Sioux Nation Filly Popular At Goffs Autumn Yearling Sale

The two-day Goffs Autumn Yearling Sale concluded on Thursday with a filly by Sioux Nation heading the final session at €72,000.

Consigned by Noel O'Callaghan's Mountarmstrong Stud, lot 663 is a granddaughter of the G3 Prix du Bois winner Ela Merici (Fr)  (Beaudelaire {Fr}) and was bought by the father-and-son team of Con and Neil Sands of Bronson Racing. The filly will be trained by Joseph O'Brien, who currently trains Bronson Racing's 92-rated winning juvenile Goa Gajah (Bay A Bali {Brz}).

A Mehmas (Ire) colt (lot 481) and a filly by his sire Acclamation (GB) (lot 609) each made €70,000. Oghill House Stud consigned the former, who caught the eye of Bobby O'Ryan. His great granddam was Dead Certain (GB) (Absolom {GB}), the winner of the 1989 G1 Cheveley Park S.

Lot 609, out of a Smart Strike half-sister to GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf hero Hootenanny (Quality Road), was purchased by Jack Davison Racing from the Rathbarry Stud draft.

Thursday's trade resulted in 199 sold (76%) from 263 offered for a gross of €1,863,000. The average was €9,362 (-30%) and the median was €5,500 (-45%). Overall, 394 yearlings (77%) sold from 512 offered for a gross of €3,705,400. The average was €9,405 (-33%) and the median dropped to €5,500 (-39%), but it should be noted that the 2021 edition of the sale included a dispersal from Derrinstown Stud following the death of Shadwell's Sheikh Hamdan.

BBA Ireland was the leading buyer by gross over the two-day stand just like last year, and purchased 24 head for €264,300. Clare Manning's Boherguy Stud edged out David Cox's Baroda Stud for leading consignor, with 18 sold for €290,500 versus 26 sold for €236,500.

Goffs Group Chief Executive Henry Beeby said, “You're only as good as your last sale” is an oft used adage when analysing bloodstock sales and we are all guilty of only measuring against the immediate predecessor.

“Twelve months ago the Goffs Autumn Yearling Sale benefited from a large dispersal from Derrinstown Stud following the sad passing of His Highness Sheikh Hamdan Al Maktoum who was such a valued and revered supporter of Goffs. That draft accounted for a quarter of the turnover with eight of the top 10 prices and propelled the sale to record breaking levels headed by a top price of €180,000.

“Those lofty heights were always going to be out of reach and so it is that the statistics from the last two days are well behind 2021. However we are far from despondent when reviewing this year's renewal as it has finished ahead of every other incarnation of the Open/Autumn Yearling Sale since its inception in 2010 with a second-best turnover, average and median flowing from a reasonable clearance rate of 77%. Whilst some of these figures do not necessarily point to massive returns for breeders, they do demonstrate a vibrancy to the proceedings and those that appealed most had plenty of admirers.

“Demand over the two days has been driven by a truly international buying bench with a flood of overseas buyers headed by a large group from Italy who accounted for nigh on 100 yearlings and another strong contingent from Eastern Europe who bought over 50 with a further 20 plus heading for China. There were also significant parties from Scandinavia, Germany, the Gulf Region, Libya, USA and France taking on spirited bidders from the UK and Ireland. All of these international visitors were attracted to Kildare Paddocks by the reputation of Irish breeders and their world class bloodlines which allow our passionate Purchaser Attraction Team, working in tandem with our network of international agents and the team at Irish Thoroughbred Marketing, to trumpet their attributes on the global stage. How lucky we are to have the assistance of the latter group as they provide an invaluable and unique service to those who choose to sell here whilst the superb IRE Incentive is a real plus for sellers in Ireland.

“As the sale closes we can reflect on vibrant, strong and positive renewals of all three parts of the Irish National Yearling Sale, each of which graphically makes our case that Irish breeders can sell, and sell extremely well, to the world at Goffs as highlighted by the Orby sale topper of €2.6M which proved to be the world's top-priced yearling filly of 2022 and a high of €300,000 at Sportsman's, the highest priced yearling ever sold in Ireland outside the Orby Sale.”

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Beckett Hopes To Crown Record Season In Style

LEXINGTON, KY — Though introducing no fissure of light into the bruised grey sky hanging over Keeneland, daybreak on Wednesday nonetheless spread an array of crimson and saffron, dazzling as any sunrise, into the trees peering over the rituals of training track and shed row. And for those supervising one horse in particular, it felt especially apt that a final, lingering blaze of autumn glory should be preserved against the fading of the year.

For if he could win the GI FanDuel Breeders' Cup Mile here on Saturday, Kinross (GB) (Kingman {GB}) would not only extend to a quite remarkable climax to his own spree of improvement through 2022; he would also set a corresponding seal on a landmark season in the career of his trainer.

Last year, Ralph Beckett posted his best haul yet, in domestic prizemoney, at £1.94 million. This time round, his Kimpton Down team have not just consolidated but smashed their way to £2.74 million already. Contributors include four Group 1 winners, and their diversity attests to a versatility that Beckett, during his rise, was not always given adequate opportunity to measure. While he has reiterated his mastery with a homebred Classic colt in Westover (GB) (Frankel {GB}), he has also saddled the winners of two elite sprints.

One of those is Kinross himself, whose autumn schedule–he's seeking a third Group/Grade I success in five weeks–is not just bewildering local horsemen, with their collective neurosis about spacing out races. It's also allowing Beckett to show equal flair in a very different discipline to the type in which he largely made his name.

There were times when he would be sent fillies at a ratio approaching two-in-three, many of them requiring patience and distance. Here, in contrast, is a gelded dasher who has thrived on a timetable so hectic that Beckett even permits himself comparisons with a couple of indefatigable sprint handicappers of a generation ago: Chaplins Club (Parade Of Stars) and Glencroft (GB) (Crofter).

“It's slightly shades of those David Chapman horses,” he says. “Those guys who were really good at it, Dandy Nicholls was another, I never really worked out how they got it so right. But really all they were doing was just going with the horse. And that's rather what we're trying with Kinross: just not to stand in his way. I think it was David Elsworth who said, 'At a mile or less, it's all about wellbeing.' And that feels like a good way or looking at it, particularly with an older horse like this one.”

To a degree, in fact, the art of training can in these cases sooner become the art of not training. It's about restraint, about going from race to race as though you were lighting one candle with another. The growing weight of accumulated starts inevitably tugs at the thread, and Beckett and his team just have to stop it fraying.

“He just hacked a couple of laps of the training track this morning, and that's all we'll do with him,” Beckett explains. “He's not a horse you ever want to do much with, never mind need to. He trains himself really. These older horses, going out in the mornings, they really know their own way around. He's enjoying life out here. But by Friday he'll know exactly what he's going to be doing, how many laps he's going to go.”

It's important, then, to ensure that horses find their regime to be congenial. Because that's one of the few doors through which a trainer can offer a horse something as elusive, but critical, as confidence. A year ago, Kinross was beaten in both the the G1 Prix de la Foret and the G1 QIPCO British Champions Sprint after travelling powerfully but running out of track and/or time. As a fully rounded professional, aged five, he has won both with the same mechanical efficiency as he had previously two races in the tier below.

“I think there are always layers, it's always a sum of parts,” Beckett reflects. “The jockey understanding him, the way he does now, is definitely relevant. Frankie [Dettori] is not afraid to sit closer to the pace now. But I do think confidence is a big thing with this horse as well. It's just grown and grown as he's got older. It's a hard thing to nail down, but it's definitely part of your role, particularly with an older horse, to make sure they're happy what they're doing.”

This race will be a whole different ball game for Kinross, spinning round the dizzy bends of the inner track while going back up in trip. Things are complicated by a tiresome draw, 13 of 14, but there's definitely a scenario in which the environment will appeal to the horse's zesty style.

“And that's key,” Beckett says. “He's pretty straightforward, a horse you could put just about anywhere, he's like a scooter. So yes, it's a tough draw but I don't see it as the end of the world. Frankie will just have to deal with it. And I'm not concerned about the mile at all, particularly given the nature of Keeneland. Whether he handles that or not is another question, but I don't think trip will be an issue. Nor would I have any concerns about the ground, it was quick when he won the [G2] City of York S.”

Asked to assess his stellar campaign, Beckett stresses one thing immediately. “It's been great fun,” he says. “I've really enjoyed it. There have been setbacks, too, but that's inevitable.  When Scope (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}) broke a hindleg, that was obviously a huge blow–we didn't run at Ascot because it was too fast, and then for that to happen… Especially when you consider how few miles he had on the clock. But everything else has been great.

“Prosperous Voyage (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}) we only ran because it was the right race [G1 Falmouth S.], not because we thought we could win. Lezoo (GB) (Zoustar {Aus}) hid her light under a bushel at home, so to get there [G1 Cheveley Park S.] with her was extraordinary. And Westover [G1 Irish Derby] was hugely satisfying. The King George was obviously a disaster, and there's always a certain pressure when they go west like that, and you have to get them all the way round again, so we were very pleased with his run in the Arc. He's probably going to for the G1 Sheema Classic, that looks a good fit for him and he'll enjoy it, I think. He's a big, tall, long horse, so you would think he might [keep developing] but that's always easy to say and we'll just have to see.”

Westover, of course, had excruciating luck in running at Epsom and that kind of thing will never cease to haunt any red-blooded horseman. But Beckett is gracious in his reflections.

“I mean, of course it was tough on everybody at the time,” he says. “But I don't think any of us thought we'd have beaten winner. It was just not getting the chance to see, that was the crux of it. And, of course, whether it'll ever happen again? It's easy to be blase about these things but horses like that are hard to come by.”

But while one can hardly invite him to comment, a personal reflection is that Beckett is now one of the handful of trainers in Britain whose eligibility for an elite yearling of absolutely any kind is proven beyond doubt. Standing 10th in the trainers' championship, he has had fewer runners than all those above him bar Sir Michael Stoute and Aidan O'Brien. He is now at that optimal stage where, though still much younger than doyens of the previous generation, he has accumulated masses of experience. Far too classy ever to hustle for business, he knows that a certain clientele are inevitably drawn to the tranquillity and independence of his facilities–and, as it happens, these also tend to be just the type of people he likes training for.

Nonetheless it's gratifying for Beckett to have preconceptions so thoroughly corrected. Juddmonte, in sending him yearlings in 2015, made him their first new trainer in a decade: and they have been rewarded for giving him opportunities across the spectrum.

Ironically, given the way Beckett has had to fight to avoid becoming a victim of his own success, the gelding he has brought to the Bluegrass actually conforms to the original brand: he was homebred by one of his most longstanding clients, Julian Richmond-Watson. (And started out in his silks before being transferred to another of the stable's patrons, Marc Chan, at the beginning of last year.)

“I trained the dam, the sisters, the dam's sisters, the whole shooting match,” Beckett remarks. “So to be able to show up here with him is a big deal. It's easy to forget that, if you get too caught up in it. Whatever happens on Saturday, when we look back in years to come I hope we reflect how blessed we were that everything worked out the way it has.”

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Boherguy Stud Stars At Goffs Autumn Yearling Sale

Clare Manning's Boherguy Stud supplied the Day 1 session-topper of the Goffs Autumn Yearling Sale on Wednesday in the shape of a Dawn Approach (Ire) colt who was knocked down to Alex Elliott for €80,000.

Lot 458 is a brother to the Group 3-placed Strapped (Ire) and was not the only big result Manning enjoyed on the day.

Another son of the 2000 Guineas winner, lot 441, made €50,000 to BBA Ireland while Boherguy Stud would have collected a clean sweep had the Castlebridge Consignment not sold its Sea The Stars filly (Ire) [lot 408] for €60,000 to MC Bloodstock. 

In the end, Boherguy Stud had to settle for filling three of the top four slots on the day after selling a Due Diligence colt [lot 257] to BBA Ireland for €46,000.

Boherguy Stud sold 12 yearlings for an aggregate of €250,500, averaging out at €20,875 per lot, and ended the day as the leading consignor. 

Manning said, “Dawn Approach is not the most commercial sire but it's great to see that granddad [Jim Bolger] is being rewarded for having faith with him. He had Poetic Flare last year (Ire) (Dawn Approach {Ire}) last year and getting a sales-topper today. Dawn Approach stood in Kildangan for a few seasons but granddad took him back to Redmonstown and it's paying off.

“I know we always say that you need to have sire power but, if you don't have the physical, you are going nowhere. Today's top lot is a beautiful horse, very athletic and he'd a great walk. We would have had no problem taking him home if we had to. He's definitely going to be a racehorse.”

She added, “Placing them in the right sales is half the battle. This sale was very strong last year and there were a lot of foreign buyers there, which is great for the bottom end of the market. But at the same time, you had all the good judges there today as well, and Alex Elliott bought our top lot while Mick Donohoe bought the other.”

The successful trade capped an emotional few days for the Manning family after Kevin Manning, Clare's father, announced his retirement after riding Vocal Studies (Ire) (Vocalised) to victory at Galway on Monday.

“Dad's retirement was big news on Monday,” Manning concluded. “I know it's a bit of a cliche, but it was great for him to go out in one piece first and foremost and for him to ride a winner was even better. It was a fairytale ending and even better that he did it for Granny and Grandad and it being by Vocalised was just the icing on the cake.”

There were 191 lots sold on Wednesday for an aggregate of €1,813,400 and trade continues on Thursday at 10am. 

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Stewart Hoping His Luck Continues With Breeders’ Cup Hope Victoria Road

What you want to hear from a major owner-breeder like Trevor Stewart, the man who has set up a mini-empire off the back of buying wondermare Cassandra Go back in 1997, is that there is a nuanced approach to breeding and, with the right blend of skill and hard work, you too can make this game pay.

The trouble is, Stewart does not believe that is the case. Not only does he put buying top-class racemare-turned-blue hen Cassandra Go down to good luck, but he also points to fortune favouring him once again in producing her grandson Victoria Road (Ire), a leading fancy for Friday's Grade I Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf.

To paraphrase Stewart, he threw the kitchen sink at Tickled Pink (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), a daughter of Cassandra Go (Ire) (Indian Ridge {Ire}), with matings to Dark Angel (Ire), Frankel (GB) and Shamardal failing to produce a single black-type runner. 

Just when Stewart had started to view Tickled Pink as a disappointing broodmare, along came Victoria Road, by first-season sire Saxon Warrior (Jpn), who bids to put the pedigree in lights at Keeneland on Friday. 

Stewart said, “Tickled Pink has been a bit disappointing up until now. I have thrown everything at her–Dark Angel, Frankel and Shamardal. A few of them were a little bit on the small side and, while they had good ratings, were limited by size. To think now that a first-season sire seems to have hit it. It's amazing really.”

He added, “It was all about Deep Impact (Jpn) when it came to choosing Saxon Warrior for the mare. I loved Saxon Warrior as an individual as well. He was a very good racehorse and had size and scope. I felt that I had sent Tickled Pink to a few very good sires and decided to risk something different to see if it worked.”

Victoria Road has taken his form to a new level in the autumn for Aidan O'Brien and boasts rock-solid credentials for Friday's contest at odds of 5-1. 

Convinced that the colt would emerge to be one of the better 2-year-olds at Ballydoyle this season, O'Brien advised Stewart to return to Saxon Warrior this breeding season with Tickled Pink, who is happily in foal to the Coolmore-based stallion. 

Stewart explained, “Interestingly, I was going to cover Tickled Pink with No Nay Never this year and sent a message to Christy Grassick asking him to ask Aidan [O'Brien] about what his view would be. Aidan came back and told me that it was an absolute no-brainer and that I had to go to Saxon Warrior

“That was a very easy decision in that there was a big difference in price between Saxon Warrior and No Nay Never's stud fee. Aidan was also talking up Victoria Road at the time, for all that it was only March.

“I was down with Aidan in May and, of course, the No Nay Nevers had come out and were winning everything. I said to Aidan, 'I think you might not have given me the best advice.' Aidan just said, 'wait and see, you'll be fine.'”

And what an understatement that has turned out to be. Victoria Road followed up his listed success at Deauville with a hard-fought Group 3 victory at Chantilly last month and suddenly Stewart is viewing Tickled Pink in a different light.

“She has an outstanding colt foal by Ghaiyyath (GB) on the ground. I went to Ghaiyyath because he's the most beautiful horse. He's big and strong and has good limbs. I felt that he would put some size into her because the Invincible Spirit seems to be coming out in her. They are just a little on the neat side. Hopefully I have found the secret to this mare because you need size and scope to make up into a good 3-year-old.”

He added, “I don't know if she's carrying a colt or a filly but obviously I am praying it's a filly. I would love to keep a filly out of her. I try to keep all the fillies and it's an exception if I bring a filly to the sales. 

“I have four daughters and three granddaughters out of Casandra Go and we have a few fillies on the ground. I will keep those and race them.”

And while Stewart, along with James Hanly of Ballyhimikin Stud, who boards all of his mares, clearly adopt a professional approach and are following a proven strategy to success in the ring and on the racetrack, nothing will dissuade the renowned owner-breeder from believing that anything other than luck can be attributed to the success.  

He said, “It's really all down to luck. Even the way I have covered Tickled Pink has been lucky. You would think that going to Frankel, Dark Angel and Shamardal would do the trick for her. Now, Saxon Warrior is looking like he will be an above-average stallion, but it's funny that a first-season sire is the one to get the mare off the ground.”

For all of his good fortune, Stewart admits that he was a little miffed at the price tag that Victoria Road made at Book 1 at Tattersalls last year. He says the fact that the mare could have been viewed as disappointing may have contributed to the colt making just 115,000gns to MV Magnier, not that he's complaining.

“He was a lovely yearling, very correct and moved like a dream. It was a disappointing price but I had a few other yearlings that I was keeping last year and decided to sell him. As my wife has told me since, Aidan has well made up for that disappointing price by what he has done with the horse on the track, so that's much more important. 

“Maybe people felt that Tickled Pink was beginning to look a bit marginal and that didn't help her. But everyone at Coolmore were all over Victoria Road at the sales and they all loved him. I'm very lucky he went where he did.”

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