Dark Angel’s Barefoot Angel Springs 20-1 Shock At Ayr

Richard Fahey trainee Barefoot Angel (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}–Love In The Desert {GB}, by Lemon Drop Kid) bettered an Aug. 1 debut second at Ripon with an Aug. 25 breakthrough at Carlisle and continued on the rise with an impressive tally at long odds in Saturday's G3 Virgin Bet Firth Of Clyde Fillies' S. at Ayr, her third straight start at the six-furlong trip. The 20-1 outsider was held up in rear through the initial stages of this stakes bow. Slicing through the pack to go sixth passing the quarter-mile pole, she quickened to the front with 150 yards remaining and was ridden out to prevail by a neck from Believing (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}) for a career high.

Barefoot Angel becomes the 53rd pattern-race winner for her sire (by Acclamation {GB}) and the first out of Listed Empress S. third Love In The Desert (Lemon Drop Kid), herself kin to G3 Clasico Cesar del Rio runner-up Andeluna (Mineshaft) and to the dam of six black-type performers headed by the multiple stakes-winning Roy's Revenge (Ven) (League Of Nations). Barefoot Angel's third dam Brackish (Alleged), a half-sister to GI Matron S.-winning blue hen Fall Aspen (Pretense), produced a trio of stakes winners headed by G1 Derby Italiano runner-up Merzouk (Theatrical {Ire}). Love In The Desert's fourth foal is a yearling filly by Invincible Army (Ire).

Saturday, Ayr, Britain
VIRGIN BET FIRTH OF CLYDE FILLIES' S.-G3, £40,000, Ayr, 9-17, 2yo, f, 6fT, 1:11.67, gd.
1–BAREFOOT ANGEL (IRE), 128, f, 2, by Dark Angel (Ire)
1st Dam: Love In The Desert (GB) (SP-Eng), by Lemon Drop Kid
2nd Dam: Jenny Lake, by Danzig
3rd Dam: Brackish, by Alleged
1ST BLACK-TYPE WIN; 1ST GROUP WIN. (€120,000 Ylg '21 GOFOR). O-Mrs H Steel; B-Guy O'Callaghan (IRE); T-Richard Fahey; J-Paul Mulrennan. £22,684. Lifetime Record: 3-2-1-0, $35,049. Werk Nick Rating: D+. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree, or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.
2–Believing (Ire), 128, f, 2, Mehmas (Ire)–Misfortunate (Ire), by Kodiac (GB). (70,000gns Ylg '21 TATOCT; 115,000gns 2yo '22 TATBRE). O-Highclere Thoroughbred Racing (Jane Addams); B-M Mullen & Cloneymore Farm (IRE); T-George Boughey. £8,600.
3–Queen Me (Ire), 128, f, 2, Dubawi (Ire)–Queen Kindly (GB), by Frankel (GB). O-Jaber Abdullah; B-Rabbah Bloodstock Ltd (IRE); T-Kevin Ryan. £4,304.
Margins: NK, 3/4, 1 1/4. Odds: 20.00, 12.00, 1.50.
Also Ran: Minnetonka (Ire), Secret Angel (Ire), Bonny Angel (GB), Marine Wave (Ire), Poetic Union (GB), Maria Branwell (Ire), Carmela (Ire), Lunarscape (GB), All The Time (Ire). Scratched: Immortal Beauty (Ire).

 

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The Weekly Wrap: It’s All About The Horses

Those who work in racing know all too well the endless hours devoted to getting horses ready for the racecourse, and fans of the sport were able to see that for themselves during the first National Racehorse Week in Britain. The brainchild of National Hunt trainer Richard Phillips, the inaugural week-long spotlight on the racing industry included racing stables being open to the public all over the country, starting at Epsom and Malton, and culminating in Newmarket's popular Henry Cecil Open Weekend. It can be deemed a huge success.

This past Sunday alone, 30 trainers opened their doors throughout the morning at 'HQ', with a rare chance to see behind the scenes at Godolphin's Stanley House Stables proving immensely popular and attracting around 1,200 visitors in the 90 minutes in which it was open.

I live in one of the smaller stables in Newmarket and our yard had a constant stream of visitors who clearly loved being able to see and get close to the horses in their home environment. It may be easy for those of us who work with horses on a daily basis to forget sometimes what drew us to this life in the first place. Having the chance to see our stable through the eyes of our guests on Sunday morning really made the day extra special, bringing a reminder, amid all the politics and other background noise, that really racing is only ever about the horses. 

We particularly enjoyed welcoming budding jockey Joshua Myers, who was first taken to a racecourse at the age of seven back in August 2014 on a day when our filly Indira (GB) happened to win at Ripon. Waiting near where the horses were being washed down after the race, Joshua asked if he was allowed to stroke Indira. So began his passion for the sport. 

Seven years later, Joshua has now ridden in two pony races and clearly has his heart set on a future in racing. Over the weekend he travelled to Newmarket from Yorkshire with his family and as part of his tour came to our yard to meet Indira's first foal, now a 2-year-old. 

As Joshua's younger brother got in on the photo with him and the horse, their dad said to me, “Oh no, I hope I haven't got two racing-mad sons.” I hope he has.

He's Apples

As we head into arguably the most important few weeks of the European Flat turf season, it's tight at the top of the British trainers' championship between Andrew Balding, Charlie Appleby, and John and Thady Gosden. While Aidan O'Brien has a commanding lead in Ireland, chased determinedly by his son Joseph, the excellent form of the stables of Jessica Harrington, Ger Lyons and Johnny Murtagh in particular have brought an interesting depth to the season. 

Appleby may be narrowly behind Balding at present but he is without question the trainer of the moment. Currently operating at a 41% strike-rate and having sent out Group 1 winners Hurricane Lane (Ire) (Frankel {GB}) and Native Trail (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}) the previous weekend in Britain and Ireland, not to mention a 1-2 in the G2 Park S. with Glorious Journey (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) and D'Bai (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}), his half of the Godolphin operation rolled on to North America this weekend with all guns blazing. 

All three Grade I contenders at Woodbine–Walton Street (GB) (Cape Cross {Ire}), and the 2-year-olds Wild Beauty (GB) (Frankel {GB}) and Albahr (GB) (Dubawi {Ire})–were triumphant in their assignments, notably with erstwhile Godolphin stable jockey Frankie Dettori in the saddle for all three. 

Meanwhile in New York, Yibir (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) won Belmont Park's Jockey Club Derby Invitational S. with Jamie Spencer, who flew home overnight in time to record another important victory in the team showjumping competition at Newmarket's open weekend with his talented daughter Chloe and trainer George Scott. 

That quartet of Godolphin winners and Jockey Club Oaks fourth Creative Flair (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) netted almost $1 million in prize-money for the stable which has two of the favourites for Europe's richest race, the Qatar Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, in a little under a fortnight's time.

Important Call Up For Graffard

There was major news from the French training ranks over the last week with the announcement that Francis Graffard is to succeed his former boss Alain de Royer-Dupre at the Aga Khan's Aiglemont training centre at Gouvieux at the end of 2021. Graffard will continue to operate his own significant Chantilly stable, which in recent years has been responsible for a stream of top-class horses, including the Classic winners Channel (Ire) (Nathaniel {Ire}) and In Swoop (Ire) (Adlerflug {Ger}).

The impending retirement of de Royer-Dupre will bring to a close a near-40-year tenure at Aiglemont, during which time he has overseen the careers of such champions as Dalakhani (Ire) and Zarkava (Fr). He too has run a separate public training stable from which base the famously flighty Irish Oaks winner Chicquita (Ire), champion racemare Pride (Fr), and Melbourne Cup winner Americain were trained. 

Stallions In The News

Wootton Bassett (GB) continues to play an ever more prominent role as a sire of note and with his biggest crop to date set to start appearing in paddocks around Europe from January, he is enjoying a decent season on the track, especially with his juveniles.

In recent weeks his new stakes winners have included Atomic Jones (Fr), Royal Patronage (Fr), Zellie (Fr) and Attagirl (GB), and on Thursday the Fabrice Chappet-trained Topgear (Fr) extended his unbeaten run to three when landing the G3 Prix Eclipse for owner Hisaaki Saito. A €200,000 purchase at last year's Arqana Select Sale by Sebastian Desmontils, Topgear is entered for the G1 Qatar Prix Jean-Luc Lagardere on Arc weekend.

Wootton Bassett may now have departed for Ireland, but France can still boast the services of Le Havre (Ire), who is also enjoying a good spin. His major Arc hope Wonderful Tonight (Fr) has sadly been retired through injury but Le Havre was represented by another two stakes winners on consecutive days last week when Hunscote Stud and Chris Humber's homebred Ville de Grace (GB) landed the listed John Musker Fillies' S., and Waliyak (Fr) added the G3 Prix Bertrand de Tarragon to her previous listed success for Roger Varian and Fawzi Nass. A Saxon Warrior (Jpn) half-sister to Ville De Grace is scheduled to sell at Book 1 of the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale through Stauffenberg Bloodstock as lot 385.

We can also expect to see Le Havre's daughter Beholding (GB) lining up in Pattern races before too long following her 12-length victory at Kempton on Friday. This followed on from her previous 10-length win in novice company at Lingfield. Her Siyouni yearling half-brother is also entered for Book 1 though breeder Newsells Park Stud as lot 109.

Updates Give You Wings

It is 15 years since Dark Angel (Ire) won the G2 Mill Reef S. before going on to take the G1 Middle Park S., and on Saturday his son Wings Of War (Ire) landed the first part of that double for Isa Salman Al Khalifa–also the owner of the aforementioned Beholding–and trainer Clive Cox.

Wings Of War has a strong 'O'Callaghan feel' to him, having been bred by Guy O'Callaghan of Grangemore Stud, whose parents Gay and Annette own Yeomanstown Stud where Dark Angel has stood throughout his career. Moreover the colt is the first foal of the listed-placed Futoon (Ire), a mare by Kodiac (GB), the flagship stallion of Tally-Ho Stud, owned by Guy's uncle and aunt, Tony and Anne O'Callaghan. Wings Of War is not only following the example of his own sire in winning the Mill Reef but his dam is out of a sister to Galeota (Ire) (Mujadil), who won the same race in 2004 and went on to be runner-up in the following year's G1 Golden Jubilee S.

Guy O'Callaghan is also the breeder of Dark Angel's son Birchwood (Ire), the G2 Superlative S. winner who is now a first-season sire in France. His Grangemore Stud draft for Book 2 of the October Yearling Sale includes the full-brother to Wings Of War (lot 577), who is set to sell during the opening session. An update on that colt from O'Callaghan can be found in our accompanying preview for the Tattersalls Ireland September Sale, in which he sells a draft of four yearlings over the next two days.

She Was A Star

In less than two hours on Saturday the full-siblings Foxes Tales (Ire) and Astadash (Ire), both by Zoffany (Ire), went agonisingly close to pulling off a Group 3 double in Britain and Ireland. King Power Racing's 3-year-old Foxes Tales had already landed the G3 Rose of Lancaster S. on his previous start and he was beaten just a neck by Solid Stone (Ire) (Shamardal) when backing up in the G3 Dubai Duty Free Legacy Cup at Newbury. 

For breeder Luke Barry of Manister House, arguably what happened a little later at Gowran Park was even more important when Astadash won the G3 Denny Cordell Lavarack & Lanwades Stud Fillies S. in the colours of Barry's mother Elizabeth and wife Rebecca. The 4-year-old has now been retired and will replace her mother Starfish (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) in the paddocks at the Co Limerick farm.

Replace might be too strong a word to use as the celebrated Starfish has set a very high bar for her daughter to follow. Her second foal was the dual Group 1 winner La Collina (Ire) (Strategic Prince {Ire}), and as well as Astadash and Foxes Tales, the mare also produced the listed winner and Group 2 runner-up Fox Chairman (Ire) (Kingman {GB}) and Listed winner Entsar (Ire) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}) among her nine winners from nine foals of racing age. Even those who didn't garner black type were multiple scorers, including the 11-time winner Black Night (Ire) (Excellent Art {GB}). Starfish died earlier this year at the age of 18 after foaling a Kingman filly.

“She never missed,” said Luke Barry of Starfish in Newmarket on Monday morning as he oversaw his draft for the Tattersalls Ireland September Yearling Sale.

“Saturday was very special. Astadash has been so consistent and she will come home now. It's fantastic to have a group-winning daughter of Starfish for the farm. We couldn't afford to go and buy a filly like her, and to have bred and raced her is very special.”

Starfish's offspring have been as consistently successful in the sales ring as on the racetrack, with four of her yearlings selling for in excess of 260,000gns at the October Sale. King Power Racing paid 450,000gns and 400,000gns respectively for Fox Chairman and Foxes Tales.

“She always produced very good-looking stock who came back here to Book 1 year after year,” said Barry, who also celebrated being a Royal Ascot-winning breeder this year following the victory of Foxes Tales in the Golden Gates H.

“We're very excited about him as well,” he added. “I know the team behind him have big hopes that he could make up into a Group 1 horse for next year.”

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Something For All As Tattersalls Ireland September Begins

NEWMARKET, UK–It's Fairyhouse, but not as we know it. For the second year running the Tattersalls Ireland September Yearling Sale has gone on tour to Newmarket, with just shy of 600 youngsters catalogued to sell over the next two days. 

The claim of Tattersalls Ireland's CEO Simon Kerins that the September Sale has something for everyone is fully backed up by two notable graduates of the sale on the track this year. This time last year Go Bears Go (Ire) (Kodi Bear {Ire}) was plucked from Micheal Ryan's Al Eile Stud for £50,000 by breeze-up pinhooker Robson Aguiar and he is now a Group 2 winner and Group 1-placed. Go back another two years and Johnny Murtagh picked up Sonnyboyliston (Ire) (Power {GB}) for €26,000. He may have taken a little longer to reach his peak, but the 4-year-old is now a six-time winner with the G1 Irish St Leger and famous Ebor H. to his name as well as almost £650,000 in earnings.

“We always have a mix of types at this sale–you have some 2-year-old types and later-maturing, staying types as well, so you'd like to think there is something for everyone,” says Kerins. “It has stood the test of time in terms of its graduates. There's a great mix of winners from the sale.”

The fact that Kerins is speaking at Park Paddocks rather than from Tattersalls Ireland's base at Fairyhouse may be the source of some frustration but, as with all sales through the pandemic, the number one concern is that they are able to take place at all, even if dates and locations have to be shuffled. The fate of the September Sale, at least when it came to its location, was sealed when a number of British visitors to the Tattersalls Ireland Derby Sale were told they had to remain in their hotels or return to Britain on the eve of the sale despite a Covid 'bubble' being in operation during Ireland's lockdown.

“The background to it was what happened at the Derby Sale, when we were told at the eleventh hour that the bubble for the UK buyers had ben rescinded,” says Kerins. “It wasn't long afterwards that the entries for the September Sale were closing and we made the decision to come here. We wanted to give clarity and certainty to our customers.”

He continues, “In an ideal world we wouldn't have the sale in Newmarket for the second year in a row, we've also had the breeze-up sale here twice now, but I can't see it happening ever again and the plan is certainly to go back to Ireland next year. The Somerville Sale was exceptional here recently, there was great buzz about the place, and you hope it will follow through to this sale.”

At least one consignor at Park Paddocks was certainly buzzing, even if he is based in almost the quietest area of the sales grounds in the calm at the back of Highflyer's G yard. Guy O'Callaghan, who has brought four yearlings from his Grangemore Stud to sell this week, had the joy of watching Wings Of War (Ire) win the G2 Mill Reef S. at Newbury at the weekend. The Clive Cox-trained colt, who runs in the colours of Isa Salman Al Khalifa, is the first foal of O'Callaghan's Kodiac (GB) mare Futoon (Ire) and is by his family's perennially popular stallion Dark Angel (Ire).

“It's magic,” says O'Callaghan. “It was great timing and it's a great result for everyone–for the stallion, for the mare, and great for Sheikh Isa. He's an enthusiastic and relatively new owner to the game and let's hope he turns into a brilliant horse for him. Clive is just a consistently fantastic trainer. Time and time again he comes up with a new one.”

He adds, “It's a great start for the mare and long may it continue. It's a wonderful family and every year good, hard-knocking, fast horses come out of it and he seems to be another one.”

On the timing front, the update is almost as good as it gets for the full-brother to Wings Of War, who is set to appear on the Monday of Book 2 of the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale.

“He's a big, strong, grey colt. I'd be quite hopeful that people will like him and I'm very proud of him,” says the breeder.

But for now O'Callaghan's focus is on the quartet being paraded up and down before him for a range of yearling viewers. They include a Dark Angel filly (lot 129), this time not a homebred but a 20,000gns pinhook from the December Foal Sale. Another first foal, her dam Light My Fire (Ire) (Dragon Pulse {Ire}) looks exactly the type to appeal to those with a commercial eye, being a winner twice at two herself and placed in the G3 Firth of Clyde S.

Similar comments apply to the El Kabeir filly in the draft (lot 258), whose hardy dam Rural Celebration (GB) (Pastoral Pursuits {GB}) won seven times between the ages of two and six and was runner-up in the listed Land O'Burns Fillies' S. Her daughter Country Carnival (Ire) (Mayson {GB}) was also a winner at two and was third in the listed Marygate S.

By now, Dark Angel needs no introduction to sales folk, being one of the most dependable stallions, both commercially and on the racecourse. “He's the gift that keeps on giving,” admits O'Callaghan.

Following in his wake at Yeomanstown Stud is another grey, El Kabeir, a strong son of Scat Daddy whose first 2-year-olds are beginning to make quite an impression. Two of his leading colts, the listed winner Masekela (Ire) and treble winner Harrow (Ire), hold group-race entries at Newmarket later this week.

“El Kabeir has made a wonderful start and we are so proud of him. His horses have plenty of size and scope and they have come to hand at the time of year that we were hoping they would,” O'Callaghan says.

Of his hopes for the next few days, he adds, “I think I have a lovely even draft, with the Dark Angel filly and the El Kabeir filly probably the picks of them. There's been plenty of footfall, so we're just hoping that the trade will be good and that we have four empty head-collars at the end of the sale.”

Another yearling in the sale to have benefited from a useful recent update is Ballinalard Stud's Mehmas (Ire) filly (lot 312). When the catalogue went to print, her half-brother King X J (Ire) (Cotai Glory {GB}) was still unraced but the colt, bred by Tom and Hazel Russell, has since scooped the pot of the valuable Tattersalls Ireland Super Auction Sale S. for trainer Michael O'Callaghan and owner Paul J Nolan. Worth €300,000 in total, the juvenile contest is run over six and a half furlongs on Irish Champions Weekend and is open to all graduates of the September Yearling Sale.

Part II of the sale, which with fairly precision timing is set to start at 5:53 p.m. on Wednesday, according to the Tattersalls Ireland website, features a quartet of yearlings by a stallion whose offspring are not often seen on these shores but who will be widely remembered. Kool Kompany (Ire), a flashy son of the much-missed Jeremy, won the G2 Prix Robert Papin and G2 Railway S. among his seven victories between the ages of two and five, and he eventually retired to Dehesa de Milagro in Spain, where his first crop are now 2-year-olds. Spanish-based consignor Alex Mahony of EAM Bloodstock consigns three colts and a filly by the stallion for Wednesday's sale, including a son of the G3 Prix Eclipse winner Damoiselle (Sky Classic) as lot 586. 

The Tattersalls Ireland September Yearling Sale takes place on Tuesday and Wednesday from 10 a.m.

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