Claiborne’s First-Crop Sires Send Strong Contingent to Keeneland

Following the passing of world-renowned international stallion More Than Ready this summer, four of his sons now stand in Kentucky in the hopes of carrying the torch for their accomplished sire.

Among them, Catholic Boy holds the distinction of earning Grade I victories on two surfaces. After collecting six graded wins over his three-year racing campaign, Catholic Boy launched his stud career at Claiborne Farm in 2020. The farm's Walker Hancock said that the $2.1 million earner, who is out a daughter of productive broodmare sire Bernardini, has all the criteria to replicate his sire's success.

“He has turned into a really gorgeous sire,” Hancock said. “He has the perfect mix of More Than Ready and Bernardini, which I think is appealing to breeders. He really fits the mold of a great stallion and we look for him to continue More Than Ready's legacy.”

The picture of versatility on the racetrack, Catholic Boy won the GIII With Anticipation S. at two in his second career start for Jonathan Thomas and then switched to dirt to take the GII Remsen S. As a sophomore, he tallied turf scores in the GIII Pennine Ridge S. and GI Belmont Derby Invitational S. and got his signature dirt Grade I in the 2018 Runhappy Travers S. He returned to the grass at four to take the GII Dixie S.

Launched at a stud fee of $25,000, Catholic Boy bred over 130 mares in his debut at Claiborne. This year his first crop of yearlings will go through the sales ring, but which surface will they ultimately excel on?

“They're kind of across the board,” Hancock explained. “They're a bit like More Than Ready in that you can get bay and chestnut, big and small. You can look at one Catholic Boy and say that this one looks like it's going to be dirt and then you look at the next one and say this one is going to be turf. He's really providing that versatility through his offspring that we saw him have on the track.”

At the breeding stock sales, Catholic Boy's first weanlings averaged over $60,000. With 20 of 24 sold, five youngsters sold for six figures. The Claiborne sire will be represented by nearly 60 yearlings at the Keeneland September Sale. Within that group, Claiborne will offer two in Book 2. Hancock said the pair is an accurate representation of the versatility Catholic Boy seems to be throwing.

Hip 714, a Catholic Boy colt out of Line (War Front) | Sara Gordon

Hip 638 is a filly out of the winning Speightstown mare Fashion Week. The yearling's second dam is Grade I-placed Theyskens' Theory (Bernardini), a half-sister to Breeders' Cup Juvenile champion Stevie Wonderboy (Stephen Got Even).

“We've had buyers come to the farm over the last two weeks and every single one of them seem to really like her,” Hancock said of the filly. “She has a real presence about her. She's a really pretty individual and she looks like she'll hopefully be one of Catholic Boy's highest-priced yearlings.”

Hip 714 is a colt out of the winning War Front mare Line, who hails from a long line of Claiborne-bred broodmares. Line's dam Wend (Pulpit) was a three-time graded winner on grass.

“It looks like he'll have a little turf influence in his athletic abilities,” Hancock explained. “We're really pleased with how he has progressed. He has really blossomed with sales prep and I think buyers will be pleased with what they see.”

As the son of a War Front mare, this colt is a result of the matings that Claiborne envisioned when they brought Catholic Boy to the farm with the hope of supporting broodmares by their flagbearing sire.

“One of our draws with Catholic Boy was that we have a lot of War Front mares and More Than Ready crosses really well with Danzig,” Hancock noted. “[The cross] has had a ton of success in Australia especially and I think we'll see it more and more here in America hopefully in the next couple of years. It's a good cross because some of the War Front mares aren't the biggest and leggiest, but Catholic Boy is really providing the kind of size and leg they might need.”

Claiborne will showcase yearlings by a second first-crop sire at Keeneland September with Demarchelier, who has over a dozen youngsters cataloged for the auction.

A regally-bred son of Dubawi–and the only stallion in Kentucky by the globally-successful Darley sire–Demarchelier was a 'TDN Rising Star' on debut for Peter Brant and Chad Brown in his lone juvenile start. At three, he defeated allowance company on the Keeneland turf and then showed an impressive turn of foot to take the GIII Pennine Ridge S. After incurring a career-ending injury in his next start, he retired to Claiborne.

Demarchelier strikes a pose | Sara Gordon

Hancock said their team was not sure how the talented bay would be received by the market with his short-but-impeccable turf resume, but he shared that they were thrilled with how breeders responded to the new stallion, who has stood for a fee of $5,000 in his first three years at stud.

Demarchelier bred 102 mares in his first crop, which we were more than happy with,” Hancock said. “[Despite] being a horse that was just three for three and with a very European pedigree, he really wasn't that hard of a sell thanks to Dubawi doing so well as an international sire. Peter Brant supported him heavily and he always told us that the horse had a ton of ability.”

While Catholic Boy seems to be throwing an array of types with his progeny, Hancock said that Demarchelier is definitely stamping his offspring.

“Every single one of them looks exactly like him. They're not the biggest, but they're really good movers. They look like they're going to be very turfy. If you've seen Dubawi, Demarchelier has a lot of his characteristics. Obviously Dubawi's sons are really excelling in Europe and we expect Demarchelier to do that here too. We have a lot of really good breeders behind the horse and I think when they hit the racetrack this time next year, they'll speak for themselves.”

For more TDN Features on first-crop yearling sires, click here

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Sir Prancealot Colt Tops WTBOA Sale

A colt by Sir Prancealot (Hip 80) topped the 55th WTBOA Summer Sale when purchased by the PT Syndicate for $80,000. The sale's leading consignor, Terry and Mary Lou Griffin's Griffin Place LLC, also sold Hip 46, a Midshipman colt out of Washington champion Bella Mia for $76,000, and Hip 34, a son of Sharp Azteca, was a $70,000 purchase. Both colts went to Dave Staudacher.

A total of 76 yearlings went through the sales ring with 68 selling for a $1,219,700 gross. The $17,677 average was up from 2021's $14,175 and the median rose to $12,000. The sale also traded 11 broodmares.

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16 Added to Texas Summer Yearling Sale

A total of 16 yearlings have been supplemented to the Texas Summer Yearling Sale, slated for Aug. 29 at Lone Star Park in Grand Prairie, Texas.

“The interest in our sale has been strong since we released our catalog late last month,” said TTA Sales Director Foster Bridewell. “These additions only help boost our sale and we're thrilled to offer these additional yearlings later this month.”

The Supplement Catalog features yearlings bred in Arkansas, Louisiana, Kentucky, Oklahoma, and Texas, including a Texas-bred filly by first-crop stallion Vino Rosso, winner of the

GI Breeders' Cup Classic. Additionally, a full-sister to 2021 Texas Two-Year-Old Colt/Gelding Champion Tengo Mis Papeles (My Golden Song) will be offered as Hip 223.

The interactive catalog, including the supplements (Hips 213-228), is available now at www.ttasales.com. The complete catalog is also available for download on the Equineline IPad App. Supplement Catalogs will also be available on the sales grounds and at the Lone Star Park Sales Pavilion.

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Arqana August: Back and Better Than Ever

Aside from perhaps the odd delay at the Channel Tunnel for British-based visitors heading to Deauville, the Arqana August Sale should be just about back to normal this year for the first time since 2019. A loaded plane will jet in direct from Saratoga on Thursday morning, when the scene will be set for three days of trade at the auction which routinely acts as the bellwether for the European yearling market.

Small changes to the format can be found this year in the fact that the August Sale is no longer comprised of an unofficial part one on Saturday and Sunday with a follow-up all-day session on Monday. This year, France's elite yearlings (plus some visitors) will be sold alphabetically throughout the three sessions, and with the French holidays meaning that racing takes place on Sunday and Monday, the sale will begin at the earlier time of 2 p.m. on Saturday, 15 Aug., with the two following sessions beginning after racing at 5 p.m. each day. The V.2 Sale, which was traditionally held just after the August Sale, has now been replaced by a new two-day auction in September.

So, that's the housekeeping done. What of the catalogue?

“Arguably it's even better than usual,” states Arqana's executive director Freddy Powell, and there is plenty of substance in his bold claim.

“We have a number of siblings to Group 1 winners, but it's not really even the numbers, it's the Group 1 races they won: the Champion S., two Arc winners, the Prix de Diane, a champion 2-year-old, a Derby winner. And we have the first foal out of a Prix de Diane winner; that's never happened before.”

Indeed, there is plenty to get one's teeth into when compiling lists, and agents working the sale in earnest will simply have to plump for the 'all show' option as they arrive at each new consignment around the sales grounds.

We'll be hearing more from individual vendors as the week progresses, but to whet the appetite, here is a sample of some of the most desirable pedigrees in the book. As mentioned, the Prix de Diane does indeed loom large in the catalogue. Not only does the three-quarter-sister to this year's winner Nashwa (GB) (Frankel {GB}) appear on Saturday as lot 93, but, as referenced by Powell, Monday's session features a Sea The Stars (Ire) daughter of the 2019 winner Channel (Ire) (Nathaniel {Ire}), who will be sold by La Motteraye Consignment as lot 234.

Ten days ago, Nashwa backed up her French Classic win with another Group 1 victory, this time against her elders, in the Nassau S. at Goodwood. The fact that physically she appears still to have so much more to give, coupled with the assertion from her owner-breeder Imad Al Sagar that Nashwa will remain in training at four, only adds to the appeal to her younger sister by another Blue Diamond Stud Group 1-winning homebred, Decorated Knight (GB). The filly is the fourth foal of her listed-winning dam Princess Loulou (Ire) (Pivotal {GB}), whose finest moment on the racetrack came when finishing runner-up in the G1 Prix Jean Romanet just across the road from where her daughter will sell.

The two aforementioned Arc winners with siblings in the August catalogue are Sottsass (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}), who will himself be represented by first foals at the sales later in the year, and the dual winner Treve (Fr) (Motivator {GB}).

It is fair to say that the family of Sottsass stole the limelight at this sale in its delayed format two years ago, when his half-sister Pure Dignity (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) fetched €2.5 million. Sottsass himself was a more modest €340,000 but we can expect to see his full-brother, who sells early in Sunday evening's session as lot 154, command a higher price tag when sent through the ring by his breeder and leading consignor Ecurie des Monceaux. He has not only Sottsass to recommend him of course, as the first name on the page is his half-sister, the seven-time Grade I winner Sistercharlie (Ire) (Myboycharlie {Ire}).

In a year in which Haras du Quesnay sadly lost its patriarch Alec Head, the stud's four-strong draft contains an Intello (Ger) half-brother to the filly who was the apple of her breeder's eye, Treve. The son of the Anabaa mare Trevise (Fr) is set to sell on Sunday evening as lot 171.

Early attention on Saturday could fall on lot 10, Haras de Colleville's full-brother to the G1 Champion S. winner Sealiway (Fr) (Galiway {GB}), while another horse early into the ring with some pretty smart credentials is Haras d'Haspel's Sea The Stars filly (lot 17) out of a Kodiac half-sister to Classic winners St Mark's Basilica (Fr) (Siyouni {Fr}) and Magna Grecia (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}). She is not the only one in Jose Delmotte's draft who has a close connection to a recent European champion 2-year-old as later in that session the Haspel team will present lot 62, a Siyouni half-sister to Native Trail (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}), who of course backed up his championship juvenile honours of last season by winning the Irish 2000 Guineas after finishing second in the 2000 Guineas at Newmarket.

That longer-than-normal opening session is not short on potential stars. A three-quarter-sister to recent G1 Grand Prix de Paris and G2 Prix Greffulhe winner Onesto (Ire) (Frankel {GB}) anchors the Camas Park and Glenvale Studs draft, which offers the daughter of Gleneagles (lot 75) on behalf of American breeder Adam Bowden of Diamond Creek Farm.

Eric L'Hermite's Haras de Grandcamp will offer a Dabirsim (Fr) half-sister to last season's G1 Prix Marcel Boussac heroine Zellie (Fr) (Wootton Bassett {GB}) as lot 123, while a first taste of the market's response to Darley freshman Too Darn Hot (GB) could be found in the sale of lot 90, who is out of a three-parts-sister to Classic winner Persian King (Ire) (Kingman {GB}).

“We have simplified the format a little bit for people to be able to see all the horses before the start of the sale so they can enjoy the hospitality during the sale,” explained Powell.

“People are more and more professional on that front so we have limited the number of horses to the number of stables we have, so there is no turnover or anything like that. All horses will be there from the beginning of the inspections, and especially now that we have the consistent quality of horses though the three days, it was important that before the first horse goes into the ring that everybody has the opportunity to see the last horse who will go through the ring on Monday night.”

The late former champion sire Galileo (Ire) has been a staple of the elite sales for so long, and three of his penultimate yearling crop will find their way to Deauville, including the daughter of the Group 3 winner and Group 1 runner-up Wind Chimes (GB) (Mastercraftsman {Ire}), a member of the Haras des Capucines draft as lot 188. Galileo's close relative Adlerflug (Ger) was also lost to breeders recently, and the late German champion sire has just one representative at Arqana, lot 163, a filly out of a Lope De Vega (Ire) half-sister to the group winners Sevenna Star (Ire) and Savanne (Ire).

Young Coolmore sire Churchill (Ire) has provided arguably the best 3-year-old colt in Europe so far this season in the G1 Prix du Jockey Club and G1 Eclipse S. winner Vadeni (Fr), and his selection of 15 yearlings in the August catalogue include a half-brother to another Classic winner, the Derby hero Wings Of Eagles (Fr). The April-born colt has another four stakes-performing half-siblings and hails from a family replete with black type which has served his breeder Haras de Montaigu very well through several generations. He will be offered as lot 191.

As the countdown to next Saturday's opening session approaches, Powell has headed off to Saratoga to assist Arqana's American representative Amy Lanigan in making sure that everyone who wants a seat on the plane heading to Normandy is accommodated.

“It's the first big sale since we have had no travelling restrictions and you can feel that people are eager to embrace it as much as they can,” he says. “We have people coming from the US, from Japan, from Australia, from everywhere really. And we are looking forward to welcoming people back to Deauville at full capacity, with all the fun we can have here.

“Anyone interested in attending the sale should get in touch with our local agents for anything they need. We will be happy to help.”

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