‘This Is Just The Beginning’ – US Owner Has Big Plans With Joseph O’Brien

Eric Long has struck it lucky with Zoinnocent (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}), the first horse he has had in training in Europe and, speaking ahead of the filly's run in Thursday's G3 Silver Flash S. at Leopardstown, the American businessman has outlined plans to grow his string with Joseph O'Brien.

Zoinnocent ran out an impressive winner of a seven-furlong maiden at Gowran Park last month and is expected to play a leading role in one of the feature races at Leopardstown on Thursday. 

Long, who has 10 horses in training in America, revealed that he would be concentrating on the upcoming yearling sales in an effort to bolster his numbers with O'Brien after what he describes as a hugely positive start to their relationship.

Long explained, “This is just the beginning–I anticipate buying at the sales at Arqana and at Goffs. With the experience that I have had already, I fully anticipate pursuing more horses and I like buying young horses to bring them along and try to make something out of them. 

“This was not a one-and-done. Zoinnocent has been a gateway for me to try and race more in Europe and I fully intend on doing that.”

He added, “I am involved in 10 horses in America and, right now, Zoinnocent is the only horse I have in Europe. I always say that, if I take care of the horses, they will take care of me. 

“So, if they are able to pay their way, I would not be opposed to having a lot more horses in Europe and 10 would be a comfortable number for me. I am extremely pleased with Joseph and I want to support his yard.”

Zoinnocent is out of the dual Listed-winning daughter of Galileo (Ire), Innocent Air (GB), and was acquired by Long–with the help of Justin Casse–at the Goffs Orby Sale last year for €210,000.

Since purchasing Zoinnocent, Long was provided with a major pedigree update when her brother Hannibal Barca (Ire), who transferred to O'Brien's stable after fetching 500,000gns at the Tattersalls Autumn Horses-In-Training Sale last year, won the G3 Gallinule S. on his stable debut.

Speaking about the decisions that led Long to get involved with O'Brien, and the thought process behind purchasing Zoinnocent at Goffs, Long, who is the president of a major manufacturing company in America, said, “I was talking about this with Justin Casse last autumn and he said, 'well, there's no better time than now to get involved,' which I did. 

“He was going to be at the Goffs Orby Sale so we picked out a few that we liked. It was Justin who picked out this particular filly [Zoinnocent] and I really liked her page. 

“At that time, I didn't even know that her brother Hannibal Barca was in training so it was a little bit of a surprise that he jumped up.”

He added, “My wife and I had never been to Ireland until last year. We spent 10 days there–went to Dublin, Galway, Ashford Castle, Tipperary and Mount Juliet in Kilkenny–and had a wonderful time. We visited Joseph at the yard and got to see the filly training. It was just a wonderful experience for us–everything I had expected and more. It was more than just racing. “We have been pretty lucky with Zoinnocent and, frankly, we could not be more pleased. Joseph is a young man who has accomplished so much and it's great to be able to support his endeavour and his yard.”

Long and his wife will be back on that plane to Ireland in September. With a bit of luck, they will be able to take in a trip to the races to see Zoinnocent line out in some of the major 2-year-old races in the autumn, but the emerging owner is not getting ahead of himself just yet. 

Asked what his expectations are ahead of Thursday's race, he said, “Joseph is a man of patience and he doesn't like to run his horses unless they are ready. He's very hands-on and, every time he calls me before the race, he will tell me what he expects will happen. Pretty much every time he has called me after the race, it has gone exactly as he predicted. So, the thing I really like about Joseph is, not only is he a terrific horseman but he's got experience as a jockey and can read a race and instruct his jockeys.”

Long added, “We'll see how she does on Thursday and, if things work out, I will probably come over to Ireland in September to see her run. There are two or three nice races that could suit her really well in September so we'll see what she does this week first.”

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Fasig Flash Sale Features Magnolia 1-2

Bidding is now open on Fasig-Tipton Digital for the Magnolia Racing Syndicate Flash Sale, a two-horse digital auction offering horses in training. The sale uniquely offers a pair of 2-year-old colts-both owned by Magnolia Racing Syndicate LLC and trained in Ireland by Joseph O'Brien-that finished first and second in the same maiden race in Ireland on June 17.

   Goa Gajah (Bal a Bali {Brz}) and Lakota Seven (Ire) (Sioux Nation) finished in that order (VIDEO) at Down Royal last Friday in Ireland, giving the burgeoning Magnolia Racing Syndicate helmed by Justin Casse and Joseph O'Brien their first winner.  Goa Gajah–named for a place for spiritual meditation in Bali–was purchased for $26,000 at the 2021 Fasig-Tipton Kentucky October yearling sale. Lakota Seven, back 2 ½ lengths in second in that race, was picked up by Casse and O'Brien for €125,000 at last year's Goffs Orby, and was making his first start Friday. From just four runners making seven starts to date, the budding operation has fielded two placed efforts in addition to Goa Gajah's victory.

“It has been a good start,” said Casse. “You are always a bit nervous with how a project–an initial project–is going to start out especially in this business, where things never go as planned. That said, we are very happy with the start of things.”

There were initially 11 horses in the syndicate, four Kentucky-breds purchased at Fasig-Tipton October, and seven European-breds. All went to train with Joseph O'Brien in Ireland. They spent €562,000 at Orby, with Lakota Seven the most expensive of the bunch.

Casse said that the growth of the type of pop-up or flash sale that Fasig-Tipton is offering is exactly tailored to how the pair wanted to market the horses.

“The basis of the project itself was to be willing and open to selling any horse that ran well to capitalize on the strength of the private racehorse sales market,” said Casse. “Both of them came out of the race in great order. We are lining up their vetting and videos and photos for the sale for prospective buyers as we speak. As much as we would love to keep them, we must stick to the model. With that in mind, we still are open to maintaining a minor share when it makes sense.”

“We are excited about this idea,” said Casse, who added that from Magnolia's four to race to date, this pair would be the third and fourth to sell. “Considering what the strategy was, to be able to have the opportunity to have four out of the four first runners sold would be a tremendous start.”

Last October, after they kicked off their buying spree, Casse told the TDN that he had been kicking around the idea of a syndicate for a few years, but assembled the partners last fall in just 30 days.

“The pinhooking and breeze-up part of me is looking at these horses for their value and what they could sell for if they run well,” Casse said at the time, “as opposed to trying not to get carried away, and pay end-user prices. Joseph knows this type of horse well. Both of our families cut our teeth on trading horses at some stage in our careers.”

“When I was looking at horses at Fasig, I was being very selective about turf stallions, primarily. I didn't care so much about their commercial viability. I was more interested in physicals. For me, Goa Gajah suited a lot of the things I look for when I go to Europe to buy horses. He used himself very well. He was very fluid with his action, with both his hind end and his front end and he had a very nice walk. He was well-balanced.”

Goa Gajah will be consigned as Hip 2 by Paramount Sales. A Kentucky-bred son of Bal a Bali, the Brazilian Triple Crown winner and multiple Grade I-winning miler in the U.S., he is out of a full-sister to multiple graded stakes winner and track record-setter Optimizer. His elite Phipps pedigree includes current undefeated multiple Grade I winner Flightline (Tapit). Lakota Seven (Hip 1), by G1 Phoenix S. winner Sioux Nation, has a pedigree which includes Grade I winners Senure, Speak in Passing; and champions Rags to Riches, Peeping Fawn and Xaar. They will be consigned by Taylor Made Sales.

And the timing for purchasing young proven racing stock couldn't be better, he said. “To try to sell these two on the heels of Royal Ascot, when people have just come home from that experience, is ideal. They both seem like horses that are progressive types and are only going to get better. Lakota Seven will be eligible for lucrative maiden purses in America, or anywhere. He looks like he is going to be a horse that is going to want a mile to a mile and a quarter. And Goa Gajah, being a Kentucky-bred, in our mind, if we didn't sell him, we were going to run him in Saratoga with an eye towards Kentucky Downs with those lucrative purses for their 2-year-olds.”

“This is another exciting first for Fasig-Tipton Digital, offering two horses owned and trained by the same connections that finished first and second in the same maiden race in Ireland,” said Leif Aaron, Fasig-Tipton Director of Digital Sales. “Both horses offer exciting and lucrative racing opportunities, particularly in Europe or this summer in the United States.

Each horse's catalogue page provides photos, walking videos, race replays, and other useful resources. Prospective buyers may also schedule in-person inspections in Ireland by contacting each horse's consignor.

Bidding closes on Tuesday, June 28, at 2 pm EDT.

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Who Will Be This Year’s Leading Freshman Sire?

From a stellar class, which freshman sire will emerge on top? And what sire currently flying under the radar will be the year's biggest surprise? With the first 2-year-old sale of the season, OBS March, now in the books, we thought it would be a good time to ask the experts:

JUSTIN CASSE
Top pick: Mendelssohn (Scat Daddy–Leslie's Lady, by Tricky Creek). 2022 fee: $35,000, Coolmore America.
“I saw some very athletic two-turn horses by Mendelssohn with size, scope, strength, and balance. They were very athletic types and they breezed fast. I didn't imagine some of them putting in as quick a breeze time as they did, but the fact that they did and are bred and built to go two turns, that would make me excited. They were attractive, athletic types that were scopey. Not all horses built like that have speed, but they showed speed. It was impressive to see what they were capable of.”

Under-the-radar pick: Cloud Computing (Maclean's Music–Quick Temper, by A.P. Indy). 2022 fee: $5,000, Spendthrift Farm
“I think they were well-balanced, solid, with good bone, good substance, size scope and strength. I vetted three or four of them, and they were typically good-moving horses, with little wasted action, and very good walkers. I think what you're seeing is that the yearling market was so strong last year that most of the pinhookers probably needed to step down their choice of the desired freshman sires. They probably couldn't afford most of the ones that everybody wanted, so you had a horse like this who was throwing quality individuals and they were falling into those pinhookers price bracket at the yearling sale. They were a pleasant surprise at the sale. These horses looked more like milers–precocious with a good walk. I'm sure there's a lot of Maclean's Music coming through there.”

DAVID INGORDO
Top Pick: Bolt d'Oro (Medaglia d'Oro-Globe Trot, by A.P. Indy). 2022 fee: $20,000, Spendthrift Farm.
“I thought Bolt d'Oro was an immensely talented horse. I saw him training in California and always got really good reports on the horse. When I saw his offspring , I thought they were nice horses and very athletic. Then I watched them develop from yearlings into two-year-olds and they all came forward really nicely. We have some going into training that we bought as yearlings that we are pretty high on. Then seeing his sales horses kind of put the exclamation point on it.”

Under-the-radar pick: Accelerate (Lookin at Lucky-Issues, by Awesome Again). 2022 fee: $15,000, Lane's End.
“Disclaimer, I was intimately involved with Accelerate. We bought him as a yearling and we broke him at the Mayberry's. We sent him to John Sadler and he stands at Lane's End. I've been watching him since his yearling year. That's how long he's been part of my life. He's never let us down and he improved from year to year. I'm very high on the ones we have in training and we bought a few more at the sales because we didn't have enough. He's never missed a mark. He's done everything right for us. These ones at the two-year-old sale are showing some speed, which he himself had. The criticism is that he didn't start running until later on. He was a May foal and we took our time with him and let him grow up. The ones with earlier foaling dates are showing precocity and speed. I've been happy with the ones we have at the farm and the ones I've seen at the sale.”

LAUREN CARLISLE
Top Pick: Mendelssohn.
“They have size, scope and the ability to run on turf or dirt.”

Under-the-radar pick: Good Samaritan (Harlan's Holiday-Pull Dancer, by Pulpit). 2022 fee: $7,500. WinStar Farm.
“The March group breezed well and had solid physicals.”

MIKE RYAN
Top Pick: Good Magic (Curlin-Glinda the Good, by Hard Spun). 2022 fee: $30,000, Hill 'n' Dale Farms.
“It's a very strong crop this year. You have the five main sires-Justify, City of Light, Mendelssohn, Good Magic and Bolt d'Oro. It's a loaded generation. Some people will say I am biased, but my pick is Good Magic. People might say he's picking him because he's his own horse. I have seen quite a few training at Stonestreet and at Niall Brennan's and some other places and I was very impressed with what I saw. They are very much like him. Great attitudes. Great demeanors. Great appetite for training and they enjoy what they are doing. They are focused and committed, a trainer's dream. He was like that himself. I like Mendelssohn quite a bit, too. It might be a flip of the coin between Mendelssohn and Good Magic.”

Under-the-radar pick: Cloud Computing.
“Niall Brennan has a couple that I have seen train and I was most impressed by them. He reminded me a little bit of Upstart from a few years ago. I didn't give Upstart a whole lot of recognition at the yearling sales. But when I saw them train as two-year-olds I was very impressed with them. I think Cloud Computing will prove to be a good value. They're well grown. They've got speed. But I don't think they'll be limited to one turn. ”

LIZ CROW
Top Pick: Bolt d'Oro.
“I have been really impressed with the Bolts overall physically. A bunch of them breezed well at OBS. They were quick and precocious.”

Under-the-radar pick: Cloud Computing.
“We had the Cloud Computing that we sold for $560,000. We bought him as a yearling and he just improved every day since we bought him. We have another one that is going to the April sale that we like as well. The ones I've been around have been really nice horses.”

JARED HUGHES
Top Pick: Good Magic.
“He was a good two-year-old and his offspring have a lot of quality to them. They are very classy. I think they will be forward enough to be around for the big fall races. I don't expect them to be early. I more expect them to start winning in the two-turns races. Like the Connect model.”

Under-the-radar pick: Accelerate.
“They have the right shape and they seem to have really good attitudes. They seem like they could be forward, even though he, as a racehorse, wasn't that forward.”

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Transatlantic Syndicate Magnolia Racing Blossoms at Goffs

Some enterprises of great pitch and moment take years to come to fruition. Some take just a few weeks.

The latter scenario is true of the new partnership between bloodstock agent Justin Casse and trainer Joseph O'Brien. When Magnolia Racing Syndicate spent €562,000 at the recent Goffs Orby Sale, the group was built on relationships years in the making, but sprouted quickly from an idea into action.

“I started kicking the idea of a transatlantic syndicate around three or four months ago,” said Casse. “The fine-tuning part of who would get behind me and support me in this came to mind in the last 30 days, when I left the Arqana sale in France.”

Magnolia Racing plans to purchase 10 or so yearlings at sales in Europe and America, race them as 2-year-olds in both North America and Europe and then sell them next fall and winter at horses-of-racing-age sales, said Casse. They picked up seven at Goffs, all with purchase prices between €42,000 and €125,000. The horses, all with turf pedigrees, will be trained by O'Brien at his base, Owning Hill in County Kilkenny, Ireland.

In just 30 days, Casse assembled a supportive group of partners. “Almost all of them have had some level of participation in racing, whether it be frequent attendees of the Derby, one-off pinhookers that have partnered with me, and handicappers,” he said. “There is one other industry professional involved.”

At Goffs Orby, they bought seven colts and fillies, just three of them for six figures; a Footstepsinthesand (GB) colt, a Zoffany (Ire) colt, and a Sioux Nation colt.

For Casse, it's a slight change of direction in career, but one that leads him back down familiar paths.

Casse's roots are in Florida, the scion of a family who made its name, in many ways, with 2-year-olds.

“The pinhooking and breeze-up part of me is looking at these horses for their value and what they could sell for if they run well,” Casse said, “as opposed to trying not to get carried away, and pay end-user prices.”

You might say the Casses are an American equivalent to the O'Briens; Justin and his brother, Mark, are the successful sons of a successful father; Joseph and his brother Donnacha, the successful sons of Aidan, perhaps the world's greatest trainer. Both O'Brien sons were champion jockeys in Ireland, and daughters Sarah and Ana have ridden professionally as well, while their mother Annemarie was the first in the family to be champion trainer. Training for just five years now, Joseph has already trained the winners of a British Classic, a Breeders' Cup race, and two Melbourne Cups.

The pair has partnered in the past; Casse purchased Pretty Gorgeous (Fr) for John Oxley for 525,000gns at the 2019 Tattersalls October Yearling Sale. Under Joseph's care, she was a 'TDN Rising Star' and Group 1 winner.

“I've been fortunate enough to have horses now with Joseph since the first year he started and what I've witnessed has far exceeded the expectations that I had,” he said. “I believe that he's a special person going special places and more than anything, I'm just happy to be a part of that.”

The concept of family is clearly a strong one, and one that resonates.

“Working with the family has been rejuvenating, and it has had a profound impact on my personal life as well as my professional life,” he said. “I think that their ability to stay close-knit and support one another and also care for old relationships in such a valuable place like they do has really taught me some life lessons. Aidan and Annemarie's level of horsemanship is equally matched by their ability to get the most out of people with compassion.”

In many ways as well, their lives prove to be a different model from the kind of self-promotional ones we find in America.

“Checking your ego at the door is key,” said Casse. “It was hard for some people to get past the prospect of my only working for family members, so that was always going to be difficult. As much as having the last name Casse could get you very far, it could also have its challenges from time to time.”

But Casse, who spent a semester in London while at Florida State, where he graduated with a B.A. in International Affairs, has always had an affinity for Europe. From his forays, he has brought back to America the likes of Preakness winner War of Will (War Front), who now stands at Claiborne Farm.

“In America, the attrition rate of the horses is tough,” he said. “European racing has been easy for me to get behind because it has a very high percentage of horses who make it to the races, and so we have a fair shot to succeed.”

He's not the only one who has caught onto this, he observed. “Obviously, Goffs had the greatest participation of Americans that it ever had. There's a heightened focus on turf racing in America. There's a great product here (in Europe) that can be developed, but yet, the prospect is to take advantage of American purse money while having the horses begin here. I have American partners in the syndicate who love the idea of running at Saratoga or Kentucky Downs in $150,000 maiden races. Obviously, there's a lot of prestige in Europe as well and it's really a hotbed for selling young horses when they run well first out, and that is a very promising prospect as well. The horses that we have begun to purchase have reasonably tradable prices, and prices where we can profit from earning purse money.”

Casse's father Norm, of course, was a co-founder of the Ocala Breeders' Sale Company, among many other achievements. His farm, Cardinal Hill, was on Magnolia Avenue, and the elder Casse planted 30 of the trees up and down the driveway, giving his son the task of nurturing them. “The majority of our partners are from the South,” said Casse, where the magnolia tree is a symbol of the region.

Next up, Magnolia turns its eye toward Tattersalls and Fasig-Tipton October, where the 2022 purses at Kentucky Downs will make Kentucky-breds all the more appealing. While they'll get their start in Ireland with O'Brien, the forward types that they're buying could potentially race anywhere, and certainly in America.

Casse said that O'Brien would handle the Arqana October sale, while he'll head to Fasig. In Europe for two weeks now, he's been away from his 11-year-old son long enough.

“As much as the sales are important,” he said “we try to keep the sense of family more important.”

If there is one thing that Casse and the O'Briens have learned in their time in racing, it's that family trumps all.

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