Making Waves: Spa Oaks Crown For French Filly

   In this series, the TDN takes a look at notable successes of European-based sires in North America. This week's column is highlighted by Elusive Princess, who won the GIII Saratoga Oaks Invitational S. on Friday.

Princess Reigns In Saratoga Oaks

LNJ Foxwoods, Ecurie Victoria Dreams, and NK Racing's Elusive Princess (Fr) (Martinborough {Jpn}) made her Stateside debut a winning one at Saratoga for trainer Jean-Philippe Dubois on Friday (video).

Bred by her trainer, she won three of her first four French starts for Ecurie Victoria Dreams, and was runner-up in the G3 Prix Cleopatre. LNJ Foxwoods and Dubois signed on as owners prior to the daughter of Elusive Action (Fr) (Elusive City) running a close second in the G1 Prix Saint-Alary in May. Elusive Princess was making her first start since an unplaced run in the G1 Prix de Diane. A full-sister to a yearling filly, Elusive Princess is kin to the Group 3-winning sire Diamond Green (Fr) (Green Desert), who was placed thrice at the highest level.

Elusive Princess is the first runner in the U.S. for her dual Japanese Group 3-winning sire, who stands at Haras de la Baie in France.

 

Winning Analysis For Kingman Mare

Klaravich Stables' Technical Analysis (Ire) (Kingman {GB}) won the Listed De La Rose S. at Saratoga for Chad Brown on Wednesday. (video). The quadruple graded winner has been placed in both the G1 Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup S. and the GI Diana S.

Bred by Rabbah Bloodstock Limited, the first foal out of her dam was a 200,000gns buy at the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale Book 1. Sealife (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire})'s latest foals are a yearling colt by Too Darn Hot (GB) and a weanling full-sister to the winner. G1 Melbourne Cup winner Rekindling (GB) (High Chaparral {Ire}) is under the third dam.

Juddmonte's Kingman has 30 winners from 54 runners (56%) in the U.S. His eight American stakes winners (15%) are anchored by three-time Grade I winner Domestic Spending (GB) with Technical Analysis a close second.

 

Filly Continues Klaravich and Brown's Spa Success

GI Belmont Oaks Invitational S. heroine McKulick (GB) (Frankel {GB}) was the second Saratoga stakes winner in two days for Klaravich Stables and Chad Brown with a victory in the GII Glens Falls S. on Thursday (video).

A 180,000gns Tattersalls Book 1 yearling, the bay was bred by Essafinaat UK, Ltd. The third foal and group/graded winner for G3 Oh So Sharp S. second Astrelle (Ire) (Makfi {GB}), the 4-year-old is a half-sister to Fearless King (GB) (Kingman {GB}) and Just Beautiful (GB) (Pride Of Dubai {Aus}). A half-sister to G2 Premio Ribot victor Porsenna (Ire) (Dylan Thomas {Ire}), Astrelle has the winning 3-year-old colt Lieber Power (GB) (Cracksman {GB}), as well as fillies by Calyx (GB) and Pinatubo (Ire), born in 2021 and 2022, respectively.

Frankel's 44 U.S. runners have 25 winners (56%) among them. McKulick is his first Grade I winner in that locale among his 10 American stakes winners (23%), although the Juddmonte stallion does have Canadian Grade I winner Wild Beauty (GB).

 

Bravo, Mon Amy!

Graded winner Amy C (GB) (Charming Thought {GB}) collected her third career stakes victory in the Listed Daisycutter H. at Del Mar at the end of July (video). Representing Madaket Stables LLC, Michael Dubb, and Robert LaPenta, the 5-year-old mare took the GIII Las Cienegas S. in January for trainer Phil D'Amato and was placed in the GIII Intercontinental S. at Belmont in June.

A winner in two French starts for Franconson Partners, the D. Curran-bred was trained by Henry Spiller. The fourth foal and third winner for Alzahra (GB) (Exceed And Excel {Aus}), Amy C has a 2-year-old half-brother named Rebel Empire (Fr) (Goken {Fr}) and a yearling half-sister by Wooded (Ire). Dual Guineas heroine Attraction (GB) (Efisio {GB}) is under the third dam.

Charming Thought's leading runner, Amy C is one of two winners from two to race in the U.S. The 11-year-old son of Oasis Dream (GB) stands at March Hare Stud for LM Stallions.

 

Calyx Off The Mark In The U.S.

Great Friends Stable, LLC, James Cahill, Mark Davis and Ty Leatherman's Irish import Angiolleta (Ire) (Calyx {GB}) became the first U.S. winner for her Coolmore Stud-based sire with a win at Del Mar for trainer Doug O'Neill recently (video).

Bred by Wardley Bloodstock, the daughter of Angelic Guest (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) changed hands for 20,000gns as a Tattersalls December yearling in 2022. Runner-up in her second start in France for Mrs. R Hillen and trainer Christopher Head, the chestnut was purchased privately by her current connections shortly thereafter. A half-sister to a pair of fillies by New Bay (GB) and Ardad (Ire) born in 2022 and 2023, respectively, Angiolleta's extended family features multiple group winner Sovereign Debt (Ire), a full-brother to the winner's dam, as well as G2 Al Maktoum Challenge Round 1 scorer Golden Goal (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}).

Freshman sire Calyx sports an 33% strike rate of 10 winners from 30 runners worldwide anchored by G2 Duchess Of Cambridge S. heroine Persian Dreamer. Angiolleta is one of two runners in the U.S.

 

Dark Angel Colt Is The Vintage Of Choice

Three Chimneys Farm and Stonestreet Stables, LLC's Dark Vintage (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) graduated in his Del Mar bow for trainer Wesley Ward on Thursday (video). The KCS Bloodstock Ltd.-bred was third at first asking at Belmont in June.

Knocked down for €170,000 as a Goffs November foal, the grey was resold for 320,000gns as a Book 1 yearling at Tattersalls last October. The second foal and winner for The Mums (GB) (Holy Roman Emperor {Ire}), who is a half-sister to a pair of black-type horses, the colt has a yearling full-brother. G2 Temple S. winner Priceless (GB) (Exceed And Excel {Aus}) is under the third dam.

Of Yeomanstown resident Dark Angel's 43 runners in the U.S., 25 (58%) have passed the post in front and six (14%) have landed at least one stakes victory. His trio of top-level winners are three-time Grade I winner-turned Gainesway sire Raging Bull (Fr), dual Grade I winner Althiqa (GB), and GI Shoemaker Mile S. winner Hunt (Ire).

 

 

Mehmas Colt Turns On The Afterburners

Turn On The Jets (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}) is now a three-time winner in the U.S. after scoring at Del Mar on Friday evening for trainer Phil D'Amato (video). The gelding is owned by the Benowitz Family Trust, CYBT, Michael Nentwig and Ray Pagano.

Bred by Mr. D. Byrne, the chestnut won once on the Dundalk all-weather for Martin and D Moylan and trainer Jack Davison before traveling Stateside. The 2022 Stormy Liberal S. winner is the first foal out of the winning Dandy Man (Ire) mare Chiclet (Ire), who foaled a full-sister to Turn On The Jets in 2022. G1 Coronation Cup winner Pether's Moon (Ire) (Dylan Thomas {Ire}) is under the third dam.

Tally-Ho Stud's Mehmas has sired 13 winners from 21 runners (62%) in the U.S. His other three stakes winners besides Turn On The Jets (19%) have all won at the graded level–Grade I winners Going Global (Ire) and Chez Pierre (Fr)–while Quattroelle (Ire) has been placed in the GI Gamely S. besides her graded scores.

 

Honourable Mentions:

Grade I winner Gold Phoenix (Ire) (Belardo {Ire}), who races for Little Red Feather Racing, Sterling Stables, LLC, and Marsha Naify, padded his graded resume with a win in the GII Eddie Read S. at Del Mar on Sunday for trainer Phil D'Amato (video).

Bredman Family Racing LLC and WEBD, LLC's No Nay Mets (Ire) (No Nay Never) bounced back to take Monmouth Park's Tyro S. after a fruitless Royal Ascot that same day for trainer George Weaver (video). The colt was ninth in the G2 Norfolk S. after taking the Royal Palm Juvenile S. at Gulfstream Park earlier this year.

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The Belle Epoque Continues for Meautry

'Depuis 1875' is proudly printed under the name of Haras de Meautry on the website of the renowned French nursery, and longevity is a key factor at the Rothschild family's stud in varied respects. 

For almost 150 years, the  breeding of Thoroughbreds has taken place at the farm at Touques, just outside Deauville, which was at one stage part of an even greater operation and included land which is now occupied by an international showjumping centre in Deauville itself.

The Rothschild family has been intrinsically linked not just to Normandy, but to racing at the highest level on both sides of the Channel throughout that time. Baron Edouard de Rothschild, who took over Haras de Meautry on the death of his father Guy in 2007, is not just one of the country's longest-standing owner/breeders but also properly immersed in the politics of French racing as the president of France-Galop.

On Sunday, he had to stand down from presentation duties for the G1 Prix Rothschild for the happiest of reasons: he won the race with his homebred filly Mqse De Sevigne (Ire) (Siyouni {Fr}). The four-year-old's family has been within the Rothschild fold since her unraced third dam Cleophis (Fr) (Crepello {GB}) was acquired from the famed owner/breeder Marcel Boussac. Both Mqse De Sevigne's granddam Une Pensee (Fr) and dam Penne (Fr) are by Rothschild-bred stallions in Kenmare (Fr) and Sevres Rose (Fr) respectively. 

Penne, now 20, was twice a winner and twice placed in Listed contests in her racing days, making her one of the most accomplished of the 127 foals sired by the unraced Sevres Rose, a son of Caerleon and Indian Rose (Fr), who won the G1 Prix Vermeille and G3 Prix Cleopatre for Baron Guy de Rothschild and was by another former Meautry resident in General Holme (Noholme {Aus}).

While Penne is clearly one of the most celebrated residents at the Normandy farm, stud manager Nick Bell doesn't sugarcoat his description of the mare who has not only produced Mqse De Sevigne but also four-time Group 1 winner Meandre (Fr) (Slickly {Fr}), who was her first foal.

“She's a great big brute of a mare, and she really stamps her stock,” Bell says. “We've had huge problems with her producing giants. She went to Frankel one year which was a major mistake as she produced a massive filly who never ran. She hasn't had a foal now for two years but with her stock you are always wondering if they're going to get too big.

“I take notes on the horses every month and we weigh them, and I was going through the notes on Mqse De Sevigne when she was here as a foal and a yearling and every single time I put, 'I hope she doesn't get too big'.”

Mqse De Sevigne is certainly statuesque and Bell's description of the latest Group 1 winner to emanate from the Meautry paddocks is more glowing than that of her mother.

He says, “She's an absolutely beautiful filly, she really is, and a really graceful walker.”

Penne is already accompanied by three of her daughters at the farm, with Pensee Spirituelle (Fr) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), who is one of her six winning offspring, proving to have the opposite tendencies to her mother when it comes to her own foals.

“She looks the absolute image of her mother. If the two of them are out in the field we'd be very hard pressed to tell which is which, but the first foals that she has produced have been absolutely tiny,” Bell notes. “It's funny, you think you know families and then they suddenly do strange things on you.”

Despite having topped the Arqana August Sale with a Galileo colt back in 2008, Haras de Meautry is more owner/breeder operation than commercial enterprise, which lends a certain amount of freedom, as Bell explains.

“You can experiment, if you think something will be quite an interesting mating, you can go off and do it without having to worry about the vagaries of the market,” he says. “That's the advantage we have. For years we have used some non-commercial sires that wouldn't be expensive, because we could afford to as we weren't selling the yearlings.”

The late Haras du Logis resident Slickly would be a prime example of that strategy having worked well for Rothschild, though returning to the well does not necessarily guarantee success. 

He adds, “Meandre was always a lovely-looking horse, but then we went back to Slickly the following year and got a filly called Ondoyante, who again looked just like her mother, and it's funny, with Penne, we were praying for colts, but we got quite a lot of fillies, which of course is useful now. I think she went three times to Slickly and one was very, very good and the rest were no good.”

Penne's daughters, the multiple winner and Listed-placed Dogma (Fr) (Mount Nelson {GB}) and the unraced Une Fausse Venus (Fr) (Saxon Warrior {Jpn}), complete the trio currently in production at Meautry.

It used to take about half an hour to get [Penne's] bridle on every morning. She's quite a character but we forgave her a long time ago.

“Dogma only has one ovary and she has become very tricky to breed,” Bell says. “Une Fausse Venus never ran; she had nothing but problems, then we covered her and she is now in foal to Mehmas. Penne has also got very tricky now. We've spent ages trying to get her back in foal to Siyouni. Eventually she went back in foal to him in June, but with twin pregnancies right on top of each other. We squeezed one and everything seemed fine. We had a heartbeat in the other one but after 28 days she lost it.”

He adds, “She's 21 next year but she looks fantastic and you wouldn't realise that she's the age she is. She's this wild-looking mare, and she is wild. She has settled down a bit now in her old age but apparently when she was in training with Jean-Claude Rouget it used to take about half an hour to get her bridle on every morning. She's quite a character but we forgave her a long time ago.”

If Penne is approaching her twilight years, her sire, Sevres Rose, is already there and lives on in glorious, if steady, retirement at Meautry at the ago of 30.

“He's still here. It takes him about five minutes to get out to his paddock these days and it's the same one he's been in for years and years,” says Bell. “They all live here for ages and ages. We've got paddocks of retired horses.”

He's not kidding. Even more remarkably, Dievotchka (GB), who provided the Rothschilds with the other winner of their own race in Esoterique (Ire) (Danehill Dancer {Ire}), died earlier this year at the truly grand age of 34. By Dancing Brave (GB) and out of the Jim Joel mare High And Dry (GB) (High Line {GB}), Dievotchka, though unraced, eventually proved to be an inspired purchase from her breeder Windfields Farm from the Keeneland July Yearling Sale back in 1990. Her black-type winning offspring are led by Esoterique, who added the G1 Sun Chariot and G1 Prix Jacques Le Marois to her Prix Rothschild success, as well as two Group 3 victories. Her siblings include the Group 2 winners Russian Cross (Ire) (Cape Cross {Ire}), Russian Hope (Ire) (Rock Hopper {GB}) and Archange d'Or (Ire) (Danehill), as well as the Listed winners Russian Desert (Ire) (Desert Prince {Ire}) and Russian Hill (GB) (Indian Ridge {Ire}).

Esoterique's transition from a glittering racing career to broodmare has not been plain sailing, but it was also not unexpected. In a patchy spell at stud, she finally delivered a longed-for filly this spring, who will hopefully eventually join several grand-daughters of Dievotchka already in production at the stud.

Bell explains, “She's back in foal to Kingman (GB) and has a Kingman filly foal, which is fantastic, because we were looking for a filly. Her yearling colt [also by Kingman] will go to Andre Fabre. She's very, very difficult to get in foal. She had this ovary problem when she was racing and that's why she was off for a long period of time, and I think that's why Edouard kept her in training for as long as he did, because he knew that she may not be easy.”

He continues, “The first year we thought we'd keep her local but unfortunately she didn't go in foal to Le Havre (Ire). She went to NEH in Newmarket and they found that there was a granular tumour in one of her ovaries so they removed that ovary. She went to Galileo three times and we got one out of her, and then we decided we'd change and go to Kingman, and luckily the first time she got in foal straightaway. She is very tricky though, and they've done a great job at Juddmonte and at John James's to get her in foal. She had quite a difficult foaling as well. 

“We haven't got a lot of fillies from that family. Russian Hill, who was the best mare that we had [out of Dievotchka] bred colt after colt after colt, and she is retired now.”

Mqse De Sevigne became the tenth Group 1 winner for Siyouni, who is out on his own in the French stallion ranks. Though the sire numbers in the country have been boosted by some interesting new recruits of late, the loss of some more established names has been keenly felt.

You do get a sense of history here. It's quite something. You tend to feel that you're only a guardian here for a short period of time.

“We're a little bit light on proven stallions in France at the moment and obviously we would like to use proven stallions as much as we can because you kind of know what you're getting,” Bell says.

“We used Wootton Bassett (GB) right from the first year, so he's a huge loss, and we used Le Havre plenty and the one good thing is we have a lot of Le Havre fillies, and he looks like he's going to be a good broodmare sire.”

He adds, “Occasionally we'll send a filly to race in America and perhaps leave her there to be covered and then bring her back. In fact, Victorine (Fr), by Le Havre, was covered by Kitten's Joy and that colt is now in training with Andre Fabre.”

The British-born Bell revels in the history of Haras de Meautry, which he joined in 2007 after previous stints in Newmarket as assistant to Tom Jones, as yearling manager at Ballylinch Stud, and later at Haras de Bouquetot until it was sold by owner Nicholas Springer.

“It worked out as perfect timing,” he says. “Edouard was about to take over Meautry as his father had just died, and he was looking for a manager. I was fortunate to be in the right place at the right time.”

With a view of Deauville racecourse from the highest point of the farm, and the area having had such close ties with the Rothschild family for a century and a half, Bell admits that Sunday was special day for all involved. 

He says, “It was absolutely fantastic. Edouard's son Louis presented the trophy to Edouard that he should have been presenting, and Alexis Pouchin, who rode his first Group 1 winner, his father is one of the travelling head lads for Andre Fabre, so it really was a proper family affair.”

Bell adds, “You do get a sense of history here. It's quite something. You tend to feel that you're only a guardian here for a short period of time and that you have to keep the legacy going. We sell very few yearlings and tend to keep pretty well everything. Edouard is in it for the racing–to go racing and enjoy it.”

There could be no better principle for the head of France-Galop, and few more enjoyable achievements than to have had two homebred winners of the family race on the course that feels like home.

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Marquand Stars Again On Nathaniel’s Sumo Sam In The Lillie Langtry

Saturday was all about “Mr Goodwood” as Tom Marquand again led his weighing room comrades a merry dance on the G2 Qatar Lillie Langtry S. shock winner Sumo Sam (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}).

As he had on Tuesday's brilliant G1 Goodwood Cup hero Quickthorn (GB) by the same sire, the meeting's leading rider made all on Ben and Sir Martyn Arbib's homebred 3-year-old on ground turned heavy by ever-worsening conditions. Far from caving in with two furlongs remaining, the Paul and Oliver Cole-trained 25-1 shot whose previous best was a third in Newmarket's Listed Pretty Polly S. continued to pile it on. At the end of the mile-and-three-quarter feature, she had won with relish by 8 1/2 lengths from River Of Stars (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) in an exhibition of power in testing ground.

Oliver Cole said of the winner, who had also been third behind Al Asifah (GB) (Frankel {GB}) in the Listed Agnes Keyser Fillies' S. here in June, was rewarding the efforts of the Whatcombe team having become renowned as a slow-starter. “Sumo Sam has always been a very good filly,” Oliver Cole said. “We have done a lot of stalls work with her since her last run. In her last two races, she has been left and that hasn't been helpful. Full credit to the team at home and thanks very much to the guys at the stalls who are the unsung heroes. Also to the boys who have ridden her in the stalls at home, because I know I wouldn't ride her.”

Ralph Beckett, who was winning his first Qatar Goodwood Festival training title, said of River Of Stars, “She stumbled coming out of the stalls, but I'm not sure it made any difference as she was always scrambling on that ground. She has a German dam side to her pedigree, but I have always felt that she is a good, fast-ground filly. I would say the [G2] Park Hill [at Doncaster] next, or something like that. She didn't run very well in it last year but she is a hardier, more finished article this time.”

Pedigree Notes

   Sumo Sam is the first foal out of the unraced Seaduced (GB) (Lope De Vega {Ire}) who is a half to the owner-breeders' G3 Legacy Cup winner and G1 Pretty Polly S. runner-up Stay Alert (GB) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}) and her Listed Gillies' S.-winning full-sister Star Rock (GB) who was also runner-up in the G2 T. Von Zastrow Stutenpreis and third in this race. Their dam is the G2 Park Hill S. runner-up and G2 Lancashire Oaks third Starfala (GB) (Galileo {Ire}), one of a trio of black-type performers out of the listed scorer and G3 Prix Cleopatre-placed Farfala (Fr) (Linamix {Fr}). They include the Listed Zetland S. winner and stakes producer Under The Rainbow (GB) (Fantastic Light) who was runner-up in the G2 Lancashire Oaks. Also related to Linamix's G1 Grand Prix de Saint-Cloud hero Fragrant Mix (Ire) and the G1 Prix Jean Romanet heroine Alpine Rose (Fr), Seaduced has yearling colt by Golden Horn (GB).

 

Saturday, Goodwood, Britain
QATAR LILLIE LANGTRY S.-G2, £300,000, Goodwood, 8-5, 3yo/up, f/m, 14fT, 3:17.66, hy.
1–SUMO SAM (GB), 123, f, 3, by Nathaniel (Ire)
                1st Dam: Seaduced (GB), by Lope De Vega (Ire)
                2nd Dam: Starfala (GB), by Galileo (Ire)
                3rd Dam: Farfala (Fr), by Linamix (Fr)
   1ST BLACK-TYPE WIN, 1ST GROUP WIN. O-Ben & Sir Martyn
Arbib; B-Arbib Bloodstock Partnership (GB); T-Paul & Oliver
Cole; J-Tom Marquand. £170,130. Lifetime Record: 7-2-1-1,
$247,842. Werk Nick Rating: A++. Click for the
   eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree, or the
   free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.
2–River Of Stars (Ire), 134, f, 4, Sea The Stars (Ire)–Amazone
(Ger), by Adlerflug (Ger). (400,000gns Wlg '19 TATFOA).
O-Woodford Thoroughbreds LLC; B-Dr Klaus Schulte (IRE);
T-Ralph Beckett. £64,500.
3–Time Lock (GB), 134, f, 4, Frankel (GB)–Time Chaser (GB), by
Dubawi (Ire). 1ST GROUP BLACK TYPE. O-Juddmonte;
B-Juddmonte Farms (East) Ltd (GB); T-Harry & Roger Charlton.
£32,280.
Margins: 8HF, 5HF, 1HF. Odds: 25.00, 3.30, 4.50.
Also Ran: Free Wind (Ire), Peripatetic (GB), Luisa Casati (Ire), Divina Grace (Ire), Ghara (GB). VIDEO.

 

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ThoroughBid To Offer Baycliffe Farm Dispersal

The complete dispersal of William Harrison-Allan's Baycliffe Farm, a breaking and pre-training yard, will sell at the ThoroughBid August Sale on Friday, Aug. 11. Harrison-Allan has owned and bred Thoroughbreds for more than 25 years.

Among the 10 lots offered from the Wiltshire operation will be Undertheboardwalk (Ire) (Acclamation {GB}) (lot 8), a winner on debut as a 3-year-old and a half-sister to listed-placed Atomic Lady (Fr) (Kodiac {GB}); and the 4-year-old filly Kissininthebackrow (GB) (Sixties Icon {GB}) (lot 17), a winner of a mile novice event at Lingfield two starts back.

“Selling a total sum of stock privately or at physical sales can be tricky, expensive and time-consuming, so the fact that all of Mr Harrison-Allan's horses can be sold online with us will hopefully make life much easier for them,” James Richardson, CEO of ThoroughBid, said

The full catalogue can be viewed online.

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