Enable “Happy And Well” In Arc Prep

Newmarket’s Henry Cecil Open Weekend could not take place in its traditional format this year, but a wide array of HQ trainers nonetheless participated in virtual format.

John Gosden was chief among them, and he gave an update on the town’s most popular equine resident, Enable (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}), as she gears up for an attempt at a third win in the G1 Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe on Oct. 4.

“Enable is very happy and well,” Gosden said. “She has been fine since the race at Kempton [the Sept. 5 G3 September S). She enjoyed that outing. It’s a massive task [the Arc], a big mountain to climb again. If it had gone quite right last year, she obviously wouldn’t be trying to do it this year.

“It looks a fantastic race; Aidan O’Brien is fielding a wonderful filly in Love, who naturally being a 3-year-old gets all the weight, which Enable benefited from when she won as a 3-year-old, and there are some great older horses. It is very exciting–she is in great form to attempt the impossible. Frankie [Dettori] will hopefully be here next week to ride her in some work and help bring her up to the race.”

Enable will meet her illustrious staying stablemate Stradivarius (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) for the first time on a racecourse in the Arc. Stradivarius shortened up to 2400 metres when second in the G2 Prix Foy on Sept. 13.

“In the Prix Foy, Mickael Barzalona was riding [winner] Anthony Van Dyck and he went nice gentle fractions,” Gosden said. “In the French trials they do not like to overdo them, they come into the straight and then kick. I thought for a two-and-a-half-mile Ascot Gold Cup winner he showed great acceleration down the straight. The other horses behind never got to them. I thought both horses ran lovely races and he came up a neck short. I could not have been happier with him.”

Two of Gosden’s Group 1-winning 3-year-olds, Palace Pier (GB) (Kingman {GB}) and Mishriff (GB) (Make Believe {GB}), have dates on British Champions Day, in the G1 Queen Elizabeth II S. and G1 Qipco Champion S. respectively.

“We are very much looking at the QEII with Palace Pier,” Gosden said. “We were very happy with the [G1] Jacques le Marois–we wanted that straight mile for him. They did have an excessive amount of rain, so it was very soft, but he handled it well. There is a strong possibility that he stays in training as a 4-year-old, in which case it will probably be his last run of the season as we are getting deep into October. I didn’t really want to be whizzing him off to Hong Kong or America at this stage, maybe we will do that sort of thing next year. Hopefully he runs a big race in the QEII, and we will be waiting to run him again as a 4-year-old.”

Of the G1 Prix du Jockey Club victor Mishriff, Gosden added, “We thought about the Arc. We looked at the pedigree and to me, he is not fully furnished and strengthened yet. He is still improving and the Arc at this stage of his career could do more harm than good. We decided we will stay at a mile and a quarter and he will be going to the Champion S. I’d expect him to put up a pretty big show.”

Gosden said the G3 Cumberland Lodge S. could be on the agenda for last year’s G1 St Leger winner Logician (GB) (Frankel {GB}) following his recent winning return off an extended layoff due to peritonitis.

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Hard Road After Brexit Can Still Be Eased

There is a species of fish called the Atlantic Horse Mackerel. Maybe we could generate due political attention and energy if we started racing them, instead of Thoroughbreds. As it is, the relative economic footprints of the fishing industry and equine sport appear wholly immaterial when it comes to the emotional imperatives of Brexit.

Across the political spectrum, and across the world, we have become bleakly accustomed to the increasing puerility of political discourse. Complex policy dilemmas are contorted into their most provocative form, with the shallow volatilities of social media cynically harnessed to ideological agendas.

Fishing has become a notoriously literal adaptation of the insularity that coarsened so much of the Brexit debate. And now that the debate has moved on, to what happens next, the same gusts of childish territorialism are enabling hijackers and pirates–the political captains addicted to gesture and bravado, rather than the diligent and patient business of sealing leaks or repairing torn sails and nets–to drive us all towards the rocks of no deal.

This is not the place to highlight the hazards that actually loom, as a result, for British trawlers (which export the majority of their catch). But what our own industry does need to understand is how governments are meanwhile setting adrift the ferries transporting our horseboxes from December.

How many of us are truly aware of the consequence of a hard Brexit, followed next spring by the 2021 E.U. Animal Health Law? Certainly I had no real sense of the catastrophic impracticalities ahead until the publication, this week, of a dossier compiled by a Task Force representing a variety of international industry federations.

They have been convening weekly since May. One of the most elementary premises of their analysis was to compute, for the first time, the collective economic value of racing, breeding and equestrianism in Europe. At €52.1 billion per annum, with a payroll of 210,000 direct jobs and over 500,000 overall, it far exceeds the fishing industry.

Apparently, however, that is not enough for the British, Irish and French governments to prioritise a replacement for the tripartite agreement that has long facilitated the free movement of elite horses. Evolved over 50 years, that exemplary agreement both verified and streamlined the health status of horses, applying international codes of practice for the control of equine diseases, including such virulent conditions as CEM, EVA and EIA.

Absolutely fundamental as these precautions are, the three relevant governments have apparently manifested a staggering fatalism about the agreement lapsing with Brexit. As things stand, the routine but priceless traffic of Thoroughbreds–traffic predicated, whether for competition or breeding or sale, on certification of the highest status of health and welfare–is going to be drastically affected.

If no trade deal is agreed, Britain will in December assume default “third country” standards for trade. That will entail isolation and residence requirements, disease testing, export health certification, and E.U. entry through designated Border Inspection Posts. Next April, however, still more stringent restrictions will be enforced by the E.U. Animal Health Law. You could certainly forget the “walk-in” mare crossing between the U.K. or Ireland to visit a stallion.

Already from December we can look forward to horseboxes joining queues of freight held up at ports and frontiers. Moreover the construction of Border Inspection Posts, hitherto unnecessary for the movement of horses, has been suspended in response to the latest Wild West exhibitionism from those directing the British negotiating strategy.

And, by the way, you can see the Machiavellian calculations behind legislation that deliberately flouts international law. Having flushed out nearly all the parliamentarians of old-fashioned principle and honour from the party of government, those holding the tiller now just need the House of Lords to make a stand instead. Then, perhaps, we will again hear the disingenuous, incendiary hue-and-cry about “elitist” obstruction of the popular will.

Even if such inspection points were ready for use, however, no layman could begin to grasp the terrifying risk to highly-strung mares with foals at foot; or a yearling on its way to a sale where it might be valued in millions; or a champion travelling for a race dependent for its Group 1 status on international competition.

More than half the horses sold at the principal Tattersalls sales, remember, have either arrived from an E.U. nation or will be sold to one. And of the Thoroughbreds sold by Irish vendors, at an estimated annual value of €438 million, 76% were exported to Britain in 2019.

Nor are the problems confined to traffic in and out of Britain, which also serves as landbridge for thousands of horses annually travelling between Ireland and France, and all points of the European continent beyond. The unusually dynamic working life of the racehorse can be measured by 20,892 cross-border movements, temporary or permanent, recorded between France, Ireland and Britain in 2017.

Then there are the tariffs likely to arise from the UK’s new status as a “third country”; and VAT differences between the UK and E.U. But the real runaway train, hurtling down the tracks, is the E.U.’s new Animal Health legislation, which stipulates residency requirements prior to travel.

Think of the nightmares created for sales consignors and auction houses, if you have to accommodate all stock on site for the critical 30 days leading up to its appearance in the ring. Conversely, a maximum residency of just 90 days is ordained for mares visiting stallions. Ninety days! For a pregnant mare to arrive safely in advance of her due date; to deliver her foal; to return to a coverable oestrus, and potentially require repeat covers; and to be verified as in foal after a reliable interval.

The Task Force wants to spread awareness of these appalling challenges. But it also wants to meet them. Perhaps the most instructive utterance of the whole Brexit saga was that Britain “has had enough of experts.” But the assiduous example of these far-sighted and public-spirited horsemen could be usefully borrowed by those too busy brandishing flags or sabres to devote themselves to actually recognising and solving problems. As things stand, unfortunately, the solution proposed by the Task Force has yet to be embraced by governments and regulatory authorities.

That solution, self-driven and self-funded by the industry, already exists: the digital passport. The Task Force dossier elaborates its real-time efficiency and reliability in terms of integrity, biosecurity, traceability and welfare. Told that the paper passport system must continue, its authors have suggested a compromise. (Quaint notion! Can they please take over the broader negotiations, once their work is done?) They now urge a dual system, in which paper and electronic passports can operate in tandem.

It is not too late; not quite yet. The calamitous hobbling of international equine traffic is still preventable. A comprehensive Free Trade Agreement would maintain uninhibited movement of both “high health” horses and temporary movements of their essential, skilled companions, from grooms to veterinarians to jockeys. But every restriction on that fluid ecosystem will cause grave economic damage to an industry that already operates on precarious margins.

The Task Force is not looking to cause panic. But it does need us all to heed its warnings, and assist its lobbying. Because time is running out. And if you think all this is too difficult, wait until you have to put a saddle on a fish.

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Armstrongs In Line For Profitable Sale

There is a general feeling of relief this year that the yearling sales are taking place at all. While some of the key indices are down on previous years there is comfort to be found in the strong clearance rates experienced at the sales thus far and even more comfort to be taken by some of the results pinhookers have had from their investments of 2019. For siblings Chris and Tara Armstrong this year could be one of the more memorable ones for their young pinhooking operation from Beechvale Stud.

At the upcoming Tattersalls Ireland September Yearling Sale they offer two yearling colts. The first is lot 107, a son of Profitable (Ire) whose first crop has been well received in the ring. The second is lot 222, who has arguably received one of the best pedigree updates since catalogue was printed. He is by Mehmas (Ire), who is currently leading first-season sire, and his half-sister is none other than recent G1 Matron S. winner Champers Elysees (Ire) (Elzaam {Aus}). This success for Champers Elysees was not the first update she had given her little brother, as prior to her Group 1 success she had also progressed from a listed win to Group 3 glory in the Fairy Bridge S.

Could anyone have foreseen this progression? Well maybe the Armstrongs could. “I remember last year seeing Champers Elysees in the parade ring at Naas before the Birdcatcher Handicap,” Chris recalls. “She was a big, rangy filly, and I thought whatever she does in 2019 would be a bonus, and, thankfully, she’s gone on this year. I was actually at Galway the night she won the listed race. It was nice to see her win it. Then she went up 16 pounds to a mark of 110, which is a fair bit, even though she was impressive, but, thankfully, she was able to justify her mark and she won the Fairy Bridge well.”

Before the Matron, Armstrong says he was just hopeful she would run a credible race–“at least if she was even third or fourth that would be respectable”–but the filly duly came with a late run and provided the Armstrongs with not just a boost for their yearling but also a nice birthday present for Chris.

Cast back to the foal sales of 2019, and Chris recalls what he liked about the colt sibling that cost €19,000. “He caught the eye, he was well done by his breeder, Carl Brown,” Armstrong says. “He walked well and was a nice, big colt. We thought Mehmas had a very good chance of being leading first-season sire this year, too.”

The colt has taken his preparation well for his intended return to the sale ring.

“We’ve been very happy with him. He’s developed a lot,” says Armstrong. “He is correct, walks well, has good muscle and we think he has a nice bit of quality about him; hopefully he’ll shine in the sale over in Newmarket.”

As Armstrong points out, the Tattersalls Ireland September Yearling Sale now takes place at Park Paddocks in Newmarket, England, a point Armstrong says he believes may be of further advantage to this particular colt.

“I think it may actually benefit us more,” he says. “Mehmas is on fire. He had the winner in the Weatherbys Racing Bank 2yo Stakes race at Doncaster and if I’m right, I think 95% of his winners this year have been in England. He might be more appealing to the English market. Mehmas has got a lot of winners, he’s got quality winners, and they seem to be adaptable over any ground and over five, six and seven furlongs.”

While it could be easy to get a little star struck by the above colt, the Armstrongs have another offering as part of their Beechvale Stud consignment and although the colt doesn’t boast a Group 1 update he has merits that could also see a good return.

“We literally just saw him before he went into the ring last year and we actually didn’t bid on him in the ring.” Armstrong recalls. “He wasn’t sold so we got him vetted outside the ring afterwards and we bought him. He’s a very well-proportioned colt, he stands well over the ground. He’s done very well throughout the prep and Profitable seems popular at the moment. He’s got a very good temperament too; we walk him around the roads at home on a Sunday for something different and he is absolutely bomb-proof. He eats, sleeps, works and he’s thrived throughout the prep.”

Chris and Tara have only been pinhooking since 2015 and combine the task of raising weanlings to sales-ready yearlings with their full time positions for Aidan and Joseph O’Brien, respectively. When it comes to picking four-legged investments the brother and sister team are very much on the same page. “I suppose when you’re only buying four or five each year, both myself and Tara have to be sure we are happy with what we are buying,” Armstrong says. “You’ve got to be happy with them because you look at them for the rest of the year.

The pair have already enjoyed a sale topper when their Night of Thunder (Ire) filly, bought for €15,000 as foal, led day two of the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale Book 3 last year when selling for 75,000gns, and a repeat of that experience may not be that far off.

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Half-Sister to Masar Debuts at Newmarket

Observations on the European Racing Scene turns the spotlight on the best European races of the day, highlighting well-pedigreed horses early in their careers, horses of note returning to action and young runners that achieved notable results in the sales ring. Saturday’s Insights features Sayyida (GB), a half-sister to Derby winner Masar (Ire).

2.00 Gowran Park, Mdn, €15,500, 2yo, f, 8fT
EYLARA (IRE) (Gleneagles {Ire}) takes the eye at the end of an emotional week for the Dermot Weld stable, being a half-sister to the talented Eziyra (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}) who was one of the last pattern-race winners ridden by Pat Smullen in the 2017 G3 KPMG Enterprise S. Also placed in the G1 Irish and Yorkshire Oaks and the G1 Hong Kong Vase, she hails from the excellent Aga Khan family of Enzeli (Ire) (Kahyasi {Ire}), Ebadiyla (Ire) (Sadler’s Wells) and Estimate (Ire) (Monsun {Ger}).

2.05 Newmarket, Novice, £8,000, 2yo, f, 8fT
SAYYIDA (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) debuts for the Godolphin-Charlie Appleby axis and is a fascinating prospect as a half-sister to the G1 Epsom Derby hero Masar (Ire) (New Approach {Ire}). The February-foaled daughter of the G2 UAE Derby heroine Khawlah  (Ire) (Cape Cross {Ire}) has a significant benchmark to be measured against in Khalid Abdullah’s likely hot favourite Monsoon Moon (GB) (Kingman {GB}), the John Gosden-trained half-sister to the yard’s G1 St Leger winner Logician (GB) (Frankel {GB})  who was such a promising third on debut behind TDN Rising Star Love Is You (Ire) (Kingman {GB}) at Ascot earlier this month.

2.35 Saint-Cloud, Mdn, €22,000, unraced 2yo, c/g, 8fT
Ecki Sauren’s DJANGO UNCHAINED (FR) (Pastorius {Ger}) is yet another representative of trainer Henk Grewe’s regular Tours de France and faces one dozen fellow newcomers in this one-mile test. He is a half-brother to last term’s G1 Deutsches Derby runner-up Django Freeman (Ger) (Campanolgist) and this term’s otherwise unbeaten Deutsches Derby sixth Dicaprio (Ger) (Adlerflug {Ger}).

3.50 Saint-Cloud, Mdn, €22,000, unraced 2yo, f, 8fT
George Strawbridge’s homebred MOONY (GB) (Galileo {Ire}), who is inevitably a Freddy Head trainee, is the fourth foal out of the owner-breeder’s MG1SW distaffer Moonlight Cloud (GB) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}). She bids to become her dam’s first winner and is opposed by a baker’s dozen in this debutantes’ affair.

4.00 Newbury, Novice, £6,300, 2yo, 7fT
RIFLEMAN (IRE) (The Gurkha {Ire}) debuts for the Magnier/Tabor/Smith combination and the John Gosden stable and is the 15th foal produced by the $2-million G3 King George S. winner Dietrich (Storm Cat), with the previous best being the G1 Racing Post Trophy runner-up Aloft (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}). Among his rivals is Godfrey Wilson’s unraced homebred Run To Freedom (GB) (Muhaarar {GB}), a half-brother to the G1 Haydock Sprint Cup and G1 Diamond Jubilee-winning sire Twilight Son (GB) (Kyllachy {GB}) and group scorer Music Master (GB) (Piccolo {GB}) trained by their handler Henry Candy.

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