The Belle Epoque Continues for Meautry

'Depuis 1875' is proudly printed under the name of Haras de Meautry on the website of the renowned French nursery, and longevity is a key factor at the Rothschild family's stud in varied respects. 

For almost 150 years, the  breeding of Thoroughbreds has taken place at the farm at Touques, just outside Deauville, which was at one stage part of an even greater operation and included land which is now occupied by an international showjumping centre in Deauville itself.

The Rothschild family has been intrinsically linked not just to Normandy, but to racing at the highest level on both sides of the Channel throughout that time. Baron Edouard de Rothschild, who took over Haras de Meautry on the death of his father Guy in 2007, is not just one of the country's longest-standing owner/breeders but also properly immersed in the politics of French racing as the president of France-Galop.

On Sunday, he had to stand down from presentation duties for the G1 Prix Rothschild for the happiest of reasons: he won the race with his homebred filly Mqse De Sevigne (Ire) (Siyouni {Fr}). The four-year-old's family has been within the Rothschild fold since her unraced third dam Cleophis (Fr) (Crepello {GB}) was acquired from the famed owner/breeder Marcel Boussac. Both Mqse De Sevigne's granddam Une Pensee (Fr) and dam Penne (Fr) are by Rothschild-bred stallions in Kenmare (Fr) and Sevres Rose (Fr) respectively. 

Penne, now 20, was twice a winner and twice placed in Listed contests in her racing days, making her one of the most accomplished of the 127 foals sired by the unraced Sevres Rose, a son of Caerleon and Indian Rose (Fr), who won the G1 Prix Vermeille and G3 Prix Cleopatre for Baron Guy de Rothschild and was by another former Meautry resident in General Holme (Noholme {Aus}).

While Penne is clearly one of the most celebrated residents at the Normandy farm, stud manager Nick Bell doesn't sugarcoat his description of the mare who has not only produced Mqse De Sevigne but also four-time Group 1 winner Meandre (Fr) (Slickly {Fr}), who was her first foal.

“She's a great big brute of a mare, and she really stamps her stock,” Bell says. “We've had huge problems with her producing giants. She went to Frankel one year which was a major mistake as she produced a massive filly who never ran. She hasn't had a foal now for two years but with her stock you are always wondering if they're going to get too big.

“I take notes on the horses every month and we weigh them, and I was going through the notes on Mqse De Sevigne when she was here as a foal and a yearling and every single time I put, 'I hope she doesn't get too big'.”

Mqse De Sevigne is certainly statuesque and Bell's description of the latest Group 1 winner to emanate from the Meautry paddocks is more glowing than that of her mother.

He says, “She's an absolutely beautiful filly, she really is, and a really graceful walker.”

Penne is already accompanied by three of her daughters at the farm, with Pensee Spirituelle (Fr) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), who is one of her six winning offspring, proving to have the opposite tendencies to her mother when it comes to her own foals.

“She looks the absolute image of her mother. If the two of them are out in the field we'd be very hard pressed to tell which is which, but the first foals that she has produced have been absolutely tiny,” Bell notes. “It's funny, you think you know families and then they suddenly do strange things on you.”

Despite having topped the Arqana August Sale with a Galileo colt back in 2008, Haras de Meautry is more owner/breeder operation than commercial enterprise, which lends a certain amount of freedom, as Bell explains.

“You can experiment, if you think something will be quite an interesting mating, you can go off and do it without having to worry about the vagaries of the market,” he says. “That's the advantage we have. For years we have used some non-commercial sires that wouldn't be expensive, because we could afford to as we weren't selling the yearlings.”

The late Haras du Logis resident Slickly would be a prime example of that strategy having worked well for Rothschild, though returning to the well does not necessarily guarantee success. 

He adds, “Meandre was always a lovely-looking horse, but then we went back to Slickly the following year and got a filly called Ondoyante, who again looked just like her mother, and it's funny, with Penne, we were praying for colts, but we got quite a lot of fillies, which of course is useful now. I think she went three times to Slickly and one was very, very good and the rest were no good.”

Penne's daughters, the multiple winner and Listed-placed Dogma (Fr) (Mount Nelson {GB}) and the unraced Une Fausse Venus (Fr) (Saxon Warrior {Jpn}), complete the trio currently in production at Meautry.

It used to take about half an hour to get [Penne's] bridle on every morning. She's quite a character but we forgave her a long time ago.

“Dogma only has one ovary and she has become very tricky to breed,” Bell says. “Une Fausse Venus never ran; she had nothing but problems, then we covered her and she is now in foal to Mehmas. Penne has also got very tricky now. We've spent ages trying to get her back in foal to Siyouni. Eventually she went back in foal to him in June, but with twin pregnancies right on top of each other. We squeezed one and everything seemed fine. We had a heartbeat in the other one but after 28 days she lost it.”

He adds, “She's 21 next year but she looks fantastic and you wouldn't realise that she's the age she is. She's this wild-looking mare, and she is wild. She has settled down a bit now in her old age but apparently when she was in training with Jean-Claude Rouget it used to take about half an hour to get her bridle on every morning. She's quite a character but we forgave her a long time ago.”

If Penne is approaching her twilight years, her sire, Sevres Rose, is already there and lives on in glorious, if steady, retirement at Meautry at the ago of 30.

“He's still here. It takes him about five minutes to get out to his paddock these days and it's the same one he's been in for years and years,” says Bell. “They all live here for ages and ages. We've got paddocks of retired horses.”

He's not kidding. Even more remarkably, Dievotchka (GB), who provided the Rothschilds with the other winner of their own race in Esoterique (Ire) (Danehill Dancer {Ire}), died earlier this year at the truly grand age of 34. By Dancing Brave (GB) and out of the Jim Joel mare High And Dry (GB) (High Line {GB}), Dievotchka, though unraced, eventually proved to be an inspired purchase from her breeder Windfields Farm from the Keeneland July Yearling Sale back in 1990. Her black-type winning offspring are led by Esoterique, who added the G1 Sun Chariot and G1 Prix Jacques Le Marois to her Prix Rothschild success, as well as two Group 3 victories. Her siblings include the Group 2 winners Russian Cross (Ire) (Cape Cross {Ire}), Russian Hope (Ire) (Rock Hopper {GB}) and Archange d'Or (Ire) (Danehill), as well as the Listed winners Russian Desert (Ire) (Desert Prince {Ire}) and Russian Hill (GB) (Indian Ridge {Ire}).

Esoterique's transition from a glittering racing career to broodmare has not been plain sailing, but it was also not unexpected. In a patchy spell at stud, she finally delivered a longed-for filly this spring, who will hopefully eventually join several grand-daughters of Dievotchka already in production at the stud.

Bell explains, “She's back in foal to Kingman (GB) and has a Kingman filly foal, which is fantastic, because we were looking for a filly. Her yearling colt [also by Kingman] will go to Andre Fabre. She's very, very difficult to get in foal. She had this ovary problem when she was racing and that's why she was off for a long period of time, and I think that's why Edouard kept her in training for as long as he did, because he knew that she may not be easy.”

He continues, “The first year we thought we'd keep her local but unfortunately she didn't go in foal to Le Havre (Ire). She went to NEH in Newmarket and they found that there was a granular tumour in one of her ovaries so they removed that ovary. She went to Galileo three times and we got one out of her, and then we decided we'd change and go to Kingman, and luckily the first time she got in foal straightaway. She is very tricky though, and they've done a great job at Juddmonte and at John James's to get her in foal. She had quite a difficult foaling as well. 

“We haven't got a lot of fillies from that family. Russian Hill, who was the best mare that we had [out of Dievotchka] bred colt after colt after colt, and she is retired now.”

Mqse De Sevigne became the tenth Group 1 winner for Siyouni, who is out on his own in the French stallion ranks. Though the sire numbers in the country have been boosted by some interesting new recruits of late, the loss of some more established names has been keenly felt.

You do get a sense of history here. It's quite something. You tend to feel that you're only a guardian here for a short period of time.

“We're a little bit light on proven stallions in France at the moment and obviously we would like to use proven stallions as much as we can because you kind of know what you're getting,” Bell says.

“We used Wootton Bassett (GB) right from the first year, so he's a huge loss, and we used Le Havre plenty and the one good thing is we have a lot of Le Havre fillies, and he looks like he's going to be a good broodmare sire.”

He adds, “Occasionally we'll send a filly to race in America and perhaps leave her there to be covered and then bring her back. In fact, Victorine (Fr), by Le Havre, was covered by Kitten's Joy and that colt is now in training with Andre Fabre.”

The British-born Bell revels in the history of Haras de Meautry, which he joined in 2007 after previous stints in Newmarket as assistant to Tom Jones, as yearling manager at Ballylinch Stud, and later at Haras de Bouquetot until it was sold by owner Nicholas Springer.

“It worked out as perfect timing,” he says. “Edouard was about to take over Meautry as his father had just died, and he was looking for a manager. I was fortunate to be in the right place at the right time.”

With a view of Deauville racecourse from the highest point of the farm, and the area having had such close ties with the Rothschild family for a century and a half, Bell admits that Sunday was special day for all involved. 

He says, “It was absolutely fantastic. Edouard's son Louis presented the trophy to Edouard that he should have been presenting, and Alexis Pouchin, who rode his first Group 1 winner, his father is one of the travelling head lads for Andre Fabre, so it really was a proper family affair.”

Bell adds, “You do get a sense of history here. It's quite something. You tend to feel that you're only a guardian here for a short period of time and that you have to keep the legacy going. We sell very few yearlings and tend to keep pretty well everything. Edouard is in it for the racing–to go racing and enjoy it.”

There could be no better principle for the head of France-Galop, and few more enjoyable achievements than to have had two homebred winners of the family race on the course that feels like home.

The post The Belle Epoque Continues for Meautry appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Seven Days: Hooked on Hukum

It's Goodwood, it's Galway, but this week's column comes to you from Glorious Golspie, 170 miles north of Britain's most northerly racecourse, and roughly the same distance across Scotland from the country's most recent retiree from the training ranks. Keith Dalgleish has packed up his stable at Carluke and moved to Oban in the western Highlands to pursue, at his own choosing, a life outside racing. A successful jockey in his days working for fellow Scot Mark Johnston, and later Scotland's most prolific trainer, Dalgleish will be missed both north and south of the border. We wish him well.

Life in the Highlands certainly has its appeal. Over the last week there have been peregrine falcons, seals, sheep and cattle, not to mention my faithful lurcher, to fan my love of fur and feather, but I miss the horses. I missed being at Ascot, too, for a proper humdinger of a 'King George'.

With August now upon us, the Arc is just two months away. It may still feel like we've only just dried out from a horribly wet Guineas weekend but the season, and life, gallops on. It appears that it will be at Longchamp that we next see Hukum (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) in public, and thank goodness that he was allowed to gallop on, eventually, after the injury he sustained when winning the Coronation Cup last season. 

The Classics are, of course, important tests by which we measure Thoroughbreds and, with such a premium on precocity, some budding young stars are never allowed to perform beyond even their juvenile season. The later-maturing types, however, may not even be ready to show their mettle in a Classic. Westover (GB) (Frankel {GB}), beaten only a head by Hukum in the King George, is clearly still improving, despite having been a brilliant three-year-old who was third in the Derby before winning the Irish Derby. Hukum, whose Classic year was the Covid-delayed season of 2020, was given a Derby entry but didn't run at Epsom after winning the King George V H. and being struck into during that race. (Royal Ascot, in that strange season, was run before the Derby meeting.) It is impossible to say how much that may have been a blessing in disguise, and Hukum did run fifth in the St Leger, but the initial softly-softly approach of his trainer Owen Burrows, perhaps as much by necessity as by design, is certainly paying dividends now. Hukum's progression has been immense: from solid multiple Group 3 winner in the shadow of his celebrated younger brother Baaeed (GB) to star status himself.

Baaeed was the top-rated turf horse in the world last year. Hukum would have to win the Arc in sensational fashion to overturn Equinox (Jpn) or his fellow Shadwell colour-bearer Mostahdaf (Ire), but he is bearing down on them and, as we saw on Saturday, he doesn't shirk a battle. 

It is not the first time, either, that siblings from this family, passed on from the late Queen to Sheikh Hamdan Al Maktoum through the sale of Height Of Fashion (Fr) (Bustino {GB}), have excelled. In 1989, Height Of Fashion's son Nashwan (Blushing Groom {Fr}) added the King George to his victories in the 2,000 Guineas, Derby, and Eclipse. That same year, his half-brother Unfuwain (Northern Dancer) won the G2 Jockey Club S. after landing the previous year's G2 Princess of Wales's S. Later, another half-brother, Nayef (Gulch), piled extra glory on the family with four Group 1 victories, including the Prince of Wales's and Champion S. Previously, for the Queen, both Height Of Fashion and her half-brother Milford (GB) (Mill Reef) won the the G2 Princess of Wales's S.

However long Burrows holds a training licence, it is unlikely any horse will ever surpass Hukum in his regard. The trainer's first Royal Ascot winner, first winner in Dubai at a crucial and emotional time for the Shadwell operation, and his first Group 1 winner, the six-year-old has been the most wonderful advertisement for the talents of Burrows, who spent many a year learning from Sir Michael Stoute, himself a master at handling progressive, middle-distance horses of this ilk.

Following a banner weekend for his stable, when Alfaila (GB) (Dark Angel {Ire}) also won the G2 York S. for his major patron, it is worth reflecting that Burrows has but a fraction of the equine ammunition gifted to some of the country's biggest stables. Of the top 20 trainers in Britain, he has been represented by the fewest number of runs (62 for 29 horses) with the next lowest in that group having been 142 runs for Julie Camacho's 53 runners. How wonderful, too, to have seen her stable shine through with a serious horse this year in the dual Group 1 winner Shaquille (GB) (Charm Spirit {Ire}).

It is, of course, each owner's prerogative to send their horse wherever they like to be trained, and to run them where and when they like, even if the braying mob on Twitter (yes, I'm still calling it that) may think otherwise. But at a time when the trainer numbers are falling in Britain and Ireland, and racing could do with extra diversity in its stories, it would be refreshing to see some of the major owners consider their options more widely. 

With so many of the better horses in increasingly fewer hands, one can't help wondering about the knock-on effect this has, not just on field sizes, but on that key tier of horses just below the top level who appear to be missing from our racecourses. Admittedly, a number of them are sold to race on abroad for more lucrative prize-money. But how many perhaps do not contest as many big races as they might do in other hands when situations might arise in which a trainer could have several realistic chances for a Pattern race but only wishes to run one, or maybe two, in it? A more even spread among a wider range of trainers would surely increase the competitiveness of a good number of Pattern races. 

What next for Epsom heroes?

It was not a good week for Derby winners. Adayar (Ire) (Frankel {GB}), who also won the 2021 King George, was officially retired after being well beaten into second in the G2 Princess of Wales's S. at Newmarket, having added the rescheduled G3 Gordon Richards S. to his wins' tally on his seasonal resumption. 

Desert Crown (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}) was again stood down, this time with a leg infection, while Auguste Rodin (Ire) (Deep Impact {Jpn}), who started favourite for the King George, continued his 'all duck or no dinner' season when being eased down a long way out and cantering over the line in last place.

It is fervently hoped that both Desert Crown and Auguste Rodin will return to the fray and to the level of form that it took to win at Epsom in the first place. Racing careers for colts at this level are of course always conducted with a weather eye on a future stallion career. Losses can be costly, but the level of interest in Saturday's big race and those major weight-for-age contests to come show just how much giving such horses a chance to race beyond their Classic season enhances the level of engagement with the racing public. 

It is worth considering, too, how much the World Pool is boosted by a decent double-figure field. For the King George card on Saturday, World Pool turnover reached a new high of HK$287.3m (£28.8m), up from HK$253.4m last year, albeit the number of races on the day increased from seven to eight. Of that, HK$49.4m (£4.9m), the highest turnover for any race on the day, was bet on the King George, which was up from HK$29.9m (£3.2m) in 2022 when there were only six runners.

The Rothschild for Rothschild

While Sea The Stars had bragging rights through Hukum at Ascot, it was his fellow Aga Khan Studs stallion Siyouni (Fr) who had a major say in events during Deauville's opening meeting on Sunday.

While being responsible for a new TDN Rising Star in the juvenile Elbaz (Fr), from the family of Siyouni's first Classic winner Ervedya (Fr), most notably he was represented by a new Group 1 winner, Mqse de Sevgine (Fr). The four-year-old's win was extra special for her owner/breeder Baron Edouard de Rothschild, whose family gave the race its name.

Rothschild, who under more normal circumstances would have been presenting the trophy, instead accepted it from his son Louis, and he admitted that his thoughts were very much with his father. The latter, Baron Guy de Rothschild, who died in 2007, not only bred the winner's dam, Penne (Fr), but also her sire, Sevres Rose (Fr), granddam Une Pensee (Fr), and that mare's sire, Kenmare (Fr).

The name Sevres Rose won't be jumping off too many pedigree pages. The son of Caerleon was unraced but, as a son of Rothschild's homebred G1 Prix Vermeille winner Indian Rose (Fr) (General Holme) and grandson of the classy stayer and top producer Lady Berry (Fr) (Violin d'Ingres {Fr}), he was afforded a place at stud, standing for several years at Haras du Quesnay and later at the Rothschild family's Haras de Meautry.

As a Listed place-getter and dual winner, Penne, one of six foals by her sire born in 2003, was certainly to the forefront of Sevres Rose's runners, though his best is arguably the G3 Prix de la Nonette winner Viane Rose (Fr), who was later bought as a broodmare prospect by Katsumi Yoshida of Northern Farm. Her group success in 2005 may well have helped Sevres Rose to his record number of foals in his 14 years of covering. From a total of 127 foals born through those years, 42 of them arrived in 2007.

Although Viane Rose has a pair of Listed winners among her seven winning offspring in Japan, she has been far outdone by Penne at stud. Mqse De Sevigne is the latter's second Group 1 winner following Meandre (Fr) (Slickly {Fr}), whose four wins at the highest level included the Grand Prix de Paris. A top-class winning filly ensures the line of succession for the equine family as much as it will encourage the humans involved to continue in their successful endeavours which have seen the Haras de Meautry remain in the family's ownership since its inception in 1875.

Renaissance

Hardly anyone will have been more delighted with the French resurgence on the track this season than Edouard de Rothschild, who combines his breeding activities with being president of France Galop.

All four French Classics run in 2023 have been won by French-trained horses, as well as five other Group 1s. Only Ralph Beckett and Owen Burrows have so far made off with a French Group 1 trophy, courtesy of Westover and Anmaat (Ire) (Awtaad {Ire}). In Ace Impact (Fr) (Cracksman {GB}), Blue Rose Cen (Fr), and Feed The Flame (Ire) (Kingman {GB}), the French also look to have three of the best three-year-olds in Europe.

Sangster's Winning Combination 

A chestnut filly by New Bay (GB), bred at Ballylinch Stud, winning a stakes race in the silks of Lucy Sangster? One could be forgiven for thinking that this was Saffron Beach (Ire) all over again, but there is one key difference for the young filly following in her considerable wake.

While Ollie Sangster was the co-owner, with his mother and James Wigan, of the dual Group 1 winner Saffron Beach, he is the trainer of Shuwari (Ire), the latest black-type winner for New Bay and the first to score at stakes level for Sangster, who is in his first season training at Manton. With seven winners from 29 starts to date, he has made a promising start to his career with his 27 horses on the books. 

Shuwari, who is co-owned by her breeder Ballylinch Stud, added the Listed EBF Star S. to her maiden success at Newbury a month earlier, and is the stand-out of the string so far. The young trainer also now has one of the rising forces of the ownership ranks in his stable following the private sale of Per Contra (Ire) (Footstepsinthesand {Ire}) to Wathnan Racing after his winning debut at Chepstow. Ruled out of a start in the G2 Vintage S. this week, the colt holds an entry for the G2 Champagne S. next month.

 

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