The Weekly Wrap: Reynier Rules

Yes, it's Derby week in Epsom and Chantilly, and it's all about the Classic generation, but as we briefly cast our minds back over the past seven days, let's hear it for the oldies.

At ParisLongchamp on Sunday, the 6-year-olds Skalleti (Fr) (Kendargent {Fr}) and Marianafoot (Fr) (Footstepsinthesand {GB}) pulled off a group-race double on a stellar weekend for owner Jean-Claude Seroul and trainer Jerome Reynier, while their younger stable-mate Elusive Foot (Ire) (Footstepsinthesand {GB}) brought up a memorable treble in the Quinté. These followed Saturday's listed Derby du Medoc victory for the same owner/trainer combination with Paco (Ire) (Paco Boy {Ire}). 

On board the G1 Prix Ganay winner Skalleti and Paco was Gerald Mosse, now back in his native France following a bit of a European tour in recent seasons. Mosse is 54, the same age as this season's 2000 Guineas-winning jockey Kevin Manning, and he rode his first Group 1 winner when the 35-year-old Reynier was a toddler.

The combination of youth and experience has proved a fruitful one as Mosse also rode Reynier's listed Grand Prix du Bordeaux winner Monty (Fr) (Motivator {GB}) on Saturday. The pair also combined for one of the trainer's early major wins when Royal Julius (Ire) (Royal Applause {GB}) landed Italy's G2 Premio President della Repubblica.

It's safe to say that Skalleti has now stolen the title of stable star from Royal Julius, becoming the first Group 1 winner for his trainer, his sire Kendargent, and for Seroul. The latter, now in his 80s and a prolific owner/breeder in France over many years, bred his other three weekend stakes winners but not Skalleti, who was bred by Guy Pariente, owner of both Kendargent and Skalleti's listed-winning dam Skallet (Fr). The 13-year-old mare is a daughter of the well-bred former Haras des Faunes resident Muhaymin, by A.P. Indy out of the 1000 Guineas winner Shadayid (Shadeed). 

Skallet's offspring have been dominating ParisLongchamp this season.  Not only has Skalleti won the G2 Prix d'Harcourt as well as the Ganay, the previous weekend his full-brother, the up-and-coming stayer Skazino (Fr), won the G2 Prix Vicomtesse Vigier following his easy success in the G3 Prix de Barbeville in early May. Then there's the 7-year-old Skalleto (Fr), not quite as talented as his illustrious siblings but listed-placed nonetheless and winner of a handicap at the track on May 16. The mare has so far produced four foals, all by Kendargent, the youngest of which is the unraced 2-year-old gelding Skalli (Fr), and she is now back in foal to the 18-year-old stallion.

Reynier has done his bit to boost the profile of the southern French training centre of Calas, near Marseille, and he is proving something of a dab hand at nurturing the careers of his horses through to maturity. Six is clearly not old for a horse–it just seems so in an increasingly precocity-obsessed industry. 

Skalleti, and his fellow 6-year-olds Marianafoot and Monty, have won 23 races between them and counting. As a gelding, Skalleti can race on unhindered by concerns of a stud career while his mind and body allows. Reynier has already stated that his long-term aim for this season is a return to Ascot for the G1 QIPCO Champion S., in which he was second last year. Skalleti only needs another seven wins to equal a former wonder of the French ranks, Cirrus Des Aigles (Fr) (Even Top {GB}), who won the Champion S. 10 years ago and returned to Ascot in three successive years to finish runner-up twice. 

We look forward to welcoming Skalleti back for years to come, and we can expect to hear plenty more about his trainer. From 12 runners last week, Reynier saddled seven winners and he now lies in third place in the French trainers' table behind those multiple champions Jean-Claude Rouget and Andre Fabre.

Anything Euchen Do

On the subject of equine golden oldies, there are few more admirable horses in training than William Johnstone's homebred Euchen Glen (GB) (Authorized {Ire}), who sprang something of a surprise when winning the G3 Coral Brigadier Gerard S., run in memory of the late Joe Mercer, as the 20/1 outsider of four.

Granted, the soft ground at Sandown played to his strengths, but there's plenty to love about the Jim Goldie-trained 8-year-old, who was recording his 11th win from 37 starts after having the best part of two years off the track with a tendon injury after winning the John Smith's Cup in July 2018. His impressive list of wins includes last year's G3 St Simon S in heavy ground and G3 Cumberland Lodge S. on soft. Even more impressive is that his victories have come from 1m2f at almost every distance up to 2m, the latter being his win in the Shergar Cup Stayers. 

Sandown's Brigadier Gerard meeting is arguably the best evening fixture of the year in Britain, and this year the two group races on the card were plundered by Scottish and Irish raiders. Jim Goldie took the Brigadier Gerard trophy back to Renfrewshire and Henry de Bromhead proved that he's far more than just an excellent National Hunt trainer, by sending the 4-year-old Lismore (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}) to land the G3 Coral Henry S. 

The statuesque filly, who races for her breeders Sonia and Anthony Rogers, would certainly not look out of place in a field of smart jumping mares, but she may well now be aimed at following the example of fellow Irish-trained Princess Zoe (Ger) (Jukebox Jury {Ire}) later in the season with a raid on the G1 Prix du Cadran on Arc weekend. In a year in which her trainer has captured the Cheltenham Gold Cup, Champion Hurdle, Champion Chase and Grand National, we should perhaps expect nothing less than to see him adding a Group 1 victory on the Flat to his outstanding record.

Golden Moment

The one other stakes race at Sandown's Thursday meeting provided a special first for the team behind the 2000 Guineas winner Galileo Gold (Ire). It was actually a second first, as Ebro River (Ire), winner of the listed National S., had already become his sire's first winner on May 15 for Galileo Gold's former trainer Hugo Palmer and owner Al Shaqab Racing. Extra lustre was provided by the fact that he was bred by Tally-Ho Stud, where Galileo Gold stands.

His stud-mate Cotai Glory (GB) is ahead of Galileo Gold in the table with eight individual winners, and Ardad (Ire) is further clear still on nine. But Galileo Gold is the first of the freshman sires to notch a stakes winner and Ebro River looks likely  to head next to the G2 Coventry S.

The chestnut colt is out of the Balmont mare Soft Power (Ire), a half-sister to the dam of top sprinter Slade Power (Ire) (Dutch Art {GB}), and the 10-year-old mare is now back in foal to Galileo Gold at Tally-Ho Stud.

Barbe Goes Back For Black

In a week in which the first anniversary of the death of George Floyd was widely marked around the world, Black Lives Matter (Fr) (Panis) was an appropriately named winner of the opening 2-year-old maiden on Sunday's ParisLongchamp card.

The colt, who was bred by Frederic and Christine Ehlinger, went through the Arqana Autumn Sale in the draft of Haras des Faunes, where his sire stands. His buyer, at €7,500 was bloodstock agent Patrick Barbe, who had previously owned and bred his dam Magic Potion (Fr). Barbe also had a close connection to the mare's sire Divine Light (Jpn) (Sunday Silence), whom he had been responsible for importing to France from Japan, and who made his mark as the sire of 1000 Guineas winner Natagora (Fr).

“We had the grandam and the dam,” Barbe recalled. “I originally bought into this family because the third dam was Magic Night (Fr), a champion filly in the 80s. She was second in the Arc and the Japan Cup and won the Vermeille.”

He continued, “This colt was named Blackmagic to begin with but we didn't like the name so we thought Black Lives Matter was a better one and we changed it in December. Gradually he'll be aimed at a listed race and then hopefully a Group 3. We'll see. So far, so good.”

Barbe added, “I am also a great fan of Panis, who has covered very few mares recently. I love Panis because I used to love his sire Miswaki, who is the broodmare sire of Galileo (Ire).”

Magic Potion, whom Barbe bred in partnership with Jean-Paul Marchand, was second in the listed Prix la Flèche at two, produced three foals for the partners before she was sold to the Ehlingers in December 2015. Her second foal, Magic Song (Fr) (Kendargent {Fr}), was a five-time winner in France, while the third, Shadow Noel (Fr) (Le Havre {Ire}), was exported to Japan, where she won four times.

Barbe has long had strong links with Japan and the connection continues through Black Lives Matter's trainer the Chantilly-based Satoshi Kobayashi. The former assistant to Mikel Delzanges and John Hammond had celebrated his first Classic victory the previous weekend in the G2 Derby Italiano with Tokyo Gold (Fr) (Kendargent {Fr}) for owner/breeder Teruya Yoshida.

Gold Medal Standard

The stallion in demand at Arqana's Breeze-up in Doncaster last Friday was Darley America's Medaglia d'Oro, whose three colts in the sale were among the eight leading lots on the day and returned an average price of £438,333. 

They included the £675,000 sale-topper and most expensive breezer in Europe this season, who was sold to Godolphin and will join the stable of Andre Fabre. The French maestro has previously enjoyed success with Medaglia d'Oro's striking Breeders' Cup Turf-winning son Talismanic (GB), who is now at stud for Darley in Japan.

American sires have generally fared well at the European breeze-up sales, and Medaglia d'Oro has previously been responsible for the Brown Island Stables graduate Mshawish, who was picked up by Johnny Collins and Chad Schumer for $10,000at the Keeneland September Sale and sold at Arqana's 2012 breeze-up for €170,000. He went on to listed success in France before becoming a dual Grade 1 winner for Al Shaqab in Florida. Now at Taylor Made Farm, Mshawish was represented by his first stakes winner on Saturday when Sainthood landed the GII Pennine Ridge S. at Belmont Park.

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Tiger Tanaka The Headline Act As The Turf Ramps Up

One day after the official beginning of Spring time, turf racing is the focus in France and Ireland on Sunday with The Curragh's season-opening card complemented by some intriguing races at Saint-Cloud. While the Kildare venue offers no black-type contests, it hosts some intriguing 2-year-old and 3-year-old maidens which could offer early glimpses of the 2021 Classic class. At Saint-Cloud, there are three listed races for the Classic generation with the Prix La Camargo acting as the comeback launch of Tiger Tanaka (Ire) (Clodovil {Ire}). Miguel Castro Megias's G1 Prix Marcel Boussac and G3 Prix Francois Boutin heroine resumes her partnership with Jessica Marcialis as trainer Charley Rossi seeks to get her season underway at the earliest opportunity. Last seen finishing fourth in the 10-furlong G1 Criterium de Saint-Cloud on heavy ground, she will find this mile trip more in her comfort zone. At the other end of the experience spectrum is the Wertheimers' Nohand (GB) (Dansili {GB}), an Andre Fabre-trained half-sister to the G1 Prix Vermeille winner Left Hand (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) who scored on her sole start on Chantilly's Polytrack on Mar. 2.

In the feature G3 Prix Exbury, Jean-Claude Seroul's pride and joy Skalleti (Fr) (Kendargent {Fr}) is back having taken his profile up another notch last term with wins in the G3 Prix Gontaut-Biron and G2 Prix Dollar and a second in the G1 Champion S. Seventh in the Dec. 13 G1 Hong Kong Cup, the homebred has to give upwards of four pounds to his rivals and five to the G3 Prix de Flore winner Grand Glory (GB) (Olympic Glory {Ire}). Derby aspirants get a chance to shine in the 10 1/2-furlong Listed Prix Francois Mathet, with Juddmonte's Andre Fabre-trained grandson of Hasili (Ire) (Kahyasi {Ire}), Media Stream (GB) (Frankel {GB}), bidding to build on his debut success over a mile on Chantilly's Polytrack in November.

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Reynier On the Road Again

Jerome Reynier may lack the name recognition and firepower enjoyed by his fellow Frenchmen like Arc-winner Jean-Claude Rouget, the legendary Andre Fabre and rising star Francis-Henri Graffard. But the 35-year-old, based in Marseille in the southeast of France, can boast of sharing a spot with that esteemed company on the French trainers’ premiership by earnings (north of €2 million in France alone, good for ninth place) and by number of winners (81, sixth most). Reynier can close what by any metric has been an outstanding season this weekend in Hong Kong when he sends out the win machine Skalleti (Fr) (Kendargent {Fr}) in the G1 Longines Hong Kong Cup and stablemate Royal Julius (Ire) (Royal Applause {GB}) in the G1 Longines Hong Kong Vase.

“We were locked down from mid-March to mid-May and the prize money was decreased as well,” Reynier said earlier this week from Hong Kong. “We are pretty happy to have earned a bit more than €2 million in France, so that’s a pretty good year. All I want for the guys and the owner I’m lucky enough to train for is to keep consistency, keep horses in good form and good shape.”

Like the aformentioned Graffard, Reynier participated in the Godolphin Flying Start program, working first as a bloodstock agent post-graduation before taking out a trainer’s license in 2013. Some four years later, Royal Julius provided him with his first stakes winner, defeating the Graffard-trained Maximum Aurelius (Fr) (Showcasing {GB}) in the Listed Grand Prix Anjou Bretagne at Nantes, and later became the young trainer’s first group winner when taking out the G2 Premio Presidente della Repubblica at the Capannelle in 2018. Royal Julius provided the stable a breakthrough winner on foreign soil in the 2019 Bahrain International Trophy and gave a good account of himself when fifth in this year’s HH The Emir’s Trophy in Qatar.

While the 7-year-old may lack the class of the market leaders for Vase, Royal Julius hasn’t made the trip to Hong Kong just for show.

“He’s there to be as competitive as he can and with only seven runners, we had to take this gamble,” Reynier commented. “He’s used to long travel–he’s been to Qatar twice and once in Bahrain, so that shouldn’t be a problem. The mile and a half around two turns, like the Emir’s Trophy in Qatar, he’s showed he likes that kind of trip. Mogul (GB) (Galileo {Ire}) and Exultant (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}) will be very hard to beat, but I think it’s quite open for third place.”

Royal Julius has yet to crack the win column in eight trips to the races this season, but has run with credit, including a third to the recently retired Way To Paris (GB) (Champs Elysees {GB}) in the G3 Grand Prix de Vichy in May and a pair of runner-up efforts in Milan, including the G2 Premio Federico Tesio Sept. 20.

“I quite liked the way he ran in Milan in September, he showed that he is still competitive as a 7-year-old,” the conditioner commented. “I am very happy with him as well, he’s in very good shape.”

Skalleti is better fancied of the two Reynier runners as he takes on the likes of Magical (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) and defending champ Win Bright (Jpn) (Stay Gold {Jpn}) in the Cup. A 12-time winner from just 16 starts, the 5-year-old has kept good company this season, finishing third to the classy Persian King (Ire) (Kingman {GB}) in the June 28 G2 Prix du Muguet at Saint-Cloud before carrying Pierre-Charles Boudot to a hard-fought neck defeat of the Rouget-trained future G1 Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe hero Sottsass (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}) in the G3 Prix Gontaut Biron – Hong Kong Jockey Club at Deauville in August (see below). Following up with a visually impressive title defence in the G2 Prix Dollar on Arc weekend, he backed up relatively quickly to run the soft-ground loving Addeybb (GB) (Pivotal {GB}) to 2 1/4 lengths in the G1 QIPCO British Champion S., with Magical one spot back in third.

 

WATCH: Skalleti outslugs Sottsass at Deauville

 

“After he won the Prix Dollar, he stayed up in Chantilly and prepared for the Champion S. It was the first time in his life that he was racing on two weeks’ rest,” Reynier explained. “We were not very optimistic, as that’s a long trip to Ascot. We didn’t know if he was going to be able to race up to that standard because he never raced in Group 1 company before, so we weren’t sure about his level. But he did show that he’s got plenty of ability and that he’s up to that standard and that he can be among the best in the world on the turf. That was a good run.”

Though very much suited to a race like the Hong Kong Cup, connections were wondering whether Skalleti might be over the top, but ultimately they let the horse do the talking.

“We were probably thinking after the race that’s he’s probably  given enough this year and that we would see him next year, but he came back to the southeast of France in Marseille in very good nick,” Reynier said. “We were starting to think about the Hong Kong Cup and he showed us through the month of November that he was in top shape. We are very happy with him, so we decided to give it a go.”

Skalleti, who has been full of energy in his all-weather gallops this week, is certain to encounter much quicker ground at Sha Tin than he has seen for some time, but Reynier appears not the least bit concerned.

“He has won a Group 3 over a straight mile in Deauville on firm ground [2019 G3 Prix Quincey] and he has gone 1:35 for the mile,” the trainer said. “A mile and a quarter on good ground, I don’t think that’s a problem for him. He’s probably a little better on soft, but he’s been showing us that he’s able to win on a straight track, he’s won on Polytrack, left-handed, he’s won Group 2s in heavy ground, so he can handle anything. I think he’s just a good horse and I think he’ll be very competitive.”

The conditioner is also pleased to have Boudot back in the saddle, not far removed from his two-win day at the Breeders’ Cup last month.

“It’s very important that someone rides who knows the horse, because he can be a bit anxious,” said Reynier. “Pierre-Charles knows him very well and knows how to deal with him. He was drawn one last time and we knew it was going to be hard to come from behind at Ascot, so that’s why we wanted to be close to the pace. Pierre-Charles will be riding him with some confidence.”

A long, strange trip it has been, for both horses and humans, to get to this point. The equine athletes endured a lengthy journey, from Reynier’s Marseille base to Chantilly and from that equine center to Liege, Belgium, to board their flight. With no direct option available, there was also a layover in Qatar. Reynier said it was equally challenging for him and his team navigating the waters within the context of a global pandemic.

“We were not sure that my team was going to be able to make the trip until we got tested twice,” he explained. “We are exempted from the 14-day quarantine because we have a work visa, we spent one day in a hotel after being tested on arrival and then we moved into a hotel near the racecourse. We are able to go see the horses two or three times a day, but part of the deal is that we have to stay in our rooms. We won’t be able to see the city, but look, we aren’t coming here for tourism, we are coming to try to win some races, so we don’t mind.”

Judging by his statistics as the end of the year approaches, 2020 has been a wild success, pandemic or not.

“We have improved our results. I started out with four horses as a public trainer and I got up to 40 and didn’t really want any more than that,” Reynier said. “I thought that was a good number, because I didn’t want a big stable where you lose track of your horses. I was very happy, we had very good results and in September 2018, [Skalleti’s owner] Mr [Jean-Claude] Seroul asked me to train his string, with 50 to train. That was a very different scenario because he’s got his own yard and his own staff and I’m just kind of managing it all. When we are full with all the youngsters coming in, that’s 90 or so horses to train on a daily basis and that’s plenty to keep busy. It’s the reason we’ve been able to improve our results year after year and this year, we’ve got a bit more than 80 wins in France and a bit more abroad.”

It won’t be easy, but Reynier and team would surely not complain about adding to that total in Hong Kong this weekend.

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Hong Kong On Skalleti Agenda

Jean-Claude Seroul’s Skalleti (Fr) (Kendargent {Fr}) could target the Hong Kong International meeting on Dec. 13 off the back of his second-place finish in the G1 Champion S. last weekend.

The 5-year-old gelding-who stays in training next year-was trying Group 1 company for the first time in the Champion. He has won nine of his last 12 starts including six black-type races and two runnings of the G2 Prix Dollar. He has been off the board just once in 16 starts.

“You always go to the races with a lot of confidence with this horse, because he always gives you everything,” said trainer Jerome Reynier. “He had the conditions to suit [at Ascot], because he handles that sticky ground well. To be fair, he is good on soft and heavy, straight tracks or right or left-handed, and he has even been winning on Polytrack–he’s just an amazing horse.

“Now the question is whether we go to Hong Kong with him. He hasn’t had a big campaign this year, because he only started in May and had two light starts on good ground before we started to step things up in August. We could now be aiming for Hong Kong, where I will enter him in the Hong Kong Cup over a mile and a quarter and the Hong Kong Vase over a mile and a half. You have to stay really well over a mile and a quarter at Ascot on that sort of ground, and he wasn’t fading out–when Magical came to him he kept going to finish second. I think he would stay a mile and a half on good ground in Hong Kong. Everyone is saying the races will not be as competitive this year, because the Japanese horses are not so good and the local level isn’t so strong either, so this could be the year to try it.”

Skalleti’s trainer is already eyeing a return to Ascot for next year’s G1 Prince of Wales’s S.

“The owner really wants to keep him in one piece and doesn’t want to try silly things, so I can understand if he decides to put him away for next year,” Reynier said. “We could aim for the [G1] Prix Ganay in France in April, and everyone is saying we should consider the Prince of Wales’s S. in June, because sometimes it’s raining and they can get soft ground. We will definitely consider that, because there is no option in France at that time of year.”

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