parameters that I don’t like in horses but you never really know what their heads and their hearts are like until you put them under pressure in the last two furlongs at 40mph,” he says. “Reticence is the only thing I really don’t like in a horse. Give me a hardy, tough horse who wants to do his work. I think reticence gets you nowhere, either in life or as a racehorse.”

He casts his mind back to the younger days of this season’s Flying Childers winner, whom he sold to Roger Marley and John Cullinan of Church Farm & Horse Park Stud at Book 1 last year for 50,000gns.

He says, “You take Ubettabelieveit: when he gets up in the morning he has his sleeves rolled up and he wants to get out of his box. He knows he’s there for a reason, and that’s to eat, but once he’s eaten and he’s had a sleep, everything else is about being outside. That’s pretty typical of Kodiacs. You can see it in their eyes, all they want to do is get out there and work and that’s why they’re good racehorses. They have a great mental attitude to their work and that’s why they’re so practical for so many trainers. You couldn’t see that when this horse [Kodiac] retired: fourth in a Group 1, won a Group 3, good page, but he was ordinary looking when he was retiring, though now everybody sees him as premier division for what he’s done, and for upgrading his mares. And I think that’s what I’d like everybody to understand: every first-season sire has to start off somewhere but I’d like them start off with 85 mares and see them prove themselves. I don’t like to see them start off with 170 mares.”

For the Veitch family, the trio of group winners this summer followed victory in last season’s Gimcrack S. with Threat (Ire) (Footstepsinthesand {GB}), whose dam Flare Of Firelight is represented in Tattersalls October Book 1 by her Galileo Gold (GB) yearling filly.

Veitch says, “We breed a lot of winners, but they are not all headlines horses, and that’s the difference this year, we’ve had three Group 2 horses within five or six weeks. People notice that, but they don’t necessarily notice that you breed 60 winners every year—that small winner in America or Spain—but if you breed a group winner at Doncaster or York, that’s what’s noticed, and long may it last.”

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The Cream of Ireland on Offer in Doncaster

A different venue is not the only deviation from the norm as the Goffs Orby Sale takes centre stage in the European yearling sales calendar at Doncaster this week. On the last three occasions she has been represented in this sale Galileo (Ire) has been the sire of the star offering out of stellar producer Green Room (Theatrical), but on this occasion it will be Gilltown Stud’s Sea The Stars (Ire) who has the honour of aiming to continue the mare’s spectacular sales results. As usual consigned by Ballylinch Stud on behalf of breeders Vimal and Gillian Khosla, the bay filly (lot 176) has a lot to live up to as the mare’s progeny have yielded just shy of €9 million in the ring at Goffs over the years as well as, more importantly, excelling on the racecourse. While the pedigree needs little introduction some new names have added even further depth to the page this year. Military Style (War Front), a son of this filly’s half-sister Together Forever (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), won the G3 JRA Tyros S. at Leopardstown in August while another half-sister Do You Love Me (Ire ) (Galileo {Ire}), herself a €3.2-million purchase at this sale two years ago, obtained some valuable black-type when third in a listed race at Newmarket. While the mating with Sea The Stars is a slight deviation, there is a successful precedent with Green Room’s daughter by the same sire Signe (Ire) fetching €1.1 million at this sale in 2014, so overall the case for more of the same seems fairly airtight.

Of course the sale is not at all about just one or even a handful of horses. Last year’s edition unearthed this year’s G1 Keeneland Phoenix S. winner Lucky Vega (Ire), a €175,000 purchase by BBA Ireland for Yulong Investments as well as that horse’s Group 2- winning stablemate Cadillac (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}), a bargain at €40,000. There is equal strength in depth throughout this year’s catalogue and Henry Beeby’s usual optimism and infectious enthusiasm show no signs of abating despite these trying times.

“As usual we have had great support from vendors and we’ve assembled another strong Orby catalogue as a result,” Beeby said. “Just as much work has gone into creating an environment that will allow as many potential purchasers from around the world get involved with the sale and while we were unable to have as much person-to-person contact with owners, trainers and agents as we would normally have had, our phones have been working non-stop and we have been direct mailing people. Thankfully we’ve had a lot of interest from all over the world and while it will manifest itself in a lot less people being at the sale we are confident that between our online bidding and through the use of agents on the ground people will have no trouble buying horses. The online platform is very customer- friendly and it has been used successfully now at several sales here at Goffs UK. We have also organised for videographers to go to as many farms as possible so there are up-to-date videos of most lots available as well as having videographers on site at the sales complex. It’s a case of being adaptable and finding a way through this.”

Beeby continued, “Of course we will be doing our very best to achieve the maximum price for each lot but the metric we will look at most will be the clearance rate and to provide as vibrant a marketplace as is possible at the moment. The top of the market has held up well at Arqana and Keeneland so we are hoping we can replicate that kind of activity. We are fortunate to have a sales complex that rivals anywhere and we have added even more facilities to cater for people. Also Irish Thoroughbred Marketing are treating this as an Irish sale so will be providing support to buyers coming from Ireland, which is another great help. Doncaster is also a very accessible place within England between the motorway network and the train line from London so that is in our favour too. So between the strength of the catalogue we’ve assembled and the record of Orby graduates on the track this year and in the past we are as confident as we can be in this ever-evolving situation that things will go well. There will be no lack of effort from everyone involved so please god we can get a reasonable result.”

Galileo has been prolific at the top end of this sale, siring the highest-priced yearling the last two years and indeed the top two last year headed by the €3-million filly out of Green Room now named Espania (Ire) who is in training with Aidan O’Brien. When crossed with sprinting mares Galileo has produced some top-class horses, notably Cape Blanco (Ire) and Churchill (Ire) to name just two and buyers will have that in mind when inspecting lot 122, one of eight by the sire in the catalogue. The Castlebridge-consigned filly is grey like her very fast dam Easton Angel (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) who won two listed races over the minimum trip for trainer Mike Dodds before being sold for 500,000gns in 2017.

Luke Barry offers a Galileo half-sister to G1 Irish Derby winner Trading Leather (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}) through his Manister House Stud as lot 311, while Baroda Stud’s lot 305 is out of Australian Group 1 winner Nechita (Aus) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}). Having topped one yearling session already this season Baroda has a strong hand to repeat that feat and their draft, which is the second-largest numerically, also features a colt by Kingman (GB) out of the German champion 2-year-old Monami (Ger) (Sholokhov {Ire}). Lot 291 has added appeal as a half-brother to this year’s G1 Preis de Diana winner Miss Yoda (Ger) (Sea The Stars {Ire}). Another Baroda yearling with a close Classic connection is lot 211, a Dark Angel (Ire) colt out of G1 Irish 1000 Guineas winner Jet Setting (Ire) (Fast Company {Ire}) while few boast a better page than Baroda’s lot 458. This colt by Frankel (GB) is a half-brother to six-time Group 1 winner Moonlight Cloud (GB) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) and his third dam is Doff The Derby (Master Derby), dam of the mighty Generous (Ire) et al.

At the time of writing Dubawi (Ire) was sitting at the top of the table of the leading European stallions of 2020 based on worldwide earnings and Darley’s flagship stallion is represented by just the one offering in the Orby Sale, lot 17 from Kirsten Rausing’s Staffordstown Stud. The February-born colt is out of All At Sea (GB) (Sea The Stars {Ire}), a winner of three stakes races in France and a daughter of champion Albanova (GB) (Alzao). All At Sea’s first produce, a 3-year-old filly called A La Voile (GB), has proved quite progressive for Sir Michael Stoute this year winning her only three starts and is now rated 88 with the promise of more to come.

Whether a homebred or a pinhook, stock from Timmy Hyde’s Camas Park Stud demand the utmost attention and hopes will surely be high for lot 102, a colt by Gleneagles (Ire). The son of Daneleta (Ire) (Danehill) is closely related to Group 1 winners Intense Focus and Skitter Scatter (Scat Daddy) and his foal price tag of €155,000, when purchased from breeders Airlie Stud at Goffs last year, suggests he looks the part too. Camas Park also offers a full-brother to last year’s champion European sprinter Ten Sovereigns (Ire) as lot 388. The No Nay Never colt’s two older full-sisters have made €600,000 and 320,000gns, respectively, the last two years so his credentials are obvious.

Last year’s G1 Prix de Diane Longines winner Channel (Ire) (Nathaniel {Ire}) slipped through the net at this sale three years ago when sold to Meridian International for just €18,000 but one imagines a bit more attention will be paid to lot 253. This Sea The Stars (Ire) filly, offered by The Castlebridge Consignment on behalf of Pat O’Kelly’s revered Kilcarn Stud, is a half-sister to Channel and comes from a fantastic fillies family with her granddam being the G1 Cheveley Park S. winner Magical Romance (Ire) (Barathea {Ire}).

Lot 114 from Michael O’Flynn’s Rockfield Farm is one that’s certainly bred for speed. The No Nay Never filly is out of Double Fantasy (Ger) (Indian Ridge {Ire}), who has already bred two stakes winning fillies including the Fozzy Stack trained Piece Of Paradise (Ire) (Holy Roman Emperor {Ire}). This April-born filly’s year-older full-brother brought 320,000gns as a yearling last year and although unraced so far for Roger Varian and Sheikh Mohammed Obaid, his name Jet Engine (Ire) suggests he is showing some pace at home.

Another speedily bred filly with high residual value is lot 223 from Yeomanstown Stud. The Dark Angel filly is a full-sister to the classy and durable 15-time winner Sovereign Debt (Ire) and a half to another stakes winner in Puff (Ire) (Camacho {GB}) while her 3-year-old full-sister Darkest (Ire) broke her maiden at Limerick recently.

The Bolger family have been quite fortunate with updates this year and lot 180 from Clare Manning’s Boherguy Stud got a timely boost when his half-brother Mac Swiney (Ire) (New Approach {Ire}) won the G2 Futurity S. at The Curragh. The Vocalised yearling colt is closely related to high-class Bolger performers Light Heavy (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}) and Parish Hall (Ire) and buyers should be reminded that Bolger sold this year’s G3 Acomb S. winner Gear Up (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}) at this sale last year for €52,000 to Mark Johnston.

International buyers are vital to the success of this sale and one that could appeal to various overseas markets is lot 259, a colt by Caravaggio from the Castlebridge Consignment. The colt is a half-brother to both Royal Ascot winner Beauty Flame (Ire), (Footstepsinthesand {GB}) who went on to have a successful career in Hong Kong, and Roca Roja (Ire) (Strategic Prince {GB}), who also parlayed her smart Irish form to be a successful stakes winner in America. Another half-sister Roca Roma (Ire) (Australia {GB}) is a 97-rated 3-year-old filly that looks potentially stakes class for Ger Lyons.

With such quality packed into the two days there are dozens more yearlings that will no doubt command a premium while Jessica Harrington’s Cadillac (Ire) proves that there will be plenty of horsepower to be found at all levels of spending.

The sale will begin at 10 a.m. each morning.

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