Order Restored With Euro Quartet

LEXINGTON, KY–Everything must fall the right way, no doubt, to win any horse race, let alone one on the greatest of stages. There were many dominoes that fell that led to Order Of Australia (Ire) (Australia {GB}) getting a start in Saturday’s GI Breeders’ Cup Mile at Keeneland, and as the English and Irish Guineas winners Kameko (Ire) (Kitten’s Joy) and Siskin (First Defence) toiled in behind, it was a dark horse-indeed, the longest shot in the field at 73-1-that burst from the pack in midstretch to lead home an Aidan O’Brien-trained trifecta from Circus Maximus (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) and Lope Y Fernandez (Fr) (Lope De Vega {Ire}). Given O’Brien’s record at the Breeders’ Cup, it is quite remarkable that the great trainer’s three runners here were no shorter than 10-1. Even more surprising is that O’Brien had never before won the Mile, but he amended that record with aplomb on Saturday.

When Order Of Australia traveled across from Ireland last week, he wasn’t even in the race, having been placed on the also eligibles list as the 15th horse in a maximum field of 14. Just hours after leading the Ballydoyle string through their first spin over the Keeneland dirt on Thursday, the 3-year-old was in the Mile with the scratch of William Haggas’s One Master (GB) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}) after the 6-year-old mare had tied up.

Just a further few hours after that, Order Of Australia’s plans changed again when his rider Christophe Soumillon tested positive for COVID-19, ruling him out of his two rides at the meeting. Soumillon’s fellow Frenchman, the in-form Pierre-Charles Boudot, stepped up to deputise, and in fact the rising star rider was a huge beneficiary of others’ misfortunes on Saturday due to the virus; Ioritz Mendizabal had ridden the James Fanshawe-trained Audarya (Fr) (Wootton Bassett {GB} to win the G1 Prix Jean Romanet in August and finish third behind Tarnawa (Ire) (Shamardal) in the G1 Prix de l’Opera, and had been set to travel to Kentucky to partner the 4-year-old filly in the GI Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Turf before a positive COVID test stopped him getting on the plane. Audarya and Boudot bested the six-time American Grade I winner and 3-1 favourite Rushing Fall (More Than Ready) at 12-1 in that mile and a quarter contest to make Fanshawe a perfect one-for-one at the meeting. Audarya and Order Of Australia were just Boudot’s fourth and fifth mounts in Breeders’ Cup races, and while he has been ascending the ranks in Europe for some time, he has assured his status as a world-class jockey.

“It’s a dream come true,” Boudot said of his Breeders’ Cup double. “It is only by chance to get these rides and I’m sorry for Ioritz Mendizabal and Christophe Soumillon. It’s a difficult situation with COVID, but I was given two nice opportunities. I’m over the moon.”

Order Of Australia, fourth in the G1 Irish Derby and seventh in the G1 Prix du Jockey Club this spring, broke his maiden over the all-weather at Dundalk on Sept. 18. He is a three-quarter-brother to Iridessa (Ire) (Ruler of the World {Ire}), who made history of her own at last year’s Breeders’ Cup when making her trainer Joseph O’Brien the youngest-winning conditioner ever at the meeting in the Filly & Mare Turf.

Audarya had franked the form of the Aga Khan and Dermot Weld’s Tarnawa, and that 4-year-old filly obliged four races later in the G1 Turf to make it three straight Group 1 wins. Tarnawa, remarkably, had been the second of Soumillon’s two rides at the Breeders’ Cup, and as Soumillon served his isolation in Lexington that ride was picked up by Colin Keane, who had come to Kentucky to ride Siskin in the Mile.

Another weighing room star inevitably on the minds of many after Tarnawa’s victory was Pat Smullen, who served a long and successful tenure as stable jockey to Weld. Smullen retired from race riding in the spring of 2019 after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, and tragically passed away in September aged 43 following a courageous battle in which his courage and fundraising efforts were life-changing for many others.

Tarnawa led home an exacta of European-trained fillies in the Turf, with Ballydoyle’s ever-reliable Magical (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) delivering once again to be second. She had filled the same spot behind Enable (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}) in the 2018 edition of the same race at Churchill Downs.

It was the first win at the Breeders’ Cup for Weld, and in fact that was a major theme on the day for the European contingent. It was another veteran Group 1-winning mare, the 4-year-old Glass Slippers (GB) (Dream Ahead), who got the ball rolling earlier in the day on Saturday for team Europe after a blank Friday, bursting from the pack in midstretch to give trainer Kevin Ryan and jockey Tom Eaves their first Breeders’ Cup winner. It was also a fairytale result for Terry and Margaret Holdcroft’s Bearstone Stud. The Shropshire nursery bred both Glass Slippers and her winning dam Night Gypsy (GB) (Mind Games {GB}), and while the Holdcrofts offer some of their small yearling crop at auction each year, Glass Slippers was one they held on to. She has validated that decision many times over, having won last year’s G1 Prix de l’Abbaye as well as the G1 Flying Five S. in September. Glass Slippers was the first European-trained winner of the Turf Sprint, and Ryan was already putting a return trip to the 2021 Del Mar Breeders’ Cup on the radar in the immediate aftermath of Saturday’s race.

“Why not?” Terry said. “Kevin and Margaret [Holdcroft] are going to keep her in training. We don’t get a lot of time with these horses. If everything goes right, we’d love to come back.”

Mark Pennell, stud manager of Bearstone Stud, said, “She’s so cool. Wherever she travels, she just seems to thrive on it. There was something different about her today. She got very excited, pawing the ground and wanted to get on with it.

“It’s just massive for everybody because we’re not a massive breeding operation; we don’t keep many horses to race. We lost the mare and decided that we were always going to keep that filly from a foal. She always looked like an athlete. I’ve worked with Terry and Margaret for 40 years and to get a horse like this at the end, it’s been worthwhile. If you’re persistent and keep trying, you’ll get one. We kept her, and raced her, and broke her in at home–we’ve done absolutely everything with her and it’s just been unbelievable. I can’t tell you the number of messages I’ve had off people that have been in the racing industry for years; it’s just been amazing. It’s just phenomenal and she’s really put us on the map.”

Audarya, likewise, was the first Breeders’ Cup starter and winner for longtime Newmarket trainer James Fanshawe. The progressive bay has hit her best stride this year over a mile and a quarter, and she put an exclamation point on a stellar year for Coolmore’s recruit Wootton Bassett (GB). The son of Iffraaj (GB) had long promised to explode into the major leagues, and he fulfilled expectations in major fashion in 2020. His 14 stakes winners this year is more than double what he has achieved any other season, and in addition to Audarya includes G1 Prix de l’Abbaye scorer Wooded (Fr), who bested Glass Slippers by a neck in her Abbaye defense at ParisLongchamp on Oct. 4.

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Adlerflug Sophomores Face Off in Munich Showpiece

Gestut Auenquelle’s G1 Deutsches Derby runner-up Torquator Tasso (Ger) (Adlerflug {Ger}) and Christoph Holschbach and Thomas Krauth’s Derby sixth Dicaprio (Ger) Adlerflug {Ger}) lock horns for a third time in Sunday’s G1 Allianz Grosser Preis von Bayern at Munich, Germany’s penultimate pattern race of the year. The pair head the betting for the 12-furlong stamina test and were separated by a whisker when the former emerged victorious in Hoppegarten’s Oct. 3 G1 Grosser Preis von Berlin last time.

A solid domestic defence also features sophomore distaffers Tabera (GB) (Gleneagles {Ire}), who snagged last month’s G3 Preis der Deutschen Einheit at Hoppegarten, and Stefan Hahne’s G3 Grosser Preis der Mehl-Mulhens-Stiftung runner-up Sunny Queen (Ger) (Camelot {GB}). Stall Dusselforf Fighters’ Walderbe (Ger) (Maxios {GB}), who annexed Rome’s Oct. 25 G2 Gran Premio Del Jockey Club in his most recent start, adds another level of resistance.

Britain’s four-strong challenge includes Charlie Appleby representative Secret Advisor (Fr) (Dubawi {Ire}), who ran second in Newmarket’s June 7 Listed Buckhounds S. last time, and the Ralph Beckett-trained duo Manuela de Vega (Ire) (Lope de Vega {Ire}) and Antonia de Vega (Ire) (Lope de Vega {Ire}). Both have won twice since running second and fourth, respectively, in last year’s renewal.

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Pearl Another Breeders’ Cup Gem

LEXINGTON, KY–The European-trained runners may have been shut out on opening day of the Breeders’ Cup at Keeneland, but there would have been plenty of smiling faces in Ireland, France and England on Friday evening as ‘TDN Rising Star’ Aunt Pearl (Ire) (Lope de Vega {Ire}) kept her perfect record intact with a powerful front-running score in the GI Juvenile Fillies Turf under Frenchman Florent Geroux for trainer Brad Cox. Aidan O’Brien’s Mother Earth (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}) made up significant ground late to grab second, mowing down the Ringfort Stud-bred Miss Amulet (Ire) (Sir Prancealot {Ire})-herself a revelation this season in winning two stakes races after being purchased for £7,500 as a yearling-who checked in third. Stonestreet Stables’ G1 Prix Morny and G2 Queen Mary S. winner Campanelle (Ire) (Kodiac {GB}) faded to fourth after chasing Aunt Pearl’s five-length lead early.

Bred by the partnership of John Malone’s Ballylinch Stud and Frenchman Lucien Urano’s Ecurie des Charmes, Aunt Pearl was presented in the ring during Book 1 of the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale last year. At 280,000gns, she was the most expensive of nine fillies bought between Books 1 and 2 by Liz Crow and Brad Weisbord of BSW Bloodstock, who were shopping at the sale for the first time for a new venture headed by prominent American owners Sol Kumin and Michael Dubb to target European-bred fillies to run on the turf in the U.S.

“We put a group together and Mike and I were the first two who were apart of it, and then we filled it in with a few others,” Kumin explained. “They [Weisbord and Crow] went over there and did all the hard work and it was obviously a terrific job by the team scouting this horse out. From the beginning she was one of the better ones of the group and she’s probably turned out to be the best one.”

If all this sounds familiar, it should: two years previously, agent Mike Ryan had shopped Book 1 for Klaravich Stables and unearthed another daughter of Lope De Vega, Newspaperofrecord (Ire). Like Aunt Pearl, Newspaperofrecord won her first two starts by open lengths before wiring this race at Churchill Downs. For Kumin in particular, the Juvenile Fillies Turf is a race he is building an enviable record in; he won it for the first time in 2014 at Santa Anita with Lady Eli (Divine Park).

Aunt Pearl isn’t the only Grade I star for American connections to have graduated from Book 1 last year; agent Ben McElroy picked out Campanelle for 190,000gns on behalf of Stonestreet, one of three he signed for. To add further clout, the seventh-place finisher in the Juvenile Fillies Turf, Editor At Large (Ire), is also by Lope De Vega and was purchased from Book 1 for 260,000gns by Mike Ryan for Peter Brant’s White Birch Farm.

Coronavirus understandably put somewhat of a damper on American invaders at Park Paddocks this October, but Irishmen Ryan and McElroy were both on the buyers’ list and Aunt Pearl’s win all but guarantees that the already formidable American participation will continue to rise at Tattersalls.

Aunt Pearl is the latest feather in the cap for Ballylinch Stud’s Lope De Vega, whose star has only continued to ascend over the years. He has had four Group 1 winners on three continents this year, with Newspaperofrecord adding the G1 Just a Game S. to her already illustrious record and Gytrash (Aus) and the 2-year-old Lucky Vega (Ire) becoming new top-level winners in Australia and Ireland, respectively. Lope De Vega’s G2 Champions Juvenile S. scorer Cadillac (Ire) was a respectable fourth in Friday’s G1 Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf for Alpha Racing and Jessica Harrington, while Godolphin’s G3 Tattersalls S. winner La Barrosa (Ire) is one to look forward to next year.

While European-trained runners failed to get a win on the board at the Breeders’ Cup on Friday, a few others in addition to Cadillac made favourable impressions. Battleground (War Front) made up ground late to be second in the Juvenile Turf under Ryan Moore, just missing emulating his dam Found (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) who won the GI Breeders’ Cup Turf the last time the championships were at Keeneland in 2015.

Owners Martin and Lisa Webb and trainer Nigel Tinkler kept the faith in jockey Rowan Scott, who rode out his claim this summer, bringing him over to ride G2 Flying Childers S. winner Ubettabelieveit (GB) (Kodiac {GB}) in the GII Juvenile Turf Sprint, and Scott gave the colt a beautiful ride to be third. Acting like a rider with plenty more experience under his belt, Scott kept a cool head when his mount blew the break, guiding him to the rail and letting him gradually pick off runners while taking the shortest route around the course. It is likely this is not the last we’ve heard from Scott, as well as Ubettabelieveit’s owners the Webbs, who were adamant on Thursday that a top four finish would spark big celebrations.

With a hugely formidable European contingent lined up for Saturday’s GI Breeders’ Cup Turf as well as two Guineas winners in the GI Mile, the second day of the Breeders’ Cup holds plenty of chances for trophies to be taken back across the Atlantic.

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Oisin Murphy Earns Second Champion Jockey Title

Last year’s champion jockey Oisin Murphy earned his second crown with 142 wins in 2020. William Buick closed to within nine wins, but could ultimately not make up the deficit at Newcastle on Friday. Murphy is currently at the Breeders’ Cup meeting at Keeneland. The retained rider for Qatar Racing, Murphy booted home Kameko (Kitten’s Joy) in the G1 QIPCO 2000 Guineas in June.

“I’m incredibly proud to have won a second champion jockey title and I’m extremely thankful for the team around me that have enabled me to do so–my agent, manager, driver, form-man, and family,” Murphy told Great British Racing. “It’s huge to win two jockeys’ championships in two years and beyond my wildest dreams. I tried my absolute best to do so and thank you to everyone who has helped along the way.

“I’m particularly proud of my strike rate for Andrew Balding. Sheikh Fahad allowed me to go wherever I wanted to and for that I must thank him and all the team at Qatar Racing too.”

Cieren Fallon won his second consecutive champion apprentice jockey title. It was the first time an apprentice earned back-to-back titles in 32 years. Fallon’s highlight was undoubtably Oxted (GB) (Mayson {GB}) in the G1 July Cup. Fallon is the retained second jockey for Qatar Racing.

“It’s an amazing achievement for me, it is something I set out to do after the success of last year,” said Fallon. “I’ve been very lucky to have the people I have around me to help me achieve these goals–my jockey coach, nutritionist, a great boss in Sheikh Fahad, William and Maureen Haggas, my mum and dad.

“They are all the best at what they do, so I’m very lucky to be in the position. Winning the July Cup with Oxted is obviously the greatest highlight of my year and a memorable day.”

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