Being close to greatness

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Being close to greatness

In the spring of 2006, about 10 weeks and 50 kilometres apart, two leggy, brown fillies took their first tentative steps, but each looking every bit a thoroughbred racehorse.

The fillies, cousins by Bel Esprit, would go on to take vastly different paths: one was sold for $210,000 at the 2008 Melbourne Premier Yearling Sale; the other didn’t make it to a sale because she was considered too immature.

The expensive yearling became the outstanding Black Caviar, while the immature filly, with an almost identically pedigree, generated her own publicity … but not through her deeds on the track. It just goes to show how tough and indefinable the breeding game is – two horses with the same blood running through their veins, both well reared and well trained, but at the opposite ends of the spectrum when it came to racetrack success.

In 2008, Slattery Media Group boss Geoff Slattery leased from Eliza Park’s owner Lee Fleming a blood sister to Black Caviar. The filly, named Belleluia, raced for a syndicate formed through The Thoroughbred magazine. The purpose was to give the magazine’s subscribers the opportunity to get a “behind the scenes” in racing a horse.

Like Black Caviar, Belleluia is a daughter of Bel Esprit from a Desert Sun (GB) mare, but the pedigree is a lot closer than that. Belleluia’s dam, Song Of The Sun, is a half-sister to Scandinavia, the dam of Black Caviar’s mother, Helsinge. We always knew it was a good pedigree, but we didn’t know at the time that she was so closely related to greatness.

Like Black Caviar, Belleluia is a big mare, but nowhere as powerfully built as her “sister”. Song Of The Sun, a grey, was a good racehorse, Stakes-placed as a 3YO, but she was more of a stayer, finishing fifth behind Dowry in the 2004 Group 1 South Australian Oaks (2500m, Morphettville). Belleluia had her mother’s leggy and lightish frame, and the family’s long stride.

Trainer Robbie Griffiths liked her, and she eventually got to the races as a 3YO to win her debut in impressive style, by 3.5 lengths, at Traralgon in October 2009. Her next run, at Mornington, also was expected to be a win, but the big filly slipped at the start and hurt her back. Griffiths couldn’t get her right after that, and she was retired.

Belleluia has since been sold as a broodmare, in foal to Bushranger (GB), a fast son of Danetime (IRE), to breeder Stephen Whitling, of Whistling Park, Chintin, near Romsey, where “she’s the pride and joy of the farm. We are lucky to have her.” It may be through her progeny that her close relationship with greatness will shine through.

This story appears in the latest issue of the Inside Racing magazine

Photo: The leggy Belleluia pictured after trackwork at Cranbourne.


Boss busy in Singapore

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Boss busy in Singapore

Glen Boss, one of the highest-profile jockeys to take up a Singapore contract in recent times, starts his three-month stint at Kranji tomorrow.

It will be a busy opening night with rides in all nine races, including the G2 Queen Elizabeth II Cup (2000m) on Risky Business for last season’s champion trainer, the Victorian Steven Burridge.

Boss, one of the world’s leading G1 jockeys, made a flying visit last November to win the G1 Singapore Gold Cup (2000m) on Risky Business (b/br g 2004, Danehill Dancer (IRE)-Sky Watch, by Star Watch), and he gave racegoers a preview of what to expect whenever he wins a big race, standing high in the irons and waving his whip as he reached the post, for which he was fined $1000.

The Singapore Turf Club races on Fridays and Sundays, and this weekend Boss will back up his first meeting with rides in eight of the 11 races on Sunday.

Overall, the triple Melbourne Cup winner (on Makybe Diva, 2003-05) will ride for six trainers – Australians Brian Dean (six mounts) and Burridge (five), New Zealanders Stephen Gray (two), Bruce Marsh (two) and Laurie Laxon (one), and South African Basil Marcus (one).

Boss doesn’t have a ride in Sunday’s main race, the G1 Lion City Cup (1200m), in which sprint champ Rocket Man (Barend Vorster) will have only five opponents, including the Michael Freedman-trained Better Be The One, to be ridden by another Australian, Danny Beasley.

Better Be The One (b g 4, More Than Ready (USA)-Common Smytzer, by Snippets) raced as Common Interest in Australia. He ran third to J J The Jet Plane in Dubai last month, and is regarded as the only (albeit slight) threat to Rocket Man (b g 5, Viscount-Macrosa (NZ), by McGinty (NZ)) on Sunday.

Rocket Man won the G1 Golden Shaheen (1200m) in Dubai on World Cup night and the Lion City Cup is his lead-in race to the international G1 KrisFlyer (1200m) at Kranji on May 22.

Australian Damien Oliver has been confirmed as the replacement rider for the injured Glyn Schofield on Gitano Hernando in the G1 Audemars Piguet Queen Elizabeth II Cup (2000m) at Sha Tin in Hong Kong on Sunday.

Melbourne Cup-winning jockey Gerald Mosse, will ride Mr Medici in the QEII Cup – Mosse rode Mr Medici when sixth in the Caulfield Cup in October, but was on Americain when he won the Melbourne Cup and Mr Medici was 10th for Darren Beadman.

Mosse went back to France from Hong Kong only at the beginning of April to resume riding for Americain’s trainer Alain de Royer Dupre, who is the Aga Khan’s retained trainer.

Like Oliver, Mosse flew in to ride in Monday’s Champions Mile – he was fourth on Beauty Flash. ‘Ollie’ was 13th on Able One, and the ride cost him a suspension that will run from Monday until May 19.

So You Think, third to Americain in the Melbourne Cup after four straight G1 wins in the spring, is expected to have his first start in Ireland on Monday (early Tuesday morning Melbourne time).

Coolmore bought a controlling interest in the horse after the Cup, and its trainer Aidan O’Brien has him among five stable entries in the G3 Mooresbridge Stakes (2000m) at The Curragh.

Leading English jockey Ryan Moore and Irishman Seamus Heffernan, a stable rider for O’Brien, have been mentioned as possible riders for So You Think, top weight with 60kg.

Photo: Glen Boss


Who’s on the spring ‘wish list’

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Who’s on the spring ‘wish list’

Leigh Jordon, Racing Victoria’s international scout, is in regular contact with trainers and owners of overseas horses. He lists potential travellers to Melbourne for the spring carnival –

Wigmore Hall was an unlucky third in the G1 Dubai Duty Free (1800m) at Meydan at the end of March and will run in the Audemars Piguet Queen Elizabeth II Cup (2000m) at Sha Tin in Hong Kong on Sunday. Trainer Michael Bell said Wigmore Hall would go to Singapore for the G1 Singapore Airlines International Cup (2000m) at Kranji on May 22 and then take a break.

He ran second at Arlington (in the G1 Secretariat Stakes for 3YOs over 2000m on turf) last year and the owner’s keen to go to the US again (in August). I wouldn’t rule out the Cox Plate at Moonee Valley after that.

River Jetez ran second in the Duty Free for South African trainer Mike De Kock. Dubai-based De Kock has been here before with Greys Inn (unplaced in the 2005 Cox Plate and Melbourne Cup) and is up for coming if quarantine allows – Dubai has not signed the quarantine protocols with the Australian Government and they need their quarantine facilities approved, the old facilities having been bulldozed (with the move from Nad Al Sheba to Meydan).

One option would be to come on from Hong Kong (after the QEII Cup), or if Mike goes to Europe and has a team there he could bring one of two through Newmarket. Perhaps River Jetez or Musir (by Redoute’s Choice and seventh in the World Cup and third in the Champions Mile in Hong Kong on Monday) for the Cox Plate, or Irish Flame (a Group 1 winner in South Africa who was seventh to Godolphin’s Rewilding in the G1 Sheema Classic at Meydan) and is a possible Melbourne Cup horse.

Others looking to Melbourne include:

South African Herman Brown, who had Mourilyan, third in the 2009 Melbourne Cup, is keen to bring Mikaal Glinka (winner of the G3 Queen’s Vase, 3200m, at Ascot when trained by Aidan O’Brien, and a runner in lead-up races at Meydan) for the Melbourne Cup and/or Gitano Hernando (sixth in the World Cup when prepared at Newmarket by Marco Botti, and racing in Hong Kong on Sunday) for the Cox Plate, although he may be a Melbourne Cup horse. Damien Oliver will ride Gitano Hernando in Hong Kong.

Englishman Brian Meehan is interested in the Melbourne Cup with Dangerous Midge, who ran down the track in the Sheema Classic.

Simon Crisford, Godolphin’s racing manager, is very supportive of the whole Melbourne carnival and said Godolphin would definitely be here, but was not exactly sure what they’d bring.

And Singapore’s sprinter Rocket Man is a big chance for the Patinack Farm Classic and a clash with Black Caviar up the straight at Flemington on the last day of the Melbourne Cup carnival.

The issue is prizemoney – Japan has the Sprinters Stakes in early October as part of the Global Sprint Challenge. It’s worth $US2 million, the travel time is less, quarantine isn’t as strenuous, and the opposition is less.

Here the prizemoney is $750,000, quarantine is a problem … and there’s Black Caviar. If we can get prizemoney up to $1 million and some other incentive such as a bonus we could entice him – I’m quietly confident.

Read the full interview with Jordon in Inside Racing, out now.

Photo: Wigmore Hall parading before the Secretariat Stakes at Arlington. (Deans Kitten photo).


The Group 1 previews

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The Group 1 previews

This week’s Group 1 previews, produced by The Thoroughbred, for Betfair.

Danny Power is tipping Sepoy to become the fifth 2YO to win the Blue Diamond-Golden Slipper double, and he believes at a short price, Descarado could be a good lay on Betfair in the Group 1 The BMW.

Michael Sharkie has concerns about the last start Group 1 winners Aloha and Ilovethiscity in the Group 1 George Ryder Stakes at Randwick.

These quality previews feature a market ratings, a recommended betting play, speed map, top-six selections and detailed comments on all starters. Agree or not agree, it’s a coverage too detailed not to read.

All yours courtesy of Betfair:

Golden Slipper Stakes

The BMW

Vinery Stud Stakes

George Ryder Stakes


Sepoy’s challenge

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Sepoy’s challenge

Sepoy is aiming to be only fifth Blue Diamond Stakes winner to go on to win the Group 1 Golden Slipper (1200m) at Rosehill.

The Group 1 Blue Diamond Stakes (1200m, Caulfield) was first run in 1971, when the Angus Armanasco-trained Tolerance (ch c, Better Boy (IRE)-Salma, by Smokey Eyes (IRE)), ridden by Roy Higgins, beat the fillies What’s The Verdict (by Court Sentence (GB)) and Fairy Walk (by Minor Portion (IRE)). Fairy Walk returned to Sydney to win the Slipper, while Tolerance struggled into 11th place.

History says that taking out the double is a very difficult task, and some great juveniles, including Blazing Saddles, Zeditave, Alinghi and Bel Esprit have tried and failed, such is the task that lies ahead of Sepoy.

Even Hurricane Sky (1994), who is the only horse to win the Blue Diamond in quicker time than Sepoy, could manage only fifth behind Danzero in Sydney.

There have been 29 two-year-olds attempt the double, but only four have achieved the feat – John’s Hope (1972), Manikato (1978), Bounding Away (1986) and Courtza (1989).

Since Courtza’s win, only three Blue Diamond winners have been able to place in the Slipper – Canonise (2nd behind Tierce in 1991), Paint (2nd behind Merlene in 1996) and Alinghi (3rd behind Dance Hero in 2004).

Here’s the list of Blue Diamond winners who have competed in the Golden Slipper:

Year            Horse            Placing (Golden Slipper winner)

2009            Reward For Effort            7th (Phelan Ready)
2008            Reaan            16th (Sebring)
2007            Sleek Chassis            14th (Forensics)
2005            Undoubtedly            15th (Stratum)
2004            Alinghi            3rd (Dance Hero)
2003            Kusi            12th (Polar Success)
2002            Bel Esprit            5th (Calaway Gal)
2001            True Jewels            5th (Ha Ha)
2000            Road To Success            15th (Belle Du Jour)
1998            Danelagh            8th (Prowl)
1997            Knowledge            7th (Guineas)
1996            Paint            2nd (Merlene)
1995            Principality            8th (Flying Spur)
1994            Hurricane Sky            5th (Danzero)
1991            Canonise            2nd (Tierce)
1990            Mahaasin            11th (Canny Lad)
1989            Courtza            WON
1988            Zeditave            6th (Star Watch)
1987            Midnight Fever            11th (Marauding)
1986            Bounding Away            WON
1984            Street Café            8th (Inspired)
1983            Love A Show            3rd (Sir Dapper)
1981            Black Shoes            12th (Full On Aces)
1980            Aare            6th (Dark Eclipse)
1978            Manikato            WON
1977            Blazing Saddles            3rd (Luskin Star)
1974            Forina            9th (Hartshill)
1972            John’s Hope            WON
1971            Tolerance            11th (Fairy Walk)

 


Kitchwin Hills yearlings exposed

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Kitchwin Hills yearlings exposed

No amount of information is enough information in the pursuit of buying the best value yearling at the Inglis Easter Yearling Sales at Newmarket next month.

Leading Hunter Valley farm Kitchwin Hills today rolled out the Easter edition of its innovative yearling website, a unique information-package for yearling buyers.

This Kitchwin Hills initiative takes away a significant proportion of the research required by yearling buyers at all major sales.

“Since launching this at Magic Millions in January we have had quite a reaction from buyers,” Kitchwin Hills’ manager Mick Malone said.

“The concept is a basic one based around a simple objective – if a buyer happens to like one of our yearlings, the facility is now in place for them get to know everything and anything about the horse. It is also hoped that it will assist bloodstock agents, syndicators and trainers pre-sell any yearling of interest to their own clients.”

A vast amount of information is now easily sourced on each of Kitchwin’s yearlings listed for sale at Easter, featuring:

- internal farm foaling reports.
- foal photos.
- weanling photos.
- latest yearling photos.
- pedigree.
- sire nicks.
- Sirecam video.
- relations’ current status – dam’s breeding record.
- dam’s sales history.
- sire’s stud record.
- sire’s sales guide.
- and more.

To view this information, go to Kitchwin.com.au or directly to Kitchwin Hills Easter yearlings.

Kitchwin Hills media release.

Please note: Kitchwin Hills is a client of Slattery Media.


Rocket Man a caviar performer, too

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Rocket Man a caviar performer, too

The world’s richest race at the world’s richest meeting under lights at Meydan in Dubai at the weekend had no Australian runner but provided some enthralling contests and pointed to plenty to look forward to for Australian (and world) racing fans.

The $US10 million World Cup (2000m, on the artificial Tapeta surface) provided the “feel good” story, Japan’s Victoire Pisa (pictured) beating another Japanese-trained galloper, Transcend, to provide a quinella that brought a moment of joy and a welter of tears for the Japanese in Dubai, on an emotional knife-edge in the wake of Japan’s devastating earthquake and tsunami this month.

The daring of jockey Italian Marco Dimuro won the race for Melbourne Cup winning trainer Katsuhiko Sumii. Victoire Pisa (b or br h 2007, Neo Universe (JPN)-Whitewater Affair (GB), by Machiavellian (USA)) hit his head on the gates and was slow away, but Dimuro circled the field in the back straight to join Transcend  (b h 2006, Wild Rush (USA)-Cinema Scope (JPN), by Tony Bin (IRE)) in the lead when his jockey, Shinji Fujita, slowed the pace in the back straight.

The Japanese dominated from the front to run the quinella, Victoire Pisa a half-length clear, with Monterosso (by Dubawi (IRE) from Porta Roca, the mare who provided Flemington trainer Danny O’Brien with his first Group 1) a neck back in third place.

Many of those at Meydan with the Japanese runners wore black polo shirts with the word “hope” on the sleeve alongside Japan’s flag and the date of the disaster on the back. Demuro said: “It’s just unbelievable to win the Dubai World Cup for Japan.”

(Sumii trained Delta Blues, the 2006 Melbourne Cup winner in another Japanese quinella, with stablemate Pop Rock.)

With an eye to Australia in the spring, it was the $US5 million G1 Dubai Duty Free (1800m), a leg of the Asian Mile Challenge, and the $US2 million G1 Golden Shaheen (1200m) that were of greater interest in strictly racing terms.

Duty Free winner Presvis, trained by Newmarket-based Italian Luca Cumani and ridden by Ryan Moore, could be a Cox Plate runner with Cumani a dedicated visitor each spring and with the Moonee Valley Racing Club offering to pay the way of internationals.

Presvis (b g 7, Sakhee (USA)-Forest Fire (SWE), by Never So Bold (IRE)) had twice had no luck in this race. This time he again came from well back but got a clear run to win from River Jetez  and Wigmore Hall.

Cumani intends to send Presvis to Hong Kong for the Group 1 QE II Cup before heading to Singapore for the SIA Cup, both 2000m and both in May. After a spell, the Cox Plate will be considered.

The Golden Shaheen win by Rocket Man (b g 5, Viscount-Macrosa (NZ), by McGinty (NZ)) compensated for his unlucky defeat last year by American Kinsale King (a late scratching this year), and broke his international Group 1 duck after four narrow seconds – he has won two domestic Group 1s at Kranji and will return to Singapore to try to win his first home-track international Group 1 in the KrisFlyer (1200m) on May 22. Before then he will run in the Singapore Group 1 $500,000 Lion City Cup (1200m) on May 1.

He has run second in the KrisFlyer the past two years, to Hong Kong’s Sacred Kingdom and Green Birdie (fourth in the Golden Shaheen this year).

Rocket Man’s trainer Patrick Shaw is eyeing a spring clash with Black Caviar, in November’s G1 Patinack Farm Classic (1200m) at Flemington on the last day of the Melbourne Cup carnival and/or in the G1 International Sprint (1200m) at Sha Tin in Hong Kong on December 11.

Rocket Man was beaten a head by South African JJ The Jet Plane in Hong Kong last December. JJ franked that form with a win in the turf sprint, the $US1 million G2 Al Quoz Sprint (1000m) at Meydan at the weekend.

Another Singapore horse, Better Be The One, trained by Australian Michael Freedman and ridden by Danny Beasley, was a head and a head way third behind JJ and War Artist.

The run attracted Royal Ascot recruiter Nick Smith.

“Nick Smith immediately asked us after the race to come to Royal Ascot,” Freedman told www.turfclub.com.sg. “He said we would need to make a decision in about three week’s time.

“I want to get the horse home first and let the dust settle and then make plans after that.”

Better Be The One (b g 4, More Than Ready (USA)-Common Smytzer, by Snippets) raced in Australia as Common Interest.

Freedman had a big weekend with two wins at Kranji in Singapore on Friday and another on Sunday. Australian jockey Vlad Duric returned from suspension on Sunday to ride a treble. He leads the jockeys’ premiership with 28 wins from last year’s champion, Brazilian Joao Moreira (21).

Freedman (14 wins) is one of 14 trainers grouped on 10-20 wins. Perennial champion Laurie Laxon is on top with 20 from another New Zealander, Mark Walker (17).

DUBAI RESULTS

$1m G2 Al Quoz Sprint (1000m): JJ The Jet Plane (M. Houdalakis, B. Fayd’Herbe) 1, War Artist 2, Better Be The One 3.

$1m G2 Godolphin Mile (1600m): Skysurfers (F. Dettori, S. bin Suroor) 1, Mufarrh 2, Red Jazz 3.

$2m G2 UAE Derby (1900m): Khawiah (M. Barzelona, S. bin Suroor) 1, Master Of Hounds 2, Mahbooba 3.

$2m G1 Golden Shaheen (1200m): Rocket Man (F. Coetzee, P. Shaw) 1, Euroears 2, Sunny King 3.

$5m G1 Dubai Duty Free (1800m): Presvis (R. Moore, L. Cumani) 1, River Jetez 2, Wigmore Hall 3.

$5m G1 Dubai Sheema Classic (2400m): Rewilding (F. Dettori, M. Al Zarooni) 1, Redwood 2, Calvados Blues 3.

$10m G1 Dubai World Cup (2000m): Victoire Pisa (M. Demuro, K. Sumii)1, Transcend 2, Monterossa 3.


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