Group 1 Trainer Robert Armstrong Passes Away at 77

Retired trainer Robert Armstrong passed away on Feb. 5 after a brief illness, reported Racing Post. He was 77.

A trainer of champions Moorestyle (GB) (Manacle {GB}) and Never So Bold (GB) (Bold Lad {Ire}), Armstrong trained from his Newmarket base of St Gatien Stables for 27 years until 2000. He was a third-generation trainer after his father and grandfather. In total, his horses won 13 Group 1 races. Sheikh Hamdan utilised Armstrong as a trainer for approximately 15 years until his retirement. One of the notable winners in the Shadwell blue and white was Maroof (Danzig), who saluted in the G1 Queen Elizabeth II S. in 1994.

“It's very sad news,” said Shadwell Racing Manager Angus Gold to Racing Post. “Robert was a wonderful man to me personally and he had a very good relationship with Sheikh Hamdan.

“We enjoyed a lot of good times together and he was a very easy man to deal with. He was a fascinating man to be around and was a very generous host and a great trainer to boot.”

“Mujadil and Mujtahid were probably the best he trained for us as well as Maroof who was an underrated horse. There certainly was no fluke about the way he won the QEII that day.”

Armstrong is survived by his wife Jane, sister Susan Piggott, the wife of legendary jockey Lester Piggott, and nieces Tracy Piggott and Maureen Haggas.

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Name Six Qatar Racing Juveniles

Qatar Racing has launched a competition to name six of the operation's 2-year-olds of 2021.

Previously featured in the Follow The Foals series, which was created by Ascot and Official Partner QIPCO, the progress of the sextet has been charted since birth. The group includes a son of Frankel (GB) out of QIPCO British Champions Fillies and Mares S. Victrix Simple Verse (Ire) (Duke Of Marmalade {Ire}).

The winners of the social media competition will be selected by Qatar Racing's founder Sheikh Fahad and David Redvers, racing manager of Qatar Racing's and owner of Tweenhills.

“All six were born at Tweenhills and it has been a pleasure to watch them grow and progress at the stud,” said Redvers. “They now take the next big step in their racing careers and head into training with their respective trainers. They are all beautifully bred and have the potential to hopefully become something quite special. Sheikh Fahad takes great pride in all his horses but there is always an added satisfaction from the success of a homebred.”

He added, “Their names should reflect the Qatar Racing legacy and high-quality pedigrees. We look forward to going through the entries. Fingers crossed—you could be naming a future Royal Ascot winner.”

The six horses to be named are: 

  • Bay colt by Frankel ex Simple Verse
  • Chestnut colt by Dubawi ex Wekeela
  • Grey filly by Dark Angel ex La Rioja
  • Bay filly by Havana Gold ex Stroll Patrol
  • Bay filly by Churchill ex Wind Fire
  • Brown filly by Deep Impact ex Lightening Pearl

Entries can be made by following Qatar Racing on social media and replying to a #FollowTheFoals post with your name suggestion(s). Names must be clean and no longer than 18 characters. Entries opened on Monday and will close at midnight on Sunday, Feb. 14. The winner(s) will be announced a week later on Sunday, Feb. 21.

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Hollie Doyle to Take Part in STC International Jockeys’ Challenge

Jockey Hollie Doyle, who celebrated her first Group 1 winner in 2020, will take part in the STC International Jockeys' Challenge in Saudia Arabia later this month.

The Feb. 19 contest features 14 jockeys at King Abdulaziz Racetrack, with Doyle also booked on MGSW Extra Elusive (GB) (Mastercraftsman {Ire}) for trainer Roger Charlton in the $20-million Saudi Cup the next day.

“I'm really excited to be riding in Saudi,” said Doyle, who also rode her first winner at Royal Ascot last term and competed in the Hong Kong International Jockeys' Championship. “I've had a few international trips recently, including Hong Kong, America and Bahrain, and it's great that I'm getting to go to these big meetings around the world.

“Competing in the jockey challenge events is really cool, because you get to ride alongside some of the world's top athletes. I've only been to some of these places for a short period of time, but I've learnt a lot. That's what will hopefully make me a better jockey, and I'll keep taking these opportunities with both hands.

“Last year was unbelievable, and when you get a taste of success it makes you want it even more. I've now got even more drive and ambition to succeed in 2021.”

Named The Sunday Times Sportswoman of the Year, Doyle is could also potentially team up with Jane Chapple-Hyam's Albadri (Ire) (Dandy Man {Ire}) in the Saudi Derby.

“It looks as though Extra Elusive has got into the Saudi Cup, so I'd be really excited about riding him in that on the Saturday,” she said. “The prize-money goes all the way down to 10th, so it would be great if he took his chance there and could get amongst it.

“I'd like to think he'll handle the dirt because he goes well on slow ground here in England. I'm not sure how similar it would ride to a slow turf track, but I'd prefer to ride him on the dirt than I would on the turf as you'd imagine it will be slower. The Saudi Cup is only nine furlongs, and we know he stays further than that.

“I could have Albadri on the Saturday too, because I know Jane Chapple-Hyam is hoping to go for the Al Rajhi Bank Saudi Derby after his win at Southwell recently. He's a lightly-raced horse that's going the right way at the moment, but he'll need to take another big step forward to get competitive.”

“There's been a bit of toing and froing, but he's going to run in the Saudi Cup,” said Charlton. “We got an invite to the Saudi Cup that we weren't really expecting–and having discussed it with the owner [Imad Al Sagar], he's very keen to run in it. The prize-money is so much more than the Neom Turf Cup–if you finish 10th in the Saudi Cup, it's the same prize-money for finishing second in the turf race.

“Over 1800m they'll go very, very quick–and the kickback will be something he hasn't experienced before. We're hoping we can get among the money. In the past he has inclined to be up at the front making the running–this obviously won't be the case, so a wider draw would probably be beneficial to keep him out of the kickback.

“My concern is that he hasn't travelled abroad yet, and he's a fairly highly-strung individual. It's how he takes a 16-hour journey door-to-door and how he handles the training on the track out there. He had a break after the end of last season, and the weather hasn't been very helpful to us–we've had snow here twice. He didn't resume exercise until after Christmas, and it's been a steady build-up. He does all his training by himself, but he seems in good form. It's important that he's in a consistent and steady routine every day.”

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Oghill House Stud’s Pat Hyland Dies at 78

Irish racing and breeding has lost a much-loved member of its community with the death on Saturday of Pat Hyland of Oghill House Stud. He was 78.

With his brother Hugh and nephew John, Hyland ran the successful Kildare farm which incorporates the family's own broodmare band along with a thriving boarding operation. His brothers David and Paul are also involved in the business and are the breeders, respectively, of G1 Racing Post Trophy winner Marcel (Ire) (Lawman {Fr}) and Washington DC (Ire), one of the stand-out performers from the first crop of Zoffany (Ire). The latter was bred in partnership with friends and clients Chris and James McHale. Notable Oghill House Stud graduates also include Third Time Lucky (Ire) (Clodovil {Ire}), whose seven victories include the 2015 Cambridgeshire for Richard Fahey and, more recently, the treble Group 3 winner Rose Of Kildare (Ire) (Make Believe {GB}).

Paying tribute to Hyland, Joe Osborne, managing director of Godolphin Ireland, whose Kildangan Stud neighbours Oghill House in Monasterevin, said, “The enthusiasm he had was so infectious. He was always smiling and he had a great work ethic. Pat was very much synonymous with the Oghill House brand and a lot of people who worked there down the years would have turned to him for advice. He was a big figure in the community: he was a local county councillor and would have helped a lot of people down the years.”

He added, “They have had a lot of success over the years through that knowledge that he had, picking the right stallions and the right mares, and as a boarding farm as well—we've done a lot of work with them and the Hylands are all great people to deal with. Pat is a huge loss to the industry and to the local community as well.”

Success on the track has gone hand in hand with some excellent results in the sales ring for Oghill House Stud drafts. Listed winner and Group 2-placed Repartee (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), bred at the farm by Joseph Burke and Wansdyke Farms, was a 310,000gns Tattersalls October Book 1 yearling, while his full-sister Parlance (Ire) was sold for 450,000gns as a foal. The farm's success with Invincible Spirit extends to Godolphin's multiple winner and listed-placed Gifts Of Gold (Ire), a €280,000 Goffs November foal.

Henry Beeby, group chief executive of Goffs, said, “Pat was one of those backbones of the industry, the sort of person who is an example of what makes Irish breeders so successful, with a depth of knowledge and immersion in the business which was just extraordinary. The Hyland family has enjoyed great success and deservedly so, as they are so committed and put so much into it. It's a terrible shame that Pat's gone. He will be missed.”

John O'Kelly of Tattersalls also paid tribute to Hyland. He said, “I have known Pat since before he stood the stallion Maelstrom Lake (GB). Like all the Hyland brothers, and now extended family, he was a tireless worker, great stockman and just had an innate feel for his horses. A meeting with him was always educational and he was a great supporter of all sales companies. A lovely man who did not enjoy the best of health these last few years, he shall be much missed and my condolences go out to all his family.”

In January 2016, Oghill House Stud received the ITBA Special Merit Award in recognition of a season in which it produced 27 individual winners, including six stakes winners. “That was like the Oscars for us,” said Pat in a TDN interview at the time. 

Pat Hyland is survived by his siblings Stephanie, James, Phil, Hugh, Vonie, David and Paul and by his nieces and nephews. Owing to Covid restrictions, a private family funeral will take place on Tuesday, with Requiem Mass in St Peter & Paul's Church, Monasterevin at 11am. The funeral and burial can be viewed on www.streamlive.ie and Monasterevin Parish webcam.

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