Roasting Start To Tattersalls Ireland September

NEWMARKET, UK–Ah, the yearling sales. It's a long old season and sometimes the more elderly members of the press desk can get a little jaded by the halfway point, not to mention discombobulated. After all, we're at a Tattersalls Ireland sale in Newmarket, where instead of selling in guineas or euros, the horses are changing hands in sterling. But every now and then a feelgood story comes along to soften even the stoniest of hearts.

Let's face it, the day started pretty well: the sun shone and the free ice-cream stand was unveiled, attracting an even more attentive throng than Heaven, the, er, gentlemen's club at the bottom of Tatts hill. And then midway through the afternoon from the the exit at the back of the ring burst a bonny Ardad (Ire) colt led by Irishman Leon Carrick, who is a policeman in real life but does a pretty convincing job moonlighting as a yearling consignor and pinhooker. He was quickly joined by his girlfriend Michelle Gibbons, all smiles and hugs and kisses–some of them even directed at Carrick, but most of them landing on the yearling colt who had been transformed from a 7,500gns foal into a £105,000 yearling.

“We bought him while lying in bed–best online shopping ever!” Carrick said with a grin, bringing a hitherto unconsidered upside to being confined to quarters through lockdown. “We couldn't come over here because of Covid and I'd just come in from a night shift. We liked him and decided to buy him online and he has been an absolute delight to do everything with, and of course we have been delighted to see the stallion doing so well.”

Ardad, the young son of Kodiac (GB) based at Overbury Stud, has certainly not let down those foal buyers and breeders who put their faith in him last year as he has made a hugely promising start with his first runners this year, headed by the G1 Darley Prix Morny winner Perfect Power (Ire). The colt consigned by Carrick as lot 154 was bred by Saeed Nasser Al Romaithi and is out of the Azamour (Ire) mare Mara Grey (Ire), already the dam of the dual winner Constanzia (GB) (Dandy Man {Ire}).

Based on The Curragh, the 27-year-old Carrick is the nephew of well-known breeze-up consignor Johnny Collins and has served his time on studs working for the Aga Khan, Coolmore and at Curraghmore in New Zealand. Before joining the Gardai he also worked for Richard Brabazon, who trains Apple Of His Eye (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}) for Carrick and Gibbons, who is also 27.

Carrick continued, “I didn't in my wildest dreams expect to get a figure like that. Michelle wants to go to college to do a midwifery course and she'll be able to do that comfortably now. Our thanks have to go to my uncle Johnny, who supports me, and to Richard Brabazon, who allowed us to use his facilities this year.

“We prep a few horses every year, a few cheap foal purchases, hoping that something like this will happen, and this has given us a great boost. If we get a few more results like this we might do it full time.”

The couple has four yearlings to sell this year, including a Dawn Approach colt (lot 296) who is catalogued on Wednesday.

The man who bought the colt has had the inside track on Ardad from the start as Robson Aguiar, who signed the ticket on behalf of Amo Racing, rode Ardad in his breeze at Doncaster back in 2016 and he has been a strong supporter of the stallion at the sales.

Roaring Trade

Both consignors and purchasers expressed a mixture of surprise and delight as the first day of the Tattersalls Ireland September Yearling Sale drew to a close in Newmarket. The fact that it had been relocated for the second year running amid uncertainty over the lifting of Covid restrictions in Ireland was not ideal, especially for a number of Irish consignors, but many now will be relieved to have taken the plunge and stuck with the sale. The median of £20,000 was up by 18% on the equivalent day of trade last year, while the average rose by 13% to £26,729 from 42 more horses sold this time around–217, bringing an identical first-day clearance rate of 85%. The day's takings amounted to £5,702,500.

On the first day of the Tattersalls Ireland September Yearling Sale of 2019, the last time it was staged in Ireland and in Euros, 200 horses were sold for €5,084,500, at an average of €25,423 and a median of €21,000.

Going Global

The Ardad colt was not the top price of the day, his tag having been bettered twice by two colts bought by Adam Driver of Global Equine Group on a day of trade that surpassed most people's expectations on both sides of the transactions.

The first yearling to have breached the six-figure mark during the lively opening session was a second-crop son of Churchill (Ire) (lot 111), sold by Grange Hill Stud for £110,000. His dam Komedy (Ire) has given Mark Hanly and his mother Stephanie plenty to smile about in the early days of her stud career and the Kodiac (GB) mare struck gold again on Tuesday when her yearling colt became the first at the sale to breach the six-figure mark.

Consigned by his breeders, he is the third foal of his 8-year-old dam, who was bought in the same ring at the Horses-in-Training Sale for 9,000gns. A winning sister to the listed victrix On Her Toes (Ire), Komedy did not take long to advertise her potential as a broodmare when her first foal Internationaldream (Ire) (Acclamation {GB}) won twice at two and was third in the G3 Molecomb S.

“He is a very taking individual and I thought to myself that he'd be a standout at this sale,” said Mark Hanly. “It is a nice, fast family, and he is out of a Kodiac mare and they are working very very well at the moment on the track. The mare is a typical Kodiac and when I first saw Churchill at stud, I absolutely loved him. He has a big physique and would suit a Kodiac mare, and the cross of Danehill and Galileo suited too.”

Komedy is now in foal to Churchill's Coolmore studmate Saxon Warrior (Jpn) having been barren last year.

The Global Equine Group, which Driver said already has two Churchill juveniles in training in Newmarket with Tom Clover, later signed up the leading light of the day online when going to £130,000 for lot 217, Castlehyde Stud's smart chestnut colt by No Nay Never out of the Galileo (Ire) mare Pink Damsel (Ire).

“It's great to have the top lot,” said Castlehyde Stud manager Paddy Fleming. “We brought him here to stand out and he did just that. He was born and raised on good limestone land at Castlehyde and the mare has been very good to us.”

A winner herself at three, Pink Damsel is a daughter of the dual Grade I winner Riskaverse (Dynaformer) and thus a full-sister to the G3 Dance Design S. winner Say (Ire). Her first foal, Glengowan (Ire) (Kingman {GB}), is already a winner and her Caravaggio 2-year-old Sarsons Risk (Ire) was third on debut at Newbury last month having been bought at the Craven Breeze-up Sale for 120,000gns.

A Filly To Go Farhh

Muscling her way in to be the top filly of the day was an athletic daughter of Farhh (GB) consigned by Nelius Hayes as lot 81 through his Knockainey Stud. At £90,000, she was the most expensive of nine purchases by Peter and Ross Doyle, who confirmed that she would go into training with Richard Hannon, whose previous positive experience with the sire runs to training the 2000 Guineas runner-up King Of Change (GB).

“We have been very lucky buying from Nelius Hayes over the years,” said Ross Doyle. “She is the nicest filly Nelius has brought to the sales for a few years. She is nicely sized and she has a bit of class to her.”

Hayes, who with a partnership picked up the filly's dam Imasumaq (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}) for 16,000gns when carrying this filly, added, “A friend of mine and neighbour Michael O'Dwyer bought her here at the December Sale. Everybody just seemed to like this filly. We had no expectations of anything like that coming, but as the days go on you get hopeful.”

Hayes was pleased with the early decision taken to switch the sale from Ireland to the UK. He said, “It was a difficult decision for Tattersalls to make, but I think they did the right thing making a call that they were going to stick to this date and sell here. In hindsight perhaps there could have been time to go back to Fairyhouse, but it gave us all some certainty by making a decision back in the summer.”

Brothers Believe

Richard Hannon's brother-in-law and fellow trainer Richard Hughes will also take charge of one of the day's top lots after going to £85,000 for lot 70, a colt by Make Believe (GB) who represented a successful pinhooking debut for brothers Tom and Davy Brickley of Ard Erin Stud. They bought the son of the unraced Tamayuz (GB) mare Hidden Girl (Ire) for €8,000 last year at Goffs.

“He was our very first pinhook,” said Tom Brickley, 29. “We've loved him the whole way through, he has been a champion. We are delighted to get so well paid, we were dreaming about it but never thought it would happen.”

He added, “He came from Brendan Hayes of Knocktoran Stud, who is a great breeder, and we loved his action from the start. For a big horse he moved so well. Everyone at home is part of the team–mum, dad and our sisters. Dad always had a mare at home, but we are the first to do horses in a bigger way. We caught the bug and decided that we wanted to do this game, and we both learnt from the top farms.”

A half-brother to the 100-rated Muraad (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}), the colt will be sent to former champion jump jockey AP McCoy for breaking and pre-training, according to his friend Hughes, who said, “I loved him from the minute I set eyes on him. He's not a 2-year-old type, he'll probably be more of a 3-year-old. I haven't had any by Make Believe before but I've been following his stallion career.”

Another of the day's top fillies was a decent pinhook for Guy O'Callaghan, who on Saturday celebrated the G2 Mill Reef S. victory of Wings Of War (Ire), who was bred by him at his Grangemore Stud. The same stallion, Dark Angel (Ire), was responsible for both, and lot 129 had been picked out as a foal by O'Callaghan for 20,000gns. Trainer Tom Ward, acting on behalf of a syndicate, ended up as the successful bidder on the easy-moving grey, out of the Group 3-placed Light My Fire (Ire) (Dragon Pulse {Ire}) at £80,000.

Keeping Good Company

Mark and Barbara Dreeling's Coole House Farm enjoyed a good day through the sale of lot 224, a colt by the late Fast Company (Ire) whose brother Flashcard (Ire) was third in the G3 Sovereign S.

“He has been a gentleman since the day he was born. Hopefully he will be as lucky as the full-brother,” said the couple's daughter Megan after the colt sold for £90,000 to Ed Dunlop and JD Moore.

Her mother added, “He has been very busy today and he can really move. The mare doesn't have a foal as she's not an easy mare to get in foal, but she is now in foal to Gleneagles.”

Four lots later (lot 228), a New Bay (GB) half-brother to recent debut winner Whoputfiftyinyou (GB) (Twilight Son {GB}), who was unnamed when the catalogue was printed, went the way of Kevin Ross for £88,000. Consigned by Ballylinch Stud for breeders Eleanor Commins and the New Bay Syndicate, the colt is also a three-quarter brother to the GIII San Francisco Mile S winner Whisper Not (GB) (Poet's Voice {GB}).

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Something For All As Tattersalls Ireland September Begins

NEWMARKET, UK–It's Fairyhouse, but not as we know it. For the second year running the Tattersalls Ireland September Yearling Sale has gone on tour to Newmarket, with just shy of 600 youngsters catalogued to sell over the next two days. 

The claim of Tattersalls Ireland's CEO Simon Kerins that the September Sale has something for everyone is fully backed up by two notable graduates of the sale on the track this year. This time last year Go Bears Go (Ire) (Kodi Bear {Ire}) was plucked from Micheal Ryan's Al Eile Stud for £50,000 by breeze-up pinhooker Robson Aguiar and he is now a Group 2 winner and Group 1-placed. Go back another two years and Johnny Murtagh picked up Sonnyboyliston (Ire) (Power {GB}) for €26,000. He may have taken a little longer to reach his peak, but the 4-year-old is now a six-time winner with the G1 Irish St Leger and famous Ebor H. to his name as well as almost £650,000 in earnings.

“We always have a mix of types at this sale–you have some 2-year-old types and later-maturing, staying types as well, so you'd like to think there is something for everyone,” says Kerins. “It has stood the test of time in terms of its graduates. There's a great mix of winners from the sale.”

The fact that Kerins is speaking at Park Paddocks rather than from Tattersalls Ireland's base at Fairyhouse may be the source of some frustration but, as with all sales through the pandemic, the number one concern is that they are able to take place at all, even if dates and locations have to be shuffled. The fate of the September Sale, at least when it came to its location, was sealed when a number of British visitors to the Tattersalls Ireland Derby Sale were told they had to remain in their hotels or return to Britain on the eve of the sale despite a Covid 'bubble' being in operation during Ireland's lockdown.

“The background to it was what happened at the Derby Sale, when we were told at the eleventh hour that the bubble for the UK buyers had ben rescinded,” says Kerins. “It wasn't long afterwards that the entries for the September Sale were closing and we made the decision to come here. We wanted to give clarity and certainty to our customers.”

He continues, “In an ideal world we wouldn't have the sale in Newmarket for the second year in a row, we've also had the breeze-up sale here twice now, but I can't see it happening ever again and the plan is certainly to go back to Ireland next year. The Somerville Sale was exceptional here recently, there was great buzz about the place, and you hope it will follow through to this sale.”

At least one consignor at Park Paddocks was certainly buzzing, even if he is based in almost the quietest area of the sales grounds in the calm at the back of Highflyer's G yard. Guy O'Callaghan, who has brought four yearlings from his Grangemore Stud to sell this week, had the joy of watching Wings Of War (Ire) win the G2 Mill Reef S. at Newbury at the weekend. The Clive Cox-trained colt, who runs in the colours of Isa Salman Al Khalifa, is the first foal of O'Callaghan's Kodiac (GB) mare Futoon (Ire) and is by his family's perennially popular stallion Dark Angel (Ire).

“It's magic,” says O'Callaghan. “It was great timing and it's a great result for everyone–for the stallion, for the mare, and great for Sheikh Isa. He's an enthusiastic and relatively new owner to the game and let's hope he turns into a brilliant horse for him. Clive is just a consistently fantastic trainer. Time and time again he comes up with a new one.”

He adds, “It's a great start for the mare and long may it continue. It's a wonderful family and every year good, hard-knocking, fast horses come out of it and he seems to be another one.”

On the timing front, the update is almost as good as it gets for the full-brother to Wings Of War, who is set to appear on the Monday of Book 2 of the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale.

“He's a big, strong, grey colt. I'd be quite hopeful that people will like him and I'm very proud of him,” says the breeder.

But for now O'Callaghan's focus is on the quartet being paraded up and down before him for a range of yearling viewers. They include a Dark Angel filly (lot 129), this time not a homebred but a 20,000gns pinhook from the December Foal Sale. Another first foal, her dam Light My Fire (Ire) (Dragon Pulse {Ire}) looks exactly the type to appeal to those with a commercial eye, being a winner twice at two herself and placed in the G3 Firth of Clyde S.

Similar comments apply to the El Kabeir filly in the draft (lot 258), whose hardy dam Rural Celebration (GB) (Pastoral Pursuits {GB}) won seven times between the ages of two and six and was runner-up in the listed Land O'Burns Fillies' S. Her daughter Country Carnival (Ire) (Mayson {GB}) was also a winner at two and was third in the listed Marygate S.

By now, Dark Angel needs no introduction to sales folk, being one of the most dependable stallions, both commercially and on the racecourse. “He's the gift that keeps on giving,” admits O'Callaghan.

Following in his wake at Yeomanstown Stud is another grey, El Kabeir, a strong son of Scat Daddy whose first 2-year-olds are beginning to make quite an impression. Two of his leading colts, the listed winner Masekela (Ire) and treble winner Harrow (Ire), hold group-race entries at Newmarket later this week.

“El Kabeir has made a wonderful start and we are so proud of him. His horses have plenty of size and scope and they have come to hand at the time of year that we were hoping they would,” O'Callaghan says.

Of his hopes for the next few days, he adds, “I think I have a lovely even draft, with the Dark Angel filly and the El Kabeir filly probably the picks of them. There's been plenty of footfall, so we're just hoping that the trade will be good and that we have four empty head-collars at the end of the sale.”

Another yearling in the sale to have benefited from a useful recent update is Ballinalard Stud's Mehmas (Ire) filly (lot 312). When the catalogue went to print, her half-brother King X J (Ire) (Cotai Glory {GB}) was still unraced but the colt, bred by Tom and Hazel Russell, has since scooped the pot of the valuable Tattersalls Ireland Super Auction Sale S. for trainer Michael O'Callaghan and owner Paul J Nolan. Worth €300,000 in total, the juvenile contest is run over six and a half furlongs on Irish Champions Weekend and is open to all graduates of the September Yearling Sale.

Part II of the sale, which with fairly precision timing is set to start at 5:53 p.m. on Wednesday, according to the Tattersalls Ireland website, features a quartet of yearlings by a stallion whose offspring are not often seen on these shores but who will be widely remembered. Kool Kompany (Ire), a flashy son of the much-missed Jeremy, won the G2 Prix Robert Papin and G2 Railway S. among his seven victories between the ages of two and five, and he eventually retired to Dehesa de Milagro in Spain, where his first crop are now 2-year-olds. Spanish-based consignor Alex Mahony of EAM Bloodstock consigns three colts and a filly by the stallion for Wednesday's sale, including a son of the G3 Prix Eclipse winner Damoiselle (Sky Classic) as lot 586. 

The Tattersalls Ireland September Yearling Sale takes place on Tuesday and Wednesday from 10 a.m.

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Tattersalls Ireland September Yearling Catalogue Revealed

The catalogue for the Tattersalls Ireland September Yearling Sale is now online, the sales company announced on Tuesday.

Relocated to Park Paddocks in Newmarket on Sept. 21-22 from its regular home in Ireland, 488 yearlings make up the two-day Part I of the sale, with 101 set to go through the ring for Part II later on the 22nd. Past graduates of the sale include G2 Railway S. hero Go Bears Go (Ire) (Kodi Bear {Ire}), as well as G1 Tattersalls Gold Cup winner Helvic Dream (Ire) (Power {GB}) and Group 3 winners Hermana Estrella (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}) and Beauty Inspire (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}).

Several of the notable lots are as follows: a Parish Hall (Ire) half-brother to Group 1 winner Gear Up (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}) (lot 42); a son of Galileo Gold (GB) who is a half-brother to G3 Sweet Solera S. heroine Star Of Emaraaty (Ire) (Pride of Dubai {Aus}) (lot 113); and G3 Musidora S. heroine Shutter Speed (GB) (Dansili {GB})'s half-brother by Cracksman (GB) as lot 213. Tuesday's G3 Prix de Cabourg victress Have a Good Day (Ire) (Adaay {Ire})'s half-brother is entered as lot 422.

In 2020, 333 yearlings sold for £7,368,409 during Part I of the sale. The average was £22,127 and the median was £16,175. A colt by Teofilo (Ire), a full-brother to Gear Up, took top honours at £325,000 and was purchased by the Hong Kong Jockey Club.

All yearlings in both Part I and Part II of the sale are eligible for the €300,000 Tattersalls Ireland Super Auction Series S. at The Curragh on Irish Champions Weekend. The vendor of the winning horse will also drive away in an Overland 2-stall horsebox.

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Tattersalls Ireland September Sale Moved To Newmarket For 2021

The 2021 Tattersalls Ireland September Yearling Sale is to be relocated from its base in Fairyhouse to the Tattersalls U.K.-based headquarters in Newmarket.

The sale has been relocated to Tattersalls in Newmarket owing to the continued uncertainty surrounding COVID related issues in Ireland, most notably the difficulty in guaranteeing that international buyers will be able to visit Ireland without having to undergo lengthy periods of quarantine. The three-day sale will now take place a week earlier than originally scheduled, with Part I taking place on Tuesday, Sept. 14 and Wednesday, Sept. 15, and Part II taking place on Thursday, Sept. 16, reflecting a similar move that has been made after an agreement between Tattersalls and Goffs which will see the Orby Sale also taking place at the Tattersalls Park Paddocks site on the earlier than scheduled date of Sept. 24 – 26.

Commenting on the change of location for the Tattersalls Ireland September Yearling Sale, Tattersalls Ireland CEO Simon Kerins said;

“The decision to relocate to Newmarket has not been taken lightly, especially having had to relocate the September Yearling Sale in 2020 but, given the disruption we experienced at the Derby Sale, it is now clear to us that we cannot rely on a 'bubble' which would allow overseas buyers to visit Ireland without onerous quarantine requirements. The September Yearling Sale traditionally attracts large numbers of overseas visitors and at present Britain, while also being the main source of our buyers, is considerably more accessible than Ireland.

Tattersalls is hopeful that this will be the last change to its 2021 sales calendar and have taken the decision at this early stage to provide clarity to loyal vendors prior to entries closing next week. Relocating the sale to Park Paddocks will again allow Tattersalls Ireland to achieve the constant objective of providing a vibrant market by attracting the widest and most diverse group of buyers that we possibly can.

The relocated 2020 Tattersalls Ireland September Yearling Sale returned record-breaking figures with a top lot of £325,000 and more horses selling for £150,000 or more than ever before. Vendors have already been supporting the sale this year with their better quality stock and we look forward to another successful renewal of the Tattersalls Ireland September Yearling Sale at Park Paddocks in Newmarket.”

All yearlings cataloged for the Tattersalls Ireland September Yearling Sale are eligible for the €300,000 Tattersalls Ireland Super Auction Sales Stakes at The Curragh in September 2022. Vendors not wishing to sell yearlings at the relocated sale will be accommodated in the Tattersalls Ireland Flat Sale which takes place at Fairyhouse on Nov. 13 and 14.

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