Another New Home for Goresbridge Breeze Up

For the third time in as many years, Friday’s Goresbridge Breeze Up will have a different home. Originally developed and hosted by Martin Donohoe’s Kilkenny-based auction house, the sale merged with Tattersalls Ireland last year with proceedings transferring successfully to County Meath. Another switch, this one not of the strategic kind rather more out of necessity, sees the action move across the water to Tattersalls in Newmarket as the sale, originally slated for two months previously, bids to make up for lost time. Between additional wildcards and withdrawals around 150 horses breezed in Newmarket adjacent to the Rowley Mile Racecourse on Wednesday and while there was reportedly a smallish crowd in attendance it is hoped there will be enough interested parties on hand on Friday to allow for some decent trade to take place.

Surprisingly enough trade at the earlier rescheduled European breeze-up sales held up remarkably well given events throughout the world and while it is fanciful to expect Friday’s turnover to match last year’s figure of €5,010,500, Tattersalls Ireland’s Marketing Director Simon Kerins is hopeful another important metric, the clearance rate, will keep tabs on both previous editions and other breeze-up sales held this year.

“All things considered we are reasonably hopeful the sale will go well,” he said. “The Tattersalls team here in Newmarket have been brilliant, they put together a new stabling plan and they have been hugely helpful in accommodating the sale at very short notice. I think the transfer has gone relatively smoothly, obviously there have been challenges, especially for vendors who were working under the expectation that the breeze would be in Fairyhouse with the sale across the road from that in Tattersalls Ireland. That plan was changed at short notice but the breeze seemed to go well on Wednesday and given the amazingly resilient nature of this industry and the fact that trade has held up well at other breeze ups we are hopeful of a good solid sale.”

Last year’s top lot was a son of Lope De Vega (Ire) that Norman Williamson’s Oak Tree Farm sold to Blandford Bloodstock for €175,000 and subsequently named Haqeeqy (Ire). He has done well this summer for trainer John Gosden winning twice at Yarmouth and Newmarket. Meanwhile Parent’s Prayer (Ire) (Kingman {GB}), bought by BBA Ireland for €165,000 in 2019, got off the mark at the third time of asking in a maiden at Ayr for Archie Watson on July 14.

With so many withdrawals from the main catalogue it was a welcome boost for the sale to recently receive a number of well-bred wildcards to make up for some of the shortfall on offer and those late comers include an American Pharoah filly catalogued as lot 254, the last offering of the day. Offered by Tom Whitehead’s Powerstown Stud, the filly was purchased by her vendor as a yearling at Keeneland last year for $67,000. The daughter of stakes winner Innocent Love (Grand Slam) was actually knocked down to Richard Hughes and Paul Shanahan for £100,000 at the Goffs UK breeze-up at the beginning of the month but returns for another shot at it on Friday.

Another wildcard who didn’t find a buyer in Doncaster was Robson Aguiar’s son of Siyouni (Fr) who is offered as lot 251. The half-brother to two stakes performers was a €66,000 yearling purchase by Deuce Greathouse at Arqana last year, but was bought back by Aguiar at Goffs UK for £100,000.

Also among the wildcards, Willie Browne’s Mocklershill offers a couple of well-bred sorts in lot 227, a No Nay Never half-brother to the stakes winning filly We Are Ninety (Ire) (Thewayyouare) and lot 230, a filly by Night Of Thunder (Ire) that Browne bought at the Goffs February Sale this year for €30,000.

In the original catalogue an early lot that could make a splash is lot 28, a filly by Siyouni (Fr) from Brendan Holland’s Grove Stud. The bay is the first produce out of the Galileo (Ire) mare Surprisingly (Ire) who is a full-sister to G3 Balanchine S. runner up Butterscotch (Ire) and a half-sister to the speedy Coach House (Ire) (Oasis Dream {GB}). However, what doesn’t appear in the catalogue, is the fact that Surprisingly is also a full-sister to Tiger Moth (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), who broke his maiden last month at Leopardstown before running second to Santiago (Ire) (Authorized {Ire}) in the G1 Dubai Duty Free Irish Derby.

The only remaining juvenile in the sale by leading stallion Kingman (GB) is lot 48, a colt out of the stakes winning mare Mary Boleyn (Ire) (King’s Best). Although a relatively cheap yearling purchase at €20,000 by Egmont Stud’s Mark Flannery, the same vendor topped this sale two years ago with a Bated Breath (GB) colt that went from a 5,000gns yearling to a €210,000 breezer, so Flannery certainly knows how to prepare one for this sale. Egmont also offers a well-bred Gleneagles (Ire) filly (lot 153) out of a half-sister to Group 1 winners Excelebration (Ire) (Exceed And Excel {Aus}) and Lancaster Bomber (War Front).

Johnny Collins is another master of his trade and he offers an interesting 2-year-old as lot 75. The colt is a son of US-based first-season sire Mshawish (Medaglia d’Oro), who Collins also pinhooked in Keeneland, before the horse went on to win twice at Grade I level in America for Al Shaqab Racing. This current pinhook cost Collins $60,000 at Keeneland last year and is out of the stakes producing Invincible Spirit (Ire) mare Refreshing (GB) from the brilliant family of Skitter Scatter (Scat Daddy).

Ambrose O’Mullane and Mary Reynolds of Ardglas Stables have enjoyed some good results at this sale in its former guise and they offer a nicely bred filly on Friday as lot 139. The daughter of Footstepsinthesand (GB) is the second produce out of Miss Brazil (Ire) (Exceed And Excel {Aus}), whose first foal Elaire Noire (Ire), a full-brother to this filly, was a stakes winner in Italy last year and also finished second in the G2 Premio Gran Criterium.

Among those who that caught the eye when being put through their paces on Wednesday was lot 87 from Longways Stables, a colt by Awtaad (Ire) who is a half-brother to four winners including the speedy Miss Elizabeth (Ire) (Intense Focus). She was a dual winner and was stakes placed for trainer Eddie Lynam.

Another reported to have clocked a fast time was lot 155 from Eddie Ahern Bloodstock. This filly by Zoffany (Ire), the sire of a recent stakes winning 2-year-old filly in Minaun (Ire), is out of the 2-year-old winner Limetree Lady (GB) (Selkirk) and whose pedigree traces back to the mighty Battaash (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}).

The sale will commence at 10:30 a.m. and there will be live internet bidding with potential purchasers required to register at the following link.

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New-look NHRM Set To Reopen

Newmarket’s National Horse Racing Museum (NHRM) has a new name and a new look ahead of its reopening to the public on Tuesday, July 28. The museum, situated in the centre of the town just off the high street, has been closed for four months during the coronavirus pandemic.

One-way systems and social-distancing measures are in place to ensure that visitors can return safely to the venue which is also home to a number of high-profile retired racehorses who reside in the Rothschild Yard.

“Not only does the museum present a rich and fascinating panorama of a sport which is very much at the centre of the nation’s story, it’s also a great day out for everyone, whether they already know about racing or not,” said NHRM chief executive Dr Steven Parissien. “We want to become an essential resource for the town and believe that our unique combination of art, heritage, horses, open spaces and great food and drink is exactly what Newmarket needs in these trying times.”

He continued, “There will be new catering outlets, more space, a dedicated community gallery and displays which will reflect the history of the town as well as of racing. This autumn, for example, we will be showing a compilation of BBC archival films on Newmarket, from a profile of the old railway station’s famous heavy horses of the 1960s to the Blue Peter special on the town of 2003.”

The popular Tack Room restaurant will also reopen, along with the former bakery in the King’s Yard, which will offer bread, cakes, coffee and picnic boxes. Further changes include the transformation of the museum’s paddocks into a picnic area with benches and, in the coming months, a miniature zoo for companion animals such as sheep and goats. The museum store is also being relaunched and will include a second-hand book room.

Dr Parissien added, ‘We want the museum’s fabulous open spaces to be a key venue for the town—for eating and drinking, for art, for music and for shows and events, as well as for reflection and for relaxation. Keep in touch with us through our new website and you can find everything that’s coming up.”

This summer’s special exhibition, entitled The Good Companions, opens on Friday, July 31, and explores the portrayal of dogs in art. Tickets can be booked via visit the temporary ticketing website.

 

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Boughey Quick To Make His Mark In Dream Job

When working on a plan for a new business 12 months ago, few would have set out contingencies for a global pandemic. Fortunately for George Boughey, who this month celebrates his first anniversary as a Newmarket trainer, the shutdown of racing between mid-March and the beginning of June brought only a brief hiatus to the promising start made from when he saddled his first winner on Aug. 13.

That footnote in history belongs to Three C’s (Ire), a Kodiac (GB) gelding who has won twice in the year before joining Boughey and who has really hit his stride since the start of 2020. He won three races from early February until the shutters came down on British racing and then bounced back from his enforced break to notch his fourth of the year, with his rating having improved 20lbs during that time.

The 6-year-old, who doubles as a reliable lead horse for some of the younger members of the Boughey string, is out in front again on a picture postcard morning on Newmarket’s Summer Gallop. With the imposing Rowley Mile grandstand the only object rising from the otherwise flat and sprawling landscape of the famous training grounds, the trainer doesn’t really need his binoculars to see for miles across East Anglia as he waits for his first lot to come speeding by. Hoofbeats and high-blowing are the only sounds to disturb the calm out in the middle of the acres of turf which provide a bucolic buffer from the nagging worries of the world at large. Out here it’s business as usual: Thoroughbreds being primed to do the job they were bred for in the location used so successfully for this purpose across four centuries. Out here it’s easy to see why young men and women are still drawn to the training ranks with frequency, even in uncertain times.

Calmness pervades back at Boughey’s Saffron House Stables, with its easy access straight onto the gallops. The horses are relaxed and happy, and the small team of staff appear the same. It continues through to the trainer himself, who goes about the morning’s work with a quiet confidence. In his own words, he is living the dream.

“I was lucky that I had a great grounding,” says the 28-year-old. “I started in Australia having left Newcastle University and went to work for Gai Waterhouse.”

If this sounds familiar, it was a path also trodden by Hugo Palmer, who was to become Boughey’s boss in Newmarket after he completed a stint in Melbourne at the private stable of powerful owner Lloyd Williams.

“Hugo took me on when I came back, against his own will I think, but George Scott played a big part in getting me the job there. I had six seasons there and it was great to be around such good horses and good people,” he adds.

 

 

Boughey has taken over at Saffron House Stables since the move of the aforementioned George Scott, and it was also the original yard of Charlie Fellowes, who last year moved his increasingly large string to Bedford House Stables, the former home of Luca Cumani. Clearly, Newmarket, despite its competitive backdrop in being the base of some of the biggest stables in the land, can also work as an ideal starting point for young trainers.

Boughey says, “There’s a great camaraderie among the people here. Everybody gets on well and, for me, the training grounds are second to none that I’ve worked on globally. From the vets, the owners, the sales, there’s an endless supply of things here that for me makes it the best place in the world.”

Even in these strange times, Boughey is entitled to be full of enthusiasm and, refreshingly, he is not full of himself. He gives credit to young bloodstock agent Sam Haggas, who recently launched his own agency Hurworth Bloodstock and is a noted judge of form horses. With Haggas he bought Involved (GB) (Havana Gold {Ire}) for 25,000gns at last year’s Tattersalls Horses-in-Training Sale and the 5-year-old’s three runs for his stable have seen him beaten a neck in second on June 4, swiftly followed by two wins by decent margins. This in turn has seen his rating rise to 92 and has prompted interest from southern hemisphere buyers.

“I think his career may continue in Australia, through sadly not for me,” says Boughey. “I would love the horse to have stayed in the yard and to have gone down there for me but we have to run a business at the end of the day, that’s what it’s all about. But it’s a huge attraction for me, the idea of taking horses down there and I hope we will do very soon. I think Involved will be very competitive [in Australia] and we will look forward to trying to find the next one and perhaps taking a bit of their prize-money.”

Another horse who has similarly impressive form figures since racing resumed in Britain and following his move to Boughey’s stable is Songkran (Ire) (Slade Power {Ire}). A former €100,000 Orby yearling, the 4-year-old was bought by Hurworth Bloodstock last October for 20,000gns and has notched three wins in a fortnight during July.

“I owe a lot to Sam Haggas. He does a lot of work behind the scenes and we deal with the horses when they come to the yard,” says Boughey. “He has a fantastic brain for finding horses in training. He buys for people all around the world and we’ve been very lucky that we’ve found a few good horses that have improved and have racked up a bit of a sequence recently.”

Apart from Three C’s, for whom the trainer understandably has a soft spot, the horse putting an extra spring in Boughey’s step at the moment is the once-raced Arctic Victory (Ire) (Ivawood {GB}). Unsold by co-breeder Michael Downey at €9,000 at the Tattersalls Ireland Yearling Sale, the 3-year-old made a smart debut in a fillies’ maiden at Windsor on June 22 and has subsequently been sold to former BHA chairman Paul Roy, who was already an owner in the yard.

“Paul Roy’s son Mikey had spotted a horse we had for sale on Instagram last year—a yearling I bought on spec with Alex Elliott—and it’s a pleasure to be training for them,” Boughey explains.

“Arctic Victory won first time out the other day and she will run again at the end of the month. She looks a promising filly. She wasn’t unfancied first time out but she was a big price and I think she might go on to be a better than just a maiden winner.”

The explosion of social media platforms over the last decade has in the main been of a huge benefit to racing in reaching a wider audience and allowing interested parties to have greater behind-the-scenes access. The technology has been embraced, particularly by younger trainers, and it really came into its own during lockdown when horses were still being trained on a daily basis but the main show had been taken off the stage.

Boughey says, “There’s a huge following of racing on Twitter mainly, but also on Instagram and lots of other social media networks. I don’t like to overdo it but I think it’s a good platform to let people know what you’re doing and to give them a good insight. Through lockdown I was getting messages from people who would never have watched racing before. As we started [racing again] we had a two- or three-week window and we had a couple of winners when more people were watching. Whether in the long term that is a benefit or not I don’t know, but I think it can only help.”

He continues, “These are bizarre times that we are in at the moment. But I do think we are very fortunate to be racing and it’s a huge compliment to the BHA and everyone behind the scenes for getting us back racing and keeping us racing.”

Maintaining the action and gradually reintroducing spectators to racecourses is the goal across the sport and there will be few keener than Boughey to see that happen. In this interrupted year he is currently operating at a strike-rate of 33%, with 13 wins from 39 starts made by his equine team, which currently numbers 26. A few extra recruits have meant that he has now rented the second of the two American-style barns available at Saffron House—a development which is as daunting as it is exciting. But on a spotless morning in high summer, whatever is happening in the outside world appears unlikely to dim the trainer’s sunny outlook any time soon.

Boughey says plainly, without a hint of smugness, “It’s a boyhood dream that is coming to fruition.” And in reality, his is currently a stable ripe with success.

 

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Ed Vaughan To Leave UK Training Ranks

Ed Vaughan, who last week sent out the Anthony Oppenheimer homebred Dame Malliot (GB) (Champs Elysees {GB}) to win the Group 2 Princess of Wales’s S. at his home track of Newmarket, has announced that he will relinquish his training licence at the end of the 2020 season.

The Irish-born trainer said, “I haven’t just woken up and decided to do this. It’s been on my mind for a while and now seems the right time to finish up training here in the UK. As everyone is aware, with the reductions in prize-money and the cost of running a business being so high, the economics of training in Britain are not good. I’m taking this decision now because I can see things getting worse in the next year.”

He added: “I wouldn’t rule out training elsewhere, but with 25 horses, as we have here, I just don’t see a future for doing that in the UK because I think things are going to get very tough when we are already in the situation where we have prize-money that hardly covers the cost of keeping a horse in training for a month.”

A graduate of the Irish National Stud course, Vaughan’s varied roles within the racing industry include a four-year stint in America as well as being involved in the breaking-in of Dubai Millennium when working for Darley in Ireland. Prior to training in his own right, he was assistant to dual Cheltenham Gold Cup-winning trainer Noel Chance in Lambourn, before filing the same role for the late Alec Stewart at Clarehaven Stables in Newmarket.

In recent seasons, his star performer has been the dual Group 2 winner Dame Malliot, whom he hopes to run in Group 1 company before the end of the season. Vaughan also trained G3 Winter Derby winner Robin Hoods Bay (GB) (Motivator {Ire}) for the first patron of his stable, Alan Pickering, after the trainer bought him for 9,000gns as a yearling. He has also formed a successful partnership with bloodstock agent Paul Moroney in selling horses on to race internationally.

Vaughan said: “I’ve trained horses here to continue their careers in places like Australia after putting a European-style base to their training, and they’ve gone on and done very well down there, winning several races and some of them won over $400,000. I have a good idea of the type of horse that’s required and the level and style of racing you need for various jurisdictions. We’ve also done well selling horses to Hong Kong and America.”

Reflecting on his 16 years with a training licence, including the last nine seasons at Newmarket’s historic Machell Place Stables, he added, “Alan [Pickering] has become a valued friend and I would like to express my gratitude to all my owners and to my staff for their continued support. A special mention is due to Anthony Oppenheimer: we’ve shared plenty of success together, most recently with Dame Malliot. I must also thank Colin Murfitt, who has been a wonderful landlord, owner and friend over the years.”

On Wednesday, Vaughan saddled Miss Chess (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}), a half-sister to recent G1 Prix de Diane winner Fancy Blue (Ire) (Deep Impact {Ire}), to make an eye-catching debut when third in a Yarmouth novice race for the Phoenix Ladies Syndicate.

He added, “There have been some great days, and I feel blessed to have met some wonderful people along the way.  All these friendships I can take with me on the next stage of the journey, which will be somewhere in this industry that I love.”

 

 

 

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