Group Winner Grocer Jack Highlights Tattersalls Autumn HIT Sale

Group 3 winner Grocer Jack (Ger) (Oasis Dream {GB}) is one of the highlights of the four-day Tattersalls Autumn Horses in Training Sale from Oct. 25-28. One of 1,577 lots catalogued, the 4-year-old colt (lot 738) was second in the G1 Bayerisches Zuchtrennen and is rated 118 by Timeform.

Several recent sale graduates have enjoyed Group 1 success on an international level in 2021, including Salute The Soldier (Ger) (Sepoy {Aus}) and Zaaki (GB) (Leroidesanimaux {Brz}). The catalogue features 80 group and listed performers. Among them are two-time group placed Hierarchy (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}) (lot 1205); Listed Windsor Castle S. winner Chipotle (GB) (Havana Gold {Ire}) (lot 1055); G1 Cazoo St Leger third and fourth The Mediterranean (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) (lot 238) and Interpretation (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) (lot 236); and G1 Melbourne Cup runner-up Tiger Moth (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) (lot 548); listed winner Chalk Stream (GB) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) (lot 666); and G3 March S. winner Dancing King (Ire) (Free Eagle {Ire}) (lot 778).

There are sizable drafts from Juddmonte (10), Coolmore (52), Shadwell (154), Godolphin (20), William Haggas's Somerville Lodge (25), The Castlebridge Consignment (101), Mark Johnston's Kingsley Park (54), Richard Hannon's East Everleigh Stables (51), Andrew Balding's Park House Stables (36), and Roger Varian's Carlburg Stables (32).

Tattersalls Chairman Edmond Mahony said, “The unique diversity of the Tattersalls Autumn Horses in Training Sale is the key to its enduring appeal to both domestic and international buyers. Flying the flag this year for the Autumn Horses in Training Sale is the outstanding Australian multiple Group 1 winner Zaaki, purchased at last year's sale, and this year's catalogue has all the ingredients to appeal to the customary global audience including the significant, high-class consignments from Godolphin, Juddmonte Farms and Shadwell Estates.”

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925,000gns English King Sent to Rule Australia

NEWMARKET, UK—There are obviously lessons to ponder, regarding the divergent economies of British and Australian racing. But first and foremost, let’s pause and give due credit to those who brought English King (GB) (Camelot {GB}) to the point where he could on Wednesday become much the most expensive colt ever sold at Europe’s premier horses-in-training sale.

After all, when auctioneer John O’Kelly tried to coax one last effort out of underbidder Ted Voute for lot 1153a, he told him: “There’s only one chance to buy English King.”

But Jeremy Brummitt could tell you otherwise, having picked him out as a yearling at the Arqana October Sale for €210,000. As a result, following a dazzling rehearsal in the Lingfield Trial, patron Bjorn Nielsen was able to savour the exhilaration of fielding the leading home-trained colt for the G1 Investec Derby itself—an experience that very pardonably, given the vagaries of the game, eludes many a lifelong investor.

Things did not play out on the day quite as hoped, English King finding himself adrift with most of the field early before staying on for fifth. But all the embryonic attributes perceived by Brummitt have now matured to the point that Armando Duarte was prepared to see off Voute at 925,000gns and send English King from the Tattersalls Autumn Horses-in-Training Sale to the Ballymore Stables Australia of Mike Moroney.

Brummitt, moreover, can also take credit for amplifying the marketability of the colt’s sire in Australia. For it was in this ring, 12 days before his Deauville coup, that the agent found another son of the Coolmore stallion for 120,000gns out of Book 1. As Russian Camelot (GB), that colt has this year become the pioneering winner of two Group 1 prizes Down Under for trainer Danny O’Brien, before finishing third in the G1 Ladbrokes Cox Plate only last weekend.

Others have played their part. The Cox Plate winner, Sir Dragonet (Ire) (Camelot {GB}), is himself a recent import and also gave a boost to the profile of their sire. And then there is the work of trainer Ed Walker, who understandably described the sale of his most cherished charge as a “very bittersweet” spectacle.

“I’d far rather have won the same money on the track,” Walker admitted after congratulating Duarte. “I’d far rather have won it in the Derby, obviously. But it was all a bit of a perfect storm. I suppose in a normal year, Bjorn may have sold more yearlings, and might have been up for competing internationally with this horse. But when I tried to persuade Bjorn to keep him, and aim for all these big races in Australia and Hong Kong and around the world, quite rightly he was worried as to whether we’d be able to race in those races. Will racing be happening? Will we be able to travel? Will the horse?

“But look, it’s a great result. Bjorn puts a lot into the game. So I do take great pride. A lot of trainers nowadays are selling through professional consignors. But Luca [Cumani, whom Walker served as assistant] used to take a lot of pride in preparing his horse for the sales, and I try to replicate that. When Luca retired, I wrote and asked for his spot in the Somerville Paddock and Tattersalls kindly gave it to me. We try to produce our horses sound and well, and it’s always good to get a result.

“And this has all been a great journey. English King made lockdown a bit more interesting, that’s for sure. Obviously it didn’t end as we hoped. I’m still looking for my first Group 1 winner. I was absolutely certain it would be him, but things just played against him.”

The eccentric way in which the Derby unfolded this year certainly made strenuous demands of English King, and Walker is certain that he will regroup for his new connections after twice disappointing since.

“He’d had a couple of hard races,” he said. “You don’t break a 30-year-old track record, like he did at Lingfield, without giving your all. And he had a very hard race in the Derby when he ran an absolute blinder. His next two races weren’t up to that level, but he’s not the biggest horse and those probably took their toll. For me, he’s tailormade for the Melbourne Cup. He stays, he travels, and he loves that fast ground. I am very grateful to the guys who bought him, and wish them every bit of luck.”

This transaction set a spectacular seal not just on Duarte’s purposeful shopping for brothers Mike and Paul Moroney over the preceding couple of days, but on the critical value of the Australian export market this week.

Duarte admitted that this was a real stretch but had anticipated a price between 750,000gns and 1,000,000gns and played his cards accordingly. Voute, seated to the right of the rostrum, was on a video call to his client in Saudi Arabia as Duarte lurked outside the ring, bidding through a spotter. At 875,000gns, Voute appeared to quit, only to bounce back just as the gavel was coming down with a last-ditch sally of 900,000gns. That caused a chuckle around the ring, but Duarte quickly closed in for the kill.

Paul Moroney outlined his thinking from home. “English King’s track-record performance at Lingfield, beating [G1] St Leger runner-up Berkshire Rocco (Fr) (Sir Percy {GB}), was one of the most breathtakingly dominant performances anywhere this year,” he said.

“He is clearly a highly talented colt with loads of quality and we are thrilled to have secured him. Through their joint sire Camelot, and with similar race records at the same stage, English King maps the same as Sir Dragonet.

“We’ve bought him for a syndicate headed by two New Zealand businessmen and a collection of Ballymore Stables’ Australian clients. He’s certainly an exciting addition to the team, and our first time playing at this very high level, so one could say the pressure is on for him to perform.

“He will head Down Under in December to join Mike’s Flemington stable early January and [we’ll] play things by ear. He will likely race in our autumn but next spring will be the main focus going forward.”

Congratulations to all concerned, then, most obviously to Nielsen himself. It was a bold idea to come here, as a wildcard, and presumably there was an equally bold reserve. But the reward was a deal that blew the previous record for a colt at this auction—the 625,000gns paid by Joseph O’Brien for Summer Sands (GB) (Coach House {Ire}) last year—out of the water. But Royal Ascot winner Aljazzi (Shamardal) retains the record after her 1,000,000gns transfer, as a broodmare prospect, to Newsells Park in 2018.

Following hard on the heels of the Juddmonte draft, English King duly completed the predicted rally in the third session of the sale. Turnover of 9,779,600gns represented a 19% gain on 8,206,000gns last year, driving the average up 15% to 34,803gns from 30,393gns. Clearance was strong even by 2020 standards at 92%.

With a fairly low-key finale anticipated for Thursday, year-on-year comparisons have meanwhile now levelled off more validly. And while aggregate business is down to 20,488,800gns from 24,037,000gns, the 26,748gns average dipped from 30,235gns last year; and the median dropped to 12,000gns from 16,000gns.

Bullfinch Joins the Migration

With stronger domestic prizemoney apparently reserved for Shangri-La, this sale has certainly reiterated how precious is the symbiosis between the British and Australian Turf; between the heritage of one, and the quality of stock duly attracted, and the prosperity of the other.

As John Ferguson stressed, after signing a 370,000gns docket on behalf of Chris Waller for Bullfinch (GB) (Kodiac {GB}), “The minimum prizemoney at an Australian city track at the weekend is Aus$125,000. The minimum! That does make a difference, you know.”

The 3-year-old Bullfinch (offered as lot 1100 by The Castlebridge Consignment) is a classic example of the value that can be established even in winning barely £25,000—his nugatory reward for winning three of just five starts for Roger Charlton. The colt was homebred by the Rothschilds, at a stud with a venerable history now undergoing dispersal; he has been brought along expertly on the historic Beckhampton gallops by Roger Charlton; and he has been measured against competition that far surpasses the rewards contested.

“From an Australian point of view, there are a lot of reasons why a horse like this could be a lot of fun,” Ferguson said. “Kodiac has already sired a [G1] Caulfield Cup winner in Best Solution (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}), who we bought a few years ago, and the dam [Group 1 winner Thistle Bird (GB) (Selkirk)] was a champion older mare. This is a progressive horse, with undoubted ability, that has been quite beautifully trained.”

Best Solution, a 90,000gns find in Book 2, shows the range of Ferguson’s long service for Godolphin and Waller could hardly have entrusted his recruitment to more seasoned judgement. Each of Bullfinch’s wins was marked by real flair, and he clearly can’t be judged on a disappointing stakes debut at Goodwood last time, having raced freely over a new trip. Ferguson and Waller had teamed up for three other attractive lots the previous day, for an aggregate 520,000gns.

Emissary Acts as Pathfinder for King

Duarte and the Moroney brothers had shown the vigour of their interest just minutes before topping the sale. Having given 200,000gns for Ballydoyle’s Keats (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) the previous day, they invested in another elite draft—Juddmonte —when paying 350,000gns for Emissary (GB) (Kingman {GB}).

A half-brother to Derby winner Workforce (GB) (King’s Best) and winner of his only start at two for Hugo Palmer, Emissary ( lot 1126) returned to form to win a York handicap last month.

“Physically, he’s a very nice horse,” Duarte said. “He’s 16.2, has not had many runs, is improving all the time, and there’s plenty more to come. It is the same story as yesterday. We probably had to pay a bit more than we expected, but he could be a special horse in Australia next year. This sort of horse does not come onto the market very often. The background family, the first dam and second dam, is very important to the buyers; and this horse passed the vet too, which is very hard.”

Australian Bloodstock/Ronald Rauscher meanwhile crowned their own brisk investment through the sale when giving 180,000gns for Fifth Position (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}), who has achieved a mark of 104 for Roger Varian and was sold as lot 1107.

In terms of prizemoney, it was much the same story as Bullfinch. Fifth Position leaves Britain with the metre stopped at just over ÂŁ30,000; and Emissary, not quite ÂŁ25,000.

Urban Opportunity Finally Cashed in

Having been coolly retained for no less than 340,000gns at this sale last year, when he included sixth in the G1 2000 Guineas among his accomplishments for Richard Hannon, Urban Icon (GB) (Cityscape {GB}) was back as lot 1052.

In the meantime he had maintained his rating at 110, notably in winning his first stakes race at Wolverhampton in March; and, with everything else that has happened, had arguably done just as well to maintain broadly the same value.

Certainly Ted Voute’s bid of 320,000gns represented a very satisfactory dividend for owner Michael Pescod, as the colt had been picked out as a yearling for just ÂŁ23,000 by Peter & Ross Doyle at the Tattersalls Ireland Ascot Sale.

Voute was operating for the emerging Saudi venture, Najd Stud, as when buying five lots at the inaugural August Horses-in-Training Sale here.

“He’s a big, robust horse who should stand a lot of training out there,” he said. “He’s tough and consistent and will go on quicker ground. He’ll ship out and we’ll see how he adjusts and acclimatises, but ideally he’ll go the normal route through the Cup races and then see if he can be good enough for the big Saudi international day.”

Voute also gave 340,00gns for Derevo (GB) (Dansili {GB}) (lot 1130). Having won three times for Sir Michael Stoute last year, Derevo has found a plateau in the mid-90s though beaten under a length in a Doncaster handicap last month. He should find new horizons in the desert.

“We like to buy from the Juddmonte draft and Dansili is a big plus in Saudi Arabia,” Voute said. “This horse has good form and has been well produced.”

Underbidder Ed Dunlop did at least manifest plenty of appetite and perseverance for the locals, throughout the Juddmonte draft, and finally got his reward when landing Derevo’s younger brother Society Lion (GB) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) (lot 1132) for 180,000gns.

Fight Opening a New Front in Dubai

The Middle East also beckons for Fight Zone (War Front), two of whose siblings have already proved effective in the U.A.E.

It has been quite an odyssey for the 2-year-old, as he had failed to meet his reserve at $120,000 as a Keeneland September yearling; and was then scratched from Lynn Lodge’s draft at the Arqana Breeze-Up Sale in July. Instead he surfaced in the care of Ger Lyons, for whom he has steadily improved to win a Naas maiden last month and a Dundalk nursery a few days later.

Everything finally came together when, presented by The Castlebridge Consignment as lot 1068, he brought 290,000gns from Victoria de Sousa and Chris Dwyer.

“He’ll be going out to Dubai for Sheikh Rashid and will hopefully be one for the Carnival,” de Sousa said. “I’d say he’ll probably go to one of the lads based at Meydan. He’s a lovely, scopey horse, well put together, and vetted very clean. It’s hard to get all that here, along with good form, and Chris really liked him.”

Festival Day Back to Her Roots

The fireworks later in the day were preceded by a rather torpid morning, but proceedings were enlivened by the appearance of Festival Day (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) as lot 912. Despite regressing at three, she did win a maiden by six lengths for Mark Johnston last year and would have been a valuable proposition had she never even made the track.

That’s because she is out of a Storm Cat daughter of the mighty Miesque, who matched her stellar track career in establishing a wonderful dynasty through the likes of Kingmambo (Mr. Prospector) and East Of The Moon (Private Account). The family continues to thrive, the latter’s daughter Alpha Lupi (Ire) (Rahy) having produced two of the last three winners of the G1 Coronation S., while Karakontie (Jpn) (Bernstein) and Study Of Man (Ire) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) are now trying to establish branches of their own at stud.

Any breeder would relish access to those bloodlines, but Festival Day turned out to be returning to the Niarchos fold after a 170,000gns docket was signed by Martin Buick. Himself of a notable Turf family, of course, Buick has had “the huge privilege” of working for the Flaxman bloodstock empire for around five years.

“It’s obviously one of the best pages in the Stud Book,” Buick reasoned. “And the Niarchos family were keen to get back in. The pedigree speaks for itself, it’s just amazing how it keeps repeating.”

This was not the first time his employers had reclaimed this blood. Festival Day’s dam, having been placed in a light career in France, was recruited by Godolphin on her retirement for 1,800,000gns at the December Sale here in 2007. She was culled 10 years later, however, when Flaxman Stables were able to retrieve her for just 160,000gns; yet all six foals of racing age have won.

Buick was wearing a Ulysses (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) baseball cap and evidently that was instructive of his employers’ intentions for Festival Day.

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Haggas Draft Tops Brighter Trade

NEWMARKET, UK–It’s a conundrum of the training profession: do you serve your client better by exhausting every last ounce of a horse’s potential, or by preserving a degree of residual value when the time has come to cash out and restock?

You see exemplary operators at both ends of that spectrum, but only rarely does anyone manage to reconcile both obligations as expertly as William Haggas did with his principal draft on the second day of the Autumn Horses-in-Training Sale at Tattersalls.

Of 17 Somerville Lodge horses into the ring, three would emerge first, second and joint-fifth in the table of the sale’s top lots to date. This, to be clear, is no mean addition to their trainer’s many credits as one of the consummate practitioners of his calling.

This is the kind of thing that ensures ringside interest at this auction, regardless of the tempo of business. And it proved a session when several other trainers salvaged rather better returns for their patrons, in this most difficult of years, than on a slow opening day.

Yes, turnover was again down on the equivalent day last year, if hardly to the same extent as Monday. But the caveats mentioned then still apply: the year-on-year variability of stock, even at the best of times, at sales of this nature; and the compression of so much quality, between the Juddmonte draft and the colt that started favourite for the Derby itself, in Wednesday’s catalogue.

The session turned over 6,570,700gns, down 19% from 8,134,300gns last year. That translated into a mild decline in average, to 27,264gns from 31,286gns; though the median was well down at 12,000gns from 18,000gns. For once, the year’s strongest trend could not match a remarkable 91% clearance at the equivalent session in 2019, but remained healthy at 86%.

These indices have moved the first half of the sale much closer, in overall performance, to last year: despite a much lower aggregate, the average hitherto has closed to 22,081gns, compared with 30,154gns; and the median to 10,000gns, as against 16,000gns.

Piranesi Leads Sale at 300,000gns

Top billing among the Haggas draft went to Piranesi (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}), who had dropped back to a mile at Ascot earlier in the month to win for the second time in four starts. He is bred with no ceiling, as a half-brother to G1 Racing Post Trophy winner Rivet (Ire) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}) out of a Galileo (Ire) half-sister to Superstar Leo (Ire) (College Chapel {GB}), the flying filly who has gained fresh celebrity as second dam of dual G1 Prix de la Foret winner One Master (GB) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}).

And Jane Chapple-Hyam, who signed a 300,000gns docket for the 3-year-old gelding (lot 675), felt that he has plenty of scope to keep developing with maturity. “I’m just the caretaker trainer,” she said. “He’ll be off abroad, but I can’t say where yet. He’s for an overseas client, we work together, and we felt he was a good-looking horse who liked the distance the other day and hopefully there’s more improvement in him.”

Since himself leaving Haggas, sibling Rivet has been campaigned in Hong Kong and Australia and it may yet prove significant that Chapple-Hyam has good connections in both locations. But there was no guesswork required about the destination of stakes-placed 4-year-old Desert Icon (Fr) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) and 84-rated 3-year-old Born A King (GB) (Frankel {GB}), for whom John Ferguson gave 210,000gns and 120,000gns as Lots 664 and 668, respectively.

He was acting on behalf of Chris Waller, as indeed would be the case when he gave 190,000gns for Crystal Pegasus (GB) (Australia {GB}) in the draft of Sir Michael Stoute. This Sir Evelyn De Rothschild home-bred, presented as lot 697, had taken seven attempts to break his maiden but then followed up in a Yarmouth handicap last month. He is certainly entitled to keep progressing, being out of a half-sister to elite scorers Crystal Ocean (GB) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) and Hillstar (GB) (Danehill Dancer {Ire}).

Another six-figure yield from the Somerville Lodge draft, meanwhile, was the juvenile Royal Address (Ire) (Dandy Man {Ire}), acquired as a Doncaster yearling by Blandford Bloodstock for ÂŁ45,000 and sold here–a month after completing a hat-trick in listed company at Chantilly–for 170,000gns to Emmanuel de Seroux of Narvick International.

Lot 687 will continue her career in California in the silks of Marsha Naify. “A beautiful mover and she looks the type to do well out there,” de Seroux said. “She has plenty of speed, she’s athletic, and looks very sound. Of course, she’s a stakes winner already so will have breeding value one day, but she’ll only be turning three so let’s hope she can win a Grade I first.”

Gaining Admission to the Ballydoyle Party

De Seroux had already shown his faith in the graduates of a top-class stable when signing the first six-figure docket of the sale for Numen (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) (lot 223) the previous day. Acting for the same, unnamed client, he gave 160,000gns for the 3-year-old Party Season (American Pharoah) (lot 627) just four days after the colt broke his maiden in good style at Dundalk.

This looked a good buy. A half-brother to Airdrie’s promising young stallion Upstart (Flatter), he had cost $1 million as a Saratoga yearling-bred by Mrs. Gerald A. Nielsen and sold through Summerfield–and his two previous starts for Ballydoyle had both been on heavy ground. There could be plenty more to come in a different environment.

“He won well on the all-weather the other day,” de Seroux reasoned. “So maybe he could switch to dirt. But I don’t say that he is necessarily going to America. As with yesterday’s horse, we will keep all the options open for now. But we love the American Pharoahs, and bought a few last year.”

The latent potential even in graduates of a stable as thorough and accomplished as Ballydoyle had been reiterated just before the sale by the G1 Cox Plate success of Sir Dragonet (Ire) (Camelot {GB}). And the top lot of the Ballydoyle draft, Keats (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), will also be heading to Australia after Armando Duarte landed lot 623 with a single bid at 200,000gns for Ballymore Stables Australia / Paul Moroney Bloodstock.

Keats, who crowned a busy campaign with a listed success at Cork last month, is out of the very fast Airwave (GB) (Air Express {Ire}), whose daughter Meow (Ire) (Storm Cat) has produced dual Classic winner Churchill (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) and his sister Clemmie (Ire), who emulated Airwave’s success in the G1 Cheveley Park S.

Moroney’s brother Mike will take charge of Keats at Flemington. Duarte has been serving as their eyes and ears here.

“I’ve known Paul 16 or 17 years, we’ve become good friends, and I know just what he likes and doesn’t like,” Duarte explained. “So since he couldn’t make the trip this year–he’s in quarantine in Australia having gone to the Gold Coast for the sales–I video every single thing that may be a fault until we make sure we’re all right. And this was our pick of the sale. Normally we’d be looking for a stayer but he looks a miler, or will maybe get a mile and quarter. And he came very highly recommended by Mick Flanagan, who works closely with Coolmore Australia. It was perhaps more than we wanted to pay, but we think we have a nice horse with a future.”

Perhaps the best-bred horse in the whole catalogue, never mind just in the Ballydoyle draft, was Nobel Prize (Ire) (Galileo)–a brother to Highland Reel (Ire) and his accomplished siblings. Their dam Hveger (Aus) (Danehill) is herself out of a no less celebrated mare in Circles of Gold (Aus) (Marscay {Aus}), so even the nose by which Nobel Prize landed a Group 3 prize at Dundalk this summer might make him eligible as a stallion in some jurisdictions or disciplines.

Such is certainly the way John Walsh was thinking in giving 170,000gns for lot 714 on behalf of an unnamed patron, who will now export Nobel Prize for a stud career. “It’s a fabulous page and he’s a big, strapping 16.1 horse,” the agent said. “My client has pursued him for a while. I remember being impressed when the horse won at Naas as a 2-year-old, though a very late foal [May 7]. There’s been interest in various countries. It’s an international pedigree and would work anywhere, the same Galileo-Danehill cross as Frankel.”

The Force Is with Fawzi

The compliments earlier extended to William Haggas would doubtless prompt him to remark that he could have had no better mentor, in terms of a professional approach to this sale, than Sir Mark Prescott.

The discipline and demeanour of the Heath House string was as impressive as ever, and came as no surprise to Oliver St Lawrence, who gave 160,000gns for Glen Force (Ire) (Gleneagles {Ire}) on behalf of Fawzi Nass.  “He came highly recommended by the trainer,” the agent said. “We have horses with him so if he has put us away, he’ll be for the high jump.”

That typical flourish of mischief did not alter the fact that lot 721, unusually for the stable, had only tried a distance beyond a mile when winning for a second time in a Nottingham handicap last month.

Other yards to achieve excellent overseas dividends for clients included Roger Charlton, who mustered 140,000gns from Californian interests to help defray costs of the monarch’s Turf operation through her 89-rated homebred Evening Sun (GB) (Muhaarar {GB}) (lot 750); Sir Michael Stoute, whose productive sale of Crystal Pegasus was noted earlier and who later secured a 150,000gns private sale (with Australian trainer Annabel Neasham through Blandford Bloodstock) for dual Group 3 winner Zaaki (GB) (Leroidesanimaux {Brz}) (lot 706); and David O’Meara, who has nursed King’s Charisma (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}) from a rating of 65 to 86 in winning three handicaps to gain a 170,000gns transfer to Australian Bloodstock / Ronald Rauscher (lot 770). King’s Charisma was bought out of Book 2 here a couple of years ago by Jeremy Brummitt for just 20,000gns.

A Profitable Adventure

The coup of the day was supervised by that astute horseman Andrew Slattery, who counts jumps champion Faugheen (Ire) (Germany) among his many discoveries among young bloodstock.

Ascot Adventure (GB) (Mayson {GB}) was originally purchased as a Tattersalls Ascot yearling by Five Star Bloodstock for just ÂŁ4,800, but was scratched from the Goresbridge breeze-ups by Clenagh Castle Stud. Having been saddled by Slattery to score impressively on debut at Cork last month, he arrived here as wildcard lot 746B–and realized 150,000gns from Woodhurst Construction.

That is the Potters Barr business of Kevin Bailey, who will be putting a syndicate together with John Fitzpatrick. The two friends were standing with Roger Fell, but teasingly remarked that no trainer will be chosen until the remaining shares were sold.

“He’s a very nice 2-year-old and won his maiden really well,” said Fitzpatrick. “We think he will make a really nice sprinter next year.”

“He has a bit of size about him as well, so there is some improvement as he grows and that is what you want,” added Bailey. “We’ll give him a break now, and next year will go to war.”

Bailey had a stake in that splendid globe-trotter Presvis (GB) (Sakhee), who amassed over ÂŁ4 million in prizemoney at places like Meydan, Sha Tin and Kranji. “Let’s hope this fellow will take us to some nice places too,” he said.

Station Stays on Fast Track

Three smart operations converged productively in Dubai Station (GB) (Brazen Beau {Aus}), who realized 150,000gns as lot 554. One of many modestly priced yearlings to have achieved Pattern success for Karl Burke–a 30,000gns graduate of Book 2, he was placed at Royal Ascot as a juvenile and this year added the G3 Pavilion S.–he is now to join a stable that has excelled in the recruitment of elite sprinters. He will do so in the colours of Middleham Park Racing, who have enjoyed such prolific success in 2020.

“He’ll be our first horse with Robert Cowell,” said Tim Palin, director of racing for the syndication umbrella. “We decided we’d try to get a bit of quality if we could, and this horse has a serious engine. It’s now up to the trainer to mastermind some future glories.”

Cowell is embracing that challenge with due excitement. “I’m delighted to get on board with Middleham Park, with their fantastic record,” he said. “This is a plan we’ve been putting together for two or three months. He’s a very good-looking horse that doesn’t have too many miles on the clock, and he’s rated to run potentially in very smart handicaps or stakes races. So he has options. We’ll sit down and have a glass of wine at some point, and come up with a plan.”

International Options for 95-rated Pair

One of the benchmark types at this sale is the hard-knocking 3-year-old that has earned a handicap rating that might be hard work over here, but has established his eligibility for pastures new. Two such, each rated 95, made six figures within a few minutes around lunchtime: Prince Of Naples (Ire) (Holy Roman Emperor {Ire}) went to John Egan for 120,000gns as lot 591, while Byline (GB) (Muharaar {GB}) brought 110,000gns from Alastair Donald (lot 597).

Both may well be on their way to the Middle East, though Egan was non-committal pending discussion with “a longstanding client” regarding Prince Of Naples, who had put in a timely advertisement when fourth in listed company at Leopardstown just 10 days previously.

“We could keep him here, we might look at Dubai,” Egan said. “I just loved the horse. He’s had a few things going on this year, and that gave us a chance because he would have been too expensive this time last year. He’s a bonny horse, one we can crack on with, and I’m sure there’s a lot more to come: I had a long chat with his trainer Sheila Lavery. I’ve a lot of respect for her, and everything just added up.”

This was another of the day’s well bought horses, as a €36,000 Fairyhouse yearling who has been racing in the silks of Lavery’s brother John. But Donald could see why Byline, for his part, had last visited this ring in Book 1, when bought by Stephen Hillen and trainer Kevin Ryan for 140,000gns. Racing for Highclere, he had won at two and added a Leicester handicap in June.

“He’s a very good-looking horse,” Donald remarked. “One of the best here. He’s a very solid, straightforward, consistent type and I’d say pretty good value for the level, rated 104 by Timeform. And he should do well on fast ground where he’s going.”

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Tepid Start to Tattersalls Autumn Horses-in-Training Sale

NEWMARKET, UK–A sale like this will always be rather a law unto itself. The quality on offer won’t be as consistent, year to year, as a cross-section selected from each new crop for graded catalogues of younger stock. And the distribution of such quality as does appear, across a four-session auction, will be no less variable.

So let’s not leap to any premature conclusions about a steep decline in returns from the opening day of the Autumn Horses-in-Training at Tattersalls. The coveted Juddmonte draft, for one thing, has this time been moved back from Monday to Wednesday–when the agenda will also include the small matter of the horse that started favourite for the Derby.

In this same ring, of course, the yearling market disclosed stunning resilience through all tiers of the October Sale. By the same token, if trainers are somehow managing to keep their patrons in the game, then a recycling facility like this may well, in many cases, serve to reduce commitments and so fund the next phase.

An unbroken yearling, after all, is always an act of faith. Who knows? You might even dare to picture them winning in front of teeming stands, and celebrating in unhindered conviviality. But time is seldom on the side of these prospects. If you’re lucky, you might be looking at a work in progress; and 2020 is hardly the most propitious year for a horse to be heading the other way.

Equally, it would be no surprise if some good horses have been retained, rather than cashed in at such a precarious moment.

The one thing we do know to expect, in 2020, is a business-like clearance rate: sure enough, 84% percent found a new home, down only slightly from what had been a very brisk 87% last year.

Business totalled 4,138,500gns, a 46% slump from 7,696,700gns last year–a figure, as remarked, that included 1,577,000gns of Juddmonte bluebloods. With a pretty similar number into the ring (292, compared with 305), that translated into an average down 42% to 16,961gns from 29,044gns; and a median similarly sliding all the way down to 9,000gns from 13,500gns (-33%).

Durcan Sees Fast Track to Asiaaf’s Future

One of the best angles for prospectors at a sale like this is the filly that might attract more competition as a broodmare prospect at the December Sale. That might conceivably have been the case for Asiaaf (GB) (New Approach {Ire}), given that the Shadwell 3-year-old is out of a sister to Dunboyne Express (Ire) (Shamardal), a dual Group 1 winner in Hong Kong and Singapore; and that their dam, in turn, is a half-sister to Classic winner and producer Love Divine (GB) (Diesis {GB}).

But nobody was missing the fact that lot 323, in racing terms, still has plenty of miles on the clock. She has so far made just five starts for Marcus Tregoning, reaching a rating of 86 via a Goodwood maiden success and a couple of strong runner-up finishes in handicap company. Sure enough, Ted Durcan was forced to top the session at 165,000gns to land her.

“I’ve been watching her all summer,” the astute jockey-turned-agent said. “She was my pick of the sale, especially filly-wise, and she’ll have a future whatever. But my thinking is that her only average run was on soft ground, and she’ll be a lovely filly for a faster surface next spring and summer. She’s a lovely model, big and scopey, and she’ll improve. It’s a big plus that she’s come from Marcus’s hotel. He is such a marvellous horseman and brings them all along so well.”

Beyond confirming that she will be staying in England, Durcan was not yet in a position to divulge either her new owner or trainer.

Channon Serves up Another Ace

When you think how many yearlings will have been bought for similar money this autumn, with an aspiration to plenty of good sprint action, it’s hard to imagine that many will achieve the “oven-ready” level represented by Nastase (GB) (Sixties Icon {GB}) (lot 302), who realized 120,000gns from Will Douglass of Charlie Gordon-Watson Bloodstock. He will be joining Gassim Mohammed Ghazali in Qatar.

Only two days earlier Nastase had backed up his recent listed success at York with a solid fourth, beaten 2 1/2 lengths, in the G3 Horris Hill S. at Newbury-his first attempt beyond six furlongs. That was already his eighth start since mid-July for trainer Mick Channon, who bred the youngster himself using a stallion who has served him splendidly well over the years.

“A very consistent, honest, straightforward horse,” enthused Douglass. “And sound as a pound. He was on the radar after York and ran a nice race on Saturday. He just keeps doing it, and hopefully there is plenty more to come.”

Ghazali is a regular visit to this sale but was confined to online observation this time. Douglass noted that Ghazali made a fruitful purchase here last year when giving 88,000gns for Sir Arthur Dayne (Ire) (Sir Pracncealot {Ire}). Another typically hardy West Ilsley sort, he had racked up 11 juvenile starts and has since won a valuable local prize for Ghazali.

Gordon-Watson himself applauded Channon’s choice of name for the colt, who is out of Rough Courte (Ire) (Clodovil {Ire}), albeit strictly Ilie Nastase was more of a Seventies Icon.

Another youngster named after a glamorous sportsman is Coulthard (Ire) Coulsty (Ire). He, too, has already met standards for Michael O’Callaghan that will arguably elude many a yearling purchased for more than the 90,000gns he made here (as lot 276) from Meah Lloyd Bloodstock. Though still a maiden after five starts, he has already soared to a mark of 98 in pursuit of some classy rivals, notably when third in the G3 Round Tower S.

Nicholls Makes a Wise Choice

Horse people are as flexible as their horses and a switch of codes for Wise Glory (Ire) (Muhaarar {GB}) (lot 263) will match the youthful versatility of Megan Nicholls, who signed a 135,000gns docket on behalf of her father, multiple champion jumps trainer Paul.

Nicholls, whose riding career on the Flat will this winter dovetail with a resumed jumps licence, thanked agents Tom Malone, Alex Elliott and Stephen Hillen for mentoring her as she has honed her eye through the yearling sales season.

“It’s something that massively interests me, and Dad has been very encouraging,” she explained. “Hopefully between myself, Dad and Buffy [Shirley-Beavan, vet], we can keep learning and have a bit of success.”

Here she had picked out a 3-year-old rated 86 for Simon and Ed Crisford, having added a handicap on the July Course to his maiden success at Leicester in June.

“Obviously he’ll be going back to Dad with the idea of going juvenile hurdling,” Nicholls said. “He has a lovely big frame to fill, and the more time we can give him, the better, because you’d think there’s plenty more in the engine.”

Having ridden out for the Crisfords last year, Nicholls has always had an eye on the horse. “He only ran once at two, but he was a big horse and they looked after him well,” she said. “They’re never too hard on their horses, which I like. He’s already a gelding, which is a plus, as he won’t need time for that. But he stays a mile and a half and goes in soft ground, and just has the right profile for us.”

Seroux Hopes to Build on Best of Foundations

One of the paradoxes of this market is that it will set a premium on horses presented by perceived under-achievers. Conversely, those respected for realizing every ounce of potential sometimes pay a price for their skill.

It has become a great help to the Ballydoyle draft, then, that a number of the record-breaking stable’s graduates have actually gone on to do well elsewhere. Indeed, Sir Dragonet (Ire) (Camelot {GB})–sold privately to a group put together by Ozzie Kheir–had won the G1 Ladbrokes Cox Plate just a couple of days before the sale.

So Emmanuel de Seroux of Narvick International could permit himself corresponding optimism in signing the first six-figure docket of the day, at 110,000gns, for a colt as well-bred and lightly-raced as Numen (Ire) (Galileo {GB}).

The 3-year-old, offered as lot 223, entered Ballydoyle in a program of collaboration between the stable’s owners and breeder Flaxman Stables, and looked a useful prospect winning a Leopardstown maiden in June. He then chased home his flourishing stablemate Delphi (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) in a listed race at the same track, only to disappoint in a Gowran handicap on his only subsequent start. But it is still early days, and Seroux was able to point at the depth of his page to support the hope that there could still be plenty to come: Numen’s dam is none other than the Niarchos family’s dual Classic winner Divine Proportions (Kingmambo). Her previous foals include group winner Eightfold Path (Giant’s Causeway), while this is also the family of contrasting achievers in Whipper (Miesque’s Son) and Shirley Heights (GB) (Mill Reef).

“He would have cost ten times more as a yearling,” De Seroux reasoned with a smile. “He’s not over-raced, and we hope he has a future. I don’t know where, my client has not decided, but it will be on the Flat-possibly here, possibly North America. We’ll give him a little time and hope he can come back strongly. He’s a very good mover and has all the options.”

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