‘Saturday Horses’ Seize The Day

NEWMARKET, UK–For an auction largely trading in very modest material, the March Sale could hardly have found a more resonant register at Tattersalls on Wednesday. For one thing, the fact that it was staged at all was a tribute to the improvisation and resilience demanded of the bloodstock industry, no less than any other walk of life, over the past year. And two of its three principal dividends, albeit infinitesimal on the scale of the investment they represented, caused those involved to reflect afresh on the recent loss of two of its most significant modern achievers.

The sale, introduced to meet residual demand after the February Sale had been severely constricted by Covid regulations, welcomed back horses and horsemen to Park Paddocks within the kind of protocols that had permitted far more important business to proceed here in 2020. If an 89% clearance rate was the familiar double-edged sword of the pandemic market–yes, there is wholesome demand; but very possibly reserves are unambitious–then it was certainly a worthwhile exercise. If nothing else, the sale could be viewed as an encouraging pilot for the forthcoming breeze-up circuit, and perhaps also as a symbol of the broader hope accompanying the vaccination rollout in Britain.

The top price for the Tattersalls March Sale-with the Tattersalls Cheltenham March Sale that immediately followed it producing seven six-figure lots from 25 sales–was achieved by Bugle Major (Mizzen Mast), a product of the Juddmonte programme whose founder, Prince Khalid Abdullah, died in January. Lot 140 was certainly an unusual proposition, his proven stakes calibre being balanced by his age as a 6-year-old gelding, but Richard Hughes made a very cogent case for persevering to 90,000gns.

“He's for existing owners who have put together a syndicate and wanted a Saturday horse,” the trainer explained. “We were thinking about coming to the breeze-ups, but then we found this horse. To buy a [top] horse at the breeze-ups will cost a lot of money, with no guarantees. This is a Saturday horse ready for the lads to have some fun with. There's a lot of horses just lately winning Group 1s as 8- or 9-year-olds. There's no stopping them; remember jump horses only come on when they are seven.”

Hughes is a big supporter of the breeze-ups and will assuredly be back for those sales, too, but in a way this horse was an extreme extension of the same logic, as a ready-made starter. Mizzen Mast is known for versatile stock that continue to thrive, and Bugle Major already has excellent form in France with proven group horses. Indeed, on the grey's last start for Pascal Bary he had chased home subsequent G1 Dubai World Cup third Magny Cours (Medaglia d'Oro) at Chantilly.

“I could have done without that happening,” said Hughes with a grin. “We had this horse marked out some time ago, and I'd say that last Saturday added 20,000gns onto his price.”

Hughes had a spell as retained jockey to the Prince during his riding days, and while professing that he never really got beyond the self-effacing reserve of his late patron, he retains fond memories of the whole Juddmonte organisation.

“It's brilliant, what he did,” he said. “And just look at the horses they bring to these sales: they always bring money, because they all have those pedigrees behind them. His people are always very transparent, too; you always know what you're getting. I got a good history of this horse, he's had his issues but he has been minded and their hard work has paid off.”

If not from the most prolific Juddmonte family, Bugle Major's dam was Group 1-placed and the line does go back to two of the most important mares in the modern breed. Bugle Major's fourth dam is none other than Razyana (His Majesty), who gave us Danehill and was of course a grand-daughter of the great Natalma (Native Dancer).

Another Empire, Another Great Legacy

It is only a few days since another great bloodstock empire, Shadwell, lost its founder and it was duly poignant to see even some of its lesser animals recycled here. The most attractive proved to be Huraiz (Ire) (Sepoy {Aus}), a 4-year-old gelding who disappointed at Wolverhampton last month but had previously advanced his rating to 95 for Mark Johnston. Presented as lot 134, he realized 60,000gns from local trainer Stuart Williams, who had come with a very similar brief to Hughes.

“He has been bought for Opulence Thoroughbreds, a syndicate that has four horses with me,” he explained. “They wanted a horse to have a bit of fun with on Saturdays and the bigger meetings, and he fitted the profile. He's a nice horse, who's been running well without getting his head in front, and maybe a change of scenery might perk him up a bit.”

Williams spoke for many when he expressed his gratitude for the provision of this additional sale.

“It's a big help, after losing the February Sale to online,” he said. “I had two or three owners who didn't want to lose the benefit of actually being able to see the horse. Tattersalls did a brilliant job, facilitating videos and so on, but it's not the same as seeing them.”

Offered the suggestion that this is an especially valuable opportunity with horses in training, in order to see “any bits that may have fallen off,” Williams joked, “Yes–and to see the bits that need to come off.”

As it happens, Huraiz does not represent a long-term Shadwell project, his unraced dam having been bought as a yearling half-sister to the prolific sprinter Kingsgate Native (Ire) (Mujadil). But the third dam is a half-sister to Classic winner Las Meninas (Ire) (Glenstal) and it will be interesting to see what the shrewd Williams might yet draw out.

In the same vein as Hughes, with Juddmonte, Williams thanked Shadwell for their reliably honest briefings. And he added his own tribute to Sheikh Hamdan. “I never worked for him, but everyone I know who did only had good things to say about him,” he said. “He was obviously a very loyal man and has been a hugely important supporter of the sport, and of Arab racing too.”

What A Difference A Month Makes

Nobody can have been better pleased by the introduction of this auction than the clients of Joseph Tuite who bought back their 4-year-old gelding Attracted (GB) (New Approach {Ire}) for just 5,000 gns at the February Sale. A fortnight later he won by 12 lengths at Lingfield, and he has meanwhile followed up in a handicap at Wolverhampton. Returned here as lot 179, he catapulted his value to 82,000gns.

He was acquired remotely by Reda Al-Khalaf in Saudi Arabia. “He has been bought for our stable by Mr. Al-Turaif,” Al-Khalaf explained. “He will be aimed at bigger races in Saudi. Mr. Al-Turaif liked the fact that the horse is by New Approach and is lightly raced so there should be more to come.”

If this was the ultimate vindication for the sale, no fewer than 109 of 123 lots into the ring found a new home for an aggregate 1,273,300gns. That equated to an average of 11,682gns and a median of 8,000gns. Needless to say, there can be no year-on-year comparisons.

“The Tattersalls March Sale was added to our 2021 calendar in response to the COVID-related disruption to the February Sale,” said Tattersalls chairman Edmond Mahony. “And it has generated solid international trade, with a good crowd in attendance as well as the now customary prolific amount of live internet bidding.

“It has been great to have been able to host a live sale again at Park Paddocks and we are looking forward to welcoming registered participants to both the Tattersalls Craven and Guineas Breeze-Up Sales in the coming weeks, both of which will be conducted with similar COVID protocols in place.”

Unsurprisingly, there was rather more buoyant trade during a boutique catalogue of elite National Hunt prospects, transferred from Cheltenham and staged immediately after this sale. The top two dockets featured a couple of signatures that generated many headlines, for very different reasons, before and after the recent Cheltenham Festival: one for 220,000gns was signed by Bective Stud/Gordon Elliott; and one for 195,000gns, by Henry de Bromhead. The former, the top price of the day, was the 4-year-old gelding Au Fleuron (Fr) (Crillon {Fr}) (lot 219), the winner of a National Hunt flat race on debut at Tipperary on Mar. 24. The latter, the 5-year-old Ballybough Native (Ire) (Shirocco {Ger}) (lot 227), likewise won on debut on the same card by 13 lengths.

Sun Power To Charge Holland's New Dawn

At a time when so many people are eager for a fresh start, one of the most intriguing stories of the new season will be Darryll Holland's debut as a trainer from Harraton Court Stables at nearby Exning, with a still more accomplished ex-jockey as assistant in Kieren Fallon.

Holland gave 45,000gns to recruit Sun Power (Fr) (Night Of Thunder {Ire}) from Jane Chapple-Hyam Racing as lot 138. Fourth in the Listed Chesham S. at Royal Ascot in his younger days, Sun Power left Richard Hannon for 10,000gns in this ring at the Horses-in-Training Sale in October and, after winning at Wolverhampton in December, was recently beaten only a head round the same circuit.

“Hopefully we will be able to send him to Dubai,” Holland said. “I will have a word with Jane and get a run-down, he has obviously been well looked after and has good recent form.

“All's going well at the moment, we are really pleased. The plans is to be back up here in a couple of weeks, as we have orders for the breeze-up sales.”

The post ‘Saturday Horses’ Seize The Day appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Take A Good Look At The Diomed Draft

It has been quite the year for Bated Breath (GB), the Juddmonte stallion who could be all too easily overlooked against some of his more in-vogue stud mates but who nevertheless continues to provide a decent ratio of stakes winners.

One of his most reliable performers in this regard is Breathtaking Look (GB), who heads to the Tattersalls December Mare Sale (lot 1662) from Diomed Stables. Her combination of speed, class and consistency gives the 5-year-old a profile with a commercial outlook.

Of her six victories for trainer Stuart Williams and his brother-in-law Jonathan Parry, two have been Group 3 contests, at Doncaster last year and in Deauville in August, where she beat Air De Valse (Fr) in the Prix de Meautry. Her form this season has a particularly solid look to it with two runner-up finishes behind subsequent Group 1 winners Oxted (GB) and Dream Of Dreams (Ire).

“I’d be surprised if there are many mares in the catalogue whose first three dams all black-type performers and producers,” says Williams, who selected Breathtaking Look at Tattersalls as a yearling from October Book 3. “We’re excited to take her to the sale and would like to see her do well. I’m selling her as ‘in training’ as she is still here with me in training. I’d like to see her sell as a broodmare but she is sound, she has never taken a lame step, and if someone wanted to race her on they could do.”

Breathtaking Look started her racing career at three with two wins from her three starts that year. Her racing tally now stands at 18 starts, with those six wins backed up a string of placed efforts.

Recalling what he saw in her when he first viewed her in the Mickley Stud draft at Park Paddocks, Williams adds, “I just really liked her presence. She was quite big, and my brother-in-law, who we call Ralph though his name is actually Jonathan, always like to have a filly. He breeds one or two horses himself and we’ve had a few over the years that have done well. We’ve always been of the opinion that you got more of a chance if you buy a filly. The colts that turn out to be stallions are few and far between, so the plan was to buy something that would hopefully do well and then we could either breed from her or sell her. With Breathtaking Look, we knew she would want a bit of time but I just loved her outlook and, even though she was big, she was athletic.”

Parry’s red and pink silks have made numerous appearances on the racecourse aboard Williams-trained fillies, including the stakes-placed Oakley Girl (GB) (Sir Percy {GB}), who sold for 925,000gns in 2017. He has retained the listed-placed Holley Shiftwell (GB) (Bahamian Bounty {GB}) and another four-time winner Stellar Surprise (GB) (Notnowcato {GB}), who is out of a half-sister to Crystal Ocean (GB) and Crystal Capella (GB).

“He is retiring this year from his job so he is going to cut down on the horses a bit,” says Williams of his brother-in-law, who boards mares with James Thom of Galloway Stud, which is based at Woburn. “He’s a great guy and he has supported me well, buying two or three every year.”

While Breathtaking Look has been the star of Diomed Stables this year, some of the yard’s former residents have also been making names for themselves from the paddocks in 2020, including the dams of two Classic winners Love (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) and Dream And Do (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}).

Venetias Dream (Ire) (Librettist) produced the latter, who won the G1 Poule d’Essai des Pouliches in June before being sold to Katsumi Yoshida of Northern Farm.

Williams recalls, “Barry Root bought an old mare and had her at Old Mill Stud with my stepfather David. She was carrying an Oasis Dream (GB) foal at the time and we trained her [Dreamacha (GB)] for Barry. She won quite a few races, was rated 90, and we took her to Germany and just missed out on some black type with her.  Then he sent the mare to Librettist and she produced Venetias Dream. I couldn’t keep her sound but I managed to get her to the track about four or five times and she ended up being rated about 52. She was sold for minimum bid at one of the sales to go to Libya, but her dam had quite a good back page and her sister then produced [treble Group 1-winning miler] Charm Spirit (Ire), so one of the agents went and bought Venetias Dream back from Libya, put her in foal to Siyouni, and sold her on. And her first foal is now a Classic winner.”

In the case of Pikaboo (GB) (Pivotal {GB}), the dam of Love, she was bought by David Redvers for 20,000gns after making two starts for John Gosden.

“David and I have been friends for years and he would always have a leg of something with me, me. and I’d have something with him. When he bought Pikaboo, he handed me the ticket and said ‘have a leg and win a race with her and we’ll breed from her’. I completely failed to win a race with her. Third at Southwell was the best I could do. So we retired her and covered her with Ishiguru. That filly made 40,000gns at the breeze-ups and won a couple of races. Then the mare went to Sleeping Indian (GB). The next one was by Lucky Story, all David’s stallions obviously, and she was quite a nice filly, turned out a touch in front but a good-bodied filly. George Margarson bought her as a yearling and that was Lucky Kristale (GB).”

Following his introduction to Sheikh Fahad, Redvers sold a number of mares he owned in partnership to focus on the burgeoning Qatar Bloodstock empire. Thus, before Lucky Kristale had taken to the track and won two Group 2 races as a juvenile, her dam had gone to the sales the previous December, where Pikaboo sold for 50,000gns to Paul Venner. Her subsequent private sale to Coolmore would have been for many multiples of that.

And Willliams also has first-hand knowledge of another of the mares in the sale this year, Shena’s Dream (Ire) (Oasis Dream {GB}) (lot 1602). She has her own tale of sales high and lows and is now better known as the dam of another Lowther S. winner, Miss Amulet (Ire) (Sir Prancealot {Ire}).

“Gordon Thom picked her out at the December Sale. She had won four races for William Haggas and we decided to buy her to try to get some black type,” Williams says. She was a really strong, good-looking filly and we ran her in the good fillies’ handicap during the Victoria Cup meeting at Ascot. Unfortunately she reared up in the stalls and hit her head and just had a bad experience. We had already covered her with Sepoy (Aus) by then so she was retired to stud.”

He adds with a laugh, “I’m not sure it’s a good selling point-send me your filly and if she doesn’t win a race at least she will breed a Group winner!’

It may well persuade breeders to make close inspection of the five-strong draft heading to Tattersalls from Diomed Stables, but as Breathtaking Look and so many before her have shown, Williams is more than capable of training winners.

 

 

 

 

 

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