True Self Upsets Channel Maker In Saudi

A winner over hurdles in Ireland, a multiple listed winner on the flat in the UK, a dual Group 3 winner in Australia and now a winner in Saudi Arabia: True Self (Ire) (Oscar {Ire}) has nearly done it all, and at age eight she appeared at the peak of her powers on Saturday when overhauling America's reigning champion turf horse Channel Maker (English Channel) in a beautifully executed ride by Hollie Doyle to win the $1-million Neom Turf Cup in Riyadh.

Dropping back to race midpack as the field passed the stands for the first time, True Self and Hollie Doyle bided their time patiently as For The Top (Arg) (Equal Stripes {Arg}), who was third in this race last year, carved out the pace with Channel Maker breathing down his neck. Channel Maker, under Joel Rosario, poked his head in front midway down the backstretch and he and For The Top raced in tandem around the second bend until Channel Maker made a decisive move to kick clear at the quarter pole. The American looked a likely winner for a few strides, but True Self soon loomed large down the middle of the track, lengthening and cutting into Channel Maker's lead with every stride as Channel Maker battled on running with his head held high. True Self cut her rival down inside the final furlong and won by a length and a quarter drawing away. The locally trained Emirates Knight (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}), a 50,000gns purchase from Roger Varian's stable from the Tattersalls Autumn Horses-in-Training Sale last year, was third.

“To be fair, I thought she was my best winning chance of the day,” said Hollie Doyle. “I watched all her performances and I thought she was well up to winning this. The step back in trip was an incredibly clever move by Mr Mullins. She's a strong traveller usually over further trips, and that helped her today. They went an even, generous gallop all the way round. We got racing quite soon so the race fell apart quite early, but luckily I managed to latch on to the back of Ryan Moore [on Tilsit] and I got the splits up the straight.”

Joining the Willie Mullins yard at four, True Self went unbeaten in her first three tries that season, going as far as two miles over hurdles. After plying away under those conditions through her 4-year-old campaign, True Self dropped down to 2800 metres to take the Listed Beckford S. at Bath and to 2000 metres to win the Listed James Seymour S. at Newmarket before seasons' end. She won the Listed Vintage Tipple S. the following spring before traveling to Australia to take the first of back-to-back editions of the 2600 metre G3 Queen Elizabeth S. during the Melbourne Cup Carnival at Flemington, with OTI Racing having bought into her ownership with the Three Mile House Partnership. She was sixth on this card last year in the 3000 metre Longines Turf H., this year known as the Red Sea Turf H. True Self was making her first start since the latest renewal of the Queen Elizabeth on Saturday.

Willie Mullins said after watching from his County Carlow base, “I'd like to congratulate Hollie on a fantastic ride. She's way more speed than we thought when we bought her as a bumper mare to go hurdling with. She just has a huge amount of speed. All the jockeys who have ridden her have said to me that a mile and a quarter suits her. I was happy enough with where Hollie had positioned herself and I imagine, without having talked to Hollie, that she was probably going as fast as she could over the first half of the race. Then, when the pace was injected as the American horse went up on the outside, I thought 'that's great, because they'll be coming back at the end.'

“Sure enough, that's what happened. Hollie just kept her head, kept the position we'd discussed–if we'd anything left in the tank we'd just wait and wait as long as she could. It looked like our mare just stayed on and on, while the one in front was just tying up.”

Mullins added, “We've had gale force winds here [in Ireland] and an inch of rain this morning, and I thought 'it'll be lovely over there.' But then I saw at the start you had lots of rain as well. So I thought 'that suits the mare–she'll feel more at home with that.'”

Looking to future targets for True Self, Mullins said, “We'll have a look; today's race and Australia at the end of this year in November, that's the main plan. So what we do in between times we haven't really thought about. The first part of the year's plan has worked out, and it will be probably on to Australia from here.”

Pedigree Notes

True Self is the lone stakes horse for the unraced Mukaddamah mare Good Thought (Ire), who died in 2015. She is one of just two stakes horses, in fact, under her first three dams, the other being her third dam Enterprisor (Ire) (Artaius)'s half-sister Commanche Chief, a Grade II winner in the U.S.

NEOM TURF CUP (Cond.), $1,000,000, King Abdulaziz, 2-20, 4yo/up, 2100mT, 2:10.57, gd to fm.
1-TRUE SELF (IRE), 121, m, 8, Oscar (Ire)-Good Thought (Ire),
   by Mukaddamah. O-Three Mile House Partnership & OTI
Partnership; B-Mr Don Cantillon (Ire); T-Willie Mullins.
£437,965. Lifetime Record: 2x Hwt Older Mare-Ire at 14f+,
MGSW-Aus, MSW & GSP-Eng, SW-Ire, 28-11-5-0, £923,666.
2-Channel Maker, 126, g, 7, English Channel-In Return, by
Horse Chestnut (Saf). ($57,000 RNA yrl '15 KEESEP) O-Wachtel,
G Barber, RA Hill & Reeves; B-Tall Oaks Farm (ON); T-William
Mott. £145,985.
3-Emirates Knight (Ire), 126, h, 5, Dark Angel (Ire)-Interim
Payment, by Red Ransom. (160,000gns wnl '16 TATNOV;
175,000gns RNA yrl '17 TATOCT; 75,000gns yrl '17 TATNOV;
50,000gns HRA '20 TATOCT) O-Abdullah A J Sh A Almutairi;
B-Gerard & Anne Correy (Ire); T-H Alshuwalb. £72,992.
Margins: 1 1/4, 4 3/4, HF. Also Ran: Saltonstall (GB), Tilsit, Gronkowski, Kuwait Currency, Star Of Wins (Ire), Four White Socks (GB), For The Top (Arg), Al Hamdany (Ire), Staunch (GB). Click for the Racing Post result. VIDEO.

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Classic Winner Balanchine Dies

Balanchine (Storm Bird-Morning Devotion, by Affirmed), who became the first Classic winner for Godolphin and Frankie Dettori when winning the 1994 G1 Epsom Oaks, has died aged 30. The chestnut mare had been pensioned from breeding duties for the past seven years and lived out her days at Sheikh Mohammed's Gainsborough Farm in Versailles, Kentucky.

Bred by Robert Sangster's Swettenham Stud, Balanchine was campaigned by Sangster during a 2-year-old campaign in which she won her two starts by a combined 10 lengths. Purchased thereafter by Sheikh Mohammed's elder brother Sheikh Maktoum, Balanchine was among the first cohort of horses wintered in Dubai by the Maktoum family, and her success in the season that followed spawned a programme within the operation that is still in place today. Beaten a short head in the G1 1000 Guineas, with the influential broodmare Coup De Genie a neck back in third, Balanchine regrouped to win the Oaks next out by 2 1/2 lengths over Deep Impact (Jpn)'s dam Wind In Her Hair (Ire) (Alzao), with Frankie Dettori aboard in the Godolphin blue. Balanchine's most memorable win, however, came three weeks later when she shipped to Ireland to take on the colts in the G1 Irish Derby. Traveling third on the inside early back in the Sheikh Maktoum silks, Balanchine moved into the two path and up to take the lead shortly before they straightened, getting first run on Sheikh Mohammed's favoured King's Theatre (Ire). That G1 Racing Post Trophy winner, who went on to beat older horses in the G1 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth S. next out, proved no match for the filly Balanchine, who drew clear to win by 4 1/2 lengths. That proved Balanchine's final win; she ran three times at four, her best finish being a second behind the G1 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe winner Carnegie (Ire) (Sadler's Wells) in the G3 Prix Foy.

Frankie Dettori, who was just 23 at the time that he won two Classics aboard Balanchine, reflected on his partnership with the mare in a 2019 interview with Horse Racing Ireland.

“I was over the moon after I'd won my first Classic on her at Epsom, and I thought the next step would be the Irish Oaks,” Dettori said. “But Sheikh Maktoum and Sheikh Mohammed were never short of a challenge and they decided to race against the colts in the Irish Derby. I thought 'God, this may be a step too far.' Obviously, I was proven wrong, because she won.

“It was my only Irish Derby win, and I was only 23, so I was ecstatic and delighted, and it was a massive feat for a filly. She was a one-off. It was a bold call to make a run against the colts, and that was, I guess, the stepping stone for what Godolphin is now. She was the start.”

Balanchine's best produce was the French Group 2-placed Gulf News (Woodman). Her half-sister Red Slippers (Nureyev), however, has been an influential producer for Godolphin. She foaled the G1 Prix de Diane victress West Wind (GB) (Machiavellian) and Eastern Joy (GB) (Dubai Destination), the dam of five stakes winners headed by the dual G1 Dubai World Cup scorer Thunder Snow (Ire) (Helmet {Aus}).

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Irish Racecourses To Get Funding For Increased Stabling

Irish Racecourses will have the opportunity to increase stabling capacity after the board of Horse Racing Ireland approved a fund of €1-million to assist racecourses with that goal. A policy of one stable per horse at Irish racecourses was a key goal in the HRI Strategic Plan released last March and was also a key Covid safety requirement.

Jason Morris, HRIs director of racing, said, “The rule by which racecourses must provide each horse with their own stable has been in place since racing moved behind closed doors in June of last year for both human and equine disease prevention reasons. As a result, the number of horses running in some races at some racecourses is lower than it could be when the maximum stable capacity is reached. Field sizes have been reduced since last June for social distancing and other operational reasons, and the aim of the new Racecourse Stable Yard Expansion Scheme is to help racecourses to prepare for when we emerge from racing behind closed doors and the number of runners can safely revert to pre-Covid-19 levels.

“We have written to all racecourses to inform them of the new scheme which sets aside €1-million with the goal of increasing stabling capacity. The fund allows racecourses to avail of a grant of 40% of the cost of the construction of additional stable boxes and is similar to previous racecourse capital development programmes which have produced very positive results, both customer and industry facing, at so many racecourses. It will be the case going forward that racecourses which cannot accommodate maximum runners run the risk of only being able to stage seven- or even six-race cards, which could reduce their future fixture allocation.”

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Brittas House To Wrap Up Dispersal At Tatts Online Sale

The dispersal of the late Peter Magnier's Brittas House Stud will come to a close with offerings during Tattersalls's Online 23rd March Sale.

The 8-year-old We Are Ninety (Ire) (Thewayyouare) headlines the dispersal offerings, and the Listed Haras De Bouquetot Fillies Trial S. winner is offered alongside her filly foal by Calyx (GB). We Are Ninety is also set to be covered by first-season sire Sottsass (Fr). We Are Ninety boasts a deep pedigree, her second dam being Brigid (Irish River {Fr}), whose descendants include Group 1 winners Listen (Ire) (Sadler's Wells), Sequoyah (Ire) (Sadler's Wells), Henrythenavigator (Kingmambo) and Magician (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}). We Are Ninety's filly foal half-sister by Ten Sovereigns (Ire) will also be offered alongside a foster mare to be returned once the foal is weaned.

Two daughters of Galileo will be offered: the listed-winning Innocent Air (GB) (Galileo {Ire}) in-foal to the late Zoffany (Ire); and Zee Zee Gee (GB), a daughter of the Group 1-winning Zee Zee Top (GB) (Zafonic) and half-sister to dual Group 1 winner Izzi Top (GB) (Pivotal {GB}). Zee Zee Gee's yearling filly by No Nay Never will also be offered.

The dispersal is completed by the Hugo Palmer-trained 4-year-old filly Combine (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}), who recently won at Wolverhampton and is rated 95 by Timeform. Combine's first three dams are all stakes horses and her third dam, My Emma (GB) (Marju {Ire}), won the G1 Prix Vermeille and G1 Yorkshire Oaks.

“The Tattersalls Online platform made an auspicious debut when West End Girl sold for a UK and Irish record online price of £420,000 on the eve of Royal Ascot last year, and to be offering the final instalment of the Brittas House Stud Dispersal at our latest online sale demonstrates the confidence that vendors already have in our online product,” said Tattersalls Chairman Edmond Mahony. “We have already sold six figure lots from our online sales to Australia, Hong Kong, South Africa and the U.S. and the 23rd March Sale already features lots which look set to appeal to a global audience.”

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