Coolmore Fees: No Nay Never Up To 175k and Blackbeard To Start At 25k

Off the back of a star-studded season, No Nay Never will stand for €175,000 in 2023, which represents a €50,000 rise, while his dual Group 1-winning son Blackbeard (Ire) will join him on the Coolmore roster next year at a price of €25,000. 

No Nay Never has had an exceptional year. Older filly Alcohol Free (Ire) landed the G1 July Cup at Newmarket, but it has been his Coolmore-owned and Aidan O'Brien-trained juveniles that have set tongues wagging this term. 

Like his father, Blackbeard landed the G1 Prix Morny in Deauville before doubling his tally at the highest level in the G1 Middle Park S. at Newmarket. 

While he was prematurely retired due to a training injury, Group 1 scorers Little Big Bear (Ire) and Meditate (Ire) sit at the head of the ante-post markets for the 2,000 and 1,000 Guineas respectively. 

Coolmore's director of sales, David O'Loughlin said, “No Nay Never has had an unbelievable year. The quality of the mares he got off the back of his success has really been shining through and, to have three individual Group 1-winning two-year-olds in the one year, he has caught the attention of a lot of people. 

“It has been another big week for him with Meditate winning the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf and she is now a leading fancy for the 1,000 Guineas. Little Big Bear is favourite for the 2,000 Guineas, so No Nay Never has a big chance for the first two Classics of the season. That means a lot for us because we are trying to win the Classics.”

Sioux Nation hails from the same sire line being a son of Scat Daddy, and enjoyed a terrific debut season at stud at Coolmore with 43 winners. He will have his fee increased from €10,000 to 17,500 next year. Blackbeard is being backed to make a similar splash in his debut season by O'Loughlin. 

He said, “To get a horse like Blackbeard on the roster is hugely exciting as well. Breeders love fast horses and he proved himself of the highest quality this season and was reminiscent of his father when winning the G1 Prix Morny is some style before following up in the G1 Middle Park S. at Newmarket. That was the icing on the cake of another big season. 

“Blackbeard is very like his father-the same colour, shape and he has the movement. Everything a breeder wants, he has. He's also out of a very fast mare who Eddie Lynam trained [Muirin (Ire) (Born To Sea {Ire})] so I think a lot of people will be keen to use him.”

O'Loughlin added, “Commercially, what is driving the market is international appeal. When the international market zones in on a particular sire line, it puts a lot of value on that, much more than the domestic market can. No Nay Never is a good example of that as he has international appeal.

“Take Justify as another example, he has had two Group winners in Europe and three stakes winners in America. It's obvious that he is working both sides of the Atlantic-he has the dirt horses and horses who can do it in Europe as well. For breeders, it will help when they use Arizona, Blackbeard and Sioux Nation because they all hail from that exceptional Scat Daddy line. It's all the one line.”

Like Sioux Nation, Coolmore's Saxon Warrior (Jpn) made a big impression with his first crop of runners. As well as having the highly-touted Auguste Rodin (Ire) to look forward to this season, Saxon Warrior came up trumps with Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf winner Victoria Road (Ire), one of 21 international winners in his first season. 

O'Loughlin said, “Saxon Warrior had an exceptional year. Again, he's a horse with international appeal being a son of Deep Impact (Jpn), who was the best horse to stand in Japan. Auguste Rodin is a very special horse and Victoria Road crowned a remarkable year with his victory in the Breeders Cup Juvenile Turf. 

“It's remarkable because Saxon Warrior wasn't the most precocious of horses and, for him to be getting all of these top-class two-year-olds is a big statement. He has some very good two-year-olds and who's to say that Greenland (Ire) won't be the best of them all. I know that a lot of people think he is a high-class horse to look forward to next year. Some big breeders have latched on to him after his debut season and I even sold a nomination to him out here in Keeneland the other day. They think the horse is great value at €35,000.”

Wootton Bassett will stand for €150,000, St Mark's Basilica's 2023 fee is €65,000, and Camelot (GB) is at €60,000. Churchill (Ire), the sire of dual Group 1 winner Vadeni (Fr), has had his fee increased to €30,000, Starspangledbanner (Aus) will stand for €50,000, Australia (GB) and Sottsass (Fr) for €25,000 and Ten Sovereigns (Ire) and Gleneagles (Ire) for €17,500. 

Footstepsinthesand, Circus Maximus, Calyx and US Navy Flag are set at €10,000, Arizona (Ire) is €5,000 and Gustav Klimt (Ire) will be available at €4,000. 

 

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WC Equine Building On Positive Beginnings

Ellie Whitaker and Tegan Clark clearly remember the empty silence that followed an email blast out to the industry upon the launch of WC Equine.

“We had a list of trainers' emails,” recalls Clark. “And we put together an email saying we're here, this is what we're doing, along with background of what we've done before, and emailed 93 of them.”

Whitaker takes up the story. “We got three responses, all saying good luck! It's about selling a product at the end of the day and we didn't have a product to show people. We had all our social media set up but nothing to show for it. We just needed one person to send us one horse.”

It is to the pair's credit, however, that they had already secured the regard of trainer Roger Varian as well as Brendan Morrin of Pier House Stud. A base at Robert Cowell's Bottisham Heath Stud in Six Mile Bottom also had plenty to recommend it, allowing Whitaker and Clark to take advantage of Newmarket's facilities without being in the hustle and bustle of the town itself. And so with a barn and the hope of a handful of horses to come, WC Equine was launched.

“We started with no horses,” says Whitaker. “Then Kevin Philippart de Foy, who is a good friend of Tegan's, sent us our first yearling.

“We had also worked with Brendan Morrin at Pier House Stud and I would joke with him at the sales. If something good didn't sell, we'd keep asking 'can we breeze it, can we breeze it?'”

If you don't ask, you don't get, so the saying goes, and so it was with two Pier House Stud-bred fillies that WC Equine entered the breeze-up sector at last year's Tattersalls Guineas Sale. In the meantime, Varian had stuck to his word and sent a group of youngsters to the pair for pre-training. Their gratitude is tangible but it works both ways and Varian was evidently impressed enough to send another sizeable batch of young horses to them this season.

“I worked for Roger around the time he had Postponed, and he had always said 'give me a call when you set up',” says Clark. “And so I rang him to say we had a few boxes and he said, 'I'll definitely support you'. He basically kept us afloat that first year–he was very good to us, and we've done a few more for him this year. 

“But then I think the breeze-ups really motored us forward and sparked a bit of interest.”

Of course, there is no better place to advertise than the public arena and while Clark and Whitaker were gaining respect as for their pre-training ability, it was arguably their debut effort at last year's Guineas Sale that drew greater attention to their name.

WC Equine headed to the sale with two fillies on behalf of Pier House Stud, namely a first-crop daughter of Aclaim (GB) and another from the first-crop of Galileo Gold (GB). Both found new homes but particularly impressive was the Aclaim filly, who changed hands for 60,000gns to Rabbah Bloodstock.

“We liked her and we knew she was the better of the two,” says Clark. “You'd pull up after a gallop and think, yes this is nice.”

Whitaker adds: “We thought she was a nice filly but we went there thinking we'd be happy at 30,000gns. We kept her under wraps for the majority of the winter. The horse physically was always going to get there but it was about training her mind as much as anything else.”

Sent to James Tate and named Royal Aclaim (Ire), she made a smart winning debut against colts less than a month later over 5f at Newcastle where her victims included none other Perfect Power (Ire) (Ardad {Ire}), subsequently winner of the G1 Prix Morny and G1 Middle Park S. who is now around a 10-1 shot for the 2000 Guineas, and Fearby (Ire) (Havana Gold {GB}), who would go on to run second in the G3 Molecomb S.

“The money wasn't the be all and end all,” says Whitaker. “It was a bonus but it was seeing her go out and win, and saying the proof is in the pudding, we've done the job essentially. That was more rewarding than having a bit of cash in your pocket.”

Fast-forward a year and WC Equine is thriving. By mid-March, the pair had broken in 60 yearlings in batches, with a waiting list of others to come in. Included in the mix are five breeze-up horses slated to fly the flag at this week's Tattersalls Guineas Sale in Newmarket.

It is the result of a deep grounding within the business allied with an appreciation of hard work and love of the animal. 

“I was two when my mother first sat me on a horse,” says Whitaker. “I did a lot of hunting and eventing. I sort of fell into racing.

“I was about 15 when I went to work for Mark Dwyer and I was there for about four years. I did the sales circuit for a year and then went to Roger Marley's [Church Farm Stables]. I went in as a head girl, I was 18 and chucked in at the deep end but I learnt a lot in a short space of time. I think you take a piece out of everything and put it into your own. You learn in abundance with people like that–and also how not to do it. They both work extremely hard. Both him and Mark rode out back then. They'd get up, muck out, feed and ride out. 

“Roger has been very helpful to us, and Mark and Blarney [Brendan Holland of Grove Stud] would be the same. They're always there to help. It's so competitive but they've been there to help and assist, and congratulate as well.”

She continues, “I was with Roger for about a year and a half and from there I went to Newmarket and to the Godolphin pre-training yard on Hamilton Road, which was a whole different way of doing things. When they dispersed, I went to Charlie Appleby's at a time when he had good horses like Cross Counter and Line Of Duty. I broke in Pinatubo–it was year of some seriously good 2-year-olds there. It's not often you get on every lot and you go 'wow, that's ok'. It was a real eye-opener.

“And after that I came here to Robert's [Cowell]. I did two and a half years as a work rider and then launched WC.”

South African-born Clark has a similarly deep background in racing. 

“My first job in racing was with Olly Stevens and before we started here, I had worked in Newmarket for about four years,” she says. “I did a season with Roger Varian and then worked the rest of time for Simon Crisford, who gave me the opportunity to go out to Dubai.

“I've been very lucky to be involved with some lovely horses. I remember riding Lightning Thunder, who was second in the 1000 Guineas. I took her up the canter and remember thinking 'this is a different class'. There was a real class to her, she did it so easily and professionally.

“Postponed was at Roger Varian's when I was there, and just to be involved with a horse like him was amazing. When I was at Simon Crisford's, he had [G2 winner] Ostilio and [G1 miler] Century Dream. Ostilio was in my section, I had a couple of spins on him, and he was a lovely horse to deal with. I also did a couple of seasons breaking in some horses with Richard Morgan-Evans. It's a seriously good operation, they work so hard, and he was very willing to help and teach.” 

Whitaker and Clark today operate at Bottisham Heath out of two barns and a stable block. They have access to a variety of gallops but also the luxury of being able to work the horses in town if needed.

“They will go into town for an educational canter,” says Whitaker. “They'll do three or four bits in town but they'll do most of their work here. We've proven that we can get them fit here. 

“We've got walkers and we put in a lunge pit ourselves, which works well as an arena. We can put them in the dummy stalls, which are great, and there's the opportunity to turn them out as well.”

Clark adds: “It's a good place to chill out, they can relax coming from town.

“This is something that we've always wanted to do. It's pretty basic but it works. They're really healthy barns. And we ride them all ourselves. When we had 15, we did everything pretty much ourselves–muck out all morning and ride all afternoon. Now we've got two riders coming in. So between all of us, we'd do five or six lots each.”

This year's WC Equine Guineas draft kicks off with Lot 146, a first-crop daughter of Sioux Nation. By a sire quick off the mark with his runners, she is a half-sister to four winners and out of Luxie (Ire) (Acclamation {GB}), a half-sister to the fast Listed winner Mister Manannan (Ire) (Desert Style {Ire}).

A real feather in the cap of their draft is the presence of a Zarak (Fr) filly. Catalogued as Lot 198, she is the only filly to be catalogued to the sale by her sire, one of the most exciting young stallions in Europe, and is a granddaughter of G2 May Hill S. winner Nasheej (Swain {Ire}).

She is followed immediately into the ring by a Starspangledbanner (Aus) colt (Lot 199), who is a half-brother to three winners and a member of the Doff The Derby (Master Derby) dynasty.

The draft is rounded out by a colt from the second crop of Caravaggio (Lot 227), who is closely related to G1-winning sprinter The Right Man (GB) (Lope De Vega {Ire}), and a colt from the first crop of Cracksman (GB) (Lot 313), who is a half-brother to Listed winner Panstarr (GB) (Pivotal {GB}).

“We started with seven this season but that's down to five, which isn't bad although we'd like to have more,” says Clark.

“It keeps us really busy. If you start expanding, what you do can be diluted and we're very hands-on, and we want to keep enjoying it. Yes we'd like to expand more but definitely not over the 50 mark overall. We're lucky to have a fantastic client base, they're very good to us and have been very supportive.”

Whitaker concurs. “We'd be comfortable if the breeze-up side keeps expanding,” she says. “We've gone from two to five. It's a big jump for us but still not as many we'd like.”

She adds: “I think we have a nice bunch. But you've got to be realistic, you've got to know what you're galloping next to. We're riding them and that's an advantage as we know when they feel a bit off and you've got to take a pull, or if they're a bit fresh and you have to give them more. You've got to manage your expectations. Everything will happen on the day and we'll just have to see.”

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State Of Rest’s Dam To Visit Frankel

Repose (Quiet American), the dam of last year's G1 Cox Plate and GI Saratoga Derby Invitational winner State Of Rest (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}), will visit champion sire Frankel (GB) this year, owner Dermot Cantillon told the TDN. The 10-year-old mare is in foal to Sea The Stars (Ire) and is due to foal soon.

State Of Rest is the second foal out of Repose, and he was bought by Diamond Bloodstock for 45,000gns as a foal before being pinhooked for 60,000gns when purchased as a yearling by Aiden O'Ryan and Joseph O'Brien. He started out racing for the Long Wait Partnership before being bought privately by Teme Valley Racing. State Of Rest ran just three times last year but made of the most of his opportunities; after finishing third in The Curragh's Listed Celebration S. on June 26, he shipped to New York to win the Saratoga Derby. He traveled to Australia off 77 days' rest, but made it a Group 1 double when besting the G1 Caulfield Guineas winner Anamoe (Aus) (Street Boss) by a short head.

Teme Valley also races Repose's 3-year-old filly Tranquil Lady (Ire) (Australia {GB}), who broke her maiden at second asking in September before finishing second in the Listed Staffordstown Stud S. Repose has a newly turned 2-year-old filly by Dandy Man (Ire) who was bought by American trainer Tony Dutrow for €180,000 at Goffs Orby, and she was rested for 2021 before being covered by Sea The Stars.

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From Claimers To Classics For Aumonerie

While it was the multi-million Euro mares who stole the limelight at Arqana's December Breeding Stock Sale two weeks ago, there were successes to be celebrated beneath those top prices. Among the most remarkable of those has to be Haras de l'Aumonerie's Starspangledbanner (Aus) colt (lot 145), who was bought by Yeomanstown Stud for €170,000.

The colt, already named Captain Star (Fr), had plenty going for him on both sides of his pedigree, being by a popular sire and a brother to two stakes horses, including none other than this year's G1 Poule d'Essai des Pouliches victress Coeursamba (Fr) (The Wow Signal {Ire}). Captain Star and Coeursamba are out of the 15-year-old Marechale (Fr) (Anabaa), whose five foals thus far were all bred by Julie Mestrallet at her Haras de l'Aumonerie just outside Deauville.

With the recent high-end breeding stock sales still fresh in the memory, it is easy to become desensitized to mares commanding millions. But we are likewise reminded at every sale that there are diamonds in the rough, and Marechale certainly represents the latter scenario, having been bought by Mestrallet out of the claiming ranks for €2,500, having failed to win in 16 starts.

The path from claimer to breeding Guineas winners is not the most well-trodden one, but Mestrallet has done things her own way since taking over her mother, Francine Mestrallet's, Aumonerie 10 years ago and converting it from a reputable nursery for showjumpers and ponies into a Classic-producing Thoroughbred operation. An accomplished showjumper herself who also worked as a groom for Olympic-level riders, Julie Mestrallet then shifted her sights to the veterinary field, taking a job at a clinic. One of the clinic's clients was Haras du Quesnay, and it was through visits to the Head family's historic stud that Mestrallet got to know the accomplished sires Anabaa and Bering. With her interest in racing suitably piqued, Mestrallet went to work for trainer Jennifer Bidgood, and it was during a trip to the small racecourse Niort in the West of France on June 13, 2010, that Mestrallet laid eyes on Marechale for the first time.

“I found Marechale in a claiming race, and even though she had no performances, I was interested in her because she is by Anabaa out of a Bering mare and bred by Quesnay,” Mestrallet said. “I'm a huge fan of the Quesnay pedigrees and Alec Head.”

Marechale, a full-sister to the multiple listed winner Maxwell (Fr), had been raced by the Head family through her first 10 starts, after which she joined trainer Philippe Le Gal. She was upped in trip by her new trainer, but that did little to turn Marechale's fortunes around, and she finished fifth at Niort that day for a €5,000 claiming tag.

Mestrallet recalled, “I went to see the trainer on the day and asked him how much the mare would cost. He said he wanted to continue to run her in claiming races, but I gave him my phone number and said, 'the day you want to get rid of her, call me.'”

Just a month later, Mestrallet's phone rang.

“He said, 'I don't want her anymore,'” Mestrallet said. “He said he was going to race her one last time, and then he would let me buy her for €2,500.”

The reasoning behind Marechale's first mating was relatively straightforward: Mestrallet held a free nomination to Alexandros (GB), won through the French TBA's stallion seasons draw. The result was a filly, later named Comme Une Grande (Fr), that Mestrallet sold for €26,000 to Yohann Gourraud at Arqana's October Yearling Sale in 2014-not a bad return on an initial €2,500 investment. Meanwhile, Mestrallet's luck at the French TBA's stallion seasons draw had continued; she won a nomination to Mr. Sidney and sold the resulting filly out of Marechale, Lady Sidney (Fr), as a foal in 2014 for €8,500 to Fresnay Agricole.

In addition to turning a few tidy profits for Mestrallet in the sales ring, Marechale soon proved a hardy producer. Comme Une Grand was a winner who ran 35 times, while Lady Sidney, all told, would run 56 times for seven wins, including a third in ParisLongchamp's Listed Prix Zarkava. After Lady Sidney, Marechale foaled the winning La Grande Zame (Fr) (Zambezi Sun {GB}), sold for €8,000 as a foal. The following season, Mestrallet once again returned victorious from the stallion seasons draw, securing a covering for Marechale to Sinndar (Ire), and that resulted in the ultimately unraced filly Twelveoclock (Fr), sold for €5,000 as a yearling in 2017. By that time, Marechale was in foal to G1 Prix Morny and G2 Coventry S. winner The Wow Signal, a decision based not on a free draw, but on Mestrallet's intuition.

“I loved The Wow Signal's head, the way he walked, everything about the physical of the horse,” she said.

Despite a very successful start to life, The Wow Signal's second career proved star-crossed; he was subfertile, and after getting a very small number of mares in foal during two seasons, died as a result of complications from laminitis. Among his second crop was Coeursamba, who was born at Aumonerie on Mar. 25, 2018. Like Marechale's latest Starspangledbanner colt, Captain Star, Mestrallet soon had a name picked out for the filly.

“She was something special from the day she was born,” Mestrallet said. “I had named her, 'Wow She's Great,' but the people that bought her changed the name. When we saw Coeursamba, we liked her so much that we decided to breed the mare to Starspangledbanner immediately, because we were so happy with the filly that we thought the mare deserved to go to a good stallion.”

Coeursamba sold to Marc Antoine Berghgracht on behalf of Jose Delmotte's Haras d'Haspel for €24,000 at Arqana's December Sale of 2018, and was pinhooked to Jean-Claude Rouget for €40,000 at Arqana August the following summer, four months before Marechale's Olympic Glory (Ire) colt Senza Malocchio (Fr) sold for €14,000 to Marco Bozzi at the December Sale. Senza Malocchio is raced by Mike Pietrangelo and John D'Amato, who were also co-owners of Olympic Glory's best progeny, Grand Glory (GB). Grand Glory sold for €2.5-million at Arqana on the same night that Captain Star went through the ring.

A winner in her second start at two for owner Jean Louis Tepper, Coeursamba was twice Group 3-placed at two and fifth in the G1 Prix Marcel Boussac, the evening prior to which she had changed hands for €400,000 at Arqana's Arc Sale, bought by Abdullah bin Fahad Al Attiyah. Third in the Listed Prix du Louvre going a mile at ParisLongchamp in April, she shocked the G1 1000 Guineas winner Mother Earth (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}) when winning the G1 Poule d'Essai des Pouliches at 38-1, and was later purchased privately by Katsumi Yoshida.

Coeursamba's Classic win provided the perfect springboard for her Starspangledbanner three-quarter-brother to be one of the top-priced foals at Arqana, and he is set to return to the ring next year as a Yeomanstown pinhook prospect. Marechale is currently in foal to another Group 1-winning sprinter, Haras d'Etreham's Hello Youmzain (Fr), and her foal's arrival will be keenly anticipated by not only Mestrallet but also her three young children; Mestrallet's daughter, Agathe, and twins sons Henri and Baptiste, born this past March. Agathe has been listed as co-breeder along with her mother and grandmother on Coeursamba, Senza Malocchio and Captain Star, but she will have to share Marechale's future progeny with her brothers.

“It was to pay for her car when she turns 18,” Mestrallet laughed. “I had twin boys this year, and they'll all be marked down as breeders in the future: the boys will get the colts, and Agathe will get the fillies.”

Today, Aumonerie is home to some 30 mares, the majority of which are boarders. Among Mestrallet's own mares are the 10-year-old Caramanta (Fr) (Zamindar), who Mestrallet bought for €7,500 from the Aga Khan Studs at the 2014 Arqana December Sale. Caramanta's third foal is Caracal (Fr) (Zelzal {Fr}), who was bought by Al Shaqab Racing for €25,000 at Arqana October last year. Caracal won a pair of races at Bordeaux Le Bouscat for trainer Jean-Claude Rouget this autumn and is reportedly highly regarded by the trainer. Mestrallet has also repatriated two of Marechale's daughters, Comme Une Grand and Twelveoclock, to Aumonerie, such is her belief in her foundation mare. Comme Une Grand had a colt by Seahenge this year, while Twelveoclock was purchased at this year's Arqana July Sale in foal to Recoletos (Ire). Mestrallet also has O'Keefe (Fr) (Peintre Celebre), a Wertheimer-bred mare that she purchased for €19,000 in 2012. Using her tried and true system of French TBA draw nominations, Mestrallet bred O'Keefe to Jukebox Jury (Ire) for her first mating, and the result was the G3 St Leger Italiano winner O'Juke (Fr).

And of course there is Marechale, the €2,500 former claimer turned Classic producer. Asked if she has considered cashing in on the mare's success and selling Marechale, Mestrallet was resolute in response.

“I have had offers for Marechale, but I am keeping her,” she said. “She has given everything to my farm.”

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