Audarya Enhances Fanshawe’s Broad Portfolio

Last Saturday at Keeneland was a banner day for the European Breeders’ Cup raiders, who won all four of the races on turf. While Aidan O’Brien, who trained the first three home in the Breeders’ Cup Mile, has enjoyed his fair share of success at the meeting over the years, there was first-time victories for Dermot Weld, James Fanshawe and Kevin Ryan.

Fanshawe’s Pegasus Stables welcomed home Alison Swinburn’s Filly & Mare Turf winner Audarya (Fr) (Wootton Bassett {GB}) on Thursday and, while she will soon be off on her winter holiday, she will return to training next year following a season which also included victory in the G1 Prix Jean Romanet in August.

“She got back safely and she’s been out in the playpen,” reported Fanshawe from quarantine in Newmarket on Friday. “She will be turned out on Monday at Fittocks Stud with The Tin Man.”

The trip to Kentucky was the first experience of the Breeders’ Cup for Fanshawe and his wife Jacko, whose wild cheering as Audarya hit the front in the home stretch were captured on television and splashed across social media.

“I could have killed the cameraman who caught us during the last few furlongs but I do think it shows just what it means to us,” he said. “The way Audarya stuck her head down and was so tenacious, she wanted to win. I’ve never had so many texts, emails and letters after a race. It has been really great and I’m very grateful for that because this year, with Covid, everything has been very different. But at the Breeders’ Cup, with Kevin [Ryan] winning the Sprint, and maybe because of the circumstances of the lockdown and lots of people watching on TV, they really got behind us. The whole week there was real camaraderie among the Europeans. We were all away from home together and we won four of the turf races. It was brilliant.”

The Breeders’ Cup victory was a major addition to a tally of big-race wins of significant breadth. While some trainers can easily be categorised, it would be hard to put Fanshawe in a pigeonhole, except to say that a hallmark of his fine record, both on the Flat and over jumps, is a commodity that is all too rare in today’s racing world: patience.

From Group 1-winning sprinters Frizzante (GB) (Efisio {GB}), Society Rock (Ire) (Rock Of Gibraltar {Ire}) and The Tin Man (GB) (Equiano {Fr}) to crack miler Soviet Song (Ire) (Marju {Ire}), top-class stayers Invermark (GB) (Machiavellian) and Arctic Owl (GB) (Most Welcome {GB}) and two Champion hurdlers in Royal Gait (GB) (Gunner B {GB}) and Hors La Loi (Fr) (Cyborg {FR}), Fanshawe has masterminded the careers of horses across all distances and codes. He has had a decent share of smart fillies among them. Indeed, when Audarya leapt from winning a Newcastle handicap to landing the Jean Romanet at Deauville, it was the third time in seven years that the Group 1 contest had fallen to a horse from his stable. Elite Racing Club’s Ribbons (GB) (Manduro {Ger}) got the ball rolling in 2014, followed two years later by Meon Valley Stud’s Speedy Boarding (GB) (Shamardal).

“In the past when we’ve had a good filly, I’ve always tried to get the first race of the season right, or go somewhere not too ambitious to start with,” Fanshawe said.

“I’d be lying if I said at the beginning of the season that I thought this would be where we’d end up. But we started Soviet Song in the same Kempton listed race as Audarya, the Snowdrop Stakes, and Soviet Song was second and then she ended up winning three Group 1 races that year. So that’s always been a race that I like to start the season with for an older filly, but it was a very hot race this year, won by Nazeef (GB).”

He continued, “Because it was a late start to the season everyone was short of somewhere to have their first run and it was quite close to Ascot. Audarya was eighth, she got no run but ran a very good race, much better than the final result suggested.

“She was showing me all the signs at home but I never asked her too many questions because I’m trying to keep her relaxed all the time, rather than finding out how good she is. We knew she was good, and she has told us exactly how good in the end. It has been a gradual progression.”

Few horses experience completely unhindered progression, however, and following the Snowdrop, a sixth-place finish in a listed contest at Pontefract required a step back out of stakes company as Fanshawe and his team regrouped.

“I don’t know what happened at Pontefract but it rained and the race got away from her, she just never got into it and it was just a disaster,” the trainer recalled.

“We felt we just needed to get her back on track and forget about any group or listed races. She was rated 99 and there was an attractive race at Newcastle. We wanted to get her back up to a mile and a quarter on a nice galloping track. After she won that the only two next potential group races were the Atalanta S., which was back to a mile again, or the Jean Romanet, which was a mile and a quarter and for 4-year-olds and upwards. They were both on the same day so we went to France.”

In hindsight, there were plenty of Breeders’ Cup clues on offer from Audarya’s second French trip this year when she was third in the G1 Prix de l’Opera, won by subsequent Longines Breeders’ Cup Turf winner Tarnawa (Ire) (Shamardal). Clearly, Fanshawe is no stranger to travelling with his horses, and beyond Europe he has had success in Canada with EP Taylor S. winner Wandering Star (Red Ransom) and Canadian International runner-up Dandino (GB) (Dansili {GB}), while he has also had two fifth-place finishers in the Melbourne Cup. Even so, he still called upon his former boss Sir Michael Stoute before his trip to Keeneland.

He said, “I went to see Michael just for a refresher and to go over the preparations and what he thought was best, just in case I hadn’t thought of anything.”

The two drawbacks to an otherwise successful venture were Alison Swinburn being unable to travel to America and Ioritz Menidazabal, who rode Audarya to victory at Deauville, testing positive for Covid prior to the meeting and thus being forced to hand the reins to ‘super-sub’ Pierre-Charles Boudot.

“Alison has two in training here and is involved in most of our Fred Archer syndicate horses. She’s been a great supporter,” Fanshawe said of the daughter of former trainer and successful owner-breeder Peter Harris. “Her father is still extremely enthusiastic and they were watching the race together. I spoke to Ioritz afterwards and he said he felt fine even though he had tested positive. It’s a terrible shame but it’s great news that Audarya is coming back into training next year. She has improved all year this year and she has plenty of scope, so it’s really good that Alison has decided to keep her in training.”

The year has also marked a changing of the guard at Pegasus Stables. Fanshawe’s former assistant trainer Kevin Philippart de Foy has left after a four-year stint to start his own training operation on the opposite side of Newmarket, leaving that role open for Fanshawe’s son Tom, who returned from Australia earlier this year, where his experience included a stint working for Newmarket ex-pat Matt Cumani.

“Kevin was obviously a big help and now he’s setting up on his own,” said Fanshawe. “Tom has been involved here since he was a teenager really but he’s recently spent two years in Australia and it’s done him the world of good. He’s very keen to learn and he’s working really hard.

“But we have a really good team, with the head lads Andy Hopkins and Alex Cairns, and Janet Anderson, who runs everything. Daniel Muscutt was really helpful to Audarya in her early days, he got her racing properly. Geoffroy de la Sayette rides her every day and he went out to Kentucky with her, so it really is a big team effort.”

He added, “We haven’t got the biggest string in the town but hopefully when we get a good one we can make sure they fulfil their potential.”

It’s a fact with which anyone who has been following the versatile Fanshawe stable over the last 30 years will certainly agree.

The post Audarya Enhances Fanshawe’s Broad Portfolio appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Arqana Autumn Begins With Yearlings

Arqana’s four-day Autumn Sale begins on Saturday with a single session of flat-bred yearlings, with 220 set to be offered after scratches. Following a dark day on Sunday, the sale will pick up on Monday and continue through Wednesday with horses in training, stores and National Hunt-bred yearlings. The single-session National Hunt Breeding Stock Sale will take place immediately following the Autumn Sale on Nov. 19, comprising the jumping stock that was set for the December Breeding Stock Sale.

With France in the midst of its second national lockdown due to the coronavirus, it is remarkable that the sale is happening at all, but Arqana officials have worked with government in recent weeks to agree on protocols including restricting the sale to those attending in a professional capacity and staging the sale in its outdoor main yard walking ring rather than in the indoor pavilion.

Highlights of the yearling catalogue on paper include lot 4, a Dabirsim (Fr) half-sister to Group 3-winning juvenile Evasive’s First (Fr) (Evasive {Fr}); lot 25, a Myboycharlie (Ire) filly from the great family of Miesque and Karakontie (Jpn); lot 33, a colt from the first crop of Recorder (GB) who is a half-brother to stakes winner Mister Hughie (Elusive City); lot 42, a Dream Ahead filly out of stakes winner Chasing Stars (GB) (Observatory) from the family of the excellent producer Modena; a pair of colts out of half-sisters to Classic winner Brametot (GB) (151, by Shalaa {Ire} and lot 156, by Ultra {Ire}); lot 176, an Iffraaj (GB) filly out of multiple stakes winner Persona Grata (GB) (Sir Percy {GB}); and lot 212, an Anodin (Ire) filly out of a half-sister to stakes winners Silver Pond (Fr) (Act One {GB}) and Silver Point (Fr) (Commands {Aus}).

The Aga Khan and Wertheimer et Frere are among the breeders that bring quality drafts to Deauville, and representatives of those include the 97-rated 3-year-old Irshad (Fr) (Raven’s Pass) (lot 393); 3-year-old Vardani (Fr) (Charm Spirit {Ire}), the winner of two of his three starts (lot 394); 4-year-old Flambeur (Mizzen Mast), a stakes winner last year who took his most recent start (lot 427); and 3-year-old Healer (Fr) (Medicean {GB}), a winner on debut and runner-up in a Clairefontaine Class 2 race (lot 428).

Many leading trainers also field drafts, like Andre Fabre with the 102-rated ParisLongchamp stakes winner Arapaho (Fr) (Lope De Vega {Ire}) (lot 418) and the listed-winning the Group 3-placed Measure Of Time (Ire) (Gleneagles {Ire}), rated 103 (lot 419).

There are many quality National Hunt offerings and wildcards also on offer. The full catalogue is available here.

The post Arqana Autumn Begins With Yearlings appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Stunning Sky a Worthy Favorite in Mrs. Revere

Stunning Sky (Declaration of War) managed to snap a seven-length losing streak with a tough-as-nails victory in Keeneland’s GIII Pin Oak Valley View S. when last seen Oct. 16 and figures a strong chance to take her current winning skein to two in Saturday’s GII Mrs. Revere S. at Churchill.

Haltered for $50,000 by this outstanding claiming outfit out of a second-out victory in the Gulfstream slop last December, Stunning Sky added a first-level allowance over the turf before her dry spell. The bay turned in some strong efforts in defeat during that stretch, including runner-up finishes in the GII Lake Placid S. and Saratoga Oaks ahead of a fourth in what has become a productive renewal of the Dueling Grounds Oaks Sept. 10. Trapped out three deep the trip in the Valley View, Stunning Sky nevertheless kept on gamely and grabbed perfect-trip Princess Grace (Karakontie {Jpn}) on the line despite covering 42 feet (about 4 1/4 lengths) more than the runner-up, according to Trakus.

Princess Grace was having just her third career start in the Valley View and looked well on her way to victory at the eighth pole, only to hang the last little bit. She can improve for that experience and will have her fair share of admirers.

How Ironic (Tonalist) was the winner of an Ellis Park allowance Aug. 7 ahead of an even seventh in the Dueling Grounds Oaks. She and Stunning Sky effectively raced as a team in the Valley View, though she lacked the same finishing kick and checked in third, beaten a length, while covering 18 fewer feet.

Hendy Woods (Uncle Mo) was runner-up to ‘TDN Rising Star’ Sharing (Speightstown) in Churchill’s GIII Edgewood S. on the GI Kentucky Oaks undercard Sept. 4 and exits a sixth in the GI QE II Challenge Cup, won by Harvey’s Lil Goil (American Pharoah), who returned to be a bang-up third in the GI Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Turf last weekend. Easy ground would enhance her chances.

The post Stunning Sky a Worthy Favorite in Mrs. Revere appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Japan: Trio Of Grade 1 Winners Line Up For Sunday’s Queen Elizabeth II Cup

This week's top racing action moves from Tokyo to western Japan and the Sunday, Nov. 15 Queen Elizabeth II Cup.

Unlike other years, the Yodo fall tradition will be held, not at Kyoto Racecourse, but at Hanshin, due to the massive renovation under way at the former. It's not the first time the all-female Grade 1 will be held at Hanshin. Hanshin hosted the 2,200-meter turf competition back in 1979, the year the current Kyoto grandstand was built.

This year marks the 45th running of the Queen Elizabeth II Cup. The race, which used to serve as the final leg of the filly triple crown, was opened to older females in 1996, and since then, first prize has gone to a 3-year-old only eight times. This year, 19 fillies and mares aged 3 to 5 have been nominated to fill the race's 18 berths.

There are three Grade 1 winners in the mix – last year's champion Lucky Lilac, 2019 Japanese Oaks winner Loves Only You and the 2019 Victoria Mile victor Normcore. Youth figures strongly in this year's field. Six youngsters are set to go up against the formidable older ladies, and though none of the 3-year-olds are Grade 1 winners, participating will be this year's Yushun Himba (Japanese Oaks) runner-up Win Marilyn and third-place finisher Win Mighty, as well as the third-place finisher in the Shuka Sho, Soft Fruit.

The difference in venues, however, will make study of past results largely moot. The courses are similarly shaped and at both the race starts far to the right of the grandstand. Races are also run to the right at both Kyoto and Hanshin (the inner and outer course, respectively), but there are marked differences in their respective 2,200-meter courses.

At Hanshin, the distance to the first turn is more than half a furlong longer than at Kyoto, allowing for more room to maneuver from the break. And, the track is downhill, resulting in faster first lap times. At Kyoto there is a significant backstretch upgrade, which causes speed to pick up as the track drops turning out of the backstretch and disadvantage horses on the outside around the turn and into the straight.

Additionally, at Hanshin, there is a slight hill just before the finish line that starts 200 meters out and rises two meters over about 150 meters.

Also, rather than a brilliant final burst of speed, the Hanshin 2,200 (its most notable race being the Grade 1 Takarazuka Kinen) tends more to favor horses who can run at a good steady speed over a long distance. But the homestretch is shorter than Kyoto's and adds to the fun.

Here's a look at some standouts:

Lucky Lilac – A big chestnut like her sire Orfevre, Lucky Lilac is expected to be the favorite Sunday. Highly consistent, the 5-year-old mare suffered her only finish out of Top 3 since spring 2019 in this year's Takarazuka Kinen. She had won the Grade 1 Osaka Hai over the Hanshin 2,000 meters before that and last out, in the Grade 2 Sapporo Kinen, she finished third after racing in second position and leaving herself open to studied attack. Lucky Lilac was runnerup in the last year's Hong Kong Vase and, amid all-female competition, will be a hard one to beat. The relatively long time between races, however, is a concern. “She went to the farm after her last race and was back at Ritto on Oct. 9,” says trainer and former jockey Mikio Matsunaga, “but she didn't quite meet expectations in her work Nov. 4, though still moved well. She has come along well though and this time, I think it'll be ideal if she can hold back and race from midfield like she did last year.”

Loves Only You – The 4-year-old Loves Only You, by Deep Impact, finished third here last year and had preceded that six months earlier with a win of the Japanese Oaks. This year, she was already in Dubai when racing was cancelled and started the year with the Grade 1 Victoria Mile and a seventh-place result. Though she won a 1-win class race over the distance, the mile has never been her best. The Victoria Mile was followed with a second in the Grade 3 Naruo Kinen at Hanshin, after which she returned a full 12 kg heavier nearly four months later to take on her first heavy track, resulting in a fifth-place finish in the Oct. 17 Grade 2 Fuchu Himba Stakes. Improvement is expected. Trainer Yoshito Yahagi is on a roll this year and looking to scoop his fifth Grade 1 win of 2020.

Normcore – The Harbinger-sired 5-year-old Normcore beat the boys and topped the field in the Sapporo Kinen last start and put 2 1/2 lengths between her and Lucky Lilac in doing so. Though most of her recent outings have been over the mile, including a 4th-place finish in this year's Yasuda Kinen only 0.1 seconds behind Almond Eye and her record win of the Victoria Mile in 2018, Normcore has scored two of her career six wins over 10 furlongs. She was fifth here in 2018. As a half-sister to Chrono Genesis (runnerup in this year's Osaka Hai and winner of the Takarazuka Kinen), Normcore should find the 2,200 meters within her grasp. Trainer Kiyoshi Hagiwara plans to ship his mare in from the east early. “I want to make the trip to Hanshin on Thursday or Friday. I really want her to land another Grade 1.” The 52-year-old Norihiro Yokoyama is expected to be in the saddle and is gunning for his first win of the race since 1990, a feat that would set a JRA record for a jockey's longest span between wins of the same Grade 1.

Salacia – Another 5-year-old and daughter of Deep Impact, Salacia won her first graded-stakes race with victory in the Grade 2 Fuchu Himba Stakes. Her third bid at the Grade 1 level, Salacia finished a close sixth here last year, only 0.4 seconds behind Lucky Lilac. Her four wins from 18 starts have come at 1,600-1,800 meters and she is 4-4-3-6-9 in contests 2,000 meters and up. However, the switch to Hanshin, with its shorter homestretch will be a plus for Salacia. On the other hand, a strike against her is that she has never win amid a big field. Excluding her debut win, her other three wins have come in fields numbering 10, 12 and 8. And, in her five starts with 17 or more in the lineup, she has never fared better than fourth place.

Win Marilyn – A 3-year-old by Screen Hero, Win Marilyn returned after a five-month layoff following her second in the Japanese Oaks to disappoint with a 15th place in the Shuka Sho on Oct. 18. Her three wins from four starts before the Oaks were all over 2,000 meters, and considering that it was her first time to ship west, that she was up 12 kg, and the fact that she'll carry 2 kg less than the mares and be well prepped to run, Win Marilyn is not one to overlook.

Others to watch are: The 3-year-old Soft Fruit was third in the Shuka Sho after pre-race tensions, a slow break, and having to cover extra ground going into the stretch. She finished only 0.3 seconds behind Daring Tact, who clinched the filly triple crown. A better trip could stand her well. Fourth here last year, Centelleo won her first graded-stakes race and her second race over the distance last out in the Grade 2 Sankei Sho All Comers at Nakayama 2,200-meter in a field that included Curren Bouquetd'or, runnerup in the 2019 Japan Cup. Win Mighty is 1-3-6-9 at 2,000 meters and up and was slow out of the gate the last two starts. Her win was over the Hanshin 2,000 meter on a slightly heavy track. If she can break sharply, she may be able to improve her score.

The post Japan: Trio Of Grade 1 Winners Line Up For Sunday’s Queen Elizabeth II Cup appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights