Guineas Win Is Sweet For Forgotten Mare

In bloodstock circles, plenty of air is devoted to rueing the unforgiving nature of the market, not least the tendency to toss a mare out with the bath water should she fail to sparkle with her first few foals.

When Kameko (Kitten’s Joy) won the G1 2000 Guineas on June 6, he made a fairly strong case for perseverance. His dam, the well-bred graded stakes winner Sweeter Still (Ire) (Rock Of Gibraltar {Ire}), had been the co-second highest priced lot at Keeneland’s January Sale in 2014 at $750,000 in foal to Galileo (Ire), carrying her second foal and bought by Phyllis Wyeth to breed to her GI Belmont S. winner Union Rags. Four years later, Sweeter Still was plucked out of the ring at Keeneland November by the little-known T. Lesley Thompson for $1,500.

Bred by Annemarie O’Brien, Sweeter Still is out of the Belmez mare Beltisaal (Fr), who had herself commanded a modest price tag when bought by O’Brien’s father Joe Crowley for 8,000 Irish guineas in 2001, having a relatively light pedigree at the time. Sweeter Still was given every chance when put into training with Annemarie’s husband Aidan at Ballydoyle, but after just one start at two was sold to American interests.

Sweeter Still put together a productive campaign at three, winning a listed stake at Santa Anita at second asking and two months later adding a Grade III going a mile on the turf. She failed to shine at four and five, however, and after making one early season start at six was retired and covered by Giant’s Causeway. Though she aborted that pregnancy, Sweeter Still returned to Giant’s Causeway the following season and produced the $100,000 foal Dreaming Of Stella (Ire).

Sweeter Still made a brief return to her native land to foal Dreaming Of Stella and visit Galileo (Ire), and by the time she visited the ring at the 2014 Keeneland January Sale her pedigree had enjoyed a few significant updates. In 2012 her three-quarter-brother Kingsbarns (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) had won the G1 Racing Post Trophy, making it three pattern winners for the dam, and under the third dam Rip Van Winkle (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) had been a top-class miler in 2009. Sweeter Still shared the top of the leaderboard at Keeneland with the likes of Life Happened (Stravinsky), whose daughter Tepin would go on to win the G1 Queen Anne S., as well as the dams of GI Breeders’ Cup Classic winner Mucho Macho Man (Macho Uno) and G1 Poule d’Essai des Pouliches victress Flotilla (Mizzen Mast).

Returned to the ring in November of 2015 carrying her second colt by the then-unproven Union Rags, Sweeter Still was led out unsold at $325,000. By the time she reappeared at Keeneland a year later carrying Kameko, neither of her first two foals had made the races-a massive knock in the modern marketplace, and Calumet Farm was able to scoop her up for $35,000. After foaling out Kameko at Calumet a stone’s throw from the sales pavilion, Sweeter Still was covered by four-time Grade I winner Big Blue Kitten, resulting in a three-quarter-sister to Kameko who was a $5,000 Keeneland September yearling and who goes through the ring at the July 1 Arqana Breeze-Up Sale as part of the Church Farm and Horse Park Stud draft.

Sweeter Still made the short trek to Keeneland once again in November of 2018 with a covering to Calumet’s Optimizer, a son of English Channel. By that time two additional unraced produce were weighing down her record, and the former blueblood went through almost entirely unnoticed at $1,500.

To say Sweeter Still fell through the cracks would be an understatement; she positively plummeted through them. And a month later, her first foal Dreaming Of Stella would be offloaded for 2,000gns at Tattersalls December to Elwick Stud.

Kameko had been similarly overlooked when he visited the same ring for the September yearling sale two months earlier. The bay colt in the Paramount Sales consignment on day two of the sale was a brother to Nobody-quite literally: his 2-year-old brother Nobody (Union Rags) was the highest achieving of his siblings on the racetrack at the time, having been beaten a combined 50 lengths in a pair of maiden claimers at Delta Downs.

Kameko’s $90,000 pricetag paid homage to a good physical, but emphasized the coolness of the market to both his underachieving dam and to his overachieving but underappreciated sire Kitten’s Joy. Onlookers, though, should have been shaking in their boots when they saw the name on the ticket: David Redvers. Two years earlier, the advisor to Qatar Racing and Bloodstock had paid $160,000 for a colt by the same sire at the same sale, and at the time Kameko was hammered down, Roaring Lion had won the G1 Coral-Eclipse and G1 Juddmonte International and had been third in the G1 Investec Derby. Four days after Kameko was secured, Roaring Lion won the G1 Irish Champion S., and five weeks after that he clinched champion 3-year-old and Horse of the Year honours when backing up to a mile to win the GI Queen Elizabeth II S.

Meanwhile, Kameko was seeing out his 30-day quarantine at Hunter Valley Farm in Versailles, Kentucky, where Sheikh Fahad boards his Kentucky-based mares. Hunter Valley is owned by a quartet of Irishmen and managed by part-owners Adrian Regan and Fergus Galvin.

“We quarantine all the Qatar [Racing] yearlings that are bought at the sales here before they go [to Europe],” Regan said. “So we got to see Kameko for 30 days. He was a very attractive colt at the time, a very nice yearling, but I’d be lying if I said I called Tweenhills and said, “This will be your next Group 1 winner.”

 

Sweet Deal

Early last summer, as Kameko was gearing up for a racecourse debut with trainer Andrew Balding, Fergus Galvin said he received a call from Redvers.

“Sheikh Fahad and David recognized how good he was–I think it was about a month before he even ran–and asked us to look up the mare,” he recalled. “We were quite astonished to see that she had gone through the year previous for $1,500. She was a good race mare and has a good pedigree, but we all know the market is very unforgiving on those mares after four or five foals. And if they don’t produce, they really can go through for any little amount.

“So we were able to come up with a deal with the previous owner [on behalf of Qatar Bloodstock]. We got the mare, and she had had quite a late foal [a filly] by Optimizer. So she wasn’t bred last year, but we did get her covered early to Kitten’s Joy this year. So she is carrying a full-sibling to Kameko for next year.”

By the time Sweeter Still, still just 15, visited Kitten’s Joy this spring, Kameko had already seriously boosted the mare’s fortunes. A debut winner at Sandown last July 25, he was beaten a nose when second in the G3 Solario S. and a neck when runner-up in the G2 Royal Lodge S. before coming good by 3 1/4 lengths in the G1 Vertem Futurity Trophy-the same race won by Sweeter Still’s brother Kingsbarns. And as it goes, the market began to warm to the family, too: Catchingsnowflakes, the unraced Galileo filly Sweeter Still was carrying when she sold for $750,000, was bought by Mini Bloodstock for $120,000 at Keeneland November last year in foal to English Channel.

All the while, however, the Qatar Racing and Tweenhills Stud teams had been dealt a serious tragedy; a week before Kameko made his stakes debut in the Solario, Roaring Lion was euthanized in New Zealand after battling colic. He has left behind one crop of foals conceived at Tweenhills.

A week removed from Kameko’s Classic coronation, Galvin and Regan were marveling at the fact that Qatar Racing and Tweenhills had managed to twice bottle lightning with colts by the same sire and from the same sale just two years removed.

“It’s just unreal, unbelievable, for everybody at Tweenhills, Sheikh Fahad and [wife] Melissa,” Regan said. “After what happened with Roaring Lion, which was devastating, to come up with a horse like Kameko by Kitten’s Joy again; it was just very thrilling, the whole thing. We were thrilled.”

“It was a bit surreal, really, watching the Guineas,” Galvin added. “What they went through with Roaring Lion was so gutting for them all. I know it was devastating for them. And you’d think you’d have to wait a lifetime to get one similar, but two, three years later, you’re getting one by the same sire. It’s quite unbelievable, really.”

“When they bought Kameko, the whole big question about him was the mare,” Galvin added. “She’s after having ‘x’ amount of foals. She’d been to Galileo, the greatest stallion anybody has seen in our lifetimes, and you’re thinking, “God, can this mare produce?” But it just shows you…”

“You don’t give up on them,” Regan chimed in.

“You don’t give up on them,” Galvin affirmed.

 

Scat Daddy Story Starts At Hunter Valley

Hunter Valley’s association with Qatar Bloodstock and Tweenhills is a ringing endorsement for the relatively young boarding, breeding and consigning operation. Regan and Galvin-who had become friends while on the Irish National Stud breeding course together and who had moved to Kentucky around the same time-were both in managerial roles at other farms in 2004 but decided to take the leap into farm ownership with Chicago-based Irishmen Tony Hegarty and John Wade, who are in the construction business.

“John and Tony, our partners up in Chicago, have been great from the get-go,” Galvin said. “We weren’t necessarily in a position at the time to be buying a 200-acre stud farm, especially in the location we were in, being so close to Keeneland. They were a huge help to us early on. They’re great partners to have. They have a construction company up in Chicago and they come down here regularly. They just love the sport.”

It likely aided enthusiasm, too, that Hunter Valley’s first-ever yearling through the ring at Keeneland in 2005 was none other than Scat Daddy. A newborn Scat Daddy and his dam Love Style were among the first boarders at Hunter Valley, and the group was able to purchase the pair of them. Trainer Todd Pletcher bought Scat Daddy for $250,000 at Keeneland September, and two months later the farm sold Love Style carrying a full-sibling to him for $350,000 at Keeneland November.

For the Hunter Valley team, purchasing Scat Daddy and Love Style was an early gamble that paid dividends.

“For us, at the time, it was a pricey package,” Galvin said. “We had to pull in a few partners. But Scat Daddy was a lovely horse from the get-go. He got better and better as time went on. Even the February of his 2-year-old year after Todd bought him we were hearing the birds chirping down in Florida about him. And sure enough, he turned out like he did. We were always big supporters of him when he was at stud through the highs and lows. And it was just such a shame, a horse just on the crest of the wave that he died, but even though he died a number of years ago we’re still seeing his influence on the breed with his sons.”

Chief among those sons of course is No Nay Never, who was sold as a foal by-you guessed it-Hunter Valley. A member of Scat Daddy’s fourth crop, No Nay Never was conceived for $15,000 and sold for $170,000 at Keeneland November in 2011 before later being pinhooked as a yearling.

“At the time he wasn’t overly big,” Regan said. “But he was very athletic, beautifully balanced, and a very solid foal. The only thing he was lacking at the time was maybe an inch of height, but he was a beautiful foal. When he went to the sale, he was very popular. I do remember the day we were selling him. We knew we had popularity for him, but on the morning at the sale, he took off. It just seemed like the word had gone around the sale. Everybody was on him come the time we took him up to the ring.”

And Hunter Valley’s fruitful association with the sire line marches on through their involvement with Qatar Racing and partners in Vitalogy (GB), a promising 3-year-old off a victory in the GIII Palm Beach S. going 1700 metres in February. The future looks bright, then, on both sides of the Atlantic for Hunter Valley and its riches to rags to riches resident Sweeter Still, with plenty more chapters likely to be written yet in both stories.

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Ganay the Feature on Frantic Sunday

Europe’s press to regain some sense of equilibrium shows no sign of abating on Sunday, when Chantilly’s G1 Prix Ganay heads a bonanza of action across all five of the major racing nations of the continent. White Birch Farm’s G1 Prix du Jockey-Club hero and G1 Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe third Sottsass (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}) simply has to reverse the form of the G2 Prix d’Harcourt to claim the 10 1/2-furlong highlight, having trailed the re-opposing Shaman (Ire) (Shamardal), Way To Paris (GB) (Champs Elysees {GB}) and Simona (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}) in that ParisLongchamp reintroduction May 11.

Chantilly also plays host to the G1 Saxon Warrior Coolmore Prix Saint Alary, where another Rouget representative is at the forefront. Shadwell’s unbeaten Tawkeel (GB) (Teofilo {Ire}) goes straight to the top level from non-black-type events along with the Wertheimers’ well-regarded May 18 course-and-distance maiden winner Solsticia (Ire) (Le Havre {Ire}). She beat the subsequent G3 Prix de Royaumont scorer Ebaiyra (Distorted Humor) by three lengths in that contest and is a fascinating runner for Andre Fabre alongside the returning G3 Prix d’Aumale winner Savarin (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}). Also in the line-up is Roy Jackson’s recent acquisition Magic Attitude (GB) (Galileo {Ire}) who captured the nine-furlong G3 Prix Vanteaux at ParisLongchamp May 14.

George Strawbridge’s star stayer Call the Wind (GB) (Frankel {GB}) reappears in the G2 Prix Vicomtesse Vigier, with Freddy Head opting to stay at home for now rather than commit to a clash with Stradivarius (Ire) (Sea the Stars {Ire}) at Royal Ascot. He is re-opposed by old rival Holdthasigreen (Fr) (Hold That Tiger), who he beat last time in Deauville’s G3 Prix de Barbeville over this 15-furlong trip May 24.

At Goodwood, the Listed Cocked Hat S. over an extended 11 furlongs sees Khalid Abdullah’s TDN Rising Star Emissary (GB) (Kingman {GB}) look to advertise Derby claims for the Hugo Palmer stable. Like his famed half-brother Workforce (GB) (King’s Best), the homebred has one piece of impressive juvenile winning form behind him after his debut at Wolverhampton in October but he faces three others who are unexposed with much promise. They include Cheveley Park Stud’s Celestran (GB) (Dansili {GB}), a John Gosden-trained son of the talented Starscope (GB) (Selkirk) who has a fitness edge having won a Yarmouth handicap 11 days ago.

At Cologne, the G2 Sparkasse Kolnbonn Union Rennen looks at the mercy of Stall Wasserfreunde’s sensation Wonderful Moon (Ger) (Sea the Moon {Ger}), who is taken on again by Grocer Jack (Ger) (Oasis Dream {GB}) who he beat in the May 8 G3 Cologne Classic.

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Record Enshrines Legend Of Galileo

And still the arrow holds its course: that perfect blaze, tapered down from the fletching between his eyes until opening into the neatly pointed tip above his nostrils. His whole life has seemed to obey the inexorable momentum implied in that warpaint. Ever onwards, ever upwards. Sure enough, with perhaps the most telling of all his records secured outright by his daughter Peaceful (Ire) in the G1 Tattersalls Irish 1,000 Guineas on Saturday, Galileo (Ire) maintains his unwavering trajectory even into the evening of his career.

With another spring of undiminished virility behind him, at 22, Galileo could well elevate this latest benchmark–the 85th elite scorer of his stud career–beyond the reach of any future paragon. Even if pensioned tomorrow, Galileo would have four crops still to enter the fray; all, naturally, produced by mares of due eligibility. As such, even a century of Group 1 winners seems perfectly within his embrace.

The breed, then, can already count a relative longevity among the many Galileo assets to which it is indebted. Danehill, with whom he had previously shared the record, died in a paddock accident at 17. And Montjeu (Ire), the son of Sadler’s Wells who contested the succession most ardently with Galileo, was lost through septicaemia complications at 16. Happily, their sire set a more hopeful example, having been retired from stud duty only at 27.

Those names, among very few of the modern era eligible for the same pantheon, all attest to the presiding genius behind Galileo. For Sadler’s Wells, Danehill and Montjeu were three other bastions of the revolution in commercial breeding inspired by John Magnier and his partners at Coolmore.

Magnier’s acumen as a breeder and dealer, of course, has been consecutively complemented by two other horsemen united by a comparable genius, the same surname, and the same stable. His father-in-law Vincent O’Brien was integral to the original transfusion of dynamic American blood into a stagnant European gene pool, most notably through Northern Dancer–sire and grandsire, respectively, of Sadler’s Wells and Danehill. In Ballydoyle’s modern epoch, of course, Peaceful’s trainer Aidan O’Brien has proved no less relentless an achiever.

Posterity, in absorbing the impact on the Stud Book of Sadler’s Wells and then Galileo, will have a convenient brand for the respective O’Brien eras. On the track, admittedly, Sadler’s Wells did not seem to belong to the very first echelon of Ballydoyle champions. Indeed, Jim Bolger remembers getting into the lift at The Curragh after the horse had just won the Irish 2,000 Guineas, finding Vincent O’Brien there, and detecting a hint of bemusement in response to his congratulations.

And it was Bolger himself, of course, who later played a pivotal role in the Galileo story. Quite apart from his contribution as mentor to Aidan O’Brien, Bolger famously bet the bank on Galileo even as the early vibes were so discouraging that his opening fee of €60,000 had been cut to €37,500. When duly coming up with Teofilo (Ire) and New Approach (Ire), moreover, Bolger also sold access to Coolmore’s most precious bloodline to the farm’s habitual antagonists in Dubai. And that, in turn, has opened new branches of the Galileo dynasty–as in the case of 2018 Derby winner Masar (Ire) (New Approach {Ire}).

In fact, we have reached the point where lines through Galileo, Montjeu and Galileo’s half-brother Sea The Stars (Ire) (Cape Cross {Ire}) have almost saturated the Classic endeavours of elite European operations. Certainly it has become incumbent on Coolmore, with so many of Galileo’s daughters in their paddocks, to renew precisely the kind of overseas experiments that produced Sadler’s Wells and company in the first place. Their search for a viable outcross has, once again, brought benefits for many others in Europe. War Front and Scat Daddy duly made their names as international influences, much like Storm Cat before them; and the early signs are that American Pharoah will transfer his ability to carry dirt speed onto grass.

Others, equally, have been able to share the formula evolved by Coolmore to sharpen Galileo’s genetic preponderance towards stamina. With faster and faster mates, Galileo has increasingly broadened his repertoire to the extent that contributors to this new record include many juveniles, milers and even a Group 1 winner at six furlongs in Clemmie (Ire). In demanding ground, moreover, his son Gustav Klimt (Ire) came within a length of landing an elite sprint for older horses when third in the G1 Haydock Sprint Cup in 2018.

The ultimate dividend from sprinting mares, however, has obviously been Frankel (GB)–whose own spectacular start at stud suggests that Coolmore, having kept the premier heir to Sadler’s Wells inside the corral, may not have managed to repeat that trick. Frankel, of course, is out of a Danehill mare and Juddmonte, to be fair, probably felt that his advent represented a courteous reciprocation after the sale of his damsire, at the end of his racing career, to stand at Coolmore.

This is not the place to debate the substance or otherwise of “crossing” sire-lines. It goes without saying that the Danehill mares sent to Galileo could only have been talented and/or well-bred, and the input of another great stallion should pretty reliably produce plenty of good runners as a result. Whether or not any specific affinity should be implied, it is not hard to accept that a little bit of Danzig pep could logically bring useful equilibrium to the staying power associated with Sadler’s Wells.

Regardless, as things stand 15 of Galileo’s 85 Group 1/Grade I scorers are out of daughters of Danehill. Of the dozen best on official ratings, however, only Frankel represents this supposedly alchemical formula.

There are, of course, manifold other genetic strands entwined in every pedigree. When Magnier bought him, for instance, the appeal of Danehill himself was doubtless heightened by the replication of Natalma on both sides of his pedigree: as third dam, and also as the mother of Danzig’s sire Northern Dancer.

As one of the few mares in the breed’s history to stand comparison with Natalma, Galileo’s dam Urban Sea (Miswaki) must also be staunchly defended against any clumsy inference that he inherited the Sadler’s Wells dominions simply by paternal succession.

For Urban Sea, not Galileo, is the true monarch of Epsom in the 21st Century, having divided her influence there through her other great son Sea The Stars (Ire); not to forget her great-granddaughter Khawlah (Ire), who is by the same sire as Sea The Stars and gave the family another Derby winner a couple of years ago in Masar.

Masar’s luminous distinction, in being inbred 3×4 to Urban Sea, was predictably given less attention than the fact that he carries exactly the same imprint of Ahonoora (GB). By the same token, it surely behooves us to ask whether less familiar genetic strands behind Urban Sea may have contributed to her legacy. The German family is by now well familiar, decorated as it also is by the likes of King’s Best (Kingmambo) and Tamayuz (GB) (Nayef); but even Bolger has professed perplexed curiosity as to the sire of Galileo’s third dam, a forgotten grandson of Tesio’s charismatic Donatello (Ity) named Espresso (GB).

Enough dredging the past; let’s look ahead. Even the greatest empire has its frontiers. Are there still uncharted deserts Galileo can colonise?

Well, of course. Most obviously, his perennial multiple representation in the Derby makes Galileo highly eligible to claim outright the record of four winners he currently shares with Montjeu, as well as Blandford, Cyllene, Waxy and Sir Peter Teazle. And there is unfinished business, also, with his own sire. Sadler’s Wells was champion sire of Britain and Ireland 14 times; Galileo has so far managed 11 titles. As we’ve already said, however, he has plenty of ammunition still to be unloaded.

It is the horse from whom he claimed this latest record, however, who perhaps makes Galileo look to his laurels. Danehill, in addition to his three domestic titles, was champion sire of Australia nine times; and the dynasties he founded there, as a shuttling pioneer, make him one of the breed’s all-time game-changers.

Galileo, notoriously, made less of an impression after five sojourns in the Hunter Valley early in his stud career resulted in three locally-bred Group 1 winners, but a further six imports from the North have thus far brought his tally in Australasia to nine. Nor has he matched the diverse reach of El Prado (Ire), the principal conduit of their sire in America. Though El Prado and his son Kitten’s Joy conform to the Sadler’s Wells profile as unequivocal turf stallions, and Galileo ran that way when rolling the dice on dirt at the Breeders’ Cup, Medaglia d’Oro has parlayed his inheritance onto dirt both as a runner and a sire; and the El Prado line has also diversified to produce sprinters as fast as Astern, Artie Schiller and Bobby’s Kitten.

Frankel, it must be said, had a running style tailor made for dirt. Perhaps his own stock, who have shown a similar tendency to carry speed, may yet be given that chance. (His brother Noble Mission already has a top-class dirt runner in Code Of Honor.) As it is, however, the single deficiency in Galileo’s historic career might be a failure to translate his breed-shaping influence beyond a known, congenial environment. He has not matched the geographical reach of Danehill, nor straddled disciplines like El Prado’s sons.

But these are the imperfections sewn into the Persian carpet, against any presumption of divinity. Galileo has been an impeccable influence, giving a priceless glamour to attributes–stamina, constitution, courage and sheer Classic quality–that were falling perilously out of favour. What that would have meant, without him, is easy to see. Just look at the ostensible “commercial” sector in Europe: it is dominated by precocious sprinting blood, generally without the faintest pretension to breeding a Classic racehorse.

To that extent, Galileo and his clan have actually profited from an increasingly clear run, above all at Epsom, a target in effect renounced by any breeder favouring “commercial” types over stallions eligible to challenge the Derby/Oaks hegemony. The same is largely true even of the mile Classics, but Kitten’s Joy has reminded us all–from severely limited opportunities in Europe–that there are alternatives to defeatism.

As it is, however, let’s celebrate an emperor who remains gloriously in his pomp. For so long as people still breed Thoroughbreds, the legacy of Galileo will be honoured. And whatever else Peaceful goes on to achieve, her name will be preserved in the annals primarily for this latest seal on the prowess of her sire. For Galileo has redefined the very nature of the elite European racehorse–and immeasurably for the better.

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Goffs Orby Topper Starts at Newbury

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. Sunday’s Insights features a €3.2-million Goffs Orby sale-topping full-sister to two Group 1 winners.

1.25 Chantilly, Cond, €28,000, 3yo, f, 10 1/2fT
BONNE IDEE (GB) (Frankel {GB}) created a big impression for the Andre Fabre stable when winning a Lyon-Parilly maiden last month and takes the next step towards grander targets here. Khalid Abdullah’s daughter of the smart Mirror Lake (GB) (Dubai Destination) and half to the Australian Group 2 winner Imaging (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}) faces four rivals over the course and distance of next month’s G1 Prix de Diane, for which she holds an entry.

1.55 Leopardstown, Debutantes, €12,000, 3yo, f, 8fT
SATIN AND SILK (IRE) (Galileo {Ire}) is Coolmore’s John Gunther-bred 900,000gns Tattersalls October Book 1 purchase and she debuts in blinkers for Ballydoyle. A half-sister to the GI Florida Derby hero Materiality (Afleet Alex) and GII Gazelle S. winner My Miss Sophia (Unbridled’s Song), she faces 14 here.

2.30 Leopardstown, Debutantes, €12,000, 3yo, c/g, 8fT
NAPA VALLEY (IRE) (Galileo {Ire}) is one of two from Ballydoyle with Seamie Heffernan siding with this half-brother to the star sprinting juvenile Tiggy Wiggy (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) who holds an entry in Wednesday’s G3 Hampton Court S. He is joined by Ramesses the Great (Pioneerof The Nile), another bred by John Gunther this time in partnership with Winstar Farm and a $575,000 Keeneland September half-brother to last year’s GI Breeders’ Cup Classic hero Vino Rosso (Curlin).

3.15 Newmarket, £5,400, 3yo/up, f/m, 7fT
CRESSIDA (GB) (Dansili {GB}) is yet another John Gosden-trained 3-year-old filly to fascinate, being Juddmonte’s full-sister to the GI Beverly D. S. dead-heating runner-up Grand Jete (GB) from the family of the sires Showcasing (GB) and Camacho (GB). Not seen since a taking winning debut at Kempton in July, the homebred is joined by the stable’s unraced Spiritus Sanctus (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), Lady Bamford’s 600,000gns Tattersalls December Foal purchase who is a full-sister to the high-class Ektihaam (Ire).

5.0 Newmarket, £6,400, 3yo/up, f/m, 12fT
DO YOU LOVE ME (IRE) (Galileo {Ire}) is the 2018 Goffs Orby topper at €3.2million who debuts for Phoenix Thoroughbred Limited and Karl Burke. The full-sister to the Group 1-winning duo Forever Together (Ire) and Together Forever (Ire) and half to fellow top-level scorer Lord Shanakill (Speightstown) meets Godolphin’s National Treasure (Ire) (Camelot {GB}), Charlie Appleby’s twice-raced relative of the GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf winner Wrote (Ire) (High Chaparral {Ire}) who fetched €500,000 at the same ground-breaking auction.

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