Park Paddocks Buzzing Ahead of Somerville Sale

NEWMARKET, UK–There's no let-up in a sales calendar that becomes more packed every year, and the yearling action now switches to Newmarket, with the Tattersalls Somerville Sale sandwiched between last Friday's BBAG Yearling Sale in Germany, and a new French sale at Arqana this coming Thursday and Friday.

This is in effect only the second year of the Somerville, a sale that grew out of the Tattersalls Ascot Yearling Sale, which itself only existed for four years, having been moved to Newmarket during the first year of the pandemic.

That move coincided with a boost in both entries and returns, and the Somerville, with its focus on a sharper type of yearling more usually found at the Goffs UK Premier Sale, was born. Its debut last September could hardly have been more encouraging, and this year's sale is on the rise again in numbers. Even so, judging by a full car park and packed runways between the stable blocks at Park Paddocks on Monday, there should be plenty of people on the ground attempting to buy the yearlings offered  from 10am on Tuesday. 

As first-year results go, having the G2 Coventry S. winner Bradsell (GB) (Tasleet {GB}) as an early flag-bearer was a welcome boost, through sadly that 12,000gns purchase is now on the easy list after picking up an injury in his subsequent start in the G1 Keeneland Phoenix S.

Sold from Bearstone Stud, which offered seven yearlings at the sale last year, Bradsell was not the only star performer from that draft. The most expensive member, at 45,000gns, was a colt from the first crop of Havana Grey (GB). Like Bradsell, he too ended up at Archie Watson's stable. Now named Eddie's Boy (GB), he has raced eight times for the Middleham Park Racing syndicate, winning on debut, and later scooping the lucrative pot of the Weatherbys Super Sprint, as well as picking up some Listed black type when third in the Windsor Castle S. at Royal Ascot behind Little Big Bear (Ire) and again at Sandown in the Dragon S.

Farther afield, Marco Bozzi's 4,500gns purchase New Collection (GB) (Brazen Beau {Aus}) is now a Listed winner in Italy. 

Bearstone Stud has returned to the Somerville Sale this year with a draft of nine, including two fillies by Tasleet and Havana Grey, as well as the half-sister to the aforementioned Eddie's Boy, who sells as lot 66 and is by Washington DC (Ire), one of Bearstone's three resident stallions. The stud's owner Terry Holdcroft was not alone among consignors in reporting hectic viewing sessions for Sunday and Monday.

“It's just been absolutely manic,” he said. “We've been very busy. We have five staff here and it's almost not enough but even if we'd brought a couple more there's not room to show them all at the same time. Yesterday it was unbelievable, we were almost having to ask people if they would like to come back later as there was a queue of people waiting to see them.”

Holdcroft added, “The sale has worked well for us and we used to go to Ascot previously, but we are putting better horses in now that it has moved to Tattersalls. It does come a bit quick for us after Doncaster, especially for the staff. But we have brought mostly sharp, 2-year-old types, which is basically what I try to breed, and it's what they are looking for in this sale, and at Doncaster of course.”

Holdcroft also issued an update on one of Bearstone's star graduates, Glass Slippers (GB) (Dream Ahead), winner of the G1 Flying Five and GI Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint two years ago.

“She's very much in foal,” he said. “She went to Dubawi and we're really looking forward to that.”

Eddie's Boy's sire Havana Grey is currently way out in front in the first-season sires' table with 30 winners of 45 races, and three stakes winners to his name. The most recent of those, and his first group winner, came last Thursday with Lady Hollywood's victory in the G3 Prix d'Arenberg at Longchamp. Her rising star of a young trainer, Alice Haynes, was among the many pounding the sale yards on Monday, and if she is on the hunt for another by Whitsbury Manor Stud's Havana Grey she will have 21 to choose from, including one from the farm responsible for breeding Havana Grey in the first place, Mickley Stud. The Shropshire farm offers lot 7, the third foal of the Listed winner Peach Melba (GB) (Dream Ahead) who already has a multiple winner to her name in Instinctive Move (GB) (Showcasing {GB}).

As outlined by Terry Holdcroft, there is a strong focus on speed and precocity in the catalogue, and just over 20% of those slated to sell are by first-crop sires, including Inns Of Court (Ire), Calyx (GB), Eqtidaar (Ire), Masar (Ire), Magna Grecia (Ire) and Land Force (Ire).

Graduates of the Somerville Sale are eligible not just for the £100,000 Tattersalls Somerville Auction S., which is to be run next August 26 over six furlongs of the July Course, but also for the Tattersalls October Auction S., staged over the same distance but slightly later and next door on Newmarket's Rowley Mile. The latter also takes in graduates of Books 3 and 4 of the October Yearling Sale.

With only 17 withdrawals at the time of writing from the 313 yearlings in the book, trade on Tuesday will be continuing long into the evening at Park Paddocks at this sale that seems unlikely to remain in its one-day format for much longer. Long viewing days and a lengthy sale session will seem worthwhile in hindsight, however, if the level of activity over the last few days is carried through on the day that it matters most.

The post Park Paddocks Buzzing Ahead of Somerville Sale appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Odell Skilfully Captures Lifeblood of Racing 

It could be a little daunting for a modern-day artist to follow Sir Alfred Munnings in the exhibition space of Newmarket's National Horseracing Museum. Munnings is an iconic name in the sporting art world, and many of his best known images of racehorses at the start were created from his makeshift studio in an old rubbing house on Newmarket Heath which exists to this day. He lived and breathed his subject, but so too does the photographer Jayne Odell FRPS, whose striking black and white images are exhibited in the museum until Dec. 4.

Odell, one of just 600 Fellows of the Royal Photographic Society, lives in the centre of Newmarket, her home backing on to one of its most historic yards. This prompted a five-year project devoted to studying the beating heart of the town, which is the everyday training of thoroughbreds.

“I moved here and I got hooked on it,” she says. “Seeing the horses out in the morning and the whole rhythm of the town.

“I realised we were behind Charlie Fellowes's old yard. We started to hear the sounds of the yard and I got a bit intrigued and then started going out to take pictures and gradually built up a body of work. The love grew and then the opportunities seemed to grow from that.”

Love is a theme which runs through the substantial monochromatic exhibition, from the photographer's own eye for a subject she clearly finds absorbing, to the day-to-day interactions between the horses and those charged with their care, and the extraordinary attention to detail that goes into the routine of every stable yard.

“Look at pride in their work,” Odell exclaims as she guides TDN through the exhibition. “I love the things that go on in the background behind the racing itself–the farriery, the valets, saddle makers and all the traditions and crafts that are involved behind the scenes. I wanted it to be a fly-on-the-wall snapshot of life behind the world of horseracing, behind the glamour of race days.”

Her work certainly conveys not just the bond between man and horse, but also the camaraderie of the stable staff. And it acts as an important social history of the town that provides the fabric on which so much of the heritage and tradition of horseracing has been woven. In essence, not that much has changed since the days that the court of King Charles II set up a sporting home away from home in Palace House, just across the road from where these images are on display. Horses are still the lifeblood of Newmarket and much of the town's business now hinges on the breeding and racing of these finest of creatures. 

Indeed, one of the most striking images is that of former trainer James Eustace, keeping an eye on his string on a bitter winter's morning, his breath backlit by the rising sun. It is an almost timeless image but in those 400 years since the royal patronage of Newmarket began, so much has of course changed. And in many ways it has changed slowly. Khadijah Mellah, the first British Muslim woman to ride a winner, is also the subject of one of the portraits at Fellowes's stable, and while her victory at Goodwood was considered a breakthrough moment because of her ethnicity, it was only as recently as 1972 that any women was allowed to ride in a race in Britain.

“It's a body of work that I'm still going to expand on and look at from slightly different angles, but I hope it will be a legacy for the town, really,” Odell explains. “Because we do want to see, in future generations, pictures of how things are now. With social media and things like that, it's a very transient, and it's current today, but tomorrow it's old hat. But images that stand the test of time and that record that moment in time, I think are really important.”

Apart from the glorious Heath itself, nothing has stood the test of time in Newmarket quite like its equine inhabitants, who of course play a vital role in Odell's collection which has a section devoted to the four seasons.

“The horses are the timekeepers of the town,” she says. “So I wanted to depict the whole year, almost like a film strip of different conditions from winter through to spring, summer, and then autumn, and the fact that the horses are training all day, every day, all weathers, all conditions.”

Officially titled Time and Motion: Capturing the Lifeblood of a Racing Yard, the exhibition will continue at the National Horseracing Museum throughout the sales and racing season in Newmarket until early December and, within easy walking distance of Tattersalls, it is recommended to all visitors to the town this autumn. 

The post Odell Skilfully Captures Lifeblood of Racing  appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

ROR ‘Racing to Cricket’ Fundraiser Offers Seasons, Shares In Auction Lots

Eight racing teams will compete in the Retraining of Racehorses (RoR) Racing to Cricket day at the Wormsley Cricket Ground to win this year's RoR Racing to Cricket Trophy Sunday, 4 Sept. Now in its third year, the day's cricket action will be enjoyed by over 240 guests attending the fundraising day at the private estate of the Getty family.

A total of eleven lots will go under the hammer with charity auctioneer Martin Pope at 1:30pm during a live auction and raffle event on the fundraising day. In advance of the day bids can be made up to 5:00pm Saturday, 3 Sept. by emailing rorauction@ror.org.uk. Racing fans can bid for a variety of experiences, including membership of the Kingsclere Racing Club for 2023, and a day to experience Newmarket for eight people, highlighted by lunch and an exclusive visit to Banstead Manor Stud to meet the legendary Frankel donated by Juddmonte.

Also going under the hammer is a race sponsorship package at Stratford racecourse, and two nominations for the 2023 season to stallions standing at Overbuy Stud: Ardad (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}), a leading first-crop sire in 2021 with the Group 1 winner Perfect Power, and young National Hunt sire Jack Hobbs (GB) (Halling), winner of the G1 Dubai Duty Free Irish Derby and G1 Longines Dubai Sheema Classic. The nominations are donated by Overbury Stud and Godolphin & Partners, respectively. A full list of the lots can be found here.

The post ROR ‘Racing to Cricket’ Fundraiser Offers Seasons, Shares In Auction Lots appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Observations: Deauville August Sensation Debuts at Newmarket

1.25 Newmarket, Novice, £8,000, 2yo, f, 7fT
ANANDA (GB) (Frankel {GB}) was a €525,000 Arqana Deauville August graduate who debuts for Lady Bamford and John and Thady Gosden. A half-sister to the G3 Prix Sigy winner Fas  (Ire) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}) and the G3 Prix Bertrand de Tarragon scorer Silva (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}), the April-foaled bay hails from the family of the high-class sprinter Sole Power (GB) (Kyllachy {GB}).

The post Observations: Deauville August Sensation Debuts at Newmarket appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights