Beeby: ‘Orby Is The One That Matters Most’ 

Tasked with identifying just one horse to look forward at the Orby Sale next week, Goffs Chief Executive Henry Beeby must have realised that he was in clover when rattling off progeny by sire sensations Dubawi (Ire), Frankel (GB) and Sea The Stars (Ire) but admitted that having the chance to offer 11 Galileos (Ire) was a particular boon ahead one of the most eagerly-anticipated yearling sales on earth. 

Beeby also described himself as thrilled with the field of 2-year-olds the Goffs Million has attracted at the Curragh on Saturday and shared hopes that the race can prove a springboard for what promises to be a helter-skelter week of trading. 

He said, “Having 11 Galileos in his penultimate crop is a big deal for us. Kirsten Rausing's Dubawi is gorgeous and there are some lovely yearlings by Sea The Stars as well. We've got Frankels, Kingmans (GB), Invincible Spirits (Ire), Night Of Thunders (Ire), Dark Angels (Ire), Kodiacs (GB), Siyounis (Fr)–everything you could possibly want. 

“We have some really good sire profiles and deep, deep pedigrees. The brother of Saffron Beach (Ire) (New Bay {GB}), I saw him back in May and my tongue was hanging out, he's such a good-looking horse.”

There are also siblings to top-notchers Champers Elysees (Ire), Pretty Gorgeous (Fr), Chanel (Ire), Homeless Songs (Ire), Mother Earth (Ire), Sonnyboyliston (Ire), Blackbeard (Ire) and many more in the sale. 

Beeby added, “There are a couple of superb No Nay Nevers and the Frankels I've seen have been gorgeous as well. I've been to the Irish National Stud and I think they have a very strong draft but it's very hard to just pick out one or two horses off the top of my head because all of the big vendors have supported us well. Put it this way, everything is in place for it to be a big sale.”

Before the two-day Orby kicks off on Tuesday, there is the Goffs Million, which will be run for the first time since 2009 on Saturday and boasts a whopping €1,234,000 prize fund. Beeby has described his satisfaction with the field of 19 runners that have assembled for Saturday's seven-furlong contest and explained the reasons behind rescheduling the race.

He said, “We're delighted with the field because it has a good representation from England and Ireland which demonstrates the interest of the sale. It looks a good race with good 2-year-olds who will go on to bigger and better things. What the race has provided is a focal point. We had a rough old time of it two years ago and, when we were thinking about the sale last year, we decided we needed something that would really grab peoples' attention. 

“We looked at all sorts of things, incentives and bonuses, all of which have merit, but we just felt that the Goffs Million had a real ring to it. There are 19 runners, 10 of them will get prize-money and the winner will get €617,000 as the race is worth €1,234,000 because any excess entry fee rolled straight back into the race. It's very exciting and really caught the imagination at the sale last year–which can be seen by the diversity of the trainer and owner profile of the race.”

Beeby added, “Two years ago was very hard. We have been very clear about the fact that we could have made better decisions in 2020. We have essentially appealed to Irish breeders to give us another chance and happily they did. They were quite heavily rewarded last year and, one of the key things I will always say is, we are nothing without the horses.

“We can come up with as many gimmicks or marketing campaigns as we like but, if you haven't got the raw material–which is the quality Irish thoroughbred–then you have nothing. 

“As a result of the great support we got last year, we saw great trade and, because of that, the Irish breeders have given us a greater share of their best horses for this year's sale. 

“Many vendors have upped their game. We have a bigger catalogue than ever and the build-up to this sale has been all about convincing the Irish breeders that they have a premier outlet in Goffs and that they don't need to go elsewhere. More and more people are happily coming around to that way of thinking.”

There is no better advertisement for a sales company than the racecourse and the Orby was once again put in lights when Eldar Eldarov (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) stormed to St Leger glory at Doncaster.  

Fellow graduate Prosperous Voyage (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}), winner of the G1 Falmouth S. at Newmarket, has also done her bit to advertise the prowess of the sale and Beeby is all too aware that such victories are needed to maintain the Orby's reputation as a guaranteed source of top-notch talent.

He said, “People come back to the Orby Sale to buy good-looking and well-bred individuals who perform on the racetrack. Eldar Eldarov and Prosperous Voyage are obviously the most high-profile graduates this season but they are pumped out every year. The sale punches above its weight in that respect. We call it the Irish national yearling sale, because that's what it is, but it is a premier European yearling sale. It's one of the most important dates in the year, certainly in Europe, if not in the northern hemisphere breeding season. It will have the full focus of attention and we expect a pretty big buying bench to turn up. 

“That's certainly the indication at the moment as hotel rooms are at a premium and we're flying people in from the United States. We have interest from the Middle East, the Far East, obviously from Ireland, Britain and Europe, so we are prepared for a really big turnout.”

And that American interest should not be underestimated. Given the strength of the dollar, it is understood that up to 60 American-based agents and buyers could be in attendance at the Orby Sale next week, which would be a record. 

Add that to the fact that the demand for yearlings has been strong at the the August Sale at Arqana, the Premier Yearling Sale at Goffs UK, the Tattersalls Somerville Sale and at Tattersalls Ireland last week, Beeby is quietly optimistic of the trend continuing at Goffs. 

He said, “The yearling sales have been extraordinary this year. We would be hopeful of a good trade. The American interest is higher than it has ever been, exactly what number turns up remains to be seen but the dollar being where it is a major attraction. They are looking for our kind of horses and we've got them in droves.”

Beeby added, “I've seen a lot of these horses and I would be surprised if buyers are not very impressed. For our sale, we need to have the pedigree and the conformation because there's plenty of good yearlings to come in the following weeks, and that's always been the case, so you really have to be the right article to get into the Orby.”

And with all of this excitement comes great responsibility. Beeby admits there will be butterflies in the stomach when he stands up on that rostrum at 10am on Tuesday morning for a sale that broke the €40-million mark 12 months ago but everything is in place for another record-breaking session.

He said, “From a Goffs point of view, this is the most important week of our year because the two days of the Orby Sale are our highest-grossing sales by some way. Any sale that I go to, and I mean this genuinely, I care deeply about it and want it to go well. 

“For example, the Premier Sale means a lot to me and I have been working at that sale since the late 1970s, but the Orby is the one that matters most. As my late father used to say, the yearling sales are all about potential and you can see in front of you what the horse is going to look at–it's like looking at a late teenager in human terms. You can see the athlete.”

Beeby added, “The overriding emotion is anticipation, excitement and there is a certain amount of adrenaline flowing. When I get up on that rostrum, I will feel some nerves, but I think you need that. If you're an auctioneer, the whole point of doing this job is the moments leading up to when a horse walks into the ring, everything else leads towards that moment. So, stepping forward with a microphone on you, the gavel in your hand and seeing a beautifully-bred horse from a major operation with a track record of selling top-class horses walking around a ring that has seen champion after champion, that's what I live for. I just love it and I can't wait for next week.”

The post Beeby: ‘Orby Is The One That Matters Most’  appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Bolger Sends ‘Safe Hands’ Prendergast a Filly to Train

Two legends of Irish racing will join forces for the first time this season after Jim Bolger revealed that he has a 2-year-old filly by Holy Roman Emperor (Ire) in training with Kevin Prendergast.

Bolger gave €31,000 for the recently named Roman Moon (Ire) after Prendergast recommended the filly at the Goffs Orby Sale last September and she is set to break new ground by becoming his first runner with the Friarstown operator.

Roman Moon will carry the white and purple colours of Bolger's wife Jackie, once carried to major glories by Teofilo (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), New Approach (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) and more recently Poetic Flare (Ire) (Dawn Approach {Ire}), when she hits the track this summer.

Speaking about the reasoning in sending the filly to the 89-year-old handler, Bolger told TDN Europe, “It was Kevin who suggested that we buy the filly and, when we did, we said that we would leave her with him knowing that she would be in safe hands.

“If I remember correctly, I was sitting beside Kevin when she walked into the ring and he told me that he was thinking of buying her on spec. Clare Manning [Bolger's granddaughter] also liked her and, when what she told me was confirmed by Kevin, I told her to go ahead and buy the filly.

“I decided there and then that, if Kevin was interested in training her for me, he could have her. She cost €35,000 so is qualified for all of those auction races and will carry Jackie's colours.”

Bolger added: “Kevin is very happy with her. You could say that Kevin is a victim of his age, and I suppose myself to a lesser extent, as not too many people want to send a man in his late 80s a racehorse. But, as far as Kevin is concerned, there are few better than him at his craft.”

Prendergast outlined his ambition to continue training “until the man upstairs calls it all to a halt” to the TDN Europe last week and Bolger's Roman Moon will form part of a 15-horse string.

Bolger's numbers are understood to be closer to 100 or more, the majority of which are owned by himself, with the wheels of his famous Coolcullen-based training establishment kept turning by the trainer's breeding arm of the operation.

It is a truly unique way of running things, with Bolger deriving just as much interest from breeding winners as he does in training them.

“One is dependent on the other but, as far as enjoyment is concerned, I suppose it would be 50-50. I have 80 broodmares and I would need 60-70 of those to go in foal every year in order to keep the wheel turning as I own 95% of the horses I train,” he explained.

“The majority of my mares will go to my own stallions but we use outside stallions as well. We could send up to 20 mares to outside stallions every year and the dam [Halla Na Saoire (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire})] of Mac Swiney (Ire) (New Approach {Ire}) has been covered by Mehmas (Ire). She also has a yearling by Make Believe (GB).”

Mac Swiney (Ire) (New Approach {Ire}), best known for getting the better of his stablemate Poetic Flare in a gripping Irish 2,000 Guineas last May, has been kept in training as a 4-year-old.

Just under 12 months on from that heroic display at the Curragh, Bolger recalls of how he wasn't best pleased to see his better-fancied Poetic Flare beaten but, any pain felt in the defeat soon disappeared when he realised he had the dam (Halla Na Saoire) standing out in the field.

“I was disappointed initially when Mac Swiney beat Poetic Flare in the Irish 2,000 Guineas last year but, when I realised that I had the dam of the winner standing out in a paddock, it made it a bit easier,” he said, before sharing details on some of stallions he supported this year.

“Along with Make Believe and Mehmas, we sent mares to Profitable (Ire), Blue Point (Ire) and Belardo (Ire). I sent 25 mares to Teofilo, about a dozen to New Approach and we supported Dawn Approach as well.”

Mac Swiney may be the best older horse Bolger has in training and is firmly on course to kick-start his 4-year-old campaign in the Tattersalls Gold Cup at the Curragh later this month but the trainer has Classic aspirations for TDN Rising Star Wexford Native and Boundless Ocean.

He said, “Good ground will make a huge difference to Wexford Native (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}) and if we get good ground in the Irish 2,000 Guineas, he could go there. His proper trip will end up being 10f or 1m4f–he could stay the Irish Derby trip.”

Bolger added, “Boundless Ocean (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}) was too keen [when 13th in the 2,000 Guineas] at Newmarket but we think we've got him settled at home now and will pick a race for him soon. He could go for the Irish 2000 Guineas but I would be in no rush to run the two of them against each other.”

 

The post Bolger Sends ‘Safe Hands’ Prendergast a Filly to Train appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Goffs: Orby Sale Could Still Take Place in Ireland

Officials at Goffs have released a statement clarifying announcements made June 30 as regards the venue and date options for the company's marquee Orby Sale.

As was previously stated, the Orby sale, with the cooperation of Tattersalls, is planned for Friday and Saturday, Sept. 24 and 25, at Park Paddocks in Newmarket. However, Goffs officials are expressing optimism that travel restrictions could be eased in time enough for the sale to take place at its originally scheduled dates of Tuesday and Wednesday, Sept. 28 and 29.

These plans follow discussions which have taken place between Goffs and Tattersalls as a result of the COVID – related issues which disrupted the recent Tattersalls Ireland Derby Sale.

Goffs Group Chief Executive Henry Beeby said: “I am pleased we are able to offer some clarity to the many mutual Tattersalls' and Goffs' clients, and I am sorry that we may have contributed to any confusion last week. As one might imagine, clarity is hard to achieve in the current climate as the situation appears to be ever changing in each country. However, I repeat our appreciation of the collaborative approach that Tattersalls have taken and their generous offer of assistance should it be necessary.

“It is such a shame that the overseas buyers 'bubble' that worked so well for the Goffs Land Rover Sale and was being replicated at the Tattersalls Ireland Derby Sale was inexplicably withdrawn at the eleventh hour but there is simply no way that vendors, or Goffs, can take the risk that the same thing could happen on the eve of the Orby Sale as there is too much at stake. Accordingly, as announced last week, we feel it is in the best interests of Irish vendors selling in Orby to clearly state that the sale will be held in Newmarket if the current restrictions on travel into Ireland remain in place.

“The caveat to all of these plans is the hope and increasingly strong belief that the introduction of the EU's digital passport in relation to Covid-19 vaccinations will lead to the imminent reopening of Ireland to international visitors meaning that we will hold the Orby Sale in Kildare Paddocks on its scheduled dates.”

Tattersalls Chairman, Edmond Mahony added: “Clarity is key at this stage and we have been working closely with Goffs, in the best interests of the wider industry, to provide them with a suitable alternative in the event that the current restrictions on travel into Ireland continue. Encouragingly, all the signals now point to a relaxation of the prevailing travel restrictions and we hope for all concerned that the Orby Sale will take place at its usual location and on its scheduled dates.”

The Goffs Sportsman's Sale will occur immediately following the conclusion of Orby should the sale in fact take place in Ireland, but if Orby is transferred to Newmarket, the Sportsman's will be held in Ireland Nov. 1 and 2 in conjunction with the Goffs Autumn Yearling and Horses-In-Training sale.

The post Goffs: Orby Sale Could Still Take Place in Ireland appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Goffs Orby Moves To Newmarket

The Goffs Orby Sale will for the second straight year be staged away from its traditional home in Co. Kildare, this year taking place at Tattersalls's Park Paddocks in Newmarket as the result of an agreement between the two sales companies. Originally slated for Sept. 28 and 29, the sale will now be held across two evening sessions on Sept. 24 and 25 after racing at Newmarket and with a daytime session on Sept. 26. The sale will, therefore, be held in conjunction with the Cambridgeshire meeting that features the G1 Cheveley Park S. and G1 Middle Park S.

The Goffs Sportsman's Sale, which traditionally follows on from the Orby Sale, will remain in Ireland and be held in conjunction with the Goffs Autumn Yearling and HIT Sale on Nov. 1 and 2.

The Goffs changes were announced after the Irish government announced it will scrap plans to resume indoor hospitality from July 5 amid concerns about the Delta Covid-19 variant. Ireland's travel and quarantine rules remain among the strictest on the continent. Last week, a UK buyers' bubble established by Tattersalls Ireland that facilitated around 100 UK residents to travel to Ireland for the Derby sale was quashed by the government on the morning of the sale. Referring to that episode, Goffs Group Chief Executive Henry Beeby said, “Last week's events mean that there is currently no confidence in our ability to hold the prestigious Orby Sale in Ireland whilst the current travel restrictions into Ireland remain in place. The overseas buyers 'bubble' that worked so well for the Goffs Land Rover Sale was being replicated at the Derby Sale but was inexplicably withdrawn at the eleventh hour and there is simply no way that vendors, or Goffs, can take the risk that the same thing could happen on the eve of the Orby Sale as there is too much at stake.

“In 2020 we took a later decision to move Orby to our UK sales complex in Doncaster but it is well known that the results were disappointing to say the least and potential Orby vendors have made it clear that is not an option that would be embraced. Therefore we feel it is in the best interests of Irish vendors selling in Orby to clearly state that the sale will be held in Newmarket in conjunction with some top class racing, as we cannot confidently deliver overseas buyers to Kildare, making it impossible for us to properly promote our world-class catalogue to an international audience.

“In many ways this is a disappointing move to have to make but we feel we have been left with no choice by recent events, as yearling vendors need certainty given the value of the yearlings we are asking them to commit to Orby. Our fervent hope and belief is that we will back in Kildare Paddocks for Orby 22 as the Irish National Yearling Sale belongs in Ireland.

“At this point I would like to thank Edmond Mahony and his Tattersalls' colleagues for giving us the option to essentially rent Park Paddocks and accommodate what is a competitor sale. The last 18 months have required all of us to work together in ways we could never have imagined and, whilst there has been plenty of mutually beneficial cooperation and give and take, this is a step further than anything else. We do not underestimate the magnitude of this generous gesture.”

The post Goffs Orby Moves To 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