Record Session Kicks Off Tattersalls Book 2

NEWMARKET, UK-the middle market has flourished at the yearling sales transatlantically thus far in 2021, and that trend proved out again on Monday during the first of three sessions of Book 2 of the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale, where figures were not only well up on the remarkably strong 2020 renewal staged in the midst of the pre-vaccine pandemic, but at this stage also trending ahead of 2019's record edition. The first day of Book 2 saw records for turnover, average and median for a session at Book 2. Of the 247 yearlings offered, 212 found new homes (86%) for an aggregate of 18,935,500gns that was up 24% on last year's corresponding session. The average jumped 27% year on year to 89,318gns, while the median climbed 35% to 70,000gns. The average for the whole of Book 2 in 2019 was 78,224gns, and the median 55,500gns.

Sean Woods made his return to the Newmarket training ranks this season after nearly 20 years in Hong Kong. He has notched 10 wins this season and will have a serious bullet to fire sometime next year in the form of a Night Of Thunder (Ire) colt (lot 604) picked up by his brother Dwayne Woods for 375,000gns on Monday.

“He was stunning; to me he was the best colt in the sale,” Dwayne Woods said after signing the ticket. “He's very strong, probably the cleanest Night Of Thunder I've ever seen– conformationally, strength, everything. Night Of Thunder is a wonderful sire, but they are a little bit incorrect in front as he is. This was the most beautiful model. I see him as being a six furlong horse to a miler, or more like seven furlongs to a mile-a Guineas horse if I ever saw one, and hence we went that strongly on him.”

Sean Woods added: “he'll have a bit of time now and come to us in January. He's for one of my existing owners.”

Bred by Cranford Bloodstock, the colt was offered by Rathbarry Stud. He is out of Harlequin Girl (GB) (Where Or When {Ire}) and his 2-year-old full-brother Hanaady (Ire), who was bought by Shadwell for 110,000gns at this sale last year, won on Sept. 29 for trainer Ed Dunlop. Harlequin Girl is a half-sister to three stakes horses, including G2 Gimcrack S. scorer Blaine (GB) (Avonbridge {GB}), and also to the dam of this year's G3 Chester Vase winner Youth Spirit (Ire) (Camelot {GB}).

There is perhaps nothing to keep buyers around until late into the evening quite like a Galileo (Ire) filly out of a young stakes-winning mare, and that is exactly what materialized when Manister House Stud's filly out G3 Cornwallis S. winner Mrs Danvers (GB) (Hellvelyn {GB}) (lot 768) strolled into the ring four lots from the end of the session. Bids flew from throughout the ring, but the final blow was at last landed online by BBA Ireland/Yulong Investments at 320,000gns.

It would be rare indeed to see a mare who couldn't find a home for £1,000 as a 2-year-old among Galileo's mates, but Mrs Danvers has punched remarkably above the weight of her page. Unsold at the Tattersalls Ireland Ascot February Sale four months before making her racecourse debut for owner/trainer Jonathan Portman, Mrs Danvers soon caused her value to skyrocket when winning at first asking at Lingfield by 3 1/4 lengths. She would proceed to sail unbeaten through a five-race juvenile campaign culminating in Newmarket's Cornwallis. Mrs Danvers has visited Galileo in her first three seasons at stud, and with her first foal, a colt, having unfortunately died, this filly will be the first to try to bolster the black-type on the page.

“She was an exceptional filly, especially for her age,” said Manister House Stud's Luke Barry in reference to the fact that the filly is a May 4 foal. “She had all the qualities of her sire but most importantly she very much looked like Mrs Danvers. Even for a May foal she looks sharp. We brought her here to stand out and we're thrilled that she sold very well. She has great quality, as will come with a Galileo, but Mrs Danvers has put a lot of strength and sharpness into her.”

New Frontier For Kingman

Kingman (GB) has enjoyed another fruitful season domestically and in the meantime he has begun to build up an admirable record in Hong Kong, with six winners from seven runners in that nation. Another son of the Juddmonte supremo is bound for Hong Kong, with the Hong Kong Jockey Club's representative Mick Kinane going to 300,000gns for lot 617 from Ballyhimikin Stud.

“He's by a great stallion and he's a lovely, correct model, which is what I want,” Kinane said. “I liked him from the first day I saw him and when he settled in up here he was a lovely colt.”

Commenting on the market, Kinane added, “It's like anything, good horses are hard to buy. This is the first one I've tried on today. We bought five last week, so we were happy.”

Lot 617 is the first foal out of Hunaina (Ire) (Tamayuz {GB}), who was bred by the Aga Khan Studs and raced by the Aga Khan through her first two seasons on the track. She was bought by Trevor Stewart through Stroud Coleman Bloodstock for €140,000 from the 2017 Goffs November Mares Sale, and went on to win the Listed Snowdrop Fillies' S. and G3 Prix Bertrand du Breuil Longines in Stewart's colours for trainer Henri Devin. This colt, her first foal, was bred by Stewart with James Hanley and Anthony Stroud. Hunaina is from the family of the dual Derby winner Harzand (Ire) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) and this year's G1 Irish Derby, G1 St Leger and G1 Grand Prix de Paris winner Hurricane Lane (Ire) (Frankel {GB}).

“We bought the mare as a 3-year-old in training and sent her to trainer Henri Devin and she won a listed race and a Group 3,” said Stewart. “We are very happy with the result. He is a really nice first foal; a good walking, strong individual. It is a nice start for the mare, who is at Ballyhimikin, and she had a colt by Sea The Stars this spring.”

There were seven Kingmans offered during the opening session of Book 2 and they filled two of the top three spots on the leaderboard. A filly by Kingman (lot 739) joined Ballyhimikin's colt late in the session at the 300,000gns mark when bought by Blandford Bloodstock's Richard Brown standing alongside John Gosden, who trained the sire through his Horse of the Year campaign.

Lot 739 was offered by breeder Appletree Stud, a Gloucestershire-based nursery run by former leading National Hunt rider Robert “Choc” Thornton that brought a three-horse draft to Book 2. She is the fifth foal out of the Moyglare Stud-bred Midnight Thoughts, who is unraced and was a high-profile buyback at the 2014 Keeneland November sale when led out unsold at $975,000. That valuation was based on the fact that Midnight Thoughts is a daughter of G2 Ribblesdale S. victress Irresistible Jewel (Ire) (Danehill), the dam of G1 Irish St Leger winner Royal Diamond (Ire) (King's Best), Ribblesdale winner Princess Highway (Street Cry {Ire}) and G3 Gladness S. winner Mad About You (Ire) (Indian Ridge).

Midnight Thoughts was acquired by Appletree Stud privately thereafter, and her third foal, Tomorrow's Dream (Fr) (Oasis Dream {GB}), was a winner and placed in Newmarket's Listed Rosemary S. while racing as an Appletree homebred with trainer William Haggas. Midnight Thoughts has a foal full-brother to Tomorrow's Dream, and was covered by Pinatubo this season.

“It's a fantastic result, in the region of double what we thought,” Thornton said. “Going into the ring, we knew we had good people behind us but we didn't expect that. It's a complete credit to Jonny Sutton, the stud groom. He has done a hell of a job with her and turned her inside out. If you look at the pictures of her online, and look at her now, they were only taken 10 days ago; she has really changed. She is by far the best daughter out of Midnight Thoughts and, as this is a business, we have put her in the sale and we have got a great result.”

Brown said after signing the ticket, “She was an extremely attractive filly. She's come from a very good, young farm in Gloucestershire. She had a fantastic shape. I've seen her quite a lot; she put on a great show out there. I bought her for John Gosden for a client of ours and we were both extremely keen to get her. John thought she was the outstanding Kingman filly in the sale and so did I. He probably knows more about Kingman than me. She's a lovely, classy, elegant filly by a proper stallion and it's a proper page.”

Brown, who picked up a daughter of Gleneagles two lots later, admitted the strength of the market had made for a difficult start to the day.

“We had to go strong, but the market has been very strong today,” he said. “It was a very frustrating morning; I bid on a lot of horses before lunch time and it wasn't going very well, but we got a couple there and she was at the top of the list.”

It's A Yes For No Nay Never Filly

Andrew Balding has trained one of the best yet by ascendant young sire No Nay Never in this season's G1 Coronation S. and G1 Sussex S. winner Alcohol Free (Ire), and Balding secured another by the Coolmore sire for Kingsclere when going to 260,000gns on Monday for lot 561, a colt from Newsells Park Stud.

“We thought he was a lovely colt and we've had some success with the stallion,” Balding noted, saying the purchase was made on behalf of an undisclosed client. “We're thrilled to get him.”

As detailed last week in the TDN, Balding is assisted at the sales by the formidable team of Emma Balding, his mother, and racing manager Tessa Hetherington, and Balding noted the colt passed inspection by each of his discerning team members.

“He was one of our top picks of the ones we've seen over the three days, so we're delighted to have him,” he said.

Jeff Smith's Alcohol Free, who also won last year's G1 Cheveley Park S., is entered in Saturday's G1 Queen Elizabeth II S. on Champions Day at Ascot, and Balding said it is “all systems go” for the 3-year-old filly. Alcohol Free looks to bounce back from a sixth-place finish behind Mishriff (Ire) (Make Believe {GB}) in the G1 Juddmonte International, and she drops back to her favoured mile trip.

Balding has enjoyed a remarkable season with the likes of Sandrine (GB), Spanish Mission, Berkshire Shadow (GB) and Bangkok (Ire) also among his group winners. Balding lost his top spot in the trainers' championship to Charlie Appleby after a great last weekend for latter, but Balding was philosophical about the demotion.

“It was inevitable, I am afraid,” he smiled. “We were probably punching above our weight for a good while there, but it is what it is and natural order has been restored. We have had a wonderful season.”

Lot 561 is the first foal out of Fleeting Fancy (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), a placed daughter of the G3 Derrinstown Stud 1000 Guineas Trial winner and G1 Irish Oaks and G2 Ribblesdale S.-placed Just Pretending (Giant's Causeway). Fleeting Fancy is likewise a full-sister to the black type-placed Persia (Ire) and Visage (Ire). She was bought for €480,000 at Arqana December in 2019, carrying this colt, by Dean Hawthorne on behalf of the Australian-based Jonathan Munz of GSA Bloodstock, who bred him.

Wilson Broadening His Racing Horizons

Lope De Vega had two yearlings feature among the top eight on Monday and one of those is headed Down Under, with owner Noel Wilson signing the docket on lot 657, a colt from Ballyhimikin Stud, at 250,000gns while seated alongside his French-based trainer Eoghan O'Neill.

Wilson, who is based in Kent and is a former Sun racing editor who is also involved in property and other investments, has horses in training with O'Neill as well as Francis Graffard and Christophe Ferland under his Just Wow Ltd. banner and has taken shares of horses in Australia to get his feet wet in the business there. Wilson also bought an Australia (GB) colt out of G3 Sweet Solera S. winner Nations Alexander (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) from Book 1 last week for 200,000gns, and said he hopes to send his new purchases to British-born, Australian-based trainer Annabel Neasham.

Of the Lope De Vega colt, Wilson said, “He's very classy. He vetted superbly, he was a standout at the sale. I'm just looking for a good horse. There is quite a bit of stamina in the two I've bought-this one has a bit more speed, maybe a mile and a quarter. You never know.”

“I live in Kent but I've never had a horse in England,” Wilson said. “I've had horses in Australia come tenth and pick up 1500-quid. That's not the deciding factor, but it's indicative of what's going on. If you look at Australia, I've seen 90-rated horses place in Group 1s, and the money–if you have a horse that does have ability, you only have to look at some of the examples recently. I'm not really rich enough to support British racing.”

The complication of not being able to regularly see his runners isn't a problem, either, for Wilson.

“I set the alarm and I can see them,” he said. “I have Equidia in the kitchen. I don't need to go and watch them physically. When they lose its nice to turn around and make a cup of tea rather than having to get in a car and drive to a different country to get home.”

“He's come to see me once in 15 years,” O'Neill confirmed.

Wilson's Lope De Vega colt continued a good day for Ballyhimikin Stud and co-breeders James Hanley, Trevor Stewart and Anthony Stroud, who also sold lot 617, the 300,000gns Kingman colt, to the Hong Kong Jockey Club. The Lope De Vega colt is out of the listed-winning and Group 3-placed Kambura (Fr) (Literato {Fr}), who was bought by Stroud Coleman Bloodstock for €220,000 at Arqana December in 2016. She is a half-sister to four stakes horses and the Lope De Vega colt is her third foal. She produced a colt by Night Of Thunder this year and was covered by Pinatubo (Ire).

New England Stud and partners picked out the Intello (Ger) mare Ionic (GB) in foal to Lope De Vega for 450,000gns at the Tattersalls December Mares Sale of 2019, and the mare's first foal, a filly (lot 635), went some way toward repaying that investment when making 270,000gns from SackvilleDonald at Tattersalls on Monday. While Ionic was but a minor winner in France, her considerable value stems from the fact that her immediate family is steeped with high-quality black-type winners and producers. Ionic is a half-sister to listed winner Prudenzia (Ire) (Dansili {GB}), who is now best known as the dam of Group 1 winners Chicquita (Ire) and Magic Wand (Ire) as well as current Group 3-winning and Classic-placed 3-year-old Philomene (Ire). Another half-sister, Pacifique (Ire) (Montjeu {Ire}), has left behind the G3 Prix de Lutece victress Paix (Ire), while the listed winner and former Derby favourite English King (Fr) is also a sibling to Ionic. The proficiency of the line appears already very much to be trickling down to the next generation; Chicquita's first two foals are group placed, including this season's G1 Irish Oaks third Nicest (Ire) (American Pharoah).

Ionic produced a filly by Too Darn Hot this spring, and was bred back to Night Of Thunder.

Ed Sackville signed the ticket on behalf of SBA Racing, which campaigns the stakes-winning Kodiac (GB) fillies Frenetic (Ire) and Geocentric (Ire) with trainer Ger Lyons. The daughter of Ionic goes to William Haggas.

Star Filly For Winning Partnership

The stakes-placed Fasliyev mare Greenisland (Ire) has been a very useful producer for the Jennings Family's Stonethorn Stud. The 15-year-old mare is the dam of the listed-winning Boerhan (GB) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) and Shamshon (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}), who has run a remarkable 102 times for 16 wins, mostly for trainer Stuart Williams, winning as recently as August as a 10-year-old. Three of her progeny have sold for six figures at the sales, including a filly foal by Sea The Stars bought by SackvilleDonald for €350,000 at Goffs November in 2019, and her latest filly by Starspangledbanner (Aus) was added to that list on Monday when Hugo Merry went to 220,000gns for lot 600. The agent was acting on behalf of Andrew Rosen, who will partner with Andrew and Madeleine Lloyd Webber's Watership Down Stud, who consigned the filly. Rosen and the Lloyd Webbers currently race the winning 3-year-old filly Theory Of Music (Ire) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}) together with trainer Jessica Harrington. Theory Of Music is a full-sister to triple group winner Turret Rocks (Ire), whose Kingman colt was among the leading lights at Book 1 last week when selling to MV Magnier and Peter Brant's White Birch Farm for 1.1-million gns. Theory Of Music cost 290,000gns at Book 1 last year.

“She's been bought for my very good client Andrew Rosen to partner with the Lloyd Webbers,” said Merry. “We bought a filly last year that's won and [Rosen] is a longstanding friend and client of the farm, so we've seen this filly around. She's bred by the Jennings' who have bred a lot of good horses. We were just trying to find a really nice filly who might work out, then have some residual value to go back to the farm to breed together.”

“The flaxen mane,” Merry quipped when asked what about the filly appealed to him. “Our sight is deteriorating, so the instruction was to get one we could see out in the field.”

“She was just a lovely shape,” he added. “The sire has had a great year. We would have liked to have had her for a bit less but it wasn't to be. The good ones are making the money.”

Le Havre Colt A Pinhooking Home Run

Jamie Railton enjoyed a pinhooking homerun courtesy of his Le Havre (Ire) colt out of Lady Francesca (GB) (Montjeu {Ire}) (lot 676), who was signed up by John Warren under the Highclere Agency banner for 230,000gns. Railton purchased the colt from this ring last year for 58,000gns under his Cill Dara Bloodstock banner.

“Some of these foals turn around, and some don't,” Railton said. “I particularly liked him as a foal and some of them work and some of them don't. The life of a pinhooker is not a straightforward one, and I am incredibly lucky to be surrounded by some exceptional people who keep me upright. I feel very privileged to have the people around me that I do. It is the people who show faith in us as a company and our organization. We have some loyal supporters, both involved in this horse and other horses. I am very grateful for all the people who support us in the good times and the bad times.”

It was 14 years ago at this sale during Book 1 that breeder Floors Stud parted with Lady Francesca for 21,000gns. She was scooped up by David Joseph, who raced her to one win and a pair of listed placings with trainer William Muir. Newsells Park Stud plucked her out of the 2009 Tattersalls December Mares Sale, and bred the Le Havre colt out of her before selling her for 40,000gns back at Park Paddocks last year, where she was bought by John Hammond. The page, meanwhile, had continued to improve, with Lady Francesca's half-sister Purr Along (GB) (Mount Nelson {GB}) winning Group 3s in Ireland and France and another sister Katawi (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) winning at listed level.

Siyouni To The Fore

Five-time Group 1 winner St Mark's Basilica (Fr), the world's current co-highest rated horse, has been one of the poster children for the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale having cost 1.3-million gns at Book 1 two years ago, and a pair of colts by his sire Siyouni (Fr) featured among the leading lights early in Monday's session when selling for 200,000gns apiece.

First up was lot 537, Whatton Manor Stud's first foal out of Faay (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}). The 6-year-old mare was placed on the racecourse herself, but holds plenty of residual value being a full-sister to the speedy pair of Mecca's Angel (Ire) and Markaz (Ire). The former won the G1 Nunthorpe S. twice, while Markaz was a multiple Group 3-winning sprinter. Faay was a 400,000gns purchased by Charlie Gordon-Watson on behalf of Abdullah Saaed al Naboodah at Book 1 of the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale, and her first foal appears bound for the breeze ups, having been bought by Mick Murphy of Longways Stables. Murphy has already had success re-selling Siyounis; he and his partner Sarah O'Connell pinhooked Al Raya (GB) and Le Brivido (Fr) by the sire, and both went on to be Group 3 winners.

Lot 576, meanwhile, has already provided an excellent pinhooking return. The son of the placed Fusion (Ire) (Cape Cross {Ire}) was the selection of Liam and Jenny Norris at last year's Tattersalls December Foal Sale for 92,000gns, and he rewarded that roll of the dice with a winning bid of 200,000gns from John Dance's Manor House Stud on Monday. Fusion is a half-sister to the champion and multiple stakes producer Attraction (GB) (Efisio), with a further two of her sisters having produced stakes horses. Fusion's 2-year-old filly Atomic Lady (Fr) has won twice this season and has been listed-placed since the catalogue was printed. The Siyouni colt was bred by Floors Farming.

“He's been a very straightforward horse and we're absolutely delighted for the client,” said Jenny Norris. “He's a very good mover and a beautiful individual. He vetted well and he's been going down well right from the start and he's behaved impeccably. There are some nice little updates in the pedigree too. So those all help and it's good to see trade is strong.”

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Emma Balding’s Love Of Foraging For Yearlings

There is much to admire about the team at Kingsclere, especially during a season when Andrew Balding has been in or near the top spot of the trainers' table throughout. But one particularly admirable facet to the Balding stable is in its sourcing of young stock at the yearling sales. 

Key to that process are the trainer's mother, Emma Balding, and Kingsclere's racing manager, Tessa Hetherington.  The duo can regularly be spotted forming an advance party on the sales grounds, sifting through the catalogue to ensure that they are left only with the most promising raw ingredients. Last year's efforts have been rewarded with two highly successful juveniles in particular, in the G2 Coventry S. winner Berkshire Shadow (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) and the listed winner and Group 2 runner-up Masekela (Ire) (El Kabeir).

“What we have tended to do over the last couple of years is that Tess and I try and get two days ahead of the game, and she starts one end, I start the other and, time allowing, we look at each other's short lists, and leave on or off,” says Balding, whose success as a breeder and contribution to the bloodstock industry was recently recognised with the highest TBA award, the Andrew Devonshire Bronze.

She continues, “Now, she and I have completely different eyes and Tess has spotted some really good horses. She just likes a different type, and she's done a lot more around the showing world, so there are things that she notices which I just don't notice. And equally, there are some things that I notice that she doesn't.

“We both have this fault that if we're blown away by something, we don't actually notice the faults. But then Andrew then looks at our longer short lists and makes the short list, and he's far more looking at the page. We try to do it not looking at the page too much, but looking at the individual.”

While Kingsclere is well populated with smart homebreds from large owner/breeders and some expensive purchases from elsewhere, it is notable that those yearlings selected by Balding and Hetherington are invariably relatively inexpensive purchases, even if they have emanated from the more select sales. The aforementioned Berkshire Shadow and Masekela cost a total of 70,000gns, from Tattersalls October Books 1 and 2 respectively. In previous TDN interviews, those horses' owners, Paul Spickett and Mick and Janice Mariscotti, have been fulsome in their praise for the part Emma Balding plays in finding their runners.

“I had a very good mentor, which was Andrew's mum, who told me in no uncertain terms not to spend too much money,” said Spickett at Royal Ascot after accepting the trophy for Berkshire Shadow's victory. The Balding team also bought Spickett's St Leger runner-up and listed winner Berkshire Rocco (Fr) (Sir Percy {GB}) for €50,000 from the Goffs Orby Sale.

The Mariscottis are enthusiastic participants at the sales alongside the Baldings, with recent purchases including the G2 Queen's Vase winner Dashing Willoughby (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}) and G1 Caulfield Cup hopeful Le Don De Vie (GB) (Leroidesanimaux {BRZ}), bought respectively for 70,000gns and 50,000gns. Both have subsequently been either sold or part-sold at a healthy profit to Australian connections, which Balding attests can be a huge advantage in the purchase of staying-bred yearlings.

“There's also the secondhand value as jumpers. You've got it both ways really,” she says.

Balding has plenty of praise for the work of others at the sales, pointing to the thorough job done by the team behind Peter and Ross Doyle, which includes Anna Doyle and Carol Tinkler. She also singles out Eve Johnson Houghton as being a particularly good judge of a horse. 

She herself has no plans to take it easy when it comes to pounding the tiring sales beat, which she has enjoyed for decades, first alongside her husband Ian and later assisting her son.

“We were very lucky in the early days because Ian trained mostly homebreds and didn't have to buy many horses,” she says. “But those he did, the owners very much wanted him to buy them. And fine, if you're used to using an agent, and Andrew is much, much better with agents than Ian was. But people in the old days, they just said, 'This is the budget. I'd like to know what your short list is, but just go and do it'. And they never turned up at the sale. So you weren't having to try and explain to them why you liked something.”

Balding continues, “Mick and Janice are great and they do more work on the catalogue probably, but both they and Paul allow you to put horses up to them and for you to justify why you've put them up rather than the other way around. And of course, that makes it so much easier. They don't mind first-season sires, they don't mind you buying horses that have got staying pedigrees. So it enables you to get the better bargains.”

That lack of constraint is a freedom which some agents do not have, as Balding acknowledges. 

“I think it is difficult for agents,” she says. “I'm hopeless in that I cannot look through the catalogue and turn down pages. Tess has been extremely instrumental in the last six or seven years but the only way I feel I'm doing reasonable work on the catalogue is to try and look at as many horses as I can. And they don't have to be big consignors, I don't mind first foals, I don't mind late foals. I don't mind so many different things, but I just cannot do that bit of turning down pages.”

Even with an open mind and book, Balding has certain likes and dislikes, and is quick to stress the importance of temperament.

“Personally, I'm not a heavy shoulder person, and heavy shoulder, back of the knee is an absolute no-no for me,” she explains. “But the thing that taught me the biggest lesson of the lot was going out to the Hong Kong international day many years ago now, and seeing all those Group 1 horses walking around in the morning, going out and doing whatever work they were doing, and seeing how few were perfect.”

Balding continues, “And if you like something, forgive the fault. Mark Johnson's a great one for knowing what faults to forgive with his veterinary cap on. And you sort of know what can be trained on your own gallops. But it isn't an exact science, and anybody who pretends it is, is living on a different planet to me. There is so much luck involved.”

She adds, “If they aren't too doped, you can tell quite a bit about temperament, and you can tell their attitude when they are coming in and out of their box and doing all the boring bits. You can still just tell what their mind is like. When you're rattling around, you're sort of always looking out the corner of your eye when you're moving onto the next one, to just see how the one you've just seen is going back in the box. And temperaments can come right but if they're upset by the sale, they're going to be upset the first time they go to the races, aren't they?”

As Balding speaks to TDN she has just completed the Tattersalls Ireland September Sale in Newmarket, at which the team from Kingsclere signed for 10 yearlings, and is preparing for a busy couple of weeks back in the town for the Tattersalls October Sale.

“I absolutely love it,” she says. “I don't mind going home before the actual sale starts, but the foraging I love, and just seeing the horses and the people. Some of them meet the horses at the sales, but quite a few of them have been with them for months and it is quite fun talking to them. I hate selling horses myself, absolutely hate it. So I really admire the personalities involved that don't mind doing it.”

And she has a valid reason for continuing her trawling of the sales grounds in that it is vital in informing her decisions when it comes to the mating plans for her mares at Kingsclere Stud.

She notes, “I said to Andrew a few years ago, 'Please, please don't stop me looking, because it's the only way I can decide what stallions I'm going to use next year.' I think if you see the type they're producing you have a little bit of an idea of what shape you want to go for, as well as temperaments, and the new stallions, and the third-season stallions, which are probably the ones I can afford as they have come down in price a bit. You're getting a bit of an idea of whether they're maintaining their stock or whether you do want to risk using them when they haven't quite hit the jackpot yet.” 

Balding has certainly done her homework well. She rarely uses expensive or obviously fashionable stallions, and in Ka Ying Star (GB) and Ranch Hand (GB) she has bred the top-rated runners by Cityscape (GB) and Dunaden (Fr) respectively. More notably and certainly satisfyingly, Kingsclere Stud has also bred the best runners by two former stars of the Kingsclere stable in the Group 1 winners Side Glance (GB) (Passing Glance {GB}) and Elm Park (GB) (Phoenix Reach {Ire}). Side Glance's sire was also a Group 2-winning Balding homebred whose first two dams and their sires Robellino and Mill Reef were also trained at Kingsclere.

Despite such success, and her service to breeding and racing as a trustee of the TBA and founder member of the Retraining of Racehorses charity, Balding still expresses some surprise at her recent prestigious award. 

She says, “When I look at all the names on the bronze, I mean, those people have contributed so much to the industry. Kirsten [Rausing] and going back to Nat Frieze, some amazing people. So I was unbelievably flattered.”

Few in the business will disagree with the decision to bestow such an honour on Emma Balding, whose tireless work behind the scenes  at home and on the sales beat continues to be a fundamental part of the success of the Kingsclere operation.

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Newsells Park Launches Digital Catalogue

Newsells Park Stud has launched a digital catalogue for its 29-horse draft for Book 1 of the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale from Oct. 5 to 7. The Newsells Park Stud Book 1 consignment includes 19 siblings to black-type winners.

Julian Dollar, Newsells Park Stud general manager, said, “Last year demonstrated the need and importance of showcasing our yearlings online before the actual sales. Our digital catalogue features photographs and videos of the yearlings, as well as the latest updates to the pedigrees, interactive race videos, and cross stakes winners to ensure potential buyers across the world have as much information as possible. We also look forward to seeing buyers in a few weeks at the Tattersalls October Book 1 Sale which has proved so successful for us in the past.”

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Omens Stronger Than Ever As Tattersalls October Approaches

Best horse in the world. Check. Top-rated miler. Check. The only two horses to win three Group 1 races in three different countries in 2021. Check. Highest-rated turf horse in America. Check. Most exciting juvenile in Europe. Check.

When a sale can boast all of these as its graduates in a single season then it's not doing badly at all, but then the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale–and Book 1 in particular–has long been a world leader, both for its results and for its pull of potential buyers from across the globe. But even by the sale's own lofty standards, the results of the yearlings to have passed under the watchful eye of the Tattersalls fox during the first week of October have reached another level in this first year of semi-normality following the pandemic.

Make no mistake, what happens on the racecourse is far more important than any blockbuster results in the sales ring. Performance is the driver for that investment, and while the sport continues to attract fresh investors even as we lose some old, beloved patrons, it makes sense that those with the means to attempt to gather nascent Thoroughbred excellence will turn to the source of such current luminaries as St Mark's Basilica (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}), Palace Pier (GB) (Kingman {GB}), Hurricane Lane (Ire) (Frankel {GB}), Domestic Spending (GB) (Kingman {GB}) and Native Trail (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}).

“Every now and then even we're surprised by the extraordinary quality and success that comes out of Book 1 of the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale, and 2021 really has been fairly incredible. Not a weekend goes by without something new to shout about, something new to focus on,” says Tattersalls's marketing director Jimmy George as he and his team in Newmarket draw breath between a lively first edition of the Somerville Yearling Sale and the start of two weeks of frenetic activity for the October Sale from Oct. 5.

He continues, “St Mark's Basilica is the most amazing flagship for the October Yearling Sale. He hasn't been beaten since he won the Dewhurst. I mean this is a very serious horse with a huge pedigree, and I think he sums up what Book 1 is about. It's where the owners come to find the best horses with the best pedigrees and he is the epitome of that, as is Hurricane Lane.”

St Mark's Basilica is not exactly an everyman horse. In his yearling class of 2019, the son of French champion sire Siyouni was one of 10 Book 1 horses to sell for a seven-figure sum, though his price of 1.3 million gns was a little over a third of that paid for the top lot that year. Hurricane Lane looks a bargain now for Godolphin, who bought him from his breeder Philippa Cooper at 200,000gns, while fellow Group 1-winning graduates of that same sale include Pretty Gorgeous (Ire), Aunt Pearl (Ire), Campanelle (Ire) and Teona (GB). The year before Palace Pier had commanded a 600,000gns price tag. Again, he was expensive, but not when one considers his immense value now as one of the most enticing stallion prospects of 2022.

International Appeal

It is at this level of the market more than any other that yearlings are not merely future racehorses but foundation mares and stallions in the making. At least that's the hope. And the array of top-level pedigrees on offer is all the draw needed to lure an international buying bench.

“A recurring feature for Book 1 that has become even more pronounced in the last five to 10 years is the particular success in Australia and North America,” notes George. “I think in both cases, we've got something that isn't readily available in their home countries. So for Australians, it is being able to buy yearlings that are capable of actually staying further than a mile. And that's not a criticism, it's an observation of the way the breed has evolved in Australia, and the emphasis on speed, and the make and shape of most of the stallions. But a lot of their middle-distance races are the most valuable races in their calendar by a wide margin. So it was a logical extension to buy those horses in training, and then to move to the next step and focus on buying them as yearlings. And the guys doing it have done incredibly well.”

Russian Camelot (Ire) became one of the poster boys for the sale, and of the Group 1 winners to have emerged from Book 1 during the 2020 season, he was also the least expensively bought at 120,000gns by Jeremy Brummitt for a syndicate with trainer Danny O'Brien. Having made history as the first northern hemisphere-bred horse to win a Derby in Australia, the son of Camelot (GB) is now at Widden Stud and has covered around 140 mares this year.

“Russian Camelot was the best possible advertisement for the October Yearling Sale in Australia,” George adds. “That sort of success can't fail to spread the word and catch the attention of buyers, and that success breeds success.”

Australia doesn't have the monopoly, however, and anyone who followed the turf racing at Saratoga this summer will have spotted an undeniably familiar ring to some of the pedigrees. As Bill Finley outlined in these pages recently, Tattersalls graduates have dominated the grass fixtures at the Spa, and there has been notable success at the Breeders' Cup, too.

“I think there's two strands to that in some ways,” says George, who has recently returned from Saratoga. “One, again, it reflects the quality of the stock that the buyers will find at Book 1, but also it's a tribute to these guys who've come over from America with a game plan. We're really fortunate with the stallions that we have at the moment in Europe. The current top 10 sires in Britain and Ireland, some of them are game changers in any era, but they're all in there together at the moment, the likes of Frankel (GB), Galileo (Ire), Dubawi (Ire), Sea The Stars (Ire), Lope De Vega (Ire), Dark Angel (Ire), Kingman (GB). They're real superstars.”

He continues, “And these guys came over, they focused on the quality, they focused on a sector of the market that they felt provided them with a good chance of being competitive and getting value for money, and their results have been phenomenal. In particular, it's the Mike Ryan, Chad Brown, Seth Klarman, Peter Brant axis. They were the pioneers in the recent wave of American interest and you can only applaud them. And obviously, their success has caught the attention of other folk in America. Last year, the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf was won by Aunt Pearl (Ire), who was the second Book 1 filly to win that particular race in three years [after Newspaperofrecord (Ire)]. Liz Crow and Bradley Weisbord were I think inspired by the success of the others.”

While the big prices make the headlines at sale time, the Tattersalls team has long been at pains to emphasise the range of fare on offer, even at Book 1.The launch of the Book 1 Bonus connected to the sale's graduates has resulted in around £6.5 million being paid out on top of prize-money, while a recent notable double Tattersalls graduate picked up an extra £125,000 bonus for being a Group 1-winning graduate of the Craven Breeze-up Sale. The horse in question is Godolphin's unbeaten Native Trail, who was bought last October for 67,000gns by breeze-up pinhooker Norman Williamson and Mags O'Toole. He tops the list of 2-year-olds in training this year with the next five colts directly beneath him at the time of writing–Ebro River (Ire) (Galileo Gold {Ire}), Point Lonsdale (Ire) (Australia {GB}), Bayside Boy (Ire) (New Bay {GB}), Lusail (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}) and Dr Zempf (GB) (Dark Angel {Ire})–all having been bought at either Book 1 or 2.

“That is another key message for the sale now,” George says. “It isn't just about beauty parades and extraordinary prices, these top-class horses are coming out at every level of the market. So Native Trail, at 67,000gns, is the highest-rated 2-year-old in Europe by a very wide margin.”

He adds, “For some, the Book 1 Bonus is a game-changer. There's a number of trainers out there who've won more than 10 Book 1 bonuses, with the highest number being 20, which is Mark Johnston. Kevin Ryan and Ger Lyons have also won a huge number. These are trainers that really now focus on the sale who may not previously have done so. There are four 2-year-olds this year that won Book 1 bonuses winning their maiden and have since gone on to win Group 2 or 3 races as 2-year-olds that cost less than 100,000gns, including Atomic Jones (Fr) last weekend.”

Also on that list are the G2 Coventry S. winner Berkshire Shadow (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}), a 40,000gns purchase, as well as G3 Acomb S. winner Royal Patronage (Fr) (Wootton Bassett {GB}), who was bought for 62,000gns, and G2 Richmond S. winner Asymmetric (Ire) (Showcasing {GB}), a 65,000gns yearling.

“People are buying these top-class horses in all sectors of the market, so this is a sale that has become all things to all people, and is rewarding people with prize-money and quality,” George adds.

This Time Around

What then can we expect to see at Park Paddocks this October? The abbreviated answer is plenty. For a start there are the full- or half-siblings to the young stallions Golden Horde (GB) (lot 10), Advertise (GB) (lot 39), Shalaa (Ire) (lot 46), Arizona (Ire) (lot 110), Phoenix Of Spain (Ire) (lot 130), Blue Point (Ire) (lot 257), Aclaim (Ire) (lot 386), and Havana Grey (GB) (lot 420). Also in this category is the Dubawi (Ire) half-sister to Arc winner Waldgeist (GB) (Galileo {Ire}) who is likely to get the final day of Book 1 off to a rousing start when she appears as lot 336 from the Newsells Park Stud draft as the first in the ring on the Thursday.

Then there are the close relations to some of this year's stars. Highclere Stud's 23-strong draft includes plenty of gems, not least lot 405, the Almanzor (Fr) half-brother to Palace Pier, and lot 274, a colt by Kingman (GB) out of the 1000 Guineas winner Sky Lantern (Ire) (Red Clubs {Ire}) and a half-brother to the G1 Falmouth S. winner Snow Lantern (GB) (Frankel {GB}).

Croom House Stud, whose previous graduates of the sale include the late Zoffany (Ire), offers a Lope De Vega (Ire) half-sister to the Australia (GB) brothers Broome (Ire) and Point Lonsdale (Ire) as lot 305.

One of the stand-out breeders of the year, Tally-Ho Stud, consigns lot 279, a filly by their champion first-season sire Mehmas (Ire) who is a half-sister to the G1 Keeneland Phoenix S. winner Ebro River (Ire) (Galileo Gold {Ire}).

Early in the sale, Ballylinch Stud will offer an Australia (GB) half-sister to 1000 Guineas runner-up Saffron Beach (Ire) (New Bay {GB}) as lot 15, and she will be swiftly followed by a Lope De Vega (Ire) half-brother to the Classic winner Just The Judge (Ire) (Lawman {Fr}) (lot 16).

Kirsten Rausing has been enjoying a record-breaking season on the track, both with runners in her own colours and with graduates of her Lanwades and Staffordstown studs. In Book 1, Staffordstown's select draft consists of two of the nine colts in the catalogue by the late champion sire Galileo (Ire), with lot 57 being a half-brother to the Group 1 winners Time Warp (GB) and Glorious Forever (GB), both sons of Archipenko. That same stallion also features as the broodmare sire of lot 134, the Galileo colt out of Rausing's G1 British Champions Fillies & Mares S. winner Madame Chiang (GB).

Kildaragh Stud brings a colt with broad international appeal in lot 128, a colt from the second crop of Saxon Warrior (Jpn) who is a three-parts brother to Japanese Derby winner Deep Brillante (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}).

Among the 24 yearlings by Dark Angel (Ire) in Book 1 is Ballyphilip Stud's full-brother to the recently retired star sprinter Battaash (Ire) (lot 379), while Kingman has a huge entry of 43 youngsters in the sale, including a colt out of Meon Valley Stud's dual Group 1 winner Speedy Boarding (GB) (Shamardal) (lot 288).

Frankel's dominance in the sire ranks this year is backed up by his emerging presence as a broodmare sire and he features in this role through his G2 Lowther S.-winning daughter Queen Kindly (GB), whose filly by Dubawi (Ire) is offered by Kilfrush Stud as lot 223. Meanwhile, the Frankel colt out of G1 Queen Elizabeth II S. winner Persuasive (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}) could be one of the stars of the Cheveley Park Stud draft as lot 201.

This is the sole year that buyers will have a chance to pick up a yearling by the late Roaring Lion, and his 10 youngsters consigned to Book 1 include lot 231, a half-brother to the high-class stayers Subjectivist (GB) (Teofilo {Ire}) and Sir Ron Priestley (GB) (Australia {GB}). Also featured is lot 343, from Woodcote Stud, the Roaring Lion half-brother to dual Group 1 winner Poet's Word (GB) (Poet's Voice {GB}).

Caution Still Advised

While the British government's rules currently allow for bloodstock sales to be conducted in a far less restrictive manner than those held this time last year, Jimmy George still sounds a note of caution when it comes to the unavoidable subject of Covid.

He says, “We've staged two sales, the first one being the August Sale and then the Somerville Yearling Sale, with the gates thrown open to allcomers and restrictions lifted. We're still very conscious that we need to be sensible, there will still obviously be multiple stations where people can sanitise hands, etc., and we, like most walks of life, have gone down the route of personal choice when it comes to people wearing masks.”

He adds, “When the world caved in, metaphorically, last March, it was really troubling for everybody, so to find ourselves 18 months later still talking about the wretched Covid but still standing is a relief. Everybody involved in the Thoroughbred business can certainly look back with a degree of pride in how they coped with everything that was being thrown at them and how they carried on. And we focused on that at Tattersalls, as far as we possibly could, to stage sales in as normal a manner as we could. The key thing globally about the bloodstock business is that the wheels did keep turning, and we were all very fortunate, and we have to extend real gratitude to everybody who made that happen.”

He continues, “We're lucky enough to conduct an awful lot of what we do outdoors, which is a big bonus for the sort of business model that bloodstock sales have. And it's been great actually to see people back at Park Paddocks without restrictions and to feel a real vibrance around the place. There has been a feel of optimism and enthusiasm, and just a happiness to be back. It's pretty well business as usual, whilst we remain conscious that we still all have to be very sensible.”

The post Omens Stronger Than Ever As Tattersalls October Approaches appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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