‘TDN Rising Star’ Padishakh Returns At Chantilly

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. Wednesday's Observations features a 'TDN Rising Star'.

 

12.20 Chantilly, Cond, €34,000, 2yo, c/g, 9fT
PADISHAKH (FR) (Wootton Bassett {GB}) earned TDN Rising Star status on debut when beating the subsequent winner Halfway Line (GB) (Zoffany {Ire}) at ParisLongchamp at the start of last month. Jean-Claude Rouget keeps Nurlan Bizakov's bay out of black-type company for now, with Ecurie Jean-Louis Bouchard's Deauville winner King Of Records (Fr) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) from the Fabrice Chappet stable a key opponent.

 

3.35 Navan, Mdn, €12,000, 2yo, 8fT
LONDONER (IRE) (Saxon Warrior {Jpn}) is one of two Ballydoyle representatives in this and is a €270,000 Goffs Orby graduate whose dam is the G1 Prix de l'Abbaye heroine Gilt Edge Girl (GB) (Monsieur Bond {Ire}). The April-foaled chestnut meets Newtown Anner Stud Farm Ltd's fellow newcomer Mr King (Ire) (Kingman {GB}), a Ger Lyons-trained half-brother to the G3 Munster Oaks winner and G1 Pretty Polly S. third Thunder Kiss (Ire) (Night Of Thunder {Ire}).

 

5.50 Kempton, Novice, £9,900, 2yo, 7f (AWT)
HIGHER LAW (IRE) (Exceed And Excel {Aus}) is yet another Charlie Appleby blueblood introduced at a track he favours, being a homebred son of Godolphin's G1 Fillies' Mile, G2 May Hill S. and G2 Cape Verdi winner Certify (Elusive Quality). The February-foaled half-brother to this year's Listed Abu Dhabi Championship scorer Law Of Peace (GB) (Shamardal) faces nine on this racecourse bow.

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Dubawi Rings The Bell With Three Book 1 Millionaires

By Emma Berry and Brian Sheerin

NEWMARKET, UK–Sales can often start with more of a whimper than a bang, but with only the second horse in the ring at Tattersalls the October Yearling Sale roared into life as the first Dubawi (Ire) yearling to be offered ensured that seven figures were lit across the bid board. That was repeated twice during the day, both times by offspring of Darley's elite sire, with top honours eventually falling to Hazelwood Bloodstock's colt out of Ring The Bell (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), who was bought by Godolphin at 1.5 million gns.

Though few stallions can match the achievements of Dubawi, at his level he is of course being graced with some of the best mares in Europe, and Ring The Bell, owned by John Camilleri of Fairway Thoroughbreds, is from a family with strength in depth. Though tried only once on the racecourse herself, she is a full-sister to no fewer than three Group 1 winners in the dual Classic heroine Hermosa (Ire), Hydrangea (Ire) and The United States (Ire), while both her dam Beauty Is Truth (Ire) (Pivotal {GB}) and granddam Zelding (Ire) (Warning {GB}) won group races in France. Furthermore, the cross of Dubawi on Galileo has had noted success via the likes of Horse of the Year Ghaiyyath (Ire) and 2000 Guineas winner Night Of Thunder (Ire), both of whom are now standing on the Darley roster.

With Sheikh Mohammed present at Park Paddocks, along with an international who's who of the bloodstock industry, his Godolphin operation flexed its muscles. During the opening session of Book 1, Anthony Stroud signed for eight yearlings, five of which were by Dubawi, for a total of 6,025,000gns. This equated to roughly 20% of the day's turnover and included the day's three most expensive lots.

A sale that had been widely touted to include a particularly fine selection of yearlings certainly got off to a positive start. The clearance rate rose from 78% to 86%, with 135 horses changing hands for 31,993,000gns, which was up by 27% but was accrued from 19 more yearlings sold than in the equivalent session last year. The median was up fractionally to 160,000gns (+5%), while the average rose by 10% to 230,165gns.

 

 

Sheikh Mohammed Returns to Top Meon Valley Family

A family which has already produced five seven-figure lots at Tattersalls in the past was responsible for the first to breach that barrier at this year's Book 1 when the second yearling into the ring, Meon Valley Stud's daughter of Dubawi (Ire) and G2 Prix de la Nonette winner Jazzi Top (GB) (Danehill Dancer {Ire}), brought the hammer down at 1.3 million gns.

The first of eight purchases by Anthony Stroud on behalf of Sheikh Mohammed on the day, the descendant of Meon Valley's influential foundation mare Reprocolor (GB) (Jimmy Reppin {GB}) was offered as lot 3.

“It's been a very good family,” said breeder Mark Weinfeld. “We've been very lucky with it. She had been very popular, but you never quite know until you get up there how many people will be there. We're absolutely delighted.”

The family, which includes the filly's G1 Prix de l'Opera-winning granddam Zee Zee Top (GB) (Zafonic) and another of her daughters, the dual Group 1 winner Izzi Top (GB) (Pivotal {GB}), has been nurtured by the Weinfeld family over more than four decades. It is one with which Sheikh Mohammed has already enjoyed significant success, having raced the Sadler's Wells Group 1-winning  brothers Opera House (GB) and Kayf Tara (GB), who are grandsons of Reprocolor.

Asked how it felt when the hammer fell, Weinfeld answered, “Heart-stopping. Particularly when it stuck around the six hundred mark, and you think, 'oh, perhaps this is as far as it's going to go.' Then it goes on and on.

“We didn't actually want to sell her but we had so many fillies this year. We kept a sister to [Oaks winner] Anapurna (GB), kept Anapurna's first yearling filly, and we've got an Invincible Spirit (Ire) filly out of Izzi Top so something had to go.

“We just thought that we'd sell one of the nice fillies to help pay for the ones we have in training.”

 

 

Easily Persuaded for Dubawi Colt

Alex Elliott made a determined effort for Cheveley Park Stud's colt by Dubawi out of the Group 1 winner Persuasive (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) but eventually had to settle for second best when Anthony Stroud made the final bid for lot 127 at a million gns on behalf of Godolphin.

Cheveley Park Stud had bought the colt's dam as a yearling from her breeder John Tuthill for €180,000 and she has proved to be an inspired purchase. Not only did she win the G1 Queen Elizabeth II S. and G3 Atalanta S. but since she was acquired, her page has been boosted by the exploits of her younger siblings, which include Godolphin's G1 QIPCO British Champions Sprint winner Creative Force (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) and the listed winner Tisbutadream (Ire) (Dream Ahead).

“It's nice to come to a top-class sale and have a horse of that sort of quality,” said Cheveley Park Stud's managing director Chris Richardson. “He was a gem from the moment he was born and we were obviously delighted that he has gone down so well.

“It's a family that keeps evolving and we're very grateful to Sheikh Mohammed for buying him. He knows the family well, with Creative Force having won the Champion Sprint S..”

Richardson advised that Persuasive, who is a daughter of the stakes-winning Choisir (Aus) mare Choose Me (Ire), has a Dubawi filly foal and is now in foal to Kingman (GB). Her first foal, the 3-year-old Persist (GB) (Frankel {GB}), has won twice for William Haggas.

“We're hoping that John Gosden can work some magic with her 2-year-old by Frankel,” he added.

 

 

Shadwell Return To The British Market

Baaeed (GB) (Sea The Stars {Ire}), Minzaal (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}) and Hukum (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) have all contributed to a memorable season for Shadwell on the track and on Tuesday the hugely successful operation returned to the sale scene in Britain for the first time in nearly two years.

Shadwell confirmed its intention to remain a global player at Keeneland last month with the purchasing of four blue-blooded fillies and Sheikha Hissa Hamdan Al Maktoum, daughter of the late Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid Al Maktoum, made a first trip to Tattersalls to add another well-bred filly to the team, lot 24.

Consigned by Watership Down Stud, the Siyouni (Fr) filly out of the four-time Group 1 winner Lah Ti Dar (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) was knocked down to Angus Gold for 880,000 gns, with the Shadwell racing manager revealing that Sheikha Hissa thoroughly enjoyed her first trip to the sale.

He said, “People have been very kind around the sale grounds and gave her a big welcome. It's lovely to have been able to walk around with her.”

Gold added, “She is very excited to have bought a filly with a pedigree like that. The first three dams are all group winners and the family has been well-nurtured by everyone at Watership Down Stud over the years.

“Obviously, we're hoping to buy some pedigrees for the future and she had one of the strongest pedigrees in the catalogue.”

 

Rau Secures 'Queen of the Sale'

A No Nay Never [lot 77] filly consigned by Camas Park Stud was described by Tina Rau as “the queen of the sale” after the popular Chantilly-based bloodstock agent signed the docket at 780,000gns on behalf of Gestut Schlenderhan.

This season has represented something of a crowning glory for No Nay Never, responsible for two of the leading juveniles in Ballydoyle residents Little Big Bear (Ire) and Blackbeard (Ire), and Rau, in company with Schlenderhan manager Merle Schmidt, admitted her surprise at being able to secure what she deemed was one of the best offerings in Book 1.

“She's going to go back to Germany,” Rau said. “Philip von Ullmann was here and we all loved her. She was the queen of the day and we're very happy to have her.”

One of nine No Nay Nevers to walk through the ring on Tuesday, Rau's purchase is out of a sister to Remote (GB) (Dansili {GB}) and from the family of Kingman (GB) and the extended family of Oasis Dream (GB).

That top price secured on the day for No Nay Never played a significant role in the red-hot sire securing an average of 248,571 gns for seven lots sold in the opening session.

Rau said, “You can't really argue with the pedigree, for one, and she's just a queen. She walks for fun and is beautifully well-balanced. She's got so much quality.”

 

Klassique start for Carisbrooke

Six years ago, Klassique (GB) (Galileo {Ire}) graduated from Book 1 with a 300,000gns price tag, bought by Cathy Grassick for Yvonne Jacques as she set about establishing a broodmare band at her Carisbrooke Stud.

With the G3 Pinnacle S. under her belt along with several other group placings, the 7-year-old mare is already earning her keep at the Berkshire farm following the sale of her first foal, a colt by Siyouni (Fr), for 525,000gns on Tuesday. Offered as lot 14, the January-born grandson of Group 1 winner Chachamaidee (Ire) (Footstepsinthesand {GB}) is bred on a cross that has already produced the Classic winners Sottsass (Fr) and St Mark's Basilica (Fr), and he will race in the blue of Godolphin.

“Klassique is the most beautiful mare, such a fabulous mother and stunning-looking. She has a gorgeous Lope De Vega (Ire) colt foal and is in foal to Kingman (GB),” said Jacques, who has around 20 broodmares at Carisbrooke. “My staff have turned them out so well, we're all really proud.”

She added, “We're now in our sixth year at the farm and we've put a lot into it. Klassique was one of the first to come back there and she is producing the most amazing stock. It's very exciting.”

 

Strong Start for New England

New England Stud offered a pair of Galileo (Ire) fillies early in the day (lots 1 and 29), with the first through the ring, a full-sister to GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf winner Line Of Duty (Ire), sold to Ted Voute on behalf of Prince Faisal's Nawarra Stud for 500,000gns.

The second was a daughter of G2 Prix de Sandringham winner Laugh Out Loud (GB) (Clodovil {Ire}), who has already produced a useful performer in America in the GII San Marcos S. winner Platinum Warrior (Ire), who is a full-brother to the filly. Knocked down at 675,000gns, she was bought by BBA Ireland.

New England also later sold a Starspangledbanner (Aus) colt (lot 76) for breeder Emma Banks for 350,000gns to Richard Knight.

The second foal of listed winner Mrs Gallagher (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}) is from a family which has received plenty of updates in recent seasons courtesy of sprinting star Harry Angel (Ire) and G1 Middle Park S. winner Supremacy (Ire) who share their third dam Great Joy (Ire) with the February-foaled yearling.

Knight has been on a prolific spending spree this yearling sale season for an undisclosed client, and he signed for another four yearlings for a total of 1,750,000gns on Tuesday. The list included lot 132, a Sea The Stars (Ire) granddaughter of Puce (GB) (Darshaan {GB}), who was bought for 600,000gns from Newsells Park Stud. The family includes the high-flying fillies Chicquita (Ire), Alexandrova (Ire) and Magic Wand (Ire).

 

Pinhookers' Paradise

Michael Fitzpatrick's Kilminfoyle House Stud enjoyed one of best pinhooks results of the session with the sale of lot 106 for 525,000gns to Sebastian Desmontils of Chauvigny Global Equine.

The daughter of Night Of Thunder (Ire) was bred by Simon Sweeting's Overbury Stallions and fetched 130,000gns at the December Foal Sale. Her dam, the unraced Pacifica Highway (Pulpit), has produced two winners to date including the Grade III-placed Ayacara (GB) (Violence), and is a half-sister to the Grade II winners Doswell (Giant's Causeway) and Secretary At War (War Front).

Yeomanstown Stud also enjoyed a decent return on a foal purchase when selling a Starspangledbanner (Aus) three-parts-brother (lot 52) to the G1 Poule d'Essai des Pouliches winner Coeursamba (Fr) (The Wow Signal {Ire}). Bought at Arqana for €170,000, the colt, whose five winning siblings include the stakes-placed Lady Sidney (Fr) (Mr Sidney), brought a bid of 550,000gns from Badgers Bloodstock.

 

Poetic Flare's Brother to John Dance

Magna Grecia featured prominently among the freshman sires during the opening session, principally through lot 53, the half-brother to Classic winner Poetic Flare (Ire) (Dawn Approach {Ire}), who was sold for 300,000gns to John Dance's Manor House Farm.

Bred and consigned by Clare Castle Stud, he is out of the Rock Of Gibraltar (Ire) mare Maria Lee (Ire) who was bought from her breeder Jim Bolger in the year that Poetic Flare was born. The 15-year-old mare has also produced Listed Zetland S. winner Glamorous Approach (Ire) (New Approach {Ire}).

Crystal Ocean (GB) may be standing under the National Hunt banner at the Beeches Stud but his handful of foals that were entered in Flat sales last year were generally met with favour, including the colt out of the Shamardal mare Nateeja (Ire). Bought last December by Guy O'Callaghan of Grangemore Stud for 30,000gns, he returned to the ring as lot 86 on Tuesday to be resold to Charlie Gordon-Watson and Crispin Estates for 115,000gns. His dual-winning dam is a half-sister to G3 Cumberland Lodge S. winner Hawaafez (GB) (Nayef), whose own profile has received a boost this year thanks to her daughter Rogue Millennium (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}), who won the Listed Lingfield Oaks Trial.

Crystal Ocean, the joint-top-rated racehorse in the world in 2019, is represented by one more yearling in Book 1, a chestnut colt catalogued as lot 512 on Thursday from Aughamore Stud.

 

Northern Lights

Consecutive lots went the way of Katsumi Yoshida of Northern Farm, who picked up lot 50, a Night Of Thunder (Ire) filly, for 200,000gns followed by a daughter of Ballyhane Stud's first-crop sire Soldier's Call (GB) for 100,000gns.

Breeder Kildaragh Stud consigned Night Of Thunder's daughter of Malaspina whose half-siblings Daban (Ire) (Acclamation GB}) and Thikriyaat (Ire) (Azamour {Ire}) are both Group 3 winners. The Gerry Oldham-bred Malaspina is herself out of the listed winner Mahalia (Ire) (Danehill) and thus a half-sister to French group winners Johnny Barnes (Ire) and Albisola (Ire).

The Soldier's Call filly meanwhile represented a terrific pinhooking result for Sherbourne Lodge Stud, who bought the daughter of Maralika (Fr) (Dubawi {Ire}) from breeders Tim and Miranda Johnson and Mickley Stud for 12,000gns at the December Foal Sale.

 

Cooney Plays It Cool After Final Twist From Plying

Had Martin Cooney not carved out a niche in the breeding game, chances are he'd have made a pretty good poker player as, moments after selling the highest-priced progeny of Gleneagles (Ire) at public auction for 650,000 gns to MV Magnier, the man behind Jossestown Farm could easily have been mistaken for a casual bystander at the sale.

But this was not Cooney's first rodeo. The young breeder has been taken on a storied journey with Plying, the mare he purchased for €21,000 in 2018 and sold last November to BBA Ireland and Yulong Investments for an eye-watering €825,000.

That sky-rocket in share price can be attributed to the emergence of Alcohol Free (Ire) (No Nay Never), now a four-time Group 1 winner, in the pedigree.

Tuesday marked the end of that dream run with the family of Plying, with the Gleneagles half-sister to Alcohol Free (lot 136) joining Cooney's fellow Tipperary men at Coolmore, leaving the young breeder facing the daunting task of replacing the mare.

He said casually of lot 136, “Good day's work. It's great–she's a lovely filly, acts like a racehorse so hopefully she is one. She's gone to a good home so hopefully she turns out to be half as good as Alcohol Free. Now I have to try and find another one.”

Cooney added, “All she [Plying] has ever done is do us proud. Those horses are like family to us. I know we sell them but you get very attached to them and it's not like I have 20 waiting to be sold.

“It's a huge result. I come from a small farm in Fethard so it gives you a good leg-up and start to business.”

 

Half-Sister to Cachet Hits the Heights

Poyle Sophie {GB}) (Teofilo {Ire}) is the gift that keeps on giving. Snapped up by John Bourke of Hyde Park Stud at the Tattersalls December Mares Sale in 2018 for just 3,000gns, she belied that modest price tag by producing a this year's 1000 Guineas winner Cachet (Ire) (Aclaim {Ire}).

Bourke's bargain buy delivered once again when a Cotai Glory (GB) half-sister (lot 141) to the Classic winner was sold for 350,000 gns to Blandford Bloodstock, much to the delight of the enthusiastic breeder and renowned breeze-up handler.

 

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October Book 1: ‘The Cream Of The Crop’

NEWMARKET, UK-It is going to require a Herculean effort to plunder the best of what is on offer at Tattersalls, according to leading bloodstock agent Alex Elliott who, on the eve of the eagerly-anticipated Book 1 session, described the stock on offer as being “the cream of the crop”. 

With Sheikh Mohommad, Sheikha Hissa Hamdan Al Maktoum, Aidan O'Brien, John Gosden, Yoshito Tahagi, Chad Brown and a host of American and foreign buyers in attendance at Newmarket on Monday, Elliott is expecting more mayhem in the sales ring this week. 

Elliott, who spent almost £4 million on 13 horses at Book 1 alone last year, said, “There's a hell of a selection. It will be very hard to buy them. People have been talking about this sale for a while and I think it's going to be every bit of what people were expecting and more.”

He added, “I'm buying for a domestic person so it's going to be hard for me to buy exactly what I want. It's always hard to buy what you want but it's going to be even harder this time. Between the prize-money, the weakness of the pound and the amount of people here–it just won't add up as well for us as it will for the Americans for example. That's going to make things extremely difficult. 

“There's more American buyers here than I have ever seen before. There are people here who I don't even recognise. This is the cream of the crop. They are the best turf horses that get brought to the market in Europe, if not the world, and it's going to be a challenge.” 

A mouse in a room full of hawks would have enjoyed a more peaceful afternoon than Sir Mark Prescott did at Tattersalls with the local legend met with a hero's welcome after Sunday's Arc heroics achieved with Alpinista (GB) (Frankel {GB}). 

Concurring with Elliott, the in-demand trainer said, “The stock is very good. It's a strong catalogue–we'll be short of money but we've enjoyed seeing them!”

He added on the reception, “My team are quite unhappy with me as we are taking too long and not seeing enough yearlings. I've had nothing but trouble! Too many 'thank yous' and 'not at alls' and so on. It's been marvellous.

“I'm very surprised by the reception. It's been extraordinary. It was just a great day and everything went right. I was saying to Aidan [O'Brien] that, if I hadn't trained the winner, I'd have enjoyed watching the race as she always seemed to be so well-placed. It just went perfectly well.”

The yearlings assembled at Tattersalls also came in for high praise from leading Irish trainer Paddy Twomey, who is expecting the demand for young stock to soar this week.

He said, “Tattersalls have attracted a lovely bunch of horses and you'd imagine that the strong trade from Goffs can carry over into the next two weeks.”

Barton Stud Bring A Big Draft

He may be one of the youngest stud managers in Britain but that infectious enthusiasm should stand Tom Blain in good stead as Barton Stud offer 22 yearlings in Book 1.

It is one thing bringing a big draft and something altogether different to offer up quality and, with two colts and a filly by Frankel (GB), a filly by Dubawi (Ire) and a filly and a colt apiece by the great Galileo (Ire) among the 22 on offer, expectations are high.

Blain said, “All of the right people are here and it was lovely to see Sheikha Hissa looking at a few of our yearlings and I understand Sheikh Mohammed is here. There are plenty of people here from America as well so there's huge interest.”

He added, “The pound is as weak as it's been for a while so, while that's not great for the country, it will help buyers. People vote with their pocket. You'd like to think that there are plenty of people who still have plenty to buy and that they will get stuck in so let's hope there's enough horses to go around.”

Barton has already earned a reputation as a proven source of top-notch talent with recent G2 May Hill S. winner Polly Pott (GB) (Muhaarar {GB}) the latest graduate.

Not only is this Barton's biggest draft of yearlings to offer up at public auction but the 34-year-old thinks it's the best.

He said, “I am really pleased with our draft. I've never sold anything by Galileo before and we've got a Dubawi filly who is very nice. There are three Frankels as well, one of which is particularly nice, and he sells on the last day [lot 436]. 

“This is what we do it for, isn't it? Try and be here competing at the top level and, most important of all, let's hope they go on and become good racehorses.”

Tally-Ho Out To Build On Dream Results

Whether it's buying, breezing or consigning, Tally-Ho Stud has an unrelenting ability to produce top-class winners, further evidence of which was seen on Sunday when homebred The Platinum Queen (Ire) (Cotai Glory {GB}) became the first juvenile since 1978 to win the G1 Prix de l'Abbaye.

She also became an important first at the highest level for the stud's up-and-coming sire Cotai Glory, not that Sunday's victory came as much of a surprise to Roger O'Callaghan, who is keen to build on the momentum with a 15-strong draft to offer this week. 

Trained by Richard Fahey and ridden to that momentous victory by Hollie Doyle, The Platinum Queen was bred and then breezed by the team at Tally-Ho, realising 57,000gns at the Tattersalls Guineas Breeze-up Sale last year.

Her success comes hot on the heels of the G1 Cheveley Park S. heroine Lezoo (GB) (Zoustar {Aus}) and G1 Beresford S. hero Crypto Force (GB) (Time Test {GB}), both of whom were breezed by Tally-Ho.

“It's the pinnacle, isn't it?” O'Callaghan says, nonchalantly. “You want to be good at your job, don't you? It's very satisfying but, today's headlines are tomorrow's fish and chips papers and we're concentrating on this week. But it's gratifying and, also, it's good for the breeze-ups as well.”

He added, “All I want to do is sell good horses. Lezoo was a very nice filly with a bad front leg. She just looked like she'd run and she did. I liked the Red Clubs (Ire) mare in the pedigree as well and she'd a great temperament.

“In fairness to Dad [Tony], he bred the dam of The Platinum Queen and he got 460,000gns from Niarchos. She didn't turn out to be much good but he bought her back for nine grand and this is the first foal out of her. Richard Fahey and Robin O'Ryan have done a fabulous job with her.”

Crypto Force represented something of a different theme for the Tally-Ho team when landing the G2 Beresford S. over a mile at the Curragh last month. 

However, that victory, according to O'Callaghan, proves that the renowned producers of equine talent can cater for every market, which could be seen with John Gosden, Kevin Ryan, Michael Donohoe and Mr Zhang, Hugo Palmer and Alice Haynes all busy inspecting the stock on Monday. 

O'Callaghan said, “Crypto Force was satisfying. He was a good-looking horse and I told everyone to buy him. Michael O'Callaghan out-bid Federico Barberini and the rest is history. “He's a different type of beast for us but we try to cater for everyone we can. We've a lot of races that we haven't sold the winner of.”

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Kirsten Rausing on Alpinista: ‘There Were a Lot of Tears Shed’

On Sunday, Kirsten Rausing and Sir Mark Prescott achieved the impossible in uniting racing's participants in joy at the victory of Alpinista (GB) (Frankel {GB}) in the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe.

For Prescott, Newmarket's longest-serving trainer now in his 53rd season with a licence, it was a moment that brought a tear to his eye as the witty one-liners for which he is famous gave way to pure emotion. For Rausing, too, who has painstakingly developed a broodmare band of significant international note over more than four decades at her Lanwades Stud, the five-year-old mare's resounding success at ParisLongchamp was a moment of extreme satisfaction. 

“It was a marvellous, marvellous day for all of us, and there is a big team that has achieved this, but it will still take some time to sink in,” said the owner-breeder on Monday morning as she continued to wade through messages of congratulation before turning her attention to the October Yearling Sale at Tattersalls. 

“Of course it was marvellous to see this crowning achievement of Sir Mark's fantastic career as well. We hardly needed a plane coming home,” she added of the man who has trained her homebreds for 35 years, including Alpinista's dam Alwilda (GB) (Hernando {Fr}) and grand-dam, the treble Group 1 winner Albanova (GB) (Alzao).

Until Sunday, it would likely have been Albanova's full-sister, the dual Champion S. winner Alborada (GB), who held the top spot in Rausing's affections but the fellow grey mare, also trained by Prescott, will now be vying for that honour with her relation Alpinista, whose Arc victory was her sixth consecutive Group 1 win and ensured that she has remained unbeaten for two years. 

It would be hard to find anyone in the breeding business who can speak with more authority and depth of pedigree knowledge than the Swedish-born Rausing. Her association with Alpinista's family started in 1985 when she purchased her fourth dam Alruccaba (Ire) Crystal Palace {Fr}) from the Aga Khan in partnership with her great friend Sonia Rogers of Airlie Stud, where Rausing spent some of her formative years working in the bloodstock business. Needless to say, it was no accident that Rausing ended up with a mare who would go on to have such a profound influence on her broodmare band and is also the ancestress of this season's St Leger winner Eldar Eldarov (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}).

“When I was a schoolgirl my grandfather taught me about pedigrees,” she recalled. “We started with dairy cattle and gun dogs and then we proceeded to thoroughbred horses, of which he knew nothing but he was very interested in their pedigrees and [books such as] Sir Charles Leicester's Breeding a Racehorse. The hero of anyone interested in breeding was the old Aga Khan–Lady Josephine (GB), Mumtaz Mahal (GB) and all that–and so it was through study of the old books and these wonderful fillies that I always thought that this family was, to my understanding, the very best in the studbook.”

Mumtaz Mahal, a daughter of The Tetrarch (Ire) who was purchased as a yearling by Aga Khan III and who became known as the 'Flying Filly' for her extraordinary success on the track, became an even bigger influence at stud for her owner. Fittingly, in the year in which the Aga Khan Studs celebrates its centenary, Mumtaz Mahal appears as the tenth dam of Alpinista.

Rausing continued, “So I was a great admirer of Mumtaz Mahal and those that came after her, and it also helped that when I was a child the Swedish National Stud had a horse called Darbhanga (GB) and he was by Dastur (GB) out of Mumtaz Begum (Fr), so he was a half-brother to Nasrullah (GB). He was a year or two older than Nasrullah and had been second in the Triple Crown in England but being by Dastur nobody wanted him. Nasrullah's greatness had yet to appear, so the Swedish government was able to buy this horse just after the war in 1945 and he came to Sweden and was a great success, probably the best there ever was. In fact, Bull Hancock sent an emissary to Sweden in the 1950s with a blank cheque to buy Nasrullah's brother but the Swedish government said, 'Whom do you take us for, we are a socialist government, not horse wranglers.' In a way that was a pity because if the horse had gone to Kentucky he would have had much more influence of course.”

The first Classic winner bred by Rausing's grandfather was a Danish 1,000 Guineas winner by Darbhanga out of a mare by Abernant (GB), and was thus inbred to Mumtaz Mahal. 

“So that really focused my absolute concentration on this family since I was a schoolgirl,” said Rausing, who bought Ayesha (GB) from Madame Couturié in 1967 from a different branch of the family and bred from her Ayah, who was the second-best two-year-old filly in Ireland in 1975.

“She had the SWE suffix so that was quite an achievement,” Rausing said. “But she died quite early so I was always scouring the catalogues for anything from that family. If anything ever cropped up they were always way too expensive for me. “When I saw Alruccaba in the book as a winning two-year-old in the December Sales of 1985 I was of course mad keen. I went to see her surreptitiously before the sales and, very luckily for me, she had a distinct tendon on her near-fore. She'd been trained by Michael Stoute and at the time his assistant was James Fanshawe who later told me that they'd never had anything slower in the yard, so they were  delighted that she managed to win a maiden at Brighton.”

With Sonia Rogers, a plan was hatched to secure Alruccaba. 

Rausing explained, “Sonia valued her much higher than I did so we had a complicated arrangement that I would bid for her and we would split her up to a certain value, and then if she made more I would keep bidding but she would be 100% Sonia's. Luckily she made a lot less than we thought she would. I bought her for one bid at 19,000gns, her reserve having been 18,000. So Sonia and I owned her together and she spent two years at Lanwades and two years at Airlie, backwards and forwards, throughout her career.”

Alruccaba's offspring include the Sun Chariot S. winner Last Second (Ire) and fellow black-type winners Alleluia (GB), Alouette (GB), and Arrikala (Ire). Another of her daughters, Jude (GB) (Darshaan {GB}), has established her own significant branch of the family which includes the Classic winner Yesterday (Ire) (Sadler's Wells).

“Alruccaba has founded quite a dynasty and it has been helped by the fact that there seems to have been more fillies than colts,” said Rausing. 

There was extra satisfaction for the breeder in the success of Alpinista as she is out of a mare by the former Lanwades resident Hernando (Fr), who also featured as broodmare sire of Saturday's G1 Prix de Royallieu winner Sea La Rosa (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}), bred by Guy Heald.

She said, “With the few opportunities numerically that Hernando had, like Selkirk, he is a significant damsire.”

For Alpinista, the paddocks of Lanwades will call her home for next season after four honourable years in training, in which she has to date won ten of her 15 starts.

“She's done enough, more than enough, and I am eternally grateful to her,” Rausing said. “Whether she runs again is a matter for Sir Mark. She gave us such an incredible day on Sunday and there were a lot of tears shed, even perhaps a few by the great man himself.”

The post Kirsten Rausing on Alpinista: ‘There Were a Lot of Tears Shed’ appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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