BBAG Yearling Sale Catalogues 223 Yearlings

The one-day BBAG Yearling Sale in Baden-Baden will see 223 yearlings go through the ring on Sept. 3, as the catalogue was announced on Thursday. Selling will start at 10 a.m., with the sale offering 32 siblings or half-siblings to group winners and six of the yearlings are half or full to Group 1 scorers. Overall, 52% of the yearlings are either out of black-type dams or are siblings to black-type horses and the majority of the yearlings are eligible to run for the lucrative BBAG auction races.

Among the choicest of lots are lot 54, a Sea The Stars (Ire) half-sister to G1 German Derby winners Windstoss (Ger) (Shirocco {Ger}) and Weltstar (Ger) (Soldier Hollow [GB}) from Gestut Rottgen; Gestut Auenquelle presents lot 161, a full-sister to G1 Preis der Diana heroine Turfdonna (Ger) (Doyen {Ire}); a full-sister to champion Genghis Secret (Ger) (Soldier Hollow {GB}) is sold as lot 180 from Gestut Park Wiedingen; Gestut Karlshof's Australia (GB) colt (lot 181) is a half-brother to champion Donjah (Ger) (Teofilo {Ire}); a Red Jazz colt (lot 187) from the draft of Vollblutgestut Lindenhof is a half-brother to Group 1 winners Ivanhowe (Ger) (Soldier Hollow {GB}) and Irving (GB) (Singspiel {Ire}); and lot 192, from the Gestut Etzean consignment, is a full-sister to 2020 G1 Preis der Diana victress Miss Yoda (Ger) (SeaThe Stars {Ire}). A pair of yearlings are out of Group 1 winners, with lot 48, a Zarak (Fr) colt from the Gestut Karlshof consignment, out of Sortilege (Ire) (Tiger Hill {Ire}); and an Gestut Wittekindshof-consigned son of Pour Moi (Ire) and G1 Preis der Diana winner Rosenreihe (Ire) (Catcher In The Rye {Ire}) as lot 156.

The BBAG catalogue also features two yearling colts by Frankel (GB) from the draft of Gestut Haus Ittlingen–lot 67 out of Group 3 winner and three-time Group 1 placed Calyxa (GB) (Pivotal {GB}) and lot 176, out of Calyxa's multiple stakes-winning dam Chantra (Ger) (Lando {Ger}), who was second in the G3 Prix de la Porte Maillot. In addition, two other stallions that have celebrated Classic success with their progeny this season are Siyouni (Fr), who has lot 60, a son of G2 German 1000 Guineas heroine Akua'da (Ger) (Shamardal), catalogued by Gestut Brummerhof; while from limited representation, Isfahan (Ger) has lot 32, an Gestut Eulenberger Hof-consigned colt from the family of MSW Upper Strata (GB) (Shirley Heights {GB}).

In 2020, 156 horses (66%) found new homes from 236 offered for an aggregate of €6,465,500. The median was €39,000 and the average was €41,446. Topping proceedings was a daughter of Sea The Starts (Ire) at €820,000. For more information, please visit www.bbag-sales.de.

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Consistent Demand At Strong July Sale

NEWMARKET, UK——Trade continued apace at Tattersalls on Thursday, with a clearance rate of 90% upheld through two lively sessions of horses in training. 

The international element of the sale was again evident in the morning session with two six-figure lots being purchased for Saudi Arabia and Australia respectively.

Sheikh Abdullah Al-Malek Al Sabah is the new owner of Man Of The Night (Fr) (Night Of Thunder {Ire}) (lot 381), who held the top spot throughout the day after he was knocked down at 175,000gns.

The Saudi sheikh, who has more than 50 horses in training in Britain, was accompanied at the sale by his son Faisal, who said, “I think he will suit the big handicaps in the UK and then we will send him to Saudi Arabia. He will stay in the UK until October.” 

Formerly trained by Richard Hannon for Night Of Thunder's owner Saeed Manana, the 4-year-old Man Of The Night won on his debut over six furlongs at two and returned to the winner's circle last month at Doncaster to push his rating to 92.

He led a session in which prices were again pushed up by the strong demand. Of the 159 horses offered before and after racing, 144 found new homes to add 3,445,100gns to the the overall tally. The second-day median was 14,000gns and the average 23,924gns. Once again, comparisons are difficult to the shorter format of last year's July Sale, but these figures stand up well to the rising trade witnessed in the few years prior to that.

Family in demand

Restitution (Fr) (Frankel {GB}), from a family which featured in one of the six-figure lots during the opening day of the sale, extended the desirability of his tribe when fetching a bit of 150,000gns from Mark Richards. 

Offered as lot 436 by Jamie Railton, the 3-year-old son of listed winner Restiana (Fr) (Kendargent {Fr}) has run just twice from the Gosden stable, winning on his second outing at the end of April. He will now be exported to Australia, explained Richards, who was acting on behalf of Mark Player's International Thoroughbred Solutions.

“Mark is well used to purchasing horses here to go to Australia and the mere fact of me being back here, it is using old contacts and old friends as much as anything else,” said British-born Richards, who is now based in Newmarket after 22 years with the Hong Kong Jockey Club.

“He likes to have someone on the ground to see the horses, knows the sort of horse I will be looking at and said that, if I found anything that might suit, to get in touch. I thought this is a lovely looking horse, hopefully he will acclimatise to Australia and he will head straight there now.”

On Wednesday, Restitution's full-sister Tianadargent (Fr) was sold in foal to Mehmas (Ire) for 100,000gns. Another sibling, Restiadargent (Fr), won the G2 Criterium de Maisons-Laffitte and was third in the G1 Diamond Jubilee S. behind Black Caviar (Aus).

Bear fans

Robson Aguiar is a name more usually associated with the breeze-up sales and, often through his partnership with Amo Racing, he has enjoyed a successful season on the track with juvenile graduates such as Go Bears Go (Ire) (Kodi Bear {Ire}) and Hello You (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), who runs in Friday's G2 Duchess of Cambridge S.

Another son of Kodi Bear, Caio Shark (Ire), was sold through the Aguiar Bloodstock draft on behalf of Amo Racing for 110,000gns  after winning at Haydock in May on his third start. Now rated 81, the former Michael Bell trainee (lot 475) was bought online by SPI Racing.

Aguiar Bloodstock has sold 10 horses over the two days of the sale for just shy of 300,000gns.

British syndicates invest

A relatively small Juddmonte draft at this year's July Sale was headed by Diderot (GB) (lot 517), a 3-year-old son of Bated Breath (GB), who was bought to race on in Britain for a syndicate at 90,000gns.

Dan Downie, who runs the Axom and Elite Racing syndicates, said, “We will give him a couple of weeks before making a decision where he will go into training. He could be for Elite Racing, Axom or the Owners Group, we haven't decided yet. He looks really progressive and there should be some improvement.”

The 88-rated Diderot, a half-brother to the GI Beverly D S runner-up Grand Jete (GB) (Dansili {GB}), was previously trained in Ireland by Ger Lyons and won a mile maiden at Dundalk on the second of his four starts to date.

Another to bring the hammer down at 90,000gns was the 100-rated Above (Fr) (Anjaal {GB}), a former colour-bearer for Qatar Racing who was most recently seventh in the Wokingham S. at Royal Ascot. He has now switched from Archie Watson's stable to Stuart Williams after the Newmarket trainer was the successful bidder on behalf of an unnamed syndicate.

Williams said of lot 557, a 4-year-old gelding who has won three of his 13 starts, “The plan is to stay in Britain with him and try and win a big handicap. We'd like to try to win something like the Ayr Gold Cup.”

Switch of codes

Albert Camus (GB) (Teofilo {Ire}) (lot 571), a winner just eight days ago at Haydock over a mile and a half, will face a new challenge when leaving Newmarket for Ireland as he is to be tried in juvenile hurdle races by his new trainer John McConnell.

The Irishman, who was bidding on behalf of Duleek Street Racing and bought the 85-rated 3-year-old from the stable of John and Thady Gosden, said, “We don't expect to improve him from where we got him out of, but with that rating, if he can jump a hurdle, he should be a nice hurdler for people involved.”

McConnell added, “He came highly recommended, the trip looks grand, he has not really encountered soft ground, but I think he will handle it. We have had a bit of luck with Teofilos before to go jumping. He seems to have very good attitude as well, he won really well at the line the other day and he looks as though there is more to come. He is a progressive Flat horse, and that is what you have to pay for a three-year-old like this.”

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Appleby Happy With Derby Winners

Godolphin's pair of 2021 Derby winners-G1 Cazoo Derby winner Adayar (Ire) (Frankel {GB}) and G1 Dubai Duty Free Irish Derby victor Hurricane Lane (Ire) (Frankel {GB}) are both progressing well since their Classic scores according to trainer Charlie Appleby. The former, who was second in the G3 bet365 Classic Trial on Apr. 23 and the May 8 Listed Novibet Derby Trial S., turned in a solid piece of work on Saturday. The bay is pointing toward the July 24 G1 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth QIPCO S. at Ascot.

Appleby said, “Touch wood, all is well–they're [both] in great form. Adayar worked on Saturday and is building up towards the King George. He's done very well for his break–he put a nice bit of condition on, so it's time to start taking a bit back off again. I couldn't be any happier with him.”

A winner of his first three starts, including the G2 Al Basti Equiworld Dubai Dante S. at York on May 13, Hurricane Lane was third to Adayar in the blue riband on June 5, before securing his own Derby win at The Curragh on June 26. Although he too holds an entry for the King George, the Sept. 11 G1 St Leger at Doncaster is likely instead.

“Hurricane Lane has come out of the Irish Derby very well. It looked a tough, hard race–and I thought he'd sleep for a few days afterwards, but he's come out of the race bouncing. We'll potentially go straight to the St Leger with him.”

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IHRB Defends Its Actions in Irish Government Hearings

The first hearing of the Irish Horseracing Regulatory Board in front of a Joint Committee on Agriculture, Food and the Marine began in Ireland on Thursday, with the IHRB defending itself rigorously. The IHRB has come under pressure recently regarding concerns over doping in Irish racing following Irish trainer Jim Bolger's claims in a newspaper interview that there would be a “Lance Armstrong” moment in the Irish industry. Irish Government committee members asked questions of Horse Racing Ireland's Chief Executive Brian Kavanagh, IHRB Chief Executive Denis Egan and IHRB Chief Veterinary Officer Dr. Lynn Hillyer. The meeting began with an opening statement from Kavanagh.

He stated in part the vital nature of horse racing to Ireland's economy and “as such, the reputation and integrity of the product is of paramount importance, so the issue of drug testing is an important one with significant funds invested annually in this area.

“HRI sees its role as ensuring that the IHRB has sufficient resources, both financial, human and capital to carry out its responsibilities to the level expected of a major racing nation–and we support the IHRB to constantly improve their capacity in this area.”

Kavanagh also cited the increased spending on testing, which has spread to all winners in Ireland, as well as more out-of-competition testing at a variety of venues.

He said, “Spending on doping control has increased by 27% in the last four years, and Horse Racing Ireland has advised the IHRB that funding will never be an issue for meaningful initiatives to improve capability or increase capacity in this area.”

Egan, who recently announced he was taking early retirement, stated, “The IHRB's Equine Anti-Doping programme has developed into a sophisticated and extensive risk-based and intelligence-led strategy, in which it is not just the numbers of samples which matter but from what horse they are taken, where and when.

“Any information received by us is assessed, categorised and actioned as appropriate. It is vitally important to the IHRB that those directly and indirectly involved in the industry understand this and the fact that they can provide any information to us in a confidential manner via the confidential hotline, email or by contacting our officials.”

He added, “We have a top-class anti-doping team headed up by Dr. Lynn Hillyer–and while we continue to evidence that there is no systematic attempt to cheat through doping in Irish racing, we will continue, with the assistance of the industry and those outside, to effectively detect, disrupt and deter such behaviour. It will not be tolerated–we will continue to seek it out–and where discovered, we will take all actions within our power to combat it without fear or favour.”

Dr. Hillyer reinforced Egan's statements and said, “The process is very simple. The information can come in via a number of routes, but once it lands on a desk it is dealt with. We don't care how it comes in, but the important thing is that it comes in. We need to differentiate between information coming in and hearsay. I'm not saying we disregard either, but we have to process it and assess it–that is basically converting information into intelligence, and we work very closely with the BHA now. Every piece of information is logged.

“One of the things that rankled the most reading the piece last week was the six horses sold from Ireland to the UK who were alleged to have traces of anabolic steroids. We were alleged to be doing nothing about it, but that couldn't be further from the truth. The minute that information came to the BHA they acted on it and communicated with us–we were across it and we were prepared to act.

“They did the most extensive piece of work I think I've ever seen. They analysed tail hair, mane hair–they analysed samples repeatedly, and there was nothing.”

Not all of the pertinent questions were asked in the two-hour limit, so another meeting has been called for July 20. In addition, on July 13, the Irish Racehorse Trainers Association and representatives from the Department of Agriculture, Food, and the Marine will also meet.

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