ARC Confirms Prizemoney Plans Through April

The prizemoney investment plans for the Arena Racing Company's Programme Book One 2022, which runs from January through April, were confirmed on Thursday. These initiatives are part of ARC's £21.7 million 2022 prizemoney investment plan. The All-Weather Championships will be held at Newcastle for the first time, as previously announced, and Flat racing will return to Southwell with a new Tapeta surface. The £40,000 Coral Winter Oaks Trial will be held at that course on Dec. 7. There will also be Flat Class 5 and 6 bonuses to the winning connections of £2,500 and the yard will earn £150 through January, February and March at all all-weather meetings. The Jumps programme will be boosted with a minimum of £75,000 in total prizemoney per card on all ARC fixtures run in January, February and March. The full programme for the Winter Million fixture is available here.

Managing Director of ARC's Racing Division, Mark Spincer, said, “We are pleased to confirm our specific prize money investment plans for programme book one 2022 as part of the overall announcements that we made in October.

“Our flat programme throughout this time will continue to run above minimum values, and we very much look forward to introducing the new bonus for Class 5 and 6 divided races from January, alongside free entry for flat owners during February and March.  Equally, we hope that the reshaping of Good Friday, with the All-Weather Vase fixture at Lingfield Park, will give more horses an end of season target, and an excellent day out for connections.”

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Tattersalls Ascot December Adds 21 Wildcards

A total of 21 wildcards were added to the Dec. 6 Tattersalls Ascot December Sale which will now feature 89 lots. Comprised of 11 yearlings, 58 horses-in-training, 12 horses-out-of-training, two stores and five point-to-pointers, selling will begin at 11 a.m. local time at Ascot Racecourse Stables. One of the wildcard entries of note is lot 47, No Nonsense (GB) (Acclamation {GB}) from George Boughey's Saffron House Stables. Sporting an official BHA Rating of 85, No Nonsense was placed the G3 Pavillion S. at Ascot. For the full catalogue, please visit the Tattersalls Ascot website.

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Partners Bid Farewell To Grand Mare

Grand Glory (GB) (Olympic Glory {Ire}) has taken her connections on a remarkable ride over the last three years, and after a short sojourn in Tokyo-where she picked up fifth-place prizemoney in Sunday's G1 Japan Cup-the G1 Prix Jean Romanet winner and G1 Prix de Diane third-place finisher rolls into Deauville this weekend to go through the ring at the Arqana December Breeding Stock Sale as lot 192 from Haras de Castillon.

Grand Glory is trained in France and owned by a trio of Americans, but her story has a decidedly Italian feel. Purchased for €18,000 as a yearling by the Rome-based Marco Bozzi, Grand Glory went into training in Maisons-Laffitte with Gianluca Bietolini, a successful trainer in Italy who emigrated to France in 2013. After making a winning debut in December of 2018 for owner Bartolo Faraci, Grand Glory was purchased privately by a trio of Italian American friends now scattered across the States: Albert Frassetto, John D'Amato and Mike Pietrangelo.

Pietrangelo, a Memphis-based retired attorney, has been dabbling in racehorse ownership, breeding and pinhooking for the better part of 20 years, but he has never had a horse like Grand Glory. Recalling how he and his partners came to buy her, Pietrangelo said, “John [D'Amato] is really close to our trainer, Gianluca Bietolini, and also with Marco Bozzi, who is our bloodstock agent in Europe. Marco had bought Grand Glory for another client, and she ran a very good first race. John D'Amato called up Gianluca to congratulate him, and Gianluca was a little sad. He said, 'I've already had calls and I think the owner is going to sell.' John said, 'no, we need to buy this horse. Tell me what a fair price is.' We had Marco work that out and we bought her. Then John said, 'I'm going to ask Al Frassetto to come in.' So we have a third each.”

Pietrangelo and D'Amato met at a day at the races hosted by another Italian American, the Florida-based Paolo Romanelli, about 10 years ago. The pair, who each had racing interests in the U.S., hit it off, and before they knew it they were racehorse owners overseas.

“There were a couple of horses that were sold in Ocala and shipped over to Europe, but the buyer never paid for them, so the horses were there and they were actually with Gianluca, so we bought them,” Pietrangelo said. “Between the three of them, I don't think they won a race, but that's how we got started. Marco then bought us a couple at the Arqana sale, and we had some good luck.”

Some good luck, and a lot of ability, would be a good descriptor for Grand Glory who, after her purchase by D'Amato, Frassetto and Pietrangelo, was put away for the winter. Meeting heavy ground on her 3-year-old debut, she was second in the Listed Prix Rose de Mai, and five weeks later won a Saint-Cloud conditions race going 2000 metres. Next up was a lofty assignment in the G1 Prix de Diane, but Grand Glory's odds of 28-1 did nothing to damper the excitement of her owners, who all traveled to Chantilly to see their filly in action. Grand Glory outran her odds to be a fast-finishing third behind Channel (Ire) (Nathaniel {Ire}).

“That was one of my most exciting days at the races,” Pietrangelo said. “It's as big a race in France as anything we have in the U.S., and to see her close like she did–maybe with another 20, 30 yards, I'm not saying we'd win, but maybe we'd get second. It was just spectacular.”

The subsequent onset of the pandemic has meant that Team Grand Glory hasn't since been able to gather to cheer home their mare in person, but she has nonetheless continued to provide thrills from afar. In her first appearance since the Diane, Grand Glory won her first black-type race, the Listed Prix Zarkava at ParisLongchamp, last May, and added the G3 Prix de Flore before seasons' end.

As good as Grand Glory was at three and four, she has proven a revelation at five. After winning the G3 Grand Prix de Vichy, she came from a joint-last early to nab the defending winner and Breeders' Cup champion Audarya (Fr) (Wootton Bassett {GB}) by a short head in the G1 Prix Jean Romanet in August. The bob of the head, however, went against Grand Glory next out, and she lost the G1 Prix de l'Opera by a nose to Rougir (Fr) (Territories {Ire}), who will also be offered on Saturday.

“After she won the Romanet we were pretty excited, and then we went to the Opera and she lost by a little bit less than she won the Romanet,” Pietrangelo said. “You live by the sword you die by. You can't complain, though it was heartbreaking.”

A trip to the Breeders' Cup and subsequent sale at Fasig-Tipton November had come under consideration for Grand Glory, but with Bietolini wary of the mare's suitability to Del Mar, that plan was shelved. Just days after the Opera, it was announced that Grand Glory would sell at Arqana, but her owners weren't quite ready to call time on a mare at the top of her game. So it was decided to take up an invitation for the Japan Cup.

“We tried like heck to go, and they dropped the quarantine to three days so that made it possible, but you had to have an essential reason to travel to Japan, and owning a horse in the Japan Cup wasn't considered essential enough,” Pietrangelo said.

So Pietrangelo and his family stayed up until 1 a.m. to watch at home in Memphis as Grand Glory came home a very respectable fifth, tracking the winner Contrail (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) much of the way before getting going a bit late in the stretch, a placing no international raider has bettered in Tokyo's marquee race in the past decade.

“We're very satisfied,” Pietrangelo said. “Nobody was going to catch the winner, Contrail–that's a special horse–but I think that stretch was a bit short for her. It was incredible competition and I think it was a great experience-we're sorry we couldn't have been there with her, but we're pleased.”

“She came out of it fine,” he added. “It's hard to say I'm happy with fifth, but with that field and under the conditions, it's ok. We beat the other two foreign horses, and one of those [Broome] had finished second in the Breeders' Cup just three weeks ago, so we're pleased. I don't think she hurt her value for the sale at all. It was quite a privilege for us to have a horse invited to that race and to run respectably, which is what she did.”

One of just two current-season Group 1 winners catalogued at the sale, Grand Glory-with an outcross pedigree to boot-offers plenty of upside to breeders anywhere in the world.

“I think she's really an outstanding broodmare prospect,” Pietrangelo said. “Her demeanour-you can get in the stall with her, you could take her out and walk her, she's just so pleasant to be around. For a horse that's that good and that competitive, the only time she has an edge is on the racetrack. She's perfectly correct, she's good-sized, and she has a race record.”

“There is no stallion in Europe that you couldn't breed her to except for her own sire,” he added. “She would be an outcross with anyone, and we think that's really an exciting opportunity for her.”

Pietrangelo said high-end breeding has never been in the business plan of he or is partners-hence why Grand Glory is going through the ring-but he stressed that, naturally, they won't let her go cheaply.

“The problem with breeding from her-and we've talked about it-is that to do her justice, you need to go to one of the top sires anywhere,” he reasoned. “In Europe, you're talking a couple hundred thousand pounds. In the U.S., who are you going to breed her to? You'd have to breed her to a turf stallion so you'd go to War Front. But to do her justice you need to have a large breeder who has the resources and wherewithal to say, 'we're going to breed her to the best available.'”

“To do her right would require substantial commitment to stud fees, and that's not the level I play at,” he added. “John doesn't breed, and I don't think Al breeds, so it didn't make sense for us to change what we do. But of course if she doesn't get a price we're happy with, we'll have to change what we do. We're not going to give her away. So if we have to breed from her, we will. But we think in the hands of one of the leading breeders around, she'll be a lot better served and her offspring will have much better opportunities.”

While the pandemic has forced Pietrangelo to miss out on much of Grand Glory's Group 1 action, he is taking up the opportunity to travel to Deauville this week to see Grand Glory go through the ring. For the man who fell in love with racing going to Aqueduct Racetrack in New York to watch Dr. Fager run, the gravity of being the custodian of a mare like Grand Glory is not lost.

“She means so much,” Pietrangelo said. “Just to have a horse to do this, and to be there for the Diane; that was probably one of the best days I've had, and I've been to all the Derbys. It's very rewarding to have a mare of this calibre and to know that she's a gentle mare with a really good head, and is so pleasant to be around.”

Bozzi has already begun to replenish the partners' stable with the addition of a 2-year-old and a yearling, and Pietrangelo warned he may not be leaving Deauville empty-handed, even if Grand Glory does sell.

“Marco Bozzi is convinced we need to buy a replacement,” Pietrangelo said. “He has already told me, 'if she sells well, you're not leaving unless you buy a broodmare.' I told him if he can guarantee me one with the same ability, I might go for it.”

He added, “It's a lot of fun, and having the faith I have in Gianluca and Marco-I know Marco will pick out a good horse for us, and I know Gianluca is as good a trainer as we can have. You have to have that confidence in the people you're working with, or you probably ought to find something else to do. But we have tremendous confidence in their skills and they've proven it. It's been fun. I never thought I'd be owning horses running in Europe or Japan, but things happen.”

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Bespangled A Star Signing For Elwick Stud

NEWMARKET, UK–Phew. There was a little bit more time to compose one's thoughts during the third session of the December mares' sale following a blockbuster Tuesday when every other lot sold for the price of a modest family home.

A slight rejigging of the catalogue to include the second batch of the Juddmonte draft on Tuesday rather than in its traditional Wednesday afternoon slot, meant that the prices took a bigger dip than usual, but the demand remained just as strong and the list of buyers every bit as international.

With the clearance rate remaining constant at 87%, this larger session led to 227 fillies and mares changing hands–27 more than on the corresponding day last year when 11 horses returned six-figure sums, with seven of those being Juddmonte-breds. This time around three mares sold for 100,000gns or more. The aggregate dropped by 18% to 4,374,000gns and the median and average were also both down, for reasons explained above. The session average was 19,269gns (-27%) and the median was 11,000gns (-21%).

The rolling aggregate for the three days, however, is already far in excess of last year's entire sale, and is currently sitting just above 61.5 million gns. Last year's total turnover was 43.1 million gns.

In the absence of Juddmonte, fillies and mares from Godolphin and Shadwell took top billing, with the day's star turn being provided by Bespangled (Ire), an unraced 3-year-old filly by Dubawi (Ire) out of the Meydan listed winner Pure Diamond (GB) (Street Cry {Ire}). With the filly's grandam and great grandam both being former champion 2-year-olds in Germany, there was much to recommend lot 2163 to breeders and it was Elwick Stud, recent winners of the G3 Bahrain International Trophy with their globetrotting grey Lord Glitters (Fr), who lasted longest in the bidding to 330,000gns.

Agent Billy Jackson-Stopps was acting on behalf of the Turnbull family and said after securing Bespangled, “The team at Elwick Stud was very keen on her, she was an obvious standout in this session. They have had a lot of good horses along the way, and they are revamping the stock and this is one for them.”

Elwick Stud was until last season the home of another of Geoff and Sandra Turnbull's top-flight winners, Mondialiste (Ire). The young son of Galileo (Ire) has his first runners on the track this year and stood the 2021 season at Haras d'Annebault in Normandy.

Jackson-Stopps added, “I don't know what plans are, but as the farm has its own sire I would be tipping that she might visit him.”

Bespangled's juvenile half-brother Symbol Of Light (GB) (Shamardal) has won twice in the last two months for Charlie Appleby from just three starts, and their dam has offspring by Frankel (GB) and Kingman (GB) to follow. Pure Diamond is herself out of the G1 Deutsches Derby runner-up White Rose (Ger) (Platini {Ger}), who has also produced three other black-type performers.

Ragsah (Ire) (2151), a Shamardal half-sister to Dubai Millennium (Seeking The Gold) was another leading pick from Godolphin, fetching a bid of 130,000gns from Hazelwood Bloodstock on behalf of Sheikh Mohammed bin Khalifa al Maktoum's Essafinaat UK. Now 13, the chestnut mare was a winner in her juvenile season, when she was also placed in the G3 Firth of Clyde S. Her two winners to date include the Grade II-placed Richmond Avenue (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), and she has fillies by Iffraaj (GB) and Camelot (GB) on the ground. 

“She has been bought for an existing client, one of our greatest supporters,” said Adrian O'Brien of Hazelwood Bloodstock. “We are delighted to get a mare with that profile. She has not got a blemish-free breeding record, but she is a sister to an iconic horse. It is brilliant, it bolsters the team at home fantastically well. We will take her home, regroup and make a plan.”

Dubai Millennium and Ragsah and out of the G2 Prix de Pomone winner Colorado Dancer (Shareef Dancer), herself a daughter of the blue hen Fall Aspen (Pretense), five of whose sons went on to be stallions. Two of Ragsah's half-sisters are also proving themselves as broodmares, with Chaquiras having produced the G2 Lowther S. winner Threading (Ire) (Exceed And Excel {Aus}), while Dubai Sunrise is the dam of Dee Ex Bee (GB). The latter, runner-up in the Derby and twice a Group 3 winner who has just joined Arctic Tack Stud, is a son of Farhh (GB), the last covering sire of Ragsah, though she was sold barren.

Early in the session Robert O'Callaghan of Yeomanstown Stud went to 120,000gns for another Dubawi mare, Nawassi (GB) (lot 1960), this time from the Shadwell draft. Members of the Yeomanstown team are on the lookout for mares to support the stud's new stallion, Supremacy (Ire), a Group 1-winning son of the popular Mehmas (Ire). Nawassi's foal, a colt by Yeomanstown's Dark Angel (Ire) had passed through the ring last week and sold for 100,000gns to Philipp Stauffenberg.

“Her Dark Angel foal was very good so it will be bred on the same lines,” said O'Callaghan of the plan to send the mare to Supremacy next year. She is currently carrying to Eqtidaar (Ire), who is by Dark Angel's and Mehmas's sire Acclamation (GB).

He added, “We're trying to buy some nice fast mares for Supremacy. We've bought seven now. She's a very good-looking Dubawi, from a very good family as a daughter of a Queen Mary winner–that was a big draw. It makes it a lot easier to buy these mares when you can see what they're producing. She was the one today that we wanted to buy and we're very glad to get her.” 

O'Callaghan continued, “We're very excited about Supremacy. He's gone down extremely well with breeders so it is a very exciting year ahead. It is our first Group 1 winner since Dark Angel to go to stud; if he can be half as good as Dark Angel we'll be happy. We had a lot of showings and bookings. Generally we'd have two or three shows a day through December and January and then we can kick on in February and start covering.”

Out of the G2 Queen Mary S. winner Maqaasid (GB) (Green Desert), Nawassi won her sole race at two. She stems from Shadwell's signature family as her third dam is Sarayir (Mr Prospector), a stakes-winning daughter of Height Of Fashion and subsequently the dam of 1000 Guineas winner Ghanaati (Giant's Causeway).

Cathy Grassick of Brian Grassick Bloodstock was another to plump for a mare from Shadwell, signing for lot 2033, Ghazawaat (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}), in foal to Tamayuz {GB}) at 80,000gns.

“She has been bought for an existing Irish client,” said the agent. “This autumn I bought her daughter by Dark Angel as a yearling, I like her a lot and she is going to Jessie Harrington.”

Grassick added, “It's hard to tell at this stage, but you can't go to wrong with a Siyouni stakes mare. She was rated 100 and he really looks like the broodmare sire of the future, he is such a lovely stallion. She also has the benefit of being out of a Choisir (Aus) mare, and he has been a very lucky stallion for me and he really is a broodmare sire that I like.”

Grassick can also bathe in some reflected glory this week as her family's Newtown Stud was the breeder of Shades Of Blue (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) and co-breeder of Flotus (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}), who were sold for 850,000gns and 1,000,000gns to White Birch Farm and Northern Farm respectively on Tuesday.

The December Sale concludes at Tattersalls on Thursday, with the final session beginning at 9.30am.

 

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