This Side Up: Manners Maketh Mandaloun

How ironic, that a man with a nearly anguished instinct for self-effacement should have left so indelible an impression on our walk of life–one he strolled so quietly that he insisted on registering his silks, with The Jockey Club in Britain, simply in the name of Mr. K. Abdullah. How many others who covet the Turf’s great prizes, in contrast, elbow their way through the crowd in preening advertisement of their wealth and acuity?

If we learn much about such people from their presumption of some deeper dignity, from a status they cannot sustain even by a royal title, so we can surmise something of those human qualities–generally so inscrutable–that were extinguished with the loss of Prince Khalid this week. For he plainly considered “Mr.” an ample prompt to our general obligation of mutual civility; above all, perhaps, among those who constantly witness the egalitarianism that persists between Thoroughbreds themselves. Whatever advantages we seek in pedigree–the foundation, after all, of his entire Juddmonte empire–even the Prince will have seen the most regal foals reduced to the claiming ranks, or denied the throne by blue-collar upstarts.

Admittedly the courteous lineaments of his public appearances so confined his inner nature that we should perhaps hesitate before discovering some third dimension barely exposed even to those in our community who spent years in his service. For their tributes have been in much the same register as those made from a more superficial vantage. Even from the outside, any of us might ascribe to him attributes of ‘the perfect gentleman’. First and foremost, precisely that freedom from self-importance; but also his distaste for the kind of hiring and firing that we see in the Turf’s coarser patrons.

So perhaps we actually knew him better than we realized. Certainly his striking fidelities suggest an unshakable respect for those qualities that abide within those who might not appear, to more fickle judgements, in a deserving state of grace. He was just about the last man standing when Sir Henry Cecil paid with the contempt of fashion for a human brittleness in the face of adversity. And while Bobby Frankel never lost professional esteem in the same way, you suspect that few who share the Prince’s antecedents would have become quite so devoted to a cantankerous Jewish gambler from Brooklyn.

The Prince with Sir Henry Cecil in 2011 | Racing Post

The sheer breadth of humanity encompassed by those two trainers, their wildly divergent personalities united by a slender strand of genius, attested to a tolerance and empathy in the Prince that would serve us all well, not least in these rancorous times. A tragic destiny, of course, reserved for Frankel and Cecil a cruel extra bond, in their premature loss to cancer. But a happier clause in the unforgiving terms of fate was the arrival of a champion, named in memory of one, to redeem the darkest hour of the other.

Arguably the Prince surrendered something even of Juddmonte’s defining achievement to the needs of his suffering trainer. Even with his own time probably short, he delayed Frankel’s retirement as the apogee of his breeding program so that Cecil would retain a spur to his fortitude every time he went out onto the gallops. And the Prince also indulged the rather parochial priorities that somewhat hampered Cecil even in his pomp, never mind at a time when personal travel had become impractical.

The Prince must surely have asked himself, as did some of us mere bystanders, what capacities remained unexplored in Frankel as Cecil kept him, almost to the end, in the same domestic pool of outclassed milers. Constantly compared with specters of the past, Frankel was never given the chance to measure himself even against his contemporaries overseas. The Prince had a mansion just beside the Bois de Boulogne, and first became enchanted by the Turf when taken by friends to Longchamp in 1956. And he adored the Breeders’ Cup. Hopefully his enjoyment of Frankel’s wonderful start at stud was not too poignantly tempered by the reflection that the speed-carrying capacity he imparts to his stock really should have been examined either in the Arc or at the Breeders’ Cup.

A trifling quibble, by now, in a legacy that has long been secure–and will long continue to evolve. Indeed, just as Juddmonte once gave a cherished friend a critical transfusion of vitality, perhaps those grieving the Prince now will themselves find some timely succour from its bloodlines.

Mandaloun | Coady

Because none of us, surely, will be able to resist a frisson that some benign force may assist the Juddmonte colt who finds himself, on this of all weekends, dipping a toe into the Triple Crown water in the GIII Lecomte S.

The Kentucky Derby was one of the few great ambitions to elude the Prince, albeit he managed two seconds (Aptitude and Empire Maker) from only five starters. Mandaloun is by the same extraordinary sire that has just settled any doubt as to his competence to stretch his trademark speed, with the improvement in his mares, to the demands of the Derby.

The upgrading of Into Mischief‘s books was aptly measured when the Prince favored him with a visit from Mandaloun’s dam, Empire Maker’s daughter Brooch, a Group 2 and 3 winner in Ireland. Judicious introduction of external blood has been key to the constant invigoration of the Prince’s families. In this case, however, the first three dams are all by homebred stallions: Empire Maker, Dansili (GB) and Distant View. But the fourth dam is Queen of Song (His Majesty), a sister to Cormorant added to the expanding Juddmonte band for $700,000 at the 1989 Keeneland November Sale.

Brad Cox also saddles an exciting sophomore filly for Juddmonte in the Silverbulletday S. Already No. 2 in colleague Bill Finley’s TDN Oaks Top 10, Sun Path is by another commercial stallion in Munnings. In her case, however, her first three dams are all by other outside sires: Tapit, Nureyev and Nijinsky. The third is champion Chris Evert’s daughter Nijinsky Star, acquired (from the Carl Rosen dispersal) in the same ring as Queen of Song, and for the same price, two years previously.

Whereas Queen Of Song had won 14 of 58 starts for Parrish Hill Farm, Nijinsky Star appeared a very different proposition: in fact, she had a tube exiting a lung, draining fluid from a bout of pleurisy in her younger days. But that did not put off the Prince and his team, and his investment paid off with Nijinsky Star’s emergence as foundation mare. Two daughters by Nureyev did especially well: Viviana produced multiple Grade I winners Sightseek (Distant View) and Tates Creek (Rahy), while Willstar gave us not only Group 1 winner Etoile Montante (Miswaki) but Touch the Star, who has already produced Bonny South by Tapit to win the GII Fair Grounds Oaks last year; and now Sun Path.

Sun Path | Hodges Photography

So both these Classic prospects exemplify the Prince’s patient refinement of families, an artistry and precision spanning three decades. Though their breeder actually started out by breaking the European record for a yearling almost immediately–giving 264,000gns for a Grundy colt at the 1978 Houghton Sale, ultimately to little avail–he showed great discrimination in his choice of talent, both human and equine, once deciding to build up his own program. It might seem easy for a member of the Saudi royal family to buy the right quality, but it’s worth recording that wealthy rivals spent even more on 37 other mares at the sale where the Prince bought Nijinsky Star. Needless to say, few proved anything like as good an investment.

In recent times the Prince had become frail, rather than just elegantly slender, and was rarely seen even as his last champion Enable (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}) prolonged her exuberant reign. But he had already long guaranteed a vibrant legacy to generations of horsemen to come.

For whenever they pore over pedigrees–renewing the perennial puzzle of what works and why–they will find themselves clinging gratefully to the footholds chiselled by this dignified, recessive figure. He will loom over the 21st Century breed much as Federico Tesio or the 17th Earl of Derby did before, paradoxically dragged by his own, understated passion into the applause of posterity from the anonymity he cherished.

Frankel | Juddmonte photo

Tesio’s exotic personality and beliefs were vividly chronicled, both by his own pen and others; while Derby’s public career in wartime gave him much wider profile. But this temperate Prince we respected, as much as anything, for the respect he exuded: whether in his personal bearing, or in the things he did (or, more importantly, the things he didn’t do) with the horses and horsemen in his service. In the old axiom, ‘manners maketh man’.

Sometimes a man becomes most truly distinguished by camouflage. I love to think of the young Prince, not yet 20, at Longchamp in 1956. People must have looked straight through him then, immaculately dapper though he surely must have been, unwitting of the transformational ambitions stirring in this captivated young Arab. That must have suited him just fine. But however little we really knew ‘the Prince’, and whatever complicated shades of humanity remained ever beyond our reach, we bid farewell to ‘Mr. Abdullah’ with much respect. And we will all duly celebrate success for Mandaloun, or Sun Path, simply as an immediate assurance that his bequest to the breed, whatever happens to Juddmonte now, will outlive us all.

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Juddmonte and Cox Unleash Another Rising Star in NOLA

Prate (Into Mischief) was quoted at 6-1 on the morning-line ahead of this debut, but was hammered down to even-money favoritism by post time and ran to the money with a ‘TDN Rising Star’-worthy graduation. Away alertly from the nine-hole, the Juddmonte homebred saved ground in a joint third, keeping a close eye on the leaders through a swift first quarter in :21.26. Tipped out two wide as the half went in :44.92, the gray split foes exiting the bend and charged clear with powerful strides in mid-stretch to win as he pleased by 4 1/2 lengths. The final time for the six-furlong event of 1:09.81 was faster than both of the juvenile stakes run at the same distance earlier in the card. The Sugar Bowl S. for colts went in 1:10.12 and the Letellier Memorial S. for fillies was completed in 1:10.17. Juddmonte and trainer Brad Cox were also represented by a juvenile ‘TDN Rising Star’ in NOLA Friday when homebred filly Sun Path (Munnings) scored an impressive victory in a two-turn allowance.

The winner is the first foal out of Vaunting, a third-generation Juddmonte homebred and a full-sister to GSW Bragging. The 7-year-old mare has since produced the yearling filly Visualize (Into Mischief) and a weanling filly by Kantharos. She was bred back to Twirling Candy.

12th-Fair Grounds, $50,000, Msw, 12-19, 2yo, 6f, 1:09.81, ft,
4 1/4 lengths.
PRATE c, 2, by Into Mischief
                1st Dam: Vaunting, by Exchange Rate
                2nd Dam: Boasting, by Kris S.
                3rd Dam: Proud Fact, by Known Fact
Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $30,000. O-Juddmonte Farms, Inc.; B-Juddmonte Farms Inc (KY); T-Brad H. Cox. Click for the Equibase.com chart, the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree or the VIDEO, sponsored by Fasig-Tipton.

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Friday’s Insights: Promising Munnings Filly Takes on Winners at Fair Grounds

8th-Fair Grounds, $48k, Alw, N2L, 2yo, f, 1m70yds, post time: 5:23 p.m. ET

Juddmonte homebred SUN PATH (Munnings) stretches to two turns and takes on winners for the first time for Brad Cox following a good-looking, maiden breaker at second asking going seven furlongs at Churchill Downs Nov. 8.

The 2-year-old is a full-sister to the Cox-trained Bonny South, heroine of this year’s GII Twinspires.com Fair Grounds Oaks and runner-up in the GI Alabama S.

Her dam is a half to French Group 1 winner Etoile Montante (Miswaki), who is responsible for MGSW Starformer (Dynaformer).

TJCIS PPs

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Steady Trade As October Sale Opens

LEXINGTON, KY – The Fasig-Tipton Kentucky October Yearlings Sale opened Monday in Lexington with a day of steady trade and a pair of youngsters by Into Mischief leading the way.

“It was a solid start,” Fasig-Tipton President Boyd Browning said Monday evening. “There was solid trade with plenty of activity. There were no dramatic surprises. Certainly lots of horses got traded and there was a legitimate, reasonable marketplace.”

During Monday’s opening session of the October sale, 248 yearlings sold for $8,393,800. The average of $33,846 dipped 14.6% from the 2019 opening session, while the median held steady at $15,000. With 71 horses reported not sold, the buy-back rate was 22.3%. It was 29.3% a year ago.

“The average was down slightly today compared to the overall sale last year, however the median was up and there was a very respectable RNA rate today of 22%, compared to 29% the first day last year,” Browning said. “We hope those same factors continue for the next three days.”

The 2019 October sale cumulative average was $37,955 and the cumulative median was $13,000.

Into Mischief continued to be in demand in the sales ring this fall, with a filly by the Spendthrift stallion topping Monday’s action when selling for $300,000 to Willis Horton Racing.

Juddmonte Farm purchased the day’s second highest offering when going to $260,000 for an Into Mischief colt. The two yearlings were among six to sell for $200,000 or over during the session. Eleven reached that mark at last year’s opener.

With economic and pandemic uncertainties looming across the globe, Archie St. George admitted he had kept expectations for his St. George Sales consignment in check, but he felt the market was weathering the storm.

“It seems solid,” St. George said. “We put good horses through the ring and we’ve sold them at all levels. It’s like everywhere, for a nice horse, there is money. Just because of everything that’s going on, I came in with low expectations. So certainly the Maclean’s Music exceeded our expectations. But we just tried to be as realistic as we could. The name of the game is selling horses, so we seemed to be doing that today. And it seemed to hold solid.”

St. George Sales sent the third highest-priced offering of the day through the ring, with a colt by Maclean’s Music bringing a final bid of $240,000 from bloodstock agent Mike Ryan.

The October sale continues through Thursday with sessions beginning daily at 10 a.m.

Into Mischief Filly for Horton

Willis Horton added a filly by Into Mischief to his racing stable when Case Clay signed the ticket at $300,000 to secure hip 202 on behalf of the owner who campaigned champion Will Take Charge. Bred by Allen Poindexter, the filly is out of Kid Majic (Lemon Drop Kid) and is a full-sister to Canadian champion Miss Mischief and a half to stakes-placed Mind Out (Tapit), who sold for $850,000 at the 2018 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga sale. Kid Majic is also the dam of Rosemonde (Indian Charlie), who produced multiple Grade I placed Rowayton (Into Mischief). The yearling was consigned by Wynnstay Sales.

“She is a lovely filly and from good breeders,” Clay said of the filly’s appeal. “She has a good walk and a good physical. The whole Horton family has a real love and a passion for racing. So they saw her and they liked her and they took a swing at her.”

While the plan is to race the filly, Clay said the Horton family is also thinking long-term with the yearling.

“They were thinking of her potential as a broodmare,” Clay confirmed. “They will give her a try at the racetrack and, even if things don’t go well there, she has great blood and a great family. So it’s a long-term play for racing and then breeding.”

Allen Poindexter purchased Kid Majic as a 2-year-old as part of a racing partnership in 2006.

“I always want more,” Poindexter said with a laugh when asked about the result. “She had a tremendous pedigree and was a very nice filly. I really wouldn’t have been too sad if she hadn’t sold and I would have kept her myself. But hopefully we will have a bunch more out of that mare and I’ll get to keep one eventually. I really didn’t want to sell her, but in this day and time, we have to sell horses.”

The 16-year-old Kid Majic and her 8-year-old daughter Rosemonde were both bred to Tapit this spring.

Poindexter enjoyed another strong result at Fasig-Tipton this year with the $500,000 sale of a colt by Giant’s Causeway at the Selected Yearlings Showcase in September.

Juddmonte Gets Into Mischief

Khalid Abdullah’s Juddmonte Farm got involved in the Into Mischief mania when manager Garrett O’Rourke went to $260,0000 to acquire a colt (hip 24) by the Spendthrift stallion early in Monday’s first session of the Fasig-Tipton October sale. The yearling is out of Golden Cropper (Aus) (More Than Ready), a half-sister to ‘TDN Rising Star’ Rubick (Aus) (Encosta de Lago {Aus}), a multiple group winner and successful young sire at Coolmore Australia. Her third dam, Shantha’s Choice (Aus) (Canny Lad {Aus}), produced Redoute’s Choice (Aus) (Danehill).

The yearling was bred by Greg Goodman’s Mt. Brilliant Farm, which purchased Golden Cropper for A$650,000 at the 2016 Magic Millions National Broodmare Sale. He RNA’d for $375,000 at last month’s Keeneland September Yearling Sale and was consigned Monday by Lane’s End.

“We saw him in September and really liked him, as did a lot of other people,” O’Rourke said. “He just had an issue or two and they dropped the reserve for this sale and we decided to take a chance. He’s a lovely colt; looks fast. He has a stallion’s pedigree and just has a lot of upside. We hope he runs to his pedigree and to his looks. Obviously we have had success with Into Mischief, as many other people have as well. You don’t go buy anything blind, but sometimes you have faith in what the stallion gives you and we think Into Mischief has earned that kind of faith.”

Juddmonte has campaigned three Into Mischief ‘TDN Rising Stars’ to date, including the ill-fated two-time stakes winner Taraz, SW & GSP Honest Mischief–a son of Juddmonte standout Honest Lady–and Mandaloun, who earned his ‘Rising Star’ at first asking at Keeneland Oct. 24.

Maclean’s Music Colt Pays for St. George

Archie St. George’s Brookstone Farm pinhooking partnership purchased a colt by Maclean’s Music for $80,000 at last year’s Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale. With the sire’s status on the rise thanks to the Grade I exploits of speedy juvenile Jackie’s Warrior (Maclean’s Music), the yearling (hip 342) was well-received in the Fasig-Tipton sales ring Monday, ultimately selling for $240,000 to bloodstock agent Mike Ryan.

“We bought him in November as a weanling and we aimed him for this sale,” St. George said. “The sire has really done well with Jackie’s Warrior and the family makes sense with Complexity in the second dam. I’d like to thank Mike Ryan and wish Chad Brown and his team the best of luck with him. Hopefully, most importantly, we see him down the road running in big races.”

Hip 342 is the first foal out of Microburst (Awesome Again), a half-sister to Grade I winner Complexity (Maclean’s Music) and to graded winner Valadorna (Curlin), who was second in the 2016 GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies. He was bred by Susan Moulton, who purchased Microburst with this foal in utero for $275,000 at the 2018 Keeneland November sale.

Microburst has a weanling colt by Super Saver and was bred back to Vino Rosso.

Tacher Stays Busy at Fasig

Puerto Rican owner Marc Tacher, who is represented by runners across the U.S., purchased four yearlings during Monday’s first session of the October sale, led by a $200,000 son of the late Arrogate (hip 91). Consigned by Peter O’Callaghan’s Woods Edge Farm, the dark bay colt is out of multiple stakes winner Hero’s Amor (Street Hero).

“I liked everything. I liked the conformation. He’s a beautiful horse to look at,” Tacher said of the colt. “He’s obviously by Arrogate, so I really liked his pedigree. He looked like a two-turn horse, a Classic-distance horse. We came to see him quite a few times and to vet him. We were really high on that horse.”

Tacher, part owner of Hipodromo Camarero, also purchased a colt by Keen Ice (hip 252) and a filly by Daredevil (hip 351) both for $100,000 and a colt by Practical Joke (hip 127) for $70,000 Monday.

“This year has been different and it’s hard to gauge,” Tacher said of the market. “So far, the prices I’ve seen are fair for the buyer and the seller. I think, more or less, we are experiencing a solid market. I do think it’s a fair market, but of course it’s not as strong as last year.”

Also this year, Tacher purchased a filly by Frosted (hip 366) for $250,000 at the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale. Now named Paradise Song, the filly is working regularly at Fair Hill. He purchased five juveniles at the OBS Spring sale, led by a colt by Not This Time (hip 953) who was acquired for $575,000. Debuting for Tacher’s Sonata Stable, the juvenile now named Arzak was fifth on debut at Delaware Park Oct. 7 for trainer Mike Trombetta.

In Puerto Rico this year, Tacher has been represented by G1 Puerto Rican Derby winner Persistente (PR) (Console).

Point of Entry Filly Pays for Partners

Ocala horsewoman Michelle Redding partnered with Reiley McDonald and Stori Atchison to acquire a filly by Point of Entry for $13,000 at last year’s Keeneland November sale and the investment paid dividends Monday at Fasig-Tipton when the yearling (hip 60) sold for $160,000 to Selective LLC.

“She’s always been a really nice filly,” Redding said. “She has always had a tremendous, beautiful, catlike walk. She is just a big, physically well-developed filly. She’s very smart with a lot of class about her.”

Of the youngster’s weanling price tag, Redding said, “We were able to get her bought just in a soft time in the market. Sometimes horses slide through the cracks. She was definitely one that was sliding through and we were lucky enough to be standing there and got her bought.”

The yearling is out of Gypsy Princess (Unbridled’s Song), a daughter of multiple graded stakes winner Buffythecenterfold (Capote). She was consigned by McDonald’s Eaton Sales.

Redding said she aims to pinhook about 15 yearlings a year, but admitted this year’s results have been mixed.

“The market was a little rough on us this year,” Redding said. “We had some horses who sold well and some we were quite disappointed in that we felt fell through the cracks this year. It was a bit of a tougher year, so it was good to end it on a good note.”

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