Aboughazale’s Bluegrass Base Begins to Bear Fruit

LEXINGTON, KY – When Oussama Aboughazale purchased the former Belvedere Farm in Paris, Kentucky four years ago, he immediately began building a broodmare band for the 235-acre property. Those initial investments are now finding success both in the sales ring–where the operation was represented by its first $1-million yearling in 2019–and on the racetrack where Princess Noor (Not This Time), bred by Aboughazale’s International Equities Holding, recently won the GI Del Mar Debutante.

“I loved Kentucky from the first time I came here more than 20 years ago,” Aboughazale, born in Jerusalem and previously based in Chile, said of the decision to begin operations in the Bluegrass. “I fell in love with it. I said, ‘I want to have the Kentucky passport.'”

With the help of bloodstock manager Frances Relihan and farm manager Jody Alexander, Aboughazale purchased 11 mares at the 2017 Keeneland January sale and a further five mares at that year’s Keeneland November sale. The plan, according to Aboughazale was to find quality that was just under the radar.

“I always told Frances, ‘Frances look for me, not for Angelina Jolie, but for the sisters and cousins of Angelina Jolie,” he explained with a chuckle. “Because Angelina Jolies will be very expensive. But the sisters and the cousins will have the same genes and bloodlines.”

Relihan added, “We feel that buying a good physical is one of the most important things we can do. And then we gauge from there to see how much pedigree we can afford with that.”

Among the mares purchased that January was Brushwork (Discreet Cat), who was in foal to Kitten’s Joy and sold for $150,000. Shadwell Estate Co. bought the mare’s Kitten’s Joy colt for $750,000 in September 2018.

At the same auction, International Equities Holding purchased graded stakes winner Delightful Joy (Tapit) for $700,000. The mare’s first foal, a filly by War Front, sold to Shadwell for $1 million at last year’s Keeneland September sale.

The group of mares purchased in November 2017 included Sheza Smoke Show (Wilko), in foal to Not This Time, who was acquired for $185,000

Asked what he liked about the mare, Aboughazale smiled knowingly and said, “As I told you, cousins of Angelina Jolie.”

Sheza Smoke Show won the 2014 GIII Senorita S. and is the daughter of stakes winner Avery Hall (A. P Jet).

“She could run and she had speed,” Relihan said of the mare’s appeal. “And the mating was a nice cross for her physically. When you buy a mare, you’re buying that foal she’s carrying, that investment and it’s always good to like the mating because it puts you one step ahead when you get that foal on the ground before you breed her back.”

Sent through the ring at Keeneland last September, the mare’s Not This Time filly sold for $135,000.

“We always liked this filly, but Not This Time was not well known at the time and we thought we got very good money for her,” Aboughazale said of the result. “She was very nice. Then when she started training, she was a monster.”

The filly worked a lights-out quarter-mile in :20 1/5 before topping the OBS Spring sale when selling for $1.35 million.

Asked if he regretted selling the filly when he saw her results at OBS, Aboughazale laughed heartily and said, “Yes, of course. But thanks God, my best friend, he’s like a nephew to me, he bought her. He paid a lot of money for her.”

The filly, now named Princess Noor, was purchased by Saudi businessman Amr Zedan. She was a dazzling debut winner in August before taking the Del Mar Debutante last week.

“I have known him since he was a kid. He calls me uncle,” Aboughazale said of Zedan. “He didn’t know at first that I had bred the filly. He didn’t find out until later. But he called me and said, ‘Uncle Oussama you know who bought this filly?’ I am very happy for him. I hope she becomes a champion. I believe in God, I believe whatever happens in your life is decided by God. So God decided we should not have her, that somebody else should have her.”

Sheza Smoke Show has a yearling colt by Aboughazale’s three-time graded stakes-winning stallion Protonico (Giant’s Causeway).

“The Protonicos, nobody will buy them,” Aboughazale said ruefully. “He is beautifully bred and a beautiful horse. I love him so much. I am backing him, I am giving him every year a minimum of 10 good mares. And the best of all the yearling colts now who will go for training is Sheza Smoke Show’s son. They will go for breaking at the end of the month.”

Sheza Smoke Show also has a weanling filly by Tapwrit and was bred back to Protonico this year. Plans for the weanling are still up in the air.

“Possibly,” Relihan said when asked if the filly would go through the sales ring. “We will monitor Princess Noor’s progress and decide that and who to send the mare to.”

Despite a slower market, International Equities Holding has already had a pair of strong results in the sales ring this week in Lexington.

Through the Gainesway consignment, the operation sold a colt by Gun Runner (hip 570) for $500,000 to trainer Jeremiah Englehart. The yearling is out of Divine Dawn (Divine Park), a mare purchased for $285,000 at the 2017 Keeneland November sale.

“That’s the second foal out of the mare,” Relihan said. “We bought her in foal to Nyquist, so Mr. Aboughazale is going to race that filly, she’s a 2-year-old. The Gun Runner was just such a good commercial filly, very correct, she is a May 1 foal and had everything. Those kind of fillies you can take to market.”

During Sunday’s first session of the Keeneland September sale, Aboughazale sold a filly by Curlin (hip 138) for $600,000 to bloodstock agent Mike Ryan. The yearling is a granddaughter of Aboughazale’s Chilean champion Wild Spirit (Chi) (Hussonet), who traveled stateside to capture the 2003 GI Ruffian H.

“When you get one that looks like her, you have to keep the cash flowing,” Relihan said of the decision to sell the yearling.

The International Equities Holding broodmare band currently numbers about 40 head and Aboughazale admitted that’s about as many mares as his farm can hold. He expects to offer all his foals at auction, but is ready to take them home if need be.

“Our policy is to send them all to the market,” Aboughazale said. “If they pay the price, we sell. If they don’t pay the price, we keep them. It’s fair for everybody.”

Relihan added, “We have to take them to market to prove to the market that Mr. Aboughazale is breeding good, quality stock. Sometimes in the past, Mr. Aboughazale kept the best and sold some of the ones that weren’t that good. But now he’s taking good product to market.”

International Equities Holding still has a handful of offerings to come as the Keeneland September sale moves into Book 2 Wednesday. Through the Taylor Made Sales Agency consignment, it will offer a filly by Pioneerof the Nile (hip 535), a colt by Empire Maker (hip 702), and a colt by Nyquist (hip 790).

In Book 3, the operation will offer a pair of fillies by Empire Maker (hip 1264 and hip 1287), as well as an American Pharoah colt whose second dam is Wild Spirit (hip 1370) and a Violence filly (hip 1522).

“We have some nice horses coming up in Books 2 and 3,” Relihan said. “If they don’t bring a good market value, we have the luxury that Mr. Aboughazale can race, he has a racing operation. If they don’t bring what we think they are worth, then we go to Plan B.”

Aboughazale, an exporter of fruit from South America and a majority shareholder of the fresh produce division of Del Monte Fruit Company, was perennially a leading owner in Chile, but he expects his Kentucky operation will eventually take over.

“In the long run, I will close Chile and I will concentrate on Kentucky,” he said.

The uncertainties in the market caused by the global pandemic and several major foreign buyers missing from the results sheets so far at Keeneland may make selling yearlings more difficult, but Aboughazale may be ready to strike at the November breeding stock sales if the market continues to be weak.

“I think maybe this year we will buy Angelina Jolie in this market,” he said with a laugh.

Following a dark day Tuesday, the Keeneland September sale continues with the first of two Book 2 sessions Wednesday at 10 a.m. The auction continues through Sept. 25.

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No Mystery about Mystic Potential

Of all the oddities shoehorned into the 2020 calendar, a Jim Dandy on Derby day felt like one of the most incongruous. In a regular year, this Grade II race serves as a midsummer crossroads for sophomores with an eye on the GI Travers: a chance either to regroup, after participation in the Triple Crown series, or to test the water after missing the Classics through immaturity or injury.

At least this latter function was maintained, this time round, in the coming-of-age of ‘TDN Rising Star’ Mystic Guide (Ghostzapper), a colt for whom even a four-month postponement of the GI Kentucky Derby proved to be not quite enough. His response to a pair of blinkers, however, suggests that he could yet profit from the drastic realignment of the Classics to follow the Derby winner to the GI Preakness S.

In carving his name below that of his grandsire Awesome Again–himself too late on the scene for the U.S. Classics, when winning the race in 1997–Mystic Guide made a breakthrough that had certainly appeared within his compass, despite an odds-on defeat in the GIII Peter Pan S. at the start of the Saratoga meet. The dynamic move he made into third that day, having been going nowhere mid-race, spoke of an unusual talent still in development.

Though again striking from last place, a more focused animal contested the Jim Dandy. This time Mystic Guide’s brawny physique required far less organizing–partly, no doubt, thanks to the blinkers covering up that big blaze of his; but also showing the benefit of trainer Mike Stidham’s forbearance, in never having tried to make him run before he could walk.

In terms of pedigree, there can’t be many horses in training right now whose ability is easier to explain: his first and third dams are both five-time Grade I winners, and his unraced second dam additionally produced a Classic winner in France. And his sire, of course, is one of the most venerable speed-carrying influences around.

Not that this kind of seamless quality routinely plays out in breeding. No less than when we sift a more plebeian family, to find the hidden genetic nuggets that might explain an unexpected talent, this one contains its challenges. Because where we normally ask which cold flints have been rubbed together to spark a flame, here we must ask why so obvious a formula has not worked more consistently.

In each case, we are guilty of the besetting vice of pedigree analysis: picking and choosing such evidence as best fits the outcome. A situation like this, however, should perhaps be viewed as a reminder of how the daily misadventures of the Thoroughbred can unravel even the best pedigrees, the best horsemanship, the most lavish care.

That applies to the Maktoum empire no less than to the rest of us. The fact is that Mystic Guide’s dam Music Note (A.P. Indy), who besides her Grade I wins (Coaching Club American Oaks, Mother Goose, Beldame, Ballerina, Gazelle) made the podium in consecutive editions of the GI Ladies’ Classic at the Breeders’ Cup, has otherwise failed to produce foals commensurate with their sires and trainers. Though herself as sound and consistent as she was talented, she has previously mustered only one that has sustained the basic functionality of a racehorse–and that was a son of Street Cry (Ire) claimed for $16,000 on his second start. He then managed a dozen wins in 64 subsequent starts, no fewer than 60 of them at Penn National.

Who knows what innate ability may have been stifled by ill luck in Music Note’s other foals? But her progeny otherwise include an Elusive Quality filly, unraced after making just $17,000 as Hip 2990 at the September Sale; two foals by Distorted Humor that managed a single unplaced start between them; and a son of Street Cry who did manage to win a race in a light career for Andre Fabre in France, though only after being gelded early.

Music Note was homebred for Godolphin by Gainsborough Stud from the unraced Note Musicale (GB) (Sadler’s Wells), whose dam It’s in the Air had broken the Keeneland November Sale record when acquired for $4.6 million in 1984. From the first crop of Mr. Prospector, It’s in the Air had shared the 2-year-old fillies’ championship in 1978 and won the GI Vanity H. twice, as well as the Ruffian H., Alabama S. and Delaware Oaks. She was tough, too, winning 16 of 43 starts.

Though It’s in the Air produced nine winners in all, the only one to achieve real distinction was the Seattle Slew filly she was carrying at the time of her sale, Bitooh (GB), who won the G2 Criterium de Maisons-Laffitte. But several other daughters proved fertile producers, notably the dam of Storming Home (GB) (Machiavellian), a top-level winner on either side of the Atlantic while best remembered for his chaotic disqualification in the GI Arlington Million. Another daughter, Group-placed Sous Intendu (Shadeed), has produced three stakes winners including G1 Prix Jean Prat runner-up Slip Stream (Irish River {Fr}), as well as the dam of Australian Group 1 winner Alverta (Aus) (Flying Sour {Aus}).

It was the unraced Note Musicale, however, who did most to defray her dam’s purchase. Besides Music Note herself, she also produced Musical Chimes (In Excess {Ire}). A Classic winner for Fabre, taking the G1 Poule d’Essai des Pouliches before finishing third in the G1 Prix de Diane, Musical Chimes was exported to win the GI John C. Mabee H. for Neil Drysdale before becoming another who proved rather disappointing at stud.

The success of It’s in the Air in her second career, somewhat deferred as it was, is gratifying to those of us who believe that quality pooled beneath a pedigree can sometimes percolate unseen through a generation or two. Because her dam, A Wind Is Rising, was certainly a conduit for the right stuff.

You wouldn’t necessarily have said so, judging her as a Florida-bred, one-time winner by Francis S.–a well-bred but largely forgotten stallion, winner of the 1960 Wood Memorial for Harbor View/Burley Parke. Typical, in fact, of the material Mr. Prospector had to work with, when he started out in Ocala. (Albeit there’s an echo of It’s in the Air in some of the most valued animals around today: Francis S. was damsire of Ogygian, whose daughter Myth–herself out of a Mr. Prospector mare–gave us Scat Daddy’s sire Johannesburg.)

A Wind Is Rising certainly had a most remarkable symmetry to her pedigree: both her damsire Nasrullah and grandsire Royal Charger are sons of Nearco; and Royal Charger is out of Nasrullah’s half-sister Sun Princess. This really is as copper-bottomed as the last century gets: the dam of Nasrullah and Sun Princess was a half-sister to the mother of breed-shaping Mahmoud, the pair of them out of the champion sprinter Mumtaz Mahal, the fount of so much vital Aga Khan blood. The mating that produced It’s in the Air, moreover, introduced an extra strain of Nasrullah, his son Nashua being damsire of Mr. Prospector.

I know people get impatient with these ancient parchments, but A Wind Is Rising also surfaces as fifth dam of dual G1 Dubai World Cup winner Thunder Snow (Ire) (Helmet {Aus}). That’s because Sheikh Mohammed doubled down on the family by buying Red Slippers (Nureyev), a great-granddaughter of A Wind Is Rising, from Robert Sangster after she broke her maiden at Ascot in 1991. Red Slippers went on to win the G2 Sun Chariot S. at three, encouraging another deal with Sangster when her half-sister by Storm Bird won both juvenile starts the following season. This was Balanchine, whose bold success against the colts in the G1 Irish Derby would set a bold template for Sheikh Mohammed’s new adventure with Godolphin. And while Balanchine has made a limited impact as a broodmare, Red Slippers produced G1 Prix de Diane winner West Wind (GB) (Machiavellian) as well as Eastern Joy (GB) (Dubai Destination), dam of four graded stakes performers besides Thunder Snow.

Another European luminary of this family is Saoirse Abu (Mr Greeley), a dual Group 1-winning juvenile for Jim Bolger in Ireland (also Classic-placed). She shares a granddam with Red Slippers.

Valuable mares owned by rich breeders get expensive coverings, and their offspring should get top-class trainers. So there are always any number of factors when the likes of Thunder Snow and now Mystic Ridge come good, three or four generations after their maternal line parted.

But I do think it comforting to find a family loaded with this kind of blood. After all, people are always eager to credit a sireline when it has tapered away to no less tenuous a degree.

And actually the sires who have seeded Mystic Guide’s branch of the family only compound the influences we just noted behind It’s in the Air. A.P. Indy doubles up the Nasrullah line through both sire and damsire. And the dam of Sadler’s Wells is by a Royal Charger-line stallion, while her granddam Thong is by a son of Nasrullah.

In a horse as well-bred as this, then, it doesn’t really matter which threads of the pedigree come through: they’re all gold. Both Mystic Guide’s parents, for instance, are out of dams who bred another elite runner: Note Musicale had Musical Chimes as well as Music Note, and Baby Zip had City Zip as well as Ghostzapper. Exactly the same is true of the respective dams of damsire and grandsire: Weekend Surprise had Summer Squall as well as A.P.Indy, and Primal Force had Macho Uno as well as Awesome Again.

Not even that brings any guarantees, as Mystic Guide’s disappointing siblings show. But if luck and judgement are now combining to permit the fulfilment of this pedigree’s potential, then there won’t be a single creaking floorboard on the stage.

And, someday, that could become hugely important. Because if Mystic Guide can earn a legitimate place at stud, he will have a chance to address the one lingering omission in the career of the phenomenal athlete who became his sire.

Justify (Scat Daddy) has announced with unmissable fanfare the emergence of Ghostzapper as a broodmare sire, unsurprising in a grandson of Deputy Minister. And, yes, Ghostzapper has Shaman Ghost standing alongside him at Adena Springs; and McCraken, his most precocious son, now making his way at Airdrie. These two have everything to play for, respectively launching their first yearlings and weanlings. At 20, however, time is running out for Ghostzapper to increase competition among his male heirs.

This is a stallion whose lifetime ratio of stakes and graded stakes winners is comfortably in step with Medaglia d’Oro and Curlin, and way ahead of many other big names. So the stakes are high, with Mystic Guide; no higher, however, than the roots are deep.

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Stuart Fitzgibbon Joins Open Nutrition

Stuart Fitzgibbon, formerly with Castleton Lyons in Central Kentucky, has been appointed director of sales and client development for the new U.S. division of Open Nutrition. The horse supplement company specializes in all-natural amino acid-based products and has products ranging from joint supplements to performance and recovery supplements, as well as others. Open Nutrition founder Julian Norrish initially developed the supplements in Australia and the United Arab Emirates.

“When I met Julian it was clearly evident through his enthusiasm, knowledge, and expertise of amino acids science that Open Nutrition’s products will be of huge benefit for all horsemen and women in our business,” said Fitzgibbon. “The company’s product line is especially important in the present environment where natural supplements can play an important role to increase the general competitiveness and well-being of all horses.”

Products are available both online and from Kentucky’s Hagyard Pharmacy. Fitzgibbon said the supplements are subject to regular product certification from the University of Kentucky’s Equine Analytical Laboratory.

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Breakway Farm to Host Virtual Tour Tuesday

Located in Central Indiana, Breakway Farm is offering a virtual farm tour and stallion showcase on its Facebook page Tuesday starting at 12 p.m. EDT.

In operation since 1995, Breakway Farm is the home to some of Indiana’s top stallions and is presenting two new stallions, Calculator and Charming Kitten, to potential breeders. Calculator (In Summation–Back To Basics, by Alphabet Soup) was the winner of the GIII Sham S. at Santa Anita in 2015 and Grade I placed and retired with lifetime earnings of more than $694,000.

“Calculator is a great addition to our breeding program because he is an outcross to so many mares,” commented Tara Mathias, manager of Breakway Farm.

Millionaire Charming Kitten (Kitten’s Joy–Iteration, by Wild Again) also joined the stallion roster at Breakway Farm in 2020. The 10-year-old won or placed in eight graded stakes and fits in with the racing program at Indiana Grand Racing & Casino, where more turf racing is being featured.

“Charming Kitten is a good fit,” says Mathias. “We’re excited to stand a son of top sire Kitten’s Joy in Indiana.”

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