Global Group Of Trainers, Jockeys Reflect On The Pandemic

Racing has been fortunate to forge ahead in 2020 without crowds, but it is imperative that they return as soon as possible. That was one of the overriding themes of the third panel of the virtual International Conference of Horseracing Authorities released on Monday and entitled “Participating and working in racing during a global pandemic.” Moderator Rishi Persad spoke with trainers Charlie Appleby, Chris Waller and Ger Lyons as well as jockeys Hollie Doyle and Zac Purton about the experience of being a racing professional in 2020.

“When the country was in lockdown we’d probably be what you termed the lucky ones, because we were out carrying on as normal,” Lyons recalled of the early days of the pandemic. “You could feel it in the staff that they knew they were doing a normal day’s work while everyone else was in lockdown, so that actually became a positive. The initial fear was that we weren’t going to get back racing, but they worked wonders and got us back racing relatively early. I think they did a great job and rescued a season that looked like it was in turmoil.

Appleby described reacting to the crisis while part of his team was in Dubai.

“The situation arrived in the spring when we were in Dubai so we were just at that crossover point with the horses and our staff shipping back,” he explained. “We already had the majority of the team back in the UK and a small team still in Dubai to look after those horses that were due to participate on Dubai World Cup night. So it was making sure first and foremost that they were alright and comfortable with what they were doing.

“Similar to what Ger mentioned, we’re lucky with the industry we’re in that we’re outdoors. So that was a plus, but you still have to address it in the correct manner with the staff and make sure they’re comfortable in coming to work and also that their families are comfortable with them doing that as well.”

Waller described the experience of going racing in Australia without crowds.

“It was quite surreal, but it was good because everyone was watching racing,” he said. “We were lucky in Australia, we were the first sport up and running; we didn’t stop. Australia was locked down and for at least two months there was no sport whatsoever. So racing stood tall and for all the right reasons it was seen to be a responsible sport. Through that we got a lot of good recognition. We saw that responsibility and carried it through.”

Waller was quick to praise his country’s governing bodies, particularly those in New South Wales.

“It’s all about good administration, not just in dealing with global pandemics but in racing in general,” he said. “That’s where the world needs to come together and see the countries that are doing well and the ones that are struggling and figure out why. We’re all beneficiaries of those good administrators and it’s sad to see some countries lagging behind.”

Waller said Australia’s experience dealing with a shutdown of racing in 2008 due to the equine influenza outbreak likely helped lay the foundation for the path forward this time.

“Going back in Australia to 2008 we had the equine influenza, and that did shut racing down,” he said. “I think that made the government stand up and realize how important racing is to the economy and society. We stopped racing for about three months and there was a lesson there to make sure we support racing. I think just as much as having good administrators it is about having a good relationship with the government.”

Another district that has continued to race throughout the pandemic is Hong Kong. Leading local rider Zac Purton described how international punters latched onto the product.

“One of the byproducts of the commingling that the Jockey Club has brought in here in the last few seasons has been that when other countries were not able to go ahead with their sports and different products, they were all of a sudden locked into what we were doing here in Hong Kong and commingling went through the roof,” he said. “We benefitted quite a lot from it. Our prizemoney remained the same and it’s actually gone up this year.”

Doyle and Lyons have each experienced major career milestones this summer at spectator-less meetings, and they reflected on those experiences. Doyle, who has ridden her first Royal Ascot winner and group-race winner this year, noted that the quiet has been good for some horses but a hindrance to others.

“At Ascot, for example, I had a 2-year-old running that I thought, ‘this will be ideal with no crowd. He’s a bit hot-headed, this should suit him.’ And it did,” she said. “But on the other hand I had an old handicapper running and he’s like the yard hack at home, you wouldn’t even think he’s a racehorse. But he comes alive at the races with the crowd and atmosphere. I rode him at Ascot and he was just like the old hack at home; he never came alive. So I think it affects horses in different ways.”

Lyons won his first Classic in June with Siskin (First Defense) in the G1 Irish 2000 Guineas and his second with Even So (Ire) (Camelot {GB}) the next month in the G1 Irish Oaks.

“It’s just typical me to win the two Classics in a year where there’s no crowds and prizemoney is cut,” he said.

“First and foremost, racing is about the owners in my opinion and you need owners,” Lyons added. “Myself or Chris or Charlie as trainers will handle no crowds and it’s possible we can actually do our work better on a raceday with no crowds. But we’ll all agree that racing won’t survive without crowds and we need people to come racing. You need an atmosphere and we need crowds back for the whole game to survive.”

Appleby added, “The word Ger used there that summed it all up was atmosphere. If you’re lucky enough to have a winner, as much as you get the satisfaction of winning the event, you get an immense sense of achievement when people are applauding yourself, the horse, the jockey, the owner. That’s very missed on those big occasions. We’re racing, which is the main thing, but in a sporting industry crowds are very important.”

One of the rules imposed on jockeys by the British Horseracing Authority from racing’s resumption in June was that jockeys would be permitted to ride at just one meeting per day. That became an industry talking point over the summer with many riders touting the benefits-both for career advancement and mental health. Doyle reflected on the rule, saying, “I think it swings both ways. For me now I have a retainer so it’s a bit complicated. For example, if he has a runner somewhere and Archie [Watson], who is also my boss, has a runner somewhere else, it is a bit annoying that I can’t ride for both, but I think from a mental health side of things it’s a lot nicer on everyone. I’ve picked up better spare rides on Saturdays, for instance, because the top blokes can’t do two meetings.

“What I think would be great [in the future] is if they had a cap on how many double meetings you could do a week. Maybe you could do double meetings twice a week, and that would be great because it’s not completely stopping you from doing your job but it’s giving you that little bit of freedom.”

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Glen Shiel Targets Champions Sprint

Group winner Glen Shiel (GB) (Pivotal {GB}) will resurface in the G1 QIPCO British Champions Sprint S. on British Champions Day Oct. 17. A good second in the G1 Betfair Sprint Cup S. at Haydock on Saturday, the chestnut won the Aug. 9 G3 Rathasker Stud Phoenix Sprint S. for trainer Archie Watson and Hambleton Racing.

“He was a very shrewd buy at £45,000 and took another step forward at Haydock, showing he can compete against the best in Group 1 races,” said Watson. “Champions Day at Ascot will be next with him and we’ll hold no fears whatever the ground is.”

Glen Shiel’s jockey Hollie Doyle was similarly bullish on her mount’s chances, “Glen Shiel ran his heart out in the Sprint Cup and thrived on the slow ground. It’s great that Hambleton Racing have found a horse like this to take them to the big meetings. After his performance on Saturday, I’m looking forward to Champions Day even more now.”

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The Weekly Wrap: What Hollie Did Next

It has been both a good week and a bad week for women in British racing. Hollie Doyle has already featured in this column on several occasions this season but when her achievements make the evening news bulletin on BBC Radio 4, then it’s worth revisiting the subject of this fast-rising jockey.

When lockdown started, and racecourses in Europe were shuttered for at least two months, it was Doyle’s partner Tom Marquand who grabbed the headlines with his Group 1-winning rides in Australia. Marquand is still 10 wins ahead of Doyle in the abridged Flat jockeys’ championship which started in June, and they are both some way adrift of leader Oisin Murphy, but within a top-five pack which also includes William Buick and Ben Curtis. However, Doyle wasn’t idle while Marquand was wintering in Australia, and she had already notched a decent tally before racing was called off. She now only needs another fives wins to record her second consecutive century in a calendar year.

Judging by Saturday’s performance, she could easily do that in one day. Jockeys are currently restricted to riding at just one meeting per day—a COVID-inspired rule which some hope will remain in place—but Doyle has been making the most of her full books of rides. On Saturday, she set a new record for a female jockey in Britain when winning five of Windsor’s nine races, including the two stakes races on the card. Especially pleasing for Doyle was doubtless the fact that she bagged a second Group 3 win aboard Extra Elusive (GB) (Mastercraftsman {Ire}) for Imad Al Sagar, with whom she recently signed a retainership. It is said that the Lord rested on the Sabbath, but that wasn’t the case for Doyle, who followed up her five-timer 24 hours later with a hat-trick at Yarmouth.

It is fully understandable that female jockeys wish to be referred to simply as jockeys, and there should of course be no distinction between the two sexes. That ridiculous old argument of women not being strong enough has thankfully been consigned to the dustbin by a string of eminently capable riders.

But it is a sad fact that Doyle is the only female in the top 50 in the British jockeys’ table. Nicola Currie, Josephine Gordon and Hayley Turner all make it into the top 70, and at a certain stage in recent years, each was very much flavour of the month. It should also be said that the problem of dwindling rides is not one faced solely by women—plenty of young male apprentices have struggled to make that leap into riding as a professional.

The fact that women represent only nine per cent of the top 100 jockeys riding in Britain and 13 per cent in Ireland shows that there is still much room for improvement and encouragement. Thankfully for those following behind her, Hollie Doyle isn’t just politely knocking on the door, she’s charging through it with a battering ram.

Trouble At The Jockey Club
From the statements issued over the weekend by the Jockey Club and its erstwhile group chief executive Delia Bushell, who resigned her post on Sunday, it is hard to ascertain which is the aggrieved party in what is undoubtedly a sorry tale for racing, whatever the truth may be. Indeed, for the second time in 24 hours, a racing-related story was reported in the wider media, though for a far more negative reason.

Bushell’s resignation came after an independent barrister appointed by the Jockey Club apparently upheld allegations made against her by a colleague of bullying, racist remarks and the sharing of offensive material. A sub-committee of three of the Jockey Club board members, referred to as stewards, determined that the review’s findings should result in disciplinary action against Bushell, including for gross misconduct.

In effect, she has jumped before she was pushed, but Bushell is clearly not prepared to go gently into what would certainly be a very dark night for her future career if the allegations against her remain unchallenged. Instead, she issued a stinging resignation letter which included counter-bullying claims against the Jockey Club as well as referring to the barrister in question ignoring “evidence of collusion by a number of male witnesses, all senior executives in the Jockey Club, both ahead of the filing of the grievance and during the investigation process itself.”

Bushell, a former managing director of BT Sport who also held several senior roles with the broadcaster Sky, became the first female head of the Jockey Club in September 2019 and acknowledged the potential difficulties faced by racing.

“The years to come will be critical for the sport, as we embrace the opportunities and challenges of innovating for fans and racegoers, appealing to new and more diverse audiences, broadening revenue streams, and driving inward investment,” she said at the time of her appointment.

Nobody could have foreseen the even greater challenges posed by a global pandemic, or indeed that turmoil within British racing’s most prestigious organisation, which oversees 15 racecourses and the National Stud, would lead to such a premature and controversial departure. In its former role as racing’s rulemaker, the Jockey Club, established in 1750, did not allow women to hold training licences until 1966 or to ride against men in races until the 1970s, a situation admittedly not out of keeping with the more general societal attitudes of that time.

It is concerning however to note in Bushell’s resignation letter her comment regarding her former employer as a “male-dominated organisation that has a troubling history of ignoring serious complaints against senior men and which seeks to discredit and ostracise anyone challenging its status quo.”

It seems likely that when more details of this story eventually come to light, it will be in a court of law. Hopefully we might also find out how the details of this matter, which really should have been confidential between employer and employee, have come into the public domain.

Cox Provides First For Many
Ballylinch Stud gave an important helping hand to Lope De Vega (Ire) in his first season with runners when his son Belardo (Ire), who was bred by the stud, became his sire’s first Group 1 winner in the Darley Dewhurst S. of 2014.

Belardo, who raced initially for Prince Faisal, was bought by Godolphin while he was still in training and is now at Kildangan Stud with his own first runners in action. But it is Ballylinch which is once again playing a part in the success of a young stallion, with Belardo’s first group winner, Isabella Giles (Ire), having been bred at the stud from the G3 Laundry Cottage Stud Firth of Clyde S. winner Majestic Dubawi (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}). The 12-year-old mare was bought by Ballylinch Stud from Rabbah Bloodstock for €260,000 at Goffs in 2015.

Isabella Giles was also continuing a great season for the juveniles representing Clive Cox’s stable. A week earlier, the trainer had sent out Cobh (Ire) to win the listed Stonehenge S. and become the first stakes winner for Belardo’s fellow freshman sire Kodi Bear (Ire), who was also trained by Cox. This followed the G2 Richmond S. victory of Supremacy (Ire), who was in turn the first group winner for this year’s leading first-season sire Mehmas (Ire).

Cox has also won this season’s G2 Coventry S. with Nando Parrado (GB) (Kodiac {GB}), who was sent off at what now seems an extraordinary price of 150/1 and subsequently finished runner-up to Campanelle (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) in the G1 Darley Prix Morny.

Important Test For Yearling Market
Today (Tuesday) sees the start of the European yearling sales season, a little over two weeks late, and in Doncaster rather than Deauville. A congested autumn calendar has become even more condensed than usual owing to the reshuffling necessary to facilitate the ever-changing coronavirus quarantine restrictions.

Despite great flexibility shown by sales houses and vendors, it remains impossible for buyers and/or agents to get to all the sales in the coming weeks even with most of the Irish sales having been moved to the UK. People returning to Britain following Arqana’s postponed Select Sale (Aug. 9 to 11) are still required to undergo 14 days of isolation.

What has become evident following the latest round of horses-in-training action at Tattersalls last week is that buyers are increasingly willing to bid online—though it is certainly less unsatisfactory to do this for horses with racing form rather than young, untested yearlings. At the Tattersalls August Sale, 60% of all lots offered received bids via the internet bidding platform: 79 horses were sold this way, amounting to 1.6 million gns of the sale’s total turnover of 8.43 million gns. The underbidders on a further 93 horses in the sale were also online rather than at the sale in person.

The other more notable factor of the last two sales at Tattersalls in July and August has been the remarkably high clearance rate of above 90% for each. This can be construed as both good and bad news. On the one hand, demand remains strong for horses trained in this region. On the other, a high number of the better horses offered in these catalogues were sold to race on abroad, primarily in the Middle East, on top of a fairly steady flow of privately purchased horses throughout the season. This is nothing new, but it certainly feels like it is happening more than ever, particularly when prize-money has plummeted further still in Britain since the resumption of racing after lockdown. Simply, for many owners of British-trained horses rated in the 70 to 100 bracket, the rewards are far greater if you sell rather than continue to race, even successfully.

It’s no secret that yearling vendors are approaching the coming weeks with trepidation, a situation exacerbated by rumours of a potential reduction in spending by the Maktoum family. It is also fairly likely that we haven’t seen the worst of the repercussions for racing from the desperate and ongoing scenario that is COVID-19. Over the next few weeks a picture will begin to be painted which may not be finished until this time next year.

But, as we have seen in the past, the bloodstock business remains a remarkably resilient industry. The breeze-up and horses-in-training sales of this year have so far held up better than most people expected, though there has of course been a downturn from what has been a fairly buoyant market since bouncing back from the global financial crisis of 2007-2008. Let’s hope that the yearling sales can follow suit.

 

 

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Hollie Doyle In Windsor Five-Timer

Hollie Doyle recorded a 899-1 five-timer at Windsor on Saturday, in the process becoming the first female rider to win five races on a card in the UK.

Doyle has enjoyed a landmark campaign, earning a first win at Royal Ascot in June before taking her first group race with Dame Malliot (GB) (Champs Elysees {GB}) in the G2 Princess of Wales’s S. in July and gaining a riding contract with Imad Al Sagar. It was for that boss that she won the card’s featured G3 Winter Hill S. aboard Extra Elusive (GB) (Mastercraftsman {Ire}). She also took the other stake on the card, the Listed August S., aboard Aziz Kheir’s Le Don De Vie (GB) (Leroidesanimaux {Brz}).

“When I woke up this morning I thought it could go one way or the other. I could have a good day or a really bad day,” Doyle told Sky Sports Racing. “The last few years have been awesome, but you’ve got to keep on improving and pushing more and more. I like riding under pressure, I feel with the better rides I get I like it more. I love riding horses, you’ve got to to do this job.”

Extra Elusive’s trainer Roger Charlton said, “I’m really pleased for him and for Hollie, it was a great ride. It wouldn’t be his choice of ground or his choice of track, but he did it well and I would say it’s the best performance he’s put up. Hollie is remarkable–he’s not an easy horse, he’s quite keen but she had him very settled there. The biggest work is carrying the saddle out for her, I think there must have been three stones of lead in there.”

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