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Entries in New Approach (30)

Wednesday
Jun222011

MUCH MORE FAMILY

Hannah Goss

Hannah Goss aboard Graffiti
(Photo : Cheryl Goss)

“SPEAKING OF TALENT…”

Those who’ve followed these columns over the years, will remember the statement that, unlike most commercial pursuits which tend to be shorter in term when it comes to turning things over, breeding of racehorses is much more of a generational thing. This means that family-building is a prime ingredient in the production of good horses, and it’s no different in the human sphere. Sunday, at the Three Springs showground’s at Treverton College, the Goss’ granddaughter, Hannah, made her show jumping debut aboard her spritely Appaloosa pony, Graffiti. What a day, with five clear rounds, two of which were in the competition stages, including a jump-off against six other competitors. In her first-ever contest against a field of riders ranging between 13 and 20 years, little Hannah (just turned 9) concluded her last round in clear fashion again, to take the third place rosette, beaten only by the clock.

There must be an adventurous spirit tucked away in the family somewhere, as she and Graffiti went into those jumps with a confidence and a verve unusual in a debutant, particularly one of such tender years.

Speaking of young talent, Summerhill’s latest foray into the Magic Millions weanling sales at the Gold Coast was especially enlightening, because it featured the first progeny of some of the world’s best racehorses of recent generations. These included the English Derby and Champion Stakes hero, New Approach; unbeaten two year old Teofilo; Horse of the Year, Duke Of Marmalade; English Derby and Eclipse winner Authorized; Champion three year old and Champion Miler, Henrythenavigator etc. We’ve managed to get our hands on three of them, though for a band of this ilk, ideally you’d have liked one of each. Make a date for next years Emperors Palace National Yearling Sale, and get your hands on one.

Here they are: 

Authorized - Cherry OrchardDuke Of Marmalade - Heaven InsteadTeofilo - Trumps

Please click the thumbnails above to enlarge…

summerhill stud, south africa

For more information please visit :
www.summerhill.co.za

Tuesday
Oct052010

THE COLD WAR : DARLEY vs COOLMORE

coolmore versus darley

“THE BREEDING SUPERPOWERS”

It seems we unearthed something of a hot potato when we penned our column, Changing Of The Guard, just over a week ago. The ink was scarcely cold, and John Berry penned an intriguing story on the same topic on Thoroughbred Internet. While what’s happening on two sides of the northern hemisphere bridges of the Atlantic might appear to be remote, the reality is, they inform the course of events the world over. As breeders, we have to maintain a currency in the genetics we employ, especially if we want to keep breeding at the top end. What is interesting about the emergence of the new stars in the Darley firmament, Street Cry and Dubawi, is that both descend from the Mr Prospector male line, a direction Summerhill has firmly pursued for close on a decade now. Where our stallions are not descended from the great American champion, more often than not, they carry his strain in their female lineage. 

John Berry writes as follows :

“With Darley and Coolmore seeming nowadays to be breeding superpowers as separate as America and Russia used to be in the days of the Cold War, it has been interesting to observe Darley’s attempts to break into Coolmore’s erstwhile dominance of the European stallion market. Coolmore’s recent position of strength was built on the stud’s two former dominant stallions Sadler’s Wells (who was pensioned in 2008) and Danehill (who died in 2003); nowadays it maintains its strength thanks to the next generation, such as the Sadler’s Wells stallions Montjeu, Galileo and High Chaparral, as well as Danehill’s son Danehill Dancer. As it currently seems to be Maktoum policy not to send mares to Coolmore stallions nor to buy yearlings by such stallions, it has thus not been easy for Darley to acquire potential heirs to the two patriarchs. However, purchasing high-class proven colts by Coolmore sires (such as Authorized, Teofilo and New Approach) has seemed not to be off limits for Darley, thus giving Sheikh Mohammed’s breeding operation the chance to recruit potentially top-class Sadler’s Wells-line sires. Set against this background, it must be particularly pleasing for Sheikh Mohammed to have unearthed two seemingly world-class stallions from a different sire-line and without having to buy from anyone else : in America his homebred Street Cry has already proved himself to be a stallion from the very top drawer, while in Europe the early evidence is that another homebred, Dubawi, is set for an equally glittering stud career.

Dubawi’s first batch of two-year-olds in 2009 did extremely well, but his results this year with his first three-year-olds have been even better. He enjoyed a great start to the current season when his son Makfi won Britain’s first Classic of the year (the 2,000 Guineas) back in the spring and he landed a second Classic a week later when his son Worthadd won the Italian Derby. Later in the month, the stallion came within a head of a Classic treble, his daughter Anna Salai being touched off in the Irish 1,000 Guineas. More recently, Makfi has claimed the scalps of Goldikova and Paco Boy in the Prix Jacques le Marois; while most recently, in a bid to claim his third Group One victory of the season, he started hot favourite for the Queen Elizabeth II Stakes at Ascot. However, that proved to be a bridge too far - not that that was a problem for his sire, whose other runner in the race, the Darley-bred colt Poet’s Voice, carried the blue Godolphin silks to a splendid victory over the previous year’s winner Rip Van Winkle.

Dubawi’s success as a stallion must be doubly pleasing for Sheikh Mohammed, the horse being a member of the only crop sired by the Sheikh’s all-time favourite horse Dubai Millennium. That magnificent horse was an outstanding galloper who won all but one of his ten races (his only defeat coming when he patently found the 12 furlongs of Oath’s Derby too far for him) and who posted his best performance in the race dearest to his owner/breeder’s heart, the Dubai World Cup in 2000. Sadly, Dubai Millenium raced only once after that superb victory, dominating Royal Ascot’s Prince Of Wales’ Stakes with equal panache three months later. Having sustained a career-ending injury in trackwork later that summer, Dubai Millennium was duly retired and was favoured with a stellar book of mares for his first season at Dalham Hall Stud in 2001. Tragically, his first season at stud also proved to be his last because the son of the Mr Prospector sire Seeking The Gold died of grass sickness on 29 April 2001.

Bearing in mind the love and respect which Sheikh Mohammed clearly held for Dubai Millennium, there was a colossal weight of expectation on his one and only crop of foals. It is likely, though, that Dubawi was initially not one of those for whom the highest hopes were held, because he is far from his father’s son in appearance. While Dubai Millennium was a mighty horse in every respect, Dubawi is a small, compact horse, much less like his father than were some other members of the crop; for instance, while fellow young Darley sire Echo Of Light is clearly his father’s son on physique, there is little in Dubawi’s appearance to give the clue to his paternity. Although, however, Dubai Millennium did not bequeath to Dubawi his size and shape, he certainly passed on to him much of his ability.

Dubawi comes from a family which has generally raced for Sheikh Mohammed’s friend and relative Sheikh Mohammed Obaid al Maktoum. Dubawi’s dam Zomaradah, a daughter of the impeccably-bred Shirley Heights stallion Deploy, was bred by Sheikh Mohammed Obaid and carried his colours when, trained by Luca Cumani, she won the Italian Oaks in 1998. The same year saw another Cumani-trained member of this family, also bred and raced by Sheikh Mohammed Obaid, win the Derby : High-rise, a half-brother to Zomaradah’s dam Jawaher. It seems likely that, had he been a son of any stallion other than Dubai Millennium, Dubawi would too have joined Cumani’s stable under the ownership of Sheikh Mohammed Obaid - but, under the circumstances, it was understandable that Dubai Millennium’s sons would join the Godolphin fold. It did not take long before Dubawi began to make a good impression there : he was one of Godolphin’s first two-year-old runners the next year, making his debut in a six-furlong maiden at the evening meeting at Goodwood on Oaks Day 2004. Despite his patent greenness, he won so well there that he went off the solid 15/8 favourite for the Group Three Superlative Stakes over seven furlongs at Newmarket’s July Meeting on his next start. He won that too before graduating to Group One company on his third start when he justified odds-on favouritism in impressive style ten weeks later in the National Stakes over seven furlongs at the Curragh.

Resuming as a three-year-old, Dubawi lost his unbeaten record first up in the 2005 2,000 Guineas, in which he finished fifth to Footstepsinthesand. He soon made amends for that defeat, however, by winning the Irish 2,000 Guineas three weeks later, beating Foostepsinthesand’s stablemate Oratorio (subsequently winner of the Eclipse and the Irish Champion Stakes) by two lengths. Although his chunky physique and quick action suggested that Dubawi might emulate his sire in finding the Derby too stiff a test of stamina, he took his chance at Epsom, which seemed fair enough bearing in mind that his dam had won the Italian Oaks and that he was closely related to High-Rise, as well to the 1983 Park Hill Stakes victrix High Hawk, herself the dam of Sheikh Mohammed’s Breeders’ Cup Turf winner and top stallion In The Wings - and it seemed an even more justifiable challenge when, despite appearing to struggle with the extra distance, he ran his heart out to finish an honourable third behind the Montjeu colts Motivator and Walk In The Park.

After the Derby, Dubawi reverted to a mile, which saw him further enhance his already impressive racing record. At Deauville’s August meeting he echoed his father’s victory in the 1999 Prix Jacques le Marois by beating the top-liners Whipper, Valixir and Divine Proportions in France’s premier 1600m race, while he again followed in his father’s footsteps by contesting the Queen Elizabeth II Stakes. In this case, though, history did not repeat itself: the race was run at Newmarket rather than Ascot (because of Ascot being closed for its costly overhaul) and Dubawi did not win it. Although, however, he was beaten, Dubawi emerged from the race with his reputation further enhanced, thanks to the splendid duel up the Rowley Mile to which he and Starcraft treated racegoers. Neither deserved to lose; and Dubawi, dwarved by the massive NZ-bred five-year-old Starcraft, showed his courage as, seemingly taking two strides to Starcraft’s one, he went down by only three-quarters of a length.

After the Queen Elizabeth II Stakes, Dubawi’s career diverged further from the path formerly trodden by his father : whereas Dubai Millennium had stayed in training to garner further laurels as a four-year-old, Dubawi was retired to Dalham Hall Stud, where he started covering in 2006 at a fee of 25,000 pounds. Predictably, Dubawi started off with a great book of mares, many owned by Darley but with plenty of outside mares too. This, of course, gave him a good start, but it was certainly no guarantee of success : the history books are choc-full of stallions who have been given every chance to succeed but who have still failed. Happily, Dubawi’s name will not be among them because last summer he began to sire winners with regularity, and stakes winners with remarkable frequency.

Under normal circumstances, Dubawi would have been champion first season-sire of Britain and Ireland last year, his total of 593,693 pounds representing an outstanding season for his first two-year-olds, 26 of whom won a total of 32 races within the British Isles. However, he had to cede the title to his contemporary, former stablemate, and fellow Darley sire Shamardal, 18 of whose sons and daughters won 25 races in Britain and Ireland between them and who collectively earned the astonishing total of 1,338,214 pounds. The bulk of this sum was snared by Shamardal’s Group Three-winning son Shakespearean, who picked up nearly a million pounds for winning the Goffs Million Mile.

Dubawi’s tally of Group winners from his first European two-year-olds was good, with Sand Vixen and Poet’s Voice each winning a Group Two race (the Flying Childers and the Champagne Stakes respectively). This year, his results have been even better, with Makfi and Poet’s Voice both winning Group One races, Worthadd winning the Group Two Italian Derby, Monterosso winning the Group Two King Edward VII Stakes at Royal Ascot, the Spanish-trained juvenile Irish Field winning the Group Two Prix Robert Papin at Deauville, Astrophysical Jet winning two Group Three races, and Anna Salai, Prince Bishop and the promising two-year-old filly Majestic Dubawi each winning one Group Three race. Furthermore, his first crop of Australian-conceived two-year-olds (like so many Darley sires, Dubawi has shuttled between Darley’s studs in Europe and Australia) included the likes of South African Group One winner Happy Archer, New Zealand Group Three winner Cellarmaster and Australian Listed winner Golden Millennium.

All told, therefore, Sheikh Mohammed is entitled to be delighted with the stud career to date of Dubawi, who looks set to confirm himself among Europe’s elite sires. It may prove to be the case that one of the Sheikh’s unproven sires, such as New Approach, might enable Darley to break Coolmore’s stranglehold on the best of the Sadler’s Wells line. In the meantime, thanks to Dubawi (and Street Cry in America), Darley, despite the death in 2004 of Street Cry’s sire Machiavellian, is in a very strong position as regards offering breeders access to the Mr Prospector line. This situation has come about at a time when Coolmore, after being the first to introduce this line to Europe via the hugely disappointing 1979 William Hill Futurity (now Racing Post Trophy) winner Hello Gorgeous, has chosen more recently to eschew Mr Prospector’s blood : every sire currently on Coolmore’s Irish roster is a male-line descendant of Northern Dancer. Were Coolmore to wish to dip its toe into Mr Prospector’s water again, what better way than buying a few sons of Dubawi? That would surely be a nice way of breaking the ice!”

Friday
Sep252009

GALILEO FILLIES : FAMILIES OF ZARKAVA AND TRISCAY

igugu (galileo x zarinia) ready to run sale 2009uthawini (galileo x tramore) ready to run sale 2009

Igugu (Galileo x Zarinia) and Uthawini (Galileo x Tramore)
(Please click photos to enlarge…)

GALILEO
EMPERORS PALACE READY TO RUN SALE
8 NOVEMBER 2009 

Champion 3yo in Europe, winning the Epsom Derby, Irish Derby and ‘King George’. One of the best looking and most well bred sires at stud, he is already a Champion sire with over 40 Stakes winners, including 10 Group 1 winners; such as Soldier Of Fortune (Irish Derby – Gr.1), Sixties Icon (St Leger), Nightime (1000 Guineas) and New Approach (Derby – Gr.1) from his first 3 crops to race.

We have two well bred fillies by Galileo, on offer in this year’s Ready To Run Draft:

IGUGU, out of Zarinia, is from the international family of ZARKAVA, Champion 2yo Filly in Europe 2007, Champion 3yo Filly in Europe 2008 and Horse of the Year in 2008. (7 wins, in France, including Prix Marcel Boussac-Barriere Deauville, Gr.1 and Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe, Gr.1). She is an attractive filly with a lovely action and is maturing into an exciting individual.

UTHAWINI, out of Tramore, is from the Australian Group 1 winning family of TRISCAY (15 wins, including Australian Guineas Gr.1, AJC Oaks, Gr.1, AJC Flight Stakes, Gr.1, Champagne Stakes Gr.1, Queensland Oaks, Gr.1 and Silver Slipper Stakes Gr.2), LA BARAKA (6 wins, including Galaxy Handicap Gr.1) and DEMERGER (8 wins, including Adelaide Cup Gr.1). She is an athletic, long striding filly that has loads of class.

summerhill ready to run draftFor more information on the Ready To Run Draft, please visit
www.summerhill.co.za

Wednesday
Jan142009

2008 WORLD THOROUGHBRED RACEHORSE RANKINGS

world thoroughbred(Pharohs Choice/GEOS)

New Approach (Galileo) owned by Princess Haya of Jordan and Curlin (Smart Strike) owned by Stonestreet Stables LLC & Midnight Cry Stables emerged as the joint-top performers of 2008 after the World Thoroughbred Rankings were revealed in London yesterday.

The TDN reports that both were rated on 130 pounds by the panel of international handicappers, their deadlock coming as a result of New Approach’s six-length success in the Champion Stakes (Gr1) in October at Newmarket and Curlin’s exploits on the dirt when winning the Dubai World Cup (Gr1)at Nad Al Sheba in March as well as the Stephen Foster Handicap (Gr1) at Churchill Downs in June.

New Approach, who also took the Epsom Derby (Gr1) and Irish Champion Stakes (Gr1), was registering his second championship in the rankings, having dominated the two-year-old division in 2007, while Curlin was upped by two pounds from last year’s mark, when he shared the top dirt honors with Invasor.

Raven’s Pass (Elusive Quality), who also raced in the colors of Princess Haya of Jordan when rounding off his three-year-old campaign with successes in the Queen Elizabeth II Stakes (Gr1) at Ascot in September and Breeders’ Cup Classic (Gr1) on Santa Anita’s Pro-Ride the following month, was a pound behind the dual champions on 129, while His Highness the Aga Khan’s Zarkava (Zamindar) was next best with a rating of 128. That was enough to secure the unbeaten Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe (Gr1) heroine the title of the world’s champion of her sex; it’s the highest achieved by a filly or mare since Miesque.

Languishing three pounds behind that stellar performer were Jerome Moss’ unbeaten Zenyatta (Street Cry) - rated the top dirt female on 125 pounds - and the Wertheimer Brothers’ fellow Breeders’ Cup heroine Goldikova (Anabaa).

Garry O’Gorman, senior Irish handicapper and co-chairman of the group of handicappers and racing secretaries who form the World Rankings Supervisory Committee, paid tribute to the distaffers of 2008. “This was a year of exceptional fillies,” Garry O’Gorman said. “Last year, I was excited by Darjina, Rags to Riches and Peeping Fawn, but these have blown them out of the water. Zarkava has been rated the best French filly since Miesque, Goldikova is the best female miler in 10 years and Zenyatta is the best filly in North America this century. Zenyatta and Goldikova both stay in training. Goldikova could emulate Miesque with back-to-back Breeders’ Cup Miles, while we can only dream how good Zenyatta might be.”

Of the remainder, Susan Magnier and Michael Tabor’s five-time Group 1 winner Duke of Marmalade (Danehill) was top of the older horse category on turf with a rating of 127 pounds, while IEAH Stables’ Big Brown (Boundary) was the best sophomore on dirt courtesy of his victories in the first two legs of the Triple Crown. The 123-rated Midnight Lute (Real Quiet) and Sacred Kingdom (Encosta de Lago) shared the top sprinters’ title, while the European trio of Conduit (Dalakhani), Yeats (Sadler’s Wells) and Septimus (Sadler’s Wells) were together on 122 pounds in the stayers’ division.

For the fifth time in 10 years, it was Aidan O’Brien who was responsible for the highest-rated two-year-old colt after Derrick Smith, Susan Magnier and Michael Tabor’s Mastercraftsman (Danehill Dancer) inched the category with a rating of 122 pounds courtesy of his Phoenix Stakes (Gr1) success at The Curragh in August. He eclipsed the same ownership’s Prix Morny (Gr1) and Middle Park Stakes (Gr1) winner Bushranger (Danetime) by a pound, with Paul Reddam’s Racing Post Trophy (Gr1) hero Crowded House (Rainbow Quest) on 120 pounds. George Strawbridge’s unbeaten Rainbow View (Dynaformer) headed the two-year-old filly division with a mark of 118, three pounds clear of Khalid Abdullah’s Prix Marcel Boussac (Gr1) winner Proportional (Beat Hollow).

Matthew Tester, the British Horseracing Authority’s two-year-old handicapper, reflected on a below-par set of ratings for the juvenile crop of 2008. “The mark of 122 is unusually low and results from the lack of an outstanding performance over the year,” he said. “The last time it was below 123 was in 2003 with Bago. I expect Mastercraftsman to become a multiple Group 1 winner, but you’ve got to respect Crowded House. Rainbow View always looked like being the one to beat, and she got her rating from winning the Fillies’ Mile (Gr1). I am totally confident John Gosden will do a suitable job, and I expect her to have a fantastic year.”

HORSE
SIRE
RATING
     
FOUR-YEARS-OLD-PLUS :    
Curlin Smart Srtike 130
Duke of Marmalade (Ire) Danehill 127
Youmzain (Ire) Sinndar (Ire) 125
Zenyatta Street Cry (Ire) 125
Good Ba Ba Lear Fan 124
It’s Gino (Ger) Perugino 124
Papal Bull (GB) Montjeu (Ire) 124
Soldier of Fortune (Ire) Galileo (Ire) 124
     
THREE-YEAR-OLDS :    
New Approach (Ire) Galileo (Ire) 130
Raven’s Pass Elusive Quality 129
Zarkava (Ire) (f) Zamindar 128
Big Brown Boundary 125
Conduit (Ire) Dalakhani (Ire) 125
Goldikova (Ire) (f) Anabaa 125
Henrythenavigator Kingmambo 125
Montmartre (Fr) Montjeu (Ire) 125
     
TWO-YEAR-OLDS :    
Mastercraftsman (Ire) Danehill Dancer (Ire) 122
Bushranger (Ire) Danetime (Ire) 121
Crowded House (GB) Rainbow Quest 120
Intense Focus Giant’s Causeway 119
Naaqoos (GB) Oasis Dream (GB) 119
Finjaan (GB) Royal Applause (GB) 118
Gallagher (GB) Bahamian Bounty (GB) 118
Lord Shanakill Speightstown 118
Milanais (Fr) Dyhim Diamond (Ire) 118
Rainbow View (f) Dynaformer 118
Sayif (Ire) Kheleyf 118
Shaweel (GB) Dansili (GB) 118
Thursday
Nov132008

CARTIER RACING AWARDS 2008 : Nominations Revealed

yeatsYeats, brother to Summerhill Stud’s Solskjaer
(horseracing/famegame)

The nominations for this year’s Cartier Racing Awards, European horseracing’s equivalent of The Oscars, have been announced. The highly-coveted Awards will be presented during a glittering ceremony before an invited audience at London’s Grosvenor House Hotel on the evening of Monday, 17th November.

The Cartier Racing Awards are now in their 18th year and celebrate the champions of the Turf, plus one person who will receive the Cartier/Daily Telegraph Award Of Merit. The eight horse awards are determined by points earned in Pattern races (40%) combined with the opinions of a panel of racing journalists chaired by Brough Scott (40%) plus votes from readers of the Racing Post and The Daily Telegraph (20%), a system which accurately rewards supreme excellence.

The nominations in alphabetical order for this year’s Cartier Horse of the Year Award are as follows:

CARTIER HORSE OF THE YEAR NOMINEES:

Duke Of Marmalade

Henrythenavigator

New Approach

Raven’s Pass

Zarkava

Of interest to Summerhill is that YEATS (brother to resident stallion SOLSKJAER), has been nominated in two categories, namely Cartier Stayer and Cartier Older Horse.

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