Dozen Juveniles Line Up For Kentucky Derby Points Race in Japan

A field of 12 Japanese-bred 2-year-old colts descends on Kawasaki Racecourse Wednesday evening for the $490,090 Listed Zen-Nippon Nisai Yushun, a 1600-meter contest that serves as the second of four legs on the Japan Road to the Kentucky Derby. A total of 42 Derby points are on the line, to be awarded to the first five finishers on a scale of 20-10-6-4-2.

Aigle Noir (Jpn), a son of Eclipse Award winner Bricks and Mortar, looks for his fourth win from five starts overall and will try to remain undefeated on the dirt in the process. Fourth on turf debut at Hanshin in June, the dark bay graduated over 1700 meters at Kokura Sept. 2 and narrowly prevailed in a Tokyo allowance Oct. 14, defeating Amante Bianco (Jpn) (Henny Hughes). Aigle Noir stepped up to stakes company last time, besting the re-opposing Satono Phoenix (Jpn) (Henny Hughes) in the Listed Hyogo Junior Grand Prix Nov. 22 (see below, SC 7), while Amante Bianco further flattered the form with a handy success in the Cattleya S., the first of the Japanese Kentucky Derby points races at Tokyo three days later.

 

 

Forever Young (Jpn) (Real Steel {Jpn}) was purchased for ¥98 million ($720,603) as a yearling at the JRHA Select Sale and is flawless in his two starts to date. A son of GII Santa Ynez S. victress Forever Darling (Congrats) and from the family of Japanese Horse of the Year Zenno Rob Roy (Jpn) (Kris S.) , the Yoshito Yahagi trainee opened his account with a stylish four-length victory in an 1800-meter newcomers event at Kyoto Oct. 14 and was the facile winner of the Listed JBC Nisai Yushun at Mombetsu when last seen Nov. 4 (see below, SC 3). Ryusei Sakai rides the narrow second ante-post favorite.

 

 

Godolphin homebred Nasty Weather (Jpn) (Pyro) is also two from three on the dirt, while Seltsam (Jpn) (Henny Hughes)–a distant third to Aigle Noir and Satono Phoenix last time–is the lone group winner in the field, having upset the G3 Hakodate Nisai S. on the turf back in July.

None of the participants from the Cattleya S. presses on to this test, meaning that the winner takes over at the top of the standings. The series continues with the Listed Hyacinth S. at Tokyo Feb. 18 and the Fukuryu S. (allowance) at Nakayama Mar. 23.

The 2022 renewal was won by subsequent G2 UAE Derby hero and recent GI Breeders' Cup Classic runner-up Derma Sotogake (Jpn) (Mind Your Biscuits).

 

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Ballyhane Stalwart Dandy Man Dies at 20

Dandy Man (Ire), the classy sprinter from the sole crop of Mozart (Ire), has died at Ballyhane Stud at the age of 20.

As hardy as he was talented, Dandy Man was bred by Noel O'Callaghan at Mountarmstrong Stud from the G3 Molecomb S. winner Lady Alexander (Ire) (Night Shift), who is also the dam of G2 Queen Mary S. victrix Anthem Alexander (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}). He raced for five seasons, winning six of his 30 starts, initially for Con Collins in Ireland, then for his daughter Tracey, before he was bought by Godolphin and continued his career under the care of Saeed Bin Suroor. 

Already the winner of the G3 Palace House S. before switching to the Godolphin blue, Dandy Man added another Listed win to his two previous Listed victories in Ireland, and he was fourth, beaten a length, in the G1 King's Stand S. He had also been second in that same race behind Miss Andretti when trained by Tracey Collins, as well as finishing third in the G1 Nunthorpe S.

Dandy Man spent his entire stallion career at Joe Foley's Ballyhane Stud, and he has been represented by the Group/Grade 1 winner Peniaphobia (Ire), La Pelosa (Ire) and River Boyne (Ire). The latter now stands in Ireland at Tara Stud. Further group winners include Dandalla (Ire), Mooniesta (Ire) and this year's G3 Pride S. winner Novus (Ire).

Paying tribute to the horse who served 15 consecutive seasons on the Ballyhane roster, Foley said, “Dandy Man had been a great friend to so many people, starting with Con and Tracey Collins, and especially to all of us here at Ballyhane. 

“It was very hard to say goodbye to him, and we are grateful for all that he has given us over the years he has been here with us. He was like a member of our family. 

“I would also like to add a special word of gratitude to breeders who used him over the years.”

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Guillaume de Saint-Seine Elected President of France Galop

The 56 new France Galop committee members met on Tuesday, December 12 at ParisLongchamp racecourse and elected Guillaume de Saint-Seine as the new President of France Galop for a four-year term that starts immediately.

Three candidates addressed the new Committee. Saint-Seine received 25 votes in the first round, Jacques Détré got 17 and Louis de Bourgoing 14. The latter defected for the second round and gave his support to Détré, but Saint-Seine managed to obtain the required 29 votes to be elected in the second round, with Détré getting 25 votes (plus one blank and one void). 

Saint-Seine, aged 62, has bred and owned racehorses “for nearly 35 years”. He has been a member of France Galop's Committee since 2015 and was a board member between 2016 and 2019. 

In 2023, he has raced 23 horses, mostly in partnerships, as he's willing to share his passion with as many friends and outsiders as possible, labelling himself a natural and objective supporter of racing to the world. Among his best horses to date are G2 Critérium de Maisons-Laffitte and G3 Prix Eclipse winner Penny's Picnic (Fr), G1 Al Quoz Sprint and G3 Prix de Seine-et-Oise winner The Right Man (GB), and Listed winners Sagaroi (Fr) and The Fixer (Fr). He also bred 14 runners in 2023.

The new President has spent most of his career in banking in Paris and London. He is currently a member of the Executive Committee of Natixis Banking and Investment company as Head of Coverage. He is a graduate of IEP Paris and holds a post-graduate degree in Finance from Paris IX Dauphine University.

“My goal is to perpetuate our traditions and modernise our sport to catch up with today's world,” he announced in his address to the Committee prior to his election. He also vowed to aim for more stability and visibility, both from a strategic and an economic point of view. 

“Frequent changes are what struck me the most over the past eight years when I compare how Racing is conducted with my experience as a banker and advisor at Natixis. Not a year goes by without a change in the way owners' premiums are calculated, regional race meetings are scheduled, or how marketing strategies are geared. It is the opposite of what we need because our activity is long-term. Whether you are an owner, breeder, trainer or benevolent, you live in the long term. Without stability and visibility, you simply cannot plan and invest wisely. We all need a long-term approach. That is why we will decide together, as early as the first quarter of 2024, on strategic and budgetary guidelines for the next four years. We all need visibility and guarantees to bring growth back.”

The new president vows to apply the same strategic and financial rules to the PMU so that instead of a yearly plan, the historically monopolistic betting arm of the French racing institution will also have to set up its strategy for the next four years. 

“I want to work with the PMU as I do with the large companies I advise on a daily basis: as a committed partner,” said Saint-Seine minutes before his election.

The new president also declared after his election that he would work immediately and tirelessly so that “racing would return into the French public's heart and soul.”

Arnaud de Seyssel and Frédéric Landon were appointed vice-presidents, the former overseeing Flat racing while the latter, who presides over the Fontainebleau racecourse, would manage jump racing. A third vice-president was nominated to deal with regional affairs, Philippe Bouchara, who is also President of Vichy racecourse.

The nine other members of the board are Hervé d'Armaillé (owner-breeder, associated member), Anthony Baudouin (elected breeder), Nicolas de Chambure (owner-breeder, associated member), Charles-Hubert de Chaudenay (owner-breeder, associated member), Pauline Chehboub (regional elected owner), Nicolas Clément (elected trainer), Philippe Germond (elected owner) and Francis Teboul (elected owner).

In an interview published last weekend by French daily Jour de Galop, Saint-Seine announced that he would appoint the deputy managing director Henri Pouret, who is also in charge of racing operations, to succeed Olivier Delloye as France Galop's managing director

Contrary to the last two presidents of France Galop, Saint-Seine is still an active businessman. His opponents used that situation as an adverse argument, claiming that the candidate, who started his campaign long before former president Edouard de Rothschild announced that he wouldn't run for a fifth mandate, would be too busy to rule France Galop properly. 

However, the new France Galop president, who vows to use his professional network extensively to promote racing politically and commercially, stated in his candidacy speech, “I will be the president of France Galop, who will preside in the full sense of the word. This is my commitment to you. A France Galop that is proud of its traditions. A France Galop that wants to rely on its two-century-old tradition of racing while showing that our values are also modern and timeless. I want our community to trust France Galop to stay true to its commitments over a long enough period to invest wisely.”

Even though Guillaume de Saint-Seine has been around the administration of France Galop for a while – he also directed last year a commission dedicated to the evolution of France Galop's governance whose conclusions were rejected mainly by Rothschild's team – his election could mark the beginning of a new era in the management of French racing's affairs. Challenges lie ahead of us, as racing has quietly receded in French society, missed the opportunities represented by the opening of the online betting market in 2010, which it resisted rather than embraced, and finally failed to adapt its global system to an ever-faster evolving world.

Yet, all is not so gloomy on the continent. On the breeding side, French sires and their offspring perform internationally, the sales are booming, French jumpers abound and succeed in Britain and Ireland, prize-money is by far above anything one can find in Europe, and French racing remains as one of the soundest, fairest and most regulated racing institutions in the world.

Guillaume de Saint-Seine might be the new man to drive this sleeping giant out of its gloomy mood.

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Half-Brother to Stage Star Tops Day 1 of Goffs December NH Sale

The Goffs December National Hunt sale saw a leading €110,000 price for the top lot (157A, a wildcard entry) as the highest for a NH foal anywhere in 2023.

The session-topping lot by Walk In The Park (Ire) is a half-brother to multiple Grade I-scorer Stage Star (Ire) (Fame And Glory {GB}). Out of the graded-stakes winning jump mare Sparky May (GB) (Midnight Legend {GB}), the foal went to Richard Frisby, who also struck earlier for lot 101, a Blue Bresil colt, secured for €45,000.

David Cox of Baroda Stud, who consigned the colt on behalf of breeder Ruxley Holdings Ltd, said, “The late entry was made in order to strike while the iron is hot. Walk In The Park is leading the National Hunt sire table and Stage Star looked even better than last year when he won the Paddy Power Gold Cup last month impressively despite making a mistake.”

In total, 119 horses sold for a turnover of €1,957,000, up 27% from last season, with an average of €16,446, an increase of 8%. The selective market ruled the day, however, as the clearance rate came in at 61%.

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