Highland Avenue Leads Appleby’s Royal Ascot Brigade

Listed winner Highland Avenue (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) is in good order ahead of an intended start in the G1 St James's Palace S. at Royal Ascot on June 15. The Godolphin flagbearer broke his maiden at second asking at Kempton in January, and followed up with another win going a mile there on Mar. 3. He captured the Listed Feilden S. at Newmarket on Apr. 3 and was only a half-length second in the Listed Heron S. at Sandown on May 20.

“Highland Avenue will go for the St James's Palace S.,” trainer Charlie Appleby told Sky Sports Racing. “I believe when you go to Ascot you have to be battle-hardened, and he's put that onto his CV now. Sandown was very much a stepping-stone to the St James's Palace, as long as he ran well. I'm very much looking forward to seeing him on a quicker surface at Ascot.”

Another Godolphin/Appleby runner for the St James's Palace S. is La Barrosa (Ire) (Lope de Vega {Ire}), the winner of the G3 Tattersalls S. as a juvenile. Second to stablemate and G1 QIPCO 2000 Guineas runner-up Master Of The Seas (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) in the G3 Craven S. at Newmarket on Apr. 15, the colt was sixth in the G1 Tattersalls Irish 2000 Guineas on May 22.

“We'll add to La Barrosa to the St James's Palace picture. We were pleased with his run on his last start,” he said. “He's come out of the race well, and deserves to be in the line-up.”

Both SW and MGSP Naval Crown (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) and SW Creative Force (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) are bound for the seven-furlong G3 Jersey S.

“Naval Crown is going to drop to seven for the Jersey,” he said.

“He lost nothing in defeat on his first run back in the Free H., and ran a gallant race in the Guineas. The pace angle is very much his forte. We might step Creative Force up from six to seven to run him in the Jersey as well. On what he has achieved he deserves to be at Ascot. On his pedigree, there is no reason why he shouldn't step up to seven.”

The aforementioned Master of the Seas has returned to work after being derailed by a minor setback that prevented him from starting at Royal Ascot. The G1 Prix du Moulin is now on his calendar in September.

“Master Of The Seas resumed back into work last week,” said Appleby. “He'll build up day by day, week by week, now. We were pointing him towards Goodwood for the [G1] Sussex, but I felt the track would not quite suit him there. The Prix du Moulin is a more realistic target. Long-term the Breeders' Cup at Del Mar will be tailor made for him.”

Hambleton Racing Duo Primed For Royal Ascot

The G3 Jersey S. at Royal Ascot is the likely next race for Listed Surrey S. hero Mehmento (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}), although he also holds an entry in the G1 Commonwealth Cup S. Earlier in the season, the Hambleton Racing XLVI & Partner runner had been a close second in the G3 Greenham S. at Newbury in April, but ran unplaced in the G1 French 2000 Guineas on May 16 prior to his Epsom score.

Cosmo Charlton, head racing manager for owners Hambleton Racing, said, “We're looking towards Royal Ascot with him now– probably most likely for the Jersey, but also considering the Commonwealth Cup. I think Archie is probably leaning towards the Jersey at the moment, but we're keeping an open mind.”

Another Hambleton-owned horse is G1 QIPCO British Champions Sprint winner Glen Shiel (GB) (Pivotal {GB}), who is being readied for the G1 Diamond Jubilee S. The gelding ran fourth in his seasonal reappearance in the G2 Greenlands S. on May 22.

“Mehmento and Glen Shiel will be going to Ascot for us–Glen Shiel will be going for the Diamond Jubilee,” Charlton added. “Glen Shiel is in very good form, and we'll see how he goes on quicker ground–because it looks like that's what we're going to get, looking at the weather forecast.”

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Heider Purchases Twilight Spinner

Scott Heider has privately purchased listed-winning 3-year-old filly Twilight Spinner (GB) (Twilight Son {GB}), who has joined trainer Joseph O'Brien.

A £30,000 Goffs UK Premier Yearling Sale purchase by Jason Kelly, Twilight Spinner was third at first asking at Pontefract in April for Hambleton Racing and trainer David O'Meara before breaking her maiden at Ripon. She won the six furlong Listed Cecil Frail S. at Haydock by 6 1/2 lengths on May 21.

“Kevin Blake picked her out for Scott and she looks like she's a progressive filly,” said O'Brien, who has trained the likes of Crossfirehurricane (Kitten's Joy), My Generation (Speightstown) and Pista (American Pharoah) for Heider. “Scott has been a great supporter of the yard and we've been lucky together. We have a very good relationship and we're hoping this filly can continue that on.

“Scott also has, and is building, a very high-class broodmare band and the hope is that she'll be a strong addition to that at some stage in the future.”

Heider said that Twilight Spinner had been on his, Blake's and O'Brien's radars for some time prior to her black-type score.

“This is a filly that has only made three starts, and on her second start at Ripon, the field split,” he recalled. “She won that day off by herself, she was about nine or 10 in front of anyone else in her group. She came back two weeks later in a listed stake at Haydock. There were some nice fillies in there, she went off at 8-1 and ran a really impressive race-the fractional times, the final time, the way she did it, to draw off and win by six lengths, and she was rated 108 post-race.

“Kevin was watching her and Joseph had noticed her and once she won the listed stake she became more obvious. She vetted perfectly and it all came together in about 72 hours, and all credit to Kevin Blake for making it move in 72 hours. She arrived at Joseph's last week and she's into his regular training regime.”

Heider said he hopes to see his silks at Royal Ascot next week aboard the Listed Patton S. winner My Generation, but that it will likely be a bit longer before Twilight Spinner is seen in his maroon and gold colours.

“I think you probably won't see her for three to four weeks as Joseph is just getting her into his programme, but there is a variety of group stakes for her and ultimately she was purchased to be top-class and compete in the best races,” he said. “It would appear at this point that she's a filly that could potentially stretch [in trip], but looking at the family and at her physically she probably is a filly that will go six and seven furlongs, and that'll probably be where she excels. When you watch her races she relaxes and she has a really nice turn of foot, but she's perhaps bred to be a quicker filly so I think initially what we're talking about are group stakes going six and seven. But I think there will be a temptation there to see if we could stretch her out, because watching her races it does appear that she could get another eighth of a mile if not further.”

Twilight Spinner certainly boasts the pedigree of a top-class sprinter, being one of two stakes winners from the first crop of the dual Group 1-winning sprinter Twilight Son, a grandson of Pivotal (GB). Her dam, Spinatrix (GB) (Diktat {GB}), is bred on a similar cross to last year's GI Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint winner and triple Group 1 scorer Glass Slippers (GB), who is by Diktat's son Dream Ahead. Both are out of daughters of Mind Games.

“She comes from an interesting family,” Heider said. “I wouldn't call it a blue-blooded family but it's a family that really runs. Her mother won 10 times and was placed 22 times. She wasn't a stakes winner but she was very highly rated. Twilight Spinner is very sound and she's from the first crop of Twilight Son, who honestly didn't catch my eye with his first 2-year-olds, but he's getting a lot of winners now, so hopefully we'll have the best Twilight Son out of that first crop.”

“Our intention would be to keep her over there [in Ireland] to race as a 3- and 4-year-old, and it would be exciting to see her next year at Keeneland for the Breeders' Cup. I'm pleasantly surprised we were able to get something done as quickly as we could, and I'm very grateful.”

Twilight Spinner's arrival must be all the more welcome in light of the fact that Heider had to make the difficult decision earlier this year to retire his exciting filly Pista, who won the Listed Vinnie Roe S. and G2 Park Hill S. last year and was second in the G1 Prix de Royallieu, and had G1 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe aspirations as a 4-year-old for 2021. The daughter of American Pharoah has been covered by Lope De Vega (Ire).

“Pista got her time off, and as she started to go back into training she was a little off, and that happens from time to time when they get time off like that,” Heider said. “We did a full check on her and she had a little something bothering her. It was something that was going to set her back; she was going to miss about half the season. Ultimately we decided, with consultation with Joseph, to go ahead and get her to Norelands Stud and let her be a mother.”

Pista, a $675,000 Keeneland September yearling, will have every chance to excel at stud, being a great-granddaughter of the influential producer Coup De Genie (Mr. Prospector).

“For a while it broke my heart that we couldn't continue the dream of the Arc path with her, but sometimes these things happen and you just need to make the best decision,” Heider said. “She was maybe the best filly we've ever owned. Coming from the family she comes from I want to play long ball with her, which means she was always going to be a broodmare for us. So we made the decision to do what we thought was best for her.

“These horses are like roses. When you have the rose you need to stop, you need to admire and you need to appreciate it's beauty. Sometimes the rose lasts longer than you think, and other times it doesn't.”

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Boughey Full Steam Ahead For Ascot

It is hard to ignore George Boughey at the moment. In only his second full season with a training licence, the 33-year-old is seventh in the British trainers' list by number of winners on 44 for the season. Most impressive of all is his strike-rate of 28%. Of trainers to have had more than 100 runners, only Charlie Appleby ranks higher on 30%, for his 36 winners.

But Boughey's most pleasing moment of the season so far came not from a winner but through the superbly gritty run of his stable star, Mystery Angel (Ire) (Kodi Bear {Ire}), who was second in the Cazoo Oaks having made most of the running. If the trainer and the owners in the Nick Bradley Racing syndicate were already on a high from the victory of Oscula (Ire) (Galileo Gold {Ire}) in the Woodcote S., the opening race of the Epsom meeting, then they were positively floating by the time Mystery Angel crossed the line in the Oaks.

“It was a great day and she has come out of the race incredibly well. She hasn't been ridden yet [since Epsom] as we haven't really got any immediate plans for her so she is just having an easy time, but she is sound and she's eating well,” reports Boughey of the filly who won the listed Pretty Polly S. on the Rowley Mile, just across from where she is trained, before running fourth in the G3 Musidora S. Prior to that, however, she had been well seasoned. 

Mystery Angel graduated from the Craven Breeze-up Sale for what now looks like a bargain price of 22,000gns–almost exactly the amount it cost to supplement her for the Oaks. She ran six times as a 2-year-old, her two victories backed up by three important pieces of black type. The hunt for a stakes win continued through March of this year, when Mystery Angel made two trips to France and finished second in the listed Prix Rose de Mai.

The trainer continues, “She's maturing into the filly that I hoped she'd be. She was a very late withdrawal from the mares' sale last year and a lot of people were wondering why as she isn't really bred to do what she's doing, but she is doing it. There are some nice decisions to make.”

The diminutive daughter of Kodi Bear may not look like an obvious middle-distance type, either physically or on paper, but she apparently has both the heart and mind for the job.

Boughey says, “She's very tough. I was outlining to anyone I spoke to before the Oaks that the thing about her is she has such a good mind. I know it still wasn't really busy at Epsom but she walked into the paddock for the Oaks and it was certainly the biggest day that she has ever seen and she was so relaxed. She lobbed to post and she settled in the race. The plan was to go forward and Ben [Curtis] and I were very confident that she would stay. I know it does't look it to the eye but Nick Bradley sent me the sectionals and she ran the quickest final furlong. Okay, so Frankie [Dettori] was easing up late on on the winner, but she stays a mile and a half well seemingly, and what a fun filly we've got.”

Mystery Angel is by no means the only fun filly in Boughey's Saffron House Stables. He has been winning 2-year-old races at a phenomenal rate this season, and the Woodcote winner Oscula is one who will form part of a formidable juvenile team for next week's Royal Meeting, along with recent impressive Newmarket winner Cachet (Ire) (Aclaim {Ire}) for Highclere Thoroughbred Racing, and dual novice winner Beautiful Sunshine (GB) (Ardad {Ire}). The latter is one of a number of smart juveniles the trainer has for Kia Joorabchian's Amo Racing, many of whose horses receive their early grounding in Ireland by crack breeze-up consignor Robson Aguiar.

Superior Force (GB) (Ardad {Ire}) is another in that category and could be one of the colts to be Ascot-bound, along with fellow Amo colour-bearer Thunder Love (GB) (Profitable {Ire}) and the treble winner and listed-placed Navello (Ire) (Ivawood {GB}), who races for Fiona Carmichael and Evelyn Yates.

“I'd be lying if I said I wasn't pinching myself,” says Boughey of his season to date. “It's extraordinary what's going on at the moment. We had a team of horses and you kind of evaluate them in late February when the 2-year-olds start doing a bit more. It was a direct ploy from us to keep buying older horses, and we won a couple of races with unexposed 3-year-olds or 4-year-olds who could be a lot of fun. I think to train a lot of winners you need to keep buying tried horses and that's what we were initially successful with and we won't change the motive there. But, yes, to have had 14 2-year-old winners already–I think it's the most in Europe and I certainly didn't expect that.”

Oscula went straight to Epsom having won well first time out on the similar rolling downland course of Brighton, which was a deliberate test on her trainer's behalf to see if she would be up to the Woodcote challenge.

“It's not an exact science but it's a pretty similar track and to be able to go down the hill and quicken again was useful,” he says. “I didn't expect her to win so cosily but she looks like she's creeping up the ranks. She will more than likely go to the Albany now and she goes there with a single-figure price chance.”

Meanwhile Oscula's stable-mate Beautiful Sunshine is being prepared for the G2 Queen Mary S.

“Beautiful Sunshine was a bit lazy on debut, and she and Superior Force are both by Ardad and they are quite similar in that they have taken a bit of racing to get them going, but Beautiful Sunshine has taken a step forward and she will go to the Queen Mary with a pretty live chance,” says Boughey. “Her work has been good and she has a great mind for it. The 2-year-olds that we are taking to Ascot this year have been pretty professional on debut. They have run professionally, and they have behaved, and I think that's a huge asset to take to Ascot. We had our first Ascot runner last year, Astimegoesby (Ire), and he was a bit of a hooligan in his race before and I slightly feared that might happen. But these ones have very straight minds on them and that's key for a big day like that.”

Navello will arrive at Ascot more seasoned than most of his contemporaries. The colt has had five runs already, starting out at Bath in early April, which turned out to be a good sighter for his subsequent hat-trick at Wolverhampton, Brighton and Chester. Most recently he was third behind the Hugo Palmer-trained Ebro River (Ire) (Galileo Gold {Ire}) in the listed National S. at Sandown.

His trainer notes, “Hugo's horse was obviously very impressive and that goes to the Coventry now so we won't have to take him on, and Navello's speed was slightly blunted by the very soft ground that was drying. I was in more of a sweat than the horse was because it was a very warm evening and it was drying out. Although he won on very soft ground at Chester, I think he kind of won by default because it was very wet ground and he got through it. 

“Navello worked the other morning on quicker ground and he worked very nicely. If we do get quicker ground at Ascot we'll probably see a different horse again. I think the plan at the moment is to go for the Norfolk.”

Navello has been ridden in all his starts by Nicola Currie, who has been determinedly clawing her way back into the limelight after injury derailed her season last year. She has formed a fruitful partnership with Boughey, who also regularly uses apprentice Mark Crehan and the currently injured Rossa Ryan.

“Nicola has been riding out a couple of times a week and driving the long hours at 4am to come and ride for us so it's nice to be able to give her a chance,” Boughey explains. “At the moment she will ride Cachet in the Albany and I would go so far as to say she'll be the top of the pile for my fillies for Ascot. She was very impressive at Newmarket on debut. I don't see why Nicola won't keep the ride–she's ridden her in all her work at home, and she will ride Cachet and Navello which are two quite nice Ascot rides for her.”

He adds, “Rossa was in on Saturday to watch work and he's trying to make it back for Ascot, but even if he doesn't he knows the nice horses are there for him to come back to.”

Ryan is the retained rider for Amo Racing, which has become an increasingly dominant force this season and is currently fifth in the owners' table behind Godolphin, Shadwell, the Coolmore partners and King Power Racing. As Nick Bradley runs his partnerships under different numbers, it is harder to quantify the operation's success in the formal table, but it has already been represented by eight winners this year, as well as two Classic-placed fillies, with the G2 Prix du Calvados winner Fev Rover (Ire) (Gutaifan {Ire}), who is trained by Richard Fahey, having finished third in the 1000 Guineas. Bradley is now a staunch supporter of the Boughey yard with 12 horses in training there.

“Nick and I speak every day and I think he said in an interview last year that he almost sees himself as an aid to his trainers,” Boughey says. “I know the programme book inside out but I speak to a lot of people about my horses and bouncing ideas off each other can only be beneficial. Nick's great. He's a very bright man and we work pretty closely. He and Amo Racing and my biggest supporters.”

While Mystery Angel will not be among the team for Royal Ascot, there are plans being formulated for her to tackle further big prizes this season, including the G1 Qatar Nassau S. at Glorious Goodwood.

Boughey says of his first Classic runner, “She's very cool and a joy to train. She gets up, eats, sleeps and trains. If we had another one or two like her life would be very easy.”

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Tattersalls July Catalogue Unveiled

The catalogue for the Tattersalls July Sale is now online, the sales company announced on Tuesday. Scheduled for July 7-9, 853 lots, divided between 742 horses and fillies in and out of training and 110 broodmares-13 with foals at foot, will sell at Park Paddocks in Newmarket over the three-day stand. Past graduates of the sale include recent G1 Doomben Cup hero Zaaki (GB) (Leoridesanimaux {Brz}).

Large consignments from owner/breeders Cheveley Park Stud (16), Godolphin (45), Juddmonte Farms (24), Newsells Park Stud, Shadwell Estates (102) and the Royal Studs have all been entered. Since 2019, the dams of 11 Group 1 winners have passed through the sale, among them the dams of Golden Horde (Ire) (Lethal Force {Ire}), Campanelle (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) and Russian Camelot (Ire) (Camelot {GB}).

Mares in foal to established sires like Bated Breath (GB), Dark Angel (Ire), Iffraaj (GB), Invincible Spirit (Ire), Mehmas (Ire), New Approach (Ire), Oasis Dream (GB), Sea The Moon (Ger), and Showcasing (GB) will be offered, just to name a few. Younger stallions are also represented by in foal mares, among them Blue Point (Ire), Churchill (Ire), Cracksman (GB), Earthlight (Ire), Expert Eye (GB), Masar (Ire), Mohaather (GB), Ribchester (Ire), Study Of Man (Ire), and Without Parole (GB).

Some of the top lots are: MSP Dubai Fashion (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) (lot 42) carrying to Blue Point (Ire); Maid's Cap (Ire) (Helmet {Aus}) (lot 122), a half-sister to G1 Melbourne Cup winner Cross Counter (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}) in foal to Cracksman (GB); G1 Cheveley Park S. heroine Hooray (GB) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), who was covered by Ulysses (Ire) this March and sells as lot 175; Monzza (GB) (Montjeu {Ire}) (lot 113), a daughter of Group 1 winner Zee Zee Top (GB) (Zafonic) in foal to Bated Breath (GB); the five-time black-type winner and dual Group 2-placed Make A Challenge (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) (lot 716); G2 Mill Reef S. winner Pierre Lapin (Ire) (Cappella Sansevero {GB}) (lot 767); 2021 Listed Woodcote S. heroine Oscula (Ire) (Galileo Gold {GB}) (lot 243); and the Group 3-placed Hala Hala Hala (Ire) (Exceed And Excel {Aus}) (lot 710).

In 2020, the sale was held over two days with a reduced catalogue of 572 due to COVID-19. A total of 330 horses sold for a gross of 5,940,900gns. The average was 18,003gns and the median was 10,000gns. Topping the sale at 130,000gns apiece were Kalagia (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) and New Jazz (Scat Daddy).

Tattersalls Chairman Edmond Mahony said, “The Tattersalls July Sale has an extraordinary record not only for producing high class horses-in-training, but also broodmares of the very highest quality. To date in 2021 mares purchased from the July Sale have produced Group 1 and 2 winners in America, Australia, Dubai and Japan bought for as little as 8,000 guineas and headed by the outstanding Group 1 Australian Oaks winner Hungry Heart (Aus) whose dam Harlech (GB) was a 60,000 guineas purchase from Godolphin in 2016. This year's Tattersalls July catalogue features the usual compelling combination of well bred fillies and in foal mares as well as high class horses in training and significant consignments from Godolphin, Juddmonte Farms and Shadwell Estates, all of which look set to attract plenty of interest from domestic and international buyers alike.”

Bidding will be available in person, as well as via the Tattersalls Live Internet Bidding platform or though telephone bidding.

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