Cheltenham Festival Aspirants To Sell On Goffs Online

Goffs will offer Minella Crooner (Shantou) and Music Drive (Muhtathir) for sale this week through Goffs Online. The Gordon Elliott-trained pair have the 2023 Cheltenham Festival firmly in their sights, while Minella Crooner will be sold with an entry at the Leopardstown Christmas Festival.

Bidding will open at 11am and close at 1pm on Thursday, Dec. 22 and prospective purchasers are asked to register here no later than 12 noon on Wednesday. A 5% agents commission will be paid to the successful purchaser provided they are a registered bloodstock agent and/or licensed trainer. Pedigrees, race footage and conformation videos will be available to view online from Tuesday afternoon.

Minella Crooner was a head second on his chasing debut in the Grade 2 Florida Pearl Novice Chase at Punchestown in November and followed up with a win in a Fairyhouse Beginners Chase on 3rd December. Four-time winner Minella Crooner will be offered for sale with a Grade 1 entry as he is set to run in the three-mile Grade 1 Neville Hotels Novice Chase at the Leopardstown Christmas Festival on Dec. 29. Horse Racing Ireland will facilitate the transfer of ownership in time for him to run in his new owner's colours provided they are currently a registered owner.

Music Drive was a Bumper winner in February, won first time out over hurdles in October at Galway and has been placed at Cheltenham on his two starts since, most recently finishing second to Hermes Allen in the Grade 2 Ballymore Novices Hurdle.

Goffs Group Chief Executive Henry Beeby commented:

“Our focus with Goffs Online is on providing vendors with a proven platform for horses of quality to sell at a time that suits them.  We limit it to one-off elite sales and, as seen with numerous Goffs Online Sales in 2022, it works extremely well for both sellers and buyers.  Minella Crooner and Music Drive are both extremely exciting prospects as we head into the thick of the National Hunt season, and we are grateful to owner David Barnard for entrusting us with their sale.”

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Twelve Questions: Bob Nastanovich

First job in the Thoroughbred industry?
Jockey agent for Greta Kuntzweiler.

Biggest influence on your career?
Chuck Scaravelli. He took extra time to teach me and gave me every chance to become an Equibase chart caller.

Favourite racehorse of all time, and why?
Drink Bubbly. She was a gentle grey daughter of Marfa who I owned in 2000. I had never been so comfortable around or confident in a horse. She was cool and a pleasure to be associated with.

Who will be champion first-season sire in 2023?
In Europe, Blue Point is a logical choice. In the US, Mitole's progeny should make an immediate impact.

Greatest race in the world?
The Derby. I am fond of Sandown Park so I love a strong renewal of the Eclipse Stakes too. In the US, the Breeders' Cup Filly And Mare Turf is a race I look forward to and savour.

If you could be someone else in the industry for a day who would it be, and why?
William Buick. It must be a thrill to ride talented horses with the skill he possesses and determination that he has.

Emerging talent in the industry (human)?
I'm impressed by the poise and confidence that Harry Davies rides races with. In the US, I think Reylu Gutierrez is a skilled and enthusiastic jockey. I hope both of them get good opportunities next season.

Name a horse TDN should have made a Rising Star, and didn't?
The regally-bred Imperial Emperor. Won his only race at the Rowley Mile in October. Left the impression that he could develop into a contender in next season's Classic races.

Under-the-radar stallion?
Study of Man. It's exciting to have a son of Deep Impact in the UK. In the US, Gentlemen's Bet, from small sample sizes, simply produces runners.

Friday night treat?
I like to play Scrabble on my phone.

Guilty pleasure outside racing?
I like to have an accumulator on random sets of sporting events. I'm a mug punter.

Race I wish I'd been there for…
I have long been a fan of Sir Percy. I would have loved to have seen his dramatic win at Epsom. Frankel's defeat of Nathaniel in a July Course maiden would have been a race to savour. Both were newcomers on that rainy August day.

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Newmarket Pony Academy’s Vital Role In Young Lives

The British Racing School (BRS) is well known for its key role in providing rounded training for young staff coming into the industry, and in recent years within its grounds in Newmarket a new charitable project has been launched.

The Newmarket Pony Academy (NPA) was the brainchild of Godolphin's charities manager Penny Taylor. In association with BRS CEO Andrew Braithwaite and former CEO Grant Harris, she formulated a pilot for a scheme aimed at helping vulnerable and disadvantaged schoolchildren in the catchment area of Suffolk and Cambridge.

“The schools can book a week and put together a group of young people who really need this opportunity,” says NPA manager Anna Sylvester, a graduate of the BRS herself who had a long career in racing and point-to-pointing yards before turning her attention to education within the sport.

“The groups are either chosen by the school or the school brings the whole year group. The programme is centred around year six [age 10 to 11], so they're young enough that they haven't gone up to secondary school, and are about to embark on that quite difficult age for young people. We also work with people referral units, alternative provision, specialist schools, and secondaries. We've done a bit of work on exclusion, non-attenders, and severe anxiety students, which has also worked very well.”

Funding was secured for an initial three years, with financial assistance coming from West Suffolk County Council, Godolphin, the Sir Peter O'Sullevan Charitable Trust, Thompson Family Charitable Trust, Orbit Housing, Tattersalls and the National Lottery. Jockey Club Estates also pitched in to build an office and classroom for the academy students on site at the BRS, while legendary former jump jockey John Francome is the academy's ambassador.

The learning module for the five-day programme focuses on equine care in a way that brings in elements of the national curriculum work in English, maths and science.

“For example, they write instructions for how to muck out using imperative tense and short, concise sentences,” Sylvester explains. “They estimate horses' heights, and then they go and measure them, and they learn a lot about diets. They feed the ponies and then link it to their own diets, so we talk a lot about the importance of a balanced diet, carbohydrates, protein, et cetera, which brings in some science.”

She continues, “But predominantly, the week is designed around building confidence, self-esteem, teamwork, and resilience. And coming out of Covid, there has been a massive rise in anxiety and mental health issues. They do a lot of working together in teams, and using the horses puts them a little bit out of their comfort zone. And it's fantastic to see how they bond with them and how they grow as people throughout the week. Most of them have never touched a horse before.”

In addition to the week-long courses, the NPA provides after-school clubs which are supported by Tattersalls.

Sylvester says, “We run the half programme, which is for children on free school meal benefits, so they get to do the horses but also get the free meals and activities provided on holidays. That's funded by West Suffolk County Council, so we are building up our funders.

“We have our own minibus, which was funded by the Thompson Family Charitable Trust, so we can pick up and drop off children within their school day to make sure there's no barriers to them attending. We work with 20 local schools at the moment and we do the driving for any schools up to a 20-minute drive. If there are schools from slightly further away that want to get involved they just provide their own transport. Predominantly, the programme is geared towards vulnerable and disadvantaged children but we also work with a lot of young carers, child protection, children in need, children in care, and looked-after children.”

Throughout 2021, 331 children attended the Newmarket Pony Academy, looked after by four staff members and 17 volunteers. Funding has also been secured for next year, while recently the NPA has gone 'on tour' in association with the Riding A Dream Academy, offering regional weeks in London and Birmingham, the former utilising Epsom racecourse as a base to work with children from Peckham Academy. Expansion is on the cards, including the hunt for the perfect ponies to add to the team, who are either owned by the NPA or loaned.

The academy has also recently been approved as a League Pony Club Centre. With further funding from Newmarket town councillor Andy Drummond and his wife Belinda, all after-school members of the NPA can now become Pony Club members.

“They can do their Pony Club badges and everything Pony Club-related, which is fantastic,” Sylvester says. “It's definitely breaking down barriers for these young people who wouldn't have the finances or the means to be able to join something like the Pony Club. They hold a few rallies here, so they will be able to join in with those.”

She adds, “Though we are based in Newmarket, where the cars stop to let the racehorses cross the roads and they see horses every day, it's amazing how many young local people haven't had the opportunity to get involved with horses. And that's the bit where we really shine, that real hands-on, practical experience.”

As well as doing its bit for children in the local community, there is a potential upside for the racing industry in funding a project such as the Newmarket Pony Academy or the Riding A Dream Academy. In the case of the latter, that is starting to be seen, with five graduates from the Racing Foundation-funded course already working in the racing industry. The younger children referred to the NPA by teachers or social workers have an initial pathway for continuation through the after-school clubs.

“We take them from year six, 10-year-olds, and they can be with us all the way up to 14, where they potentially could go onto the flexible learning plan at the Racing School, or 16, when they could go onto the foundation course,” Sylvester explains.

“The beauty is, being at the Racing School, they see the training courses taking place, and if there are young people that find their safe place, their haven, through horses, then they're often able to go into the industry. And we do talk to them about the whole industry, so they get a really good idea of what goes on.”

The 'trickle-up' effect would certainly be of benefit for an industry which is eager to recruit more young staff to its front line, but it is merely a sideshow to the core work of the Newmarket Pony Academy in its day-to-day work of helping youngsters through equine therapy. And as everyone working in the business knows, they may bring with them hard work but horses are fundamentally good for the soul. The more people that can discover that first hand, the better.

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‘He Could Do Things Others Couldn’t’ – Davy Russell Retires

Gordon Elliott, Barry Geraghty and Charles Byrnes were among those to lead the tributes to Davy Russell, one of the finest National Hunt riders to ever pull on a pair of silks, who retired at the age of 43 after partnering Liberty Dance to victory in the Thurles feature on Sunday. 

Russell will forever be remembered for partnering Elliott's Tiger Roll to successive Grand National triumphs in 2018 and 2019. Like those momentous days at Aintree, Russell signed off from the saddle with his customary wave aboard the Elliott-trained Liberty Dance in the Billy Harney Memorial Irish EBF Mares' Novice Hurdle.

The most successful jockey of all time who was still active in the weighroom, Russell earned a reputation as being one of the finest riders at Cheltenham, evident when he guided Jim Culloty's Lord Windermere to Gold Cup success in 2014.

Close friend Elliott supplied the majority of Russell's Cheltenham winners and the Cullentra House-based trainer heaped praise on the rider following his decision to retire on the spot at Thurles.

Elliott said,  “The feedback he gave has always been invaluable. He has been a big part of the team here at Cullentra for the last 10 or 12 years–and he is still going to be part of the team. He's still going to have an involvement. Hopefully we will work closely with him, on what level we are just not quite sure yet, but he will still have something to do with it.”

He added, “He has been a big part of my team since I started training and he has been a friend as well as a colleague. I rode with him as an amateur. He has been as much a friend as anything else. He is a brilliant jockey and a great person. I'm sad to see him retiring but delighted to see him going out on his own terms.

“He's a brilliant jockey and a great horseman. He could do things on horses that other people couldn't. There was never anything wrong with the bottle. The body slowed down, but the bottle was 100 per cent and so it is very sad to see him go.

“He has brilliant hands and transmitted confidence to a horse, and you only have to look at what he has achieved to see what a great jockey he was. He was brilliant.”

Multiple Cheltenham festival and Grand National-winning rider Barry Geraghty shared the weigh room with Russell for the majority of his career and labelled him “a brilliant competitor and a brilliant jockey.”

Geraghty said, “He was as tough as nails in every sense, to ride against but also coming back from the injuries he's had to deal with.

“His CV speaks for itself, two Grand Nationals, a Gold Cup, multiple Cheltenham winners. He's been a multiple champion jockey in Ireland and a brilliant, brilliant jockey for years. It's great to see him finish on such a good note and he's definitely proved the longevity in him.”

Meanwhile, Byrnes, who Russell rode Solwhit and Weapon's Amnesty to major big-race victories for, described himself as “shocked” that the 43-year-old decided to call time on a wonderful career. 

Byrnes said, “I'm delighted he is getting out in one piece, but shocked because as far as I could see he's riding as well, if not better, than ever. He is getting out on his own terms and as far as I'm concerned, he'd probably be the greatest of all time–but I'd be slightly biased.

“That's my opinion. He had an unbelievable pair of hands to get a horse to settle, to get a horse jumping. You could nearly say whether a horse was going to win or not by jumping the first hurdle with him.

“You knew the flow and the rhythm he was in. He was an absolute genius. He worked hard, he deserved everything he's got–he worked hard all his life.”

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