Delmotte On The Trail Of Classic Glory

Every owner starting out in racing will have big dreams. That said, when José Delmotte first took a share in a racehorse more than 25 years ago, he may not have allowed his mind to wander as far as one day being the breeder of Europe's champion 2-year-old. 

But that is where the Frenchman now finds himself. That one share led to a horse in training, followed by a few more, then some broodmares, the purchase of a farm in France's Orne region, and now that famous graduate of his Haras d'Haspel: Native Trail (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}).

Godolphin's unbeaten Cartier Champion Two-Year-Old Colt of 2021 bears a British suffix as his dam Needleleaf (GB) (Observatory) was in the country to foal ahead of her 2019 visit to Kingman (GB). That latter mating made a lot of sense as the unraced Needleleaf, bought by Delmotte on the advice of his friend and bloodstock advisor Marc-Antoine Berghgracht, is a Juddmonte-bred full-sister to two Group winners, African Rose (GB) and Helleborine (GB). The latter had already produced an early star for Kingman in the young Coolmore sire Calyx (GB). 

In fact both sisters are black-type producers as the G1 Haydock Sprint Cup winner African Rose is the dam of Fair Eva (GB), a first-crop stakes winner for Frankel (GB) when landing the G3 Princess Margaret Juddmonte S. on her second start. In hindsight, signing for the 2-year-old Needleleaf for 60,000gns in December 2015 now looks like an excellent bit of business.

“I like buying from Juddmonte. They are the best breeders in the world in my opinion and since I have been working with Marc-Antoine, that is for the past six years, we have always looked at their draft,” Delmotte told TDN during Arqana's Breeding Stock Sale in Deauville in December. 

Arqana was also the scene for another of the breeder's highly memorable moments of 2021 back in August when Native Trail's Kingman half-sister sold through the Haras d'Haspel draft for €950,000. It will come as no surprise that the buyer was Godolphin's agent Anthony Stroud, who earlier in the year had signed for Native Trail at the Tattersalls Craven Breeze-up for 210,000gns. It was the colt's third sale of his short lifetime, with Delmotte having sold him as a foal to Sam Sangster for €50,000, who then reoffered him as a Book 1 yearling for 67,000gns at October Book 1, where he was bought by Mags O'Toole and Norman Williamson to go breezing.

Needleleaf's first two living offspring have clearly been given a collective thumbs-up from a range of experienced horse folk and she has swiftly risen to become the star of Haras d'Haspel's band of 50 mares.

Delmotte recalled his first encounter with the mare in Newmarket. He said, “There was this unraced 2-year-old filly, a sister to two Group winners which had been retained by Juddmonte to breed from. So it seemed logical for them to sell [Needleleaf] as she wasn't as talented as her sisters and they already had several mares from the same family. I bought her because of her Group-winning relatives and also because of her sire [Observatory]. I liked the fact that his bloodlines were quite different from those you normally find in Europe, so I thought she would be easy to mate.”

He added, “We had some misfortune with her as her first foal, who was a magnificent Siyouni (Fr) filly, died a few months after birth. But the following foal was Native Trail and he has secured his place in the history books, which is amazing.”

Despite that early setback, Needleleaf's broodmare career has been relatively plain sailing since then. It didn't take long for Native Trail to start dropping massive hints as to his ability. Two months after the breeze-up sale, he won on debut at Sandown and followed up a month later with victory in the G2 Superlative S. at Newmarket's July Course. With his sister then signed up to the Godolphin team from the August Sale, he went on to enhance both their pedigrees further still, with back-to-back Group 1 wins in the Goffs Vincent O'Brien National S. at the Curragh followed by the Darley Dewhurst S., earning himself a closing mark for his 2-year-old season of 122. The winter favourite for the 2000 Guineas is safely tucked up at Charlie Appleby's Godolphin base at Moulton Paddocks, where his breeder paid him a visit during the December Sales.

“I would like to take this opportunity to thank Godolphin as they bought his sister from me and welcomed us, with Marc-Antoine and a few friends, to their private training centre in Newmarket and we were treated like royalty,” said Delmotte. “We were allowed to see and hold Native Trail and we had a very open, no-filter discussion with Charlie Appleby about his future plans. It was great, they were so kind to us.”

With Frankel having already worked well with her family, Needleleaf is currently in foal to his young son Cracksman (GB) and she has a yearling filly by Siyouni. Now nine, the mare is one of around 15 that Delmotte will send from France to either Britain or Ireland this covering season, and in Needleleaf's case it will be to Newmarket for a date with Dubawi (Ire).

“I had to! It is not our usual strategy but I had to give her an exceptional mating,” said Delmotte. “We continue to upgrade our broodmare band but I don't want to go crazy. I don't want to spend €500-600,000 on a broodmare. I try to invest in good families and then work very hard on matings. I prefer to use proven sires, that is why I sent Needleleaf to Oasis Dream. I like him and find that he suits a lot of European bloodlines. I try to remain sensible.”

The 300-hectare Haras d'Haspel, based in good breeding country between Haras du Logis and Haras de Montaigu, was also associated with some Classic names during 2021. Berghgracht's MAB Agency signed for a filly foal by The Wow Signal (Ire) for €24,000 from the 2018 Arqana Breeding Stock Sale and, reoffered the following August, she was sold by Haras d'Haspel for €40,000 to Jean-Claude Rouget, for whose stable she won last year's G1 Poule d'Essai des Pouliches.

Furthermore, the Dalakhani (Ire) mare Biancarosa (Ire) is a boarder at Haspel for Teruya Yoshida, owner/breeder of Tokyo Gold (Fr) (Kendargent {FR}), who was born and raised at the farm and won the G2 Derby Italiano in 2021 for Chantilly-based trainer Satoshi Kobayashi. Delmotte also enjoyed a homebred stakes winner of his own in the Fabrice Chappet-trained Bel Aristo (Fr) (New Approach {Ire}), a progressive stayer whom he races in partnership with Antoine Gilibert. Meanwhile on the National Hunt side, the unbeaten Jonbon (Fr) (Walk In The Park {Ire}), a full-brother to Douvan (Fr) who set a new record price for a point-to-pointer when sold for £570,000 at Goffs UK in 2020, was born and raised at the stud for breeder Lotfi Kohli.

“I have always loved horses. My business is in property development and one of my agents had racehorses. I bought a share with him some 25 years ago and ending up owning the horse outright,” Delmotte recalled.

“That's how I started. I had racehorses, then kept a few broodmares and bought a property to keep the horses. My daughter and her husband were involved in dressage, she was working in a company but wasn't very happy there and what she really loved was horses, so I bought her a farm.”

What started out as a family passion has resulted in one of the most exciting horses in training in Europe, and though Native Trail has already achieved plenty, naturally his breeder's thoughts have now turned to the Classic season ahead.

He added, “His trainer told us he that is a very laidback horse, and I think he can be a very, very good 3-year-old. If you look at his last race, he just kept lengthening his stride to the finish line. He was truly awesome in the final furlong. It is a dream for me. I am pinching myself.”

The post Delmotte On The Trail Of Classic Glory appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Haspel On Trail Of Success

DEAUVILLE, France–There were tears of delight from breeder Jose Delmotte and his friend and agent Marc-Antoine Berghgracht following the sale of Delmotte's Kingman (GB) filly (lot 62) for a session-leading €950,000 on Saturday evening at Arqana.

From the Juddmonte family of young sire Calyx (GB), the filly's dam Needleleaf (GB) (Observatory {GB}) was bought as an unraced 2-year-old from the Juddmonte draft at Tattersalls December Sale by Berghgracht six years ago for 60,000gns. The sister to Group 1-winning sprinter African Rose (GB) has already hit the big time with her second foal, Native Trail (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}), who provided a welcome update to an already strong catalogue page last month by winning the G2 Superlative S. for Godolphin. It was that same outfit that came calling for the statuesque yearling, whose breeding so closely resembles that of G2 Coventry S. winner Calyx, who is by the same sire and is out of another full-sister to Needleleaf, the Group 3 winner Helleborine (GB).

Delmotte, who owns Haras d'Haspel in Normandy and offered just one yearling during the select part of the August Sale, said, “It's a great sale. I heard all the wonderful compliments people were paying her, that she was exceptional, fabulous.”

He added, “Marc-Antoine has always tried to push me in the right direction to try and improve the quality of our mares. And whoever you speak to in the world of bloodstock, they always tell you that the model breeding operation is Juddmonte. So whenever we are at a sale [in Newmarket] we always look to see what they have that corresponds to our needs that might be somewhere near our budget.”

Delmotte sold Native Trail as a foal at the Arqana December Sale for €50,000 and he eventually found his way into Charlie Appleby's stable after being offered as a breezer by Norman Williamson of Oak Tree Farm at the Craven Sale in April.

The breeder continued, “With her brother he was already very big, which is why we sold him as a foal because we were worried that later on he would be the size of a hunter. Of course he ended up eventually being bought by Godolphin and that has worked out very well. It's a wonderful story and it is a story of friendship with Marc-Antoine.”

The agent himself was at first too overcome to speak, but after hugging Delmotte, he added, “It's very emotional because in this profession you have to be able to take the rough with the smooth and Jose has known plenty of setbacks. But now he has this wonderful mare producing these excellent horses, and he also has the sister of St Mark's Basilica (Fr) on his farm as well.”

Berghgracht continued, “It's all about teamwork and he and the team at Haras d'Haspel really deserve this. You never know with horses. He had a filly by Siyouni who knocked herself in her box on Thursday and had to be withdrawn. It can happen at any time. Now he is in the fortunate position of having this wonderful mare who is from a great operation and who is still young. Who knows where she could lead?”

The pandemic-affected 2020 sales season meant that there was no Arqana August Sale last year, but comparing Saturday's figures to those recorded at the same session in 2019 saw a slight rise in the clearance rate to 72% for 57 sold from 79 offered. The average and median were both down, if such a comparison is a fair one, to €202,930 (-29%) and €170,000 (-23%).

Monceaux's Early Splash

An early echo of last year's €2.5 million sale-topper was provided when lot 17 was knocked down at €750,000 an hour into the Arqana August Yearling Sale.

Vendor, buyer and sire were all repeated when Oliver St Lawrence and Fawzi Nass plumped for a Dubawi (Ire) yearling sold by Ecurie des Monceaux. This one was a colt, however, and the dark bay is the second foal of the LNJ Foxwoods homebred G3 Prix Minerve winner Golden Valentine (Fr) (Dalakhani {Ire}), herself out of a half-sister to the Wertheimer brothers' celebrated Goldikova (Ire).

“This lovely Dubawi colt caught our eye at an early stage and the owner was keen to buy him,” said St Lawrence, who confirmed that he will race for the Saudi-based KHK Racing, which part-owns last year's sale-topper, a half-sister to Arc winner Sottsass (Fr) who has been named Pure Dignity (GB).

“He will be trained in the UK,” the agent added.

Bred in partnership by Monceaux and LNJ Foxwoods, the colt is a grandson of the G3 Prix Cleopatre winner Gold Round (Ire), who was bought from the Wertheimer draft carrying Golden Valentine in the same ring in 2012 for €520,000 by Alex Solis. Golden Valentine's first foal is a Galileo (Ire) colt named Shadowfax (GB) who sold for €450,000 at last year's Select Sale and is now in training with John and Thady Gosden in Newmarket under the ownership of Qatar Racing and LNJ Foxwoods.

St Lawrence had his bidding boots on early and also claimed the first Roaring Lion yearling to pass through the ring in Europe for €140,000. Lot 4 was offered by Haras d'Etreham and is out of the Pivotal (GB) mare Every Time (GB) from the immediate family of G1 Moyglare Stud S winner Cursory Glance (Distorted Humour) and Digital Age (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), a Grade I winner on the American turf for Chad Brown.

Ecurie des Monceaux, which ended the session as leading vendor by aggregate with 15 sold for €3,357,000, was also responsible for the third-top lot of the session, a filly by the late champion sire Galileo (Ire) out of the listed-placed Johannesburg mare Militante (Ire).

“They've stopped making Galileos and he has been such a world-changing sire,” lamented David Redvers after signing for the chestnut half-sister to the G3 Prix de Lieurey winner Wind Chimes (GB) (Mastercraftsman {Ire}) at €600,000.

He added of lot 56, who was bought for Qatar Racing, “She is strong and correct–everything we want in a filly to add to our broodmare band–and I thought she was good value at that price. She has come off the best farm in France and she will remain in France to be trained.”

From Trotting To Galloping

Florent Fonteyne of Trotting Bloodstock had a productive five minutes when buying consecutive lots from the Haras de Colleville draft for €220,000 and €380,000. The fillies are both daughters of the young Colleville resident and leading sophomore sire Galiway (GB), with the latter, lot 31, being a full-sister to the G1 Prix Jean-Luc Lagaradere winner and this season's G1 Prix du Jockey Club runner-up Sealiway (Fr).

“We were very keen to buy from France's leading breeder Guy Pariente and it is possible he may keep a share in the fillies,” said the young agent, who noted that he was acting on behalf of owners Thomas Lines and Ronan Kerdraon, who race as SARL Groupe KR and have 12 horses in training. The partnership began its involvement in Thoroughbred racing just two years ago, having had a previous involvement in trotting.

He added, “The clients have sent mares to Galiway and are fans of the stallion.”

Sealiway's sister has already been named Seagala (Fr) by her breeder and she is a daughter of the listed Prix Herod winner Kensea (Fr), who is by Galiway's stud-mate Kendargent (Fr).

She followed into the ring a filly bred on exactly the same Galiway-Kendargent cross who is also a sister to group winner and out of a group-winning mare. In the case of lot 30, she is a sibling to another smart juvenile in Kenway (Fr), winner of the G3 Prix La Rochette, and a daughter of the G3 Prix Eclipse winner Kendam (Fr), who was also third in the G1 Prix de la Foret. If a formula works, why not repeat it?

Trio For Godolphin

Anthony Stroud and David Loder, in Deauville on behalf of Sheikh Mohammed and in the company of trainer Charlie Appleby, were the leading buyers in the name of Godolphin with three yearlings bought for €1,500,000. The majority of that tally was accounted for by the day's top lot, but they also signed for lot 68, a Lope De Vega colt bred and consigned by Ballylinch Stud.

The chestnut, bought for €350,000, is the first foal of Normandel (Fr) (Le Havre {Ire}), who won a listed race in the colours of her breeder Gerard Augustin-Normand when trained by Pia Brandt and later won the G3 Park Express S. for Ballylinch and Jim Bolger.

Normandel is a full-sister to La Pyle (Fr), whose son Pyledriver (GB) (Harbour Watch {GB}) won this season's G1 Coronation Cup, and a half-sibling to Augustin-Normand's G1 Grand Prix de Paris winner Mont Ormel (Fr) (Air Chief Marshal {Ire}).

The colt was one of two by Lope De Vega bought by Godolphin on Saturday, along with lot 10, another first foal, this one out of dual winner Front Contender (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}) and bought for €200,000 from La Motteraye Consignment.

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