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Entries in Hurricane Run (4)

Wednesday
Apr272011

SADLER'S WELLS DIES AGE 30

Sadler's Wells wins the 1984 Coral Eclipse Stakes

Sadler’s Wells wins the 1984 Coral Eclipse Stakes at Sandown Park
(Photo : PA Archive)

SADLER’S WELLS
(Northern Dancer - Fairy Bridge) 

Sadler’s Wells (Northern Dancer - Fairy Bridge, by Bold Reason), a perennial champion stallion and prodigious sire of sires in Europe, died Tuesday afternoon of natural causes at Coolmore, where he had resided since entering stud in 1985. He was 30 years old.

Coolmore manager Christy Grassick said, “He was undoubtedly the best sire Europe has ever seen, and through his sons Galileo, Montjeu, High Chaparral and Yeats, along with grandsons Hurricane Run and Rip Van Winkle, he has left a wonderful legacy at Coolmore, and his influence looks set to continue for many years to come. We all feel privileged to have been involved with such a special horse.”

Sadler’s Wells captured both of his starts at two, including the G2 Beresford Stakes, but was overshadowed by the brilliance of stablemate and fellow Northern Dancer scion El Gran Senor (brother to Summerhill’s multiple champion sire Northern Guest), who ended 1983 as the champion 2-year-old in England and Ireland. At three, Sadler’s Wells won the G2 Derrinstown Stud Derby Trial Stakes before earning Classic glory in the G1 Irish 2000 Guineas. He followed with a runner-up finish in the G1 Prix du Jockey Club, splitting future top sires Darshaan (GB) and Rainbow Quest.

The blaze-faced bay established himself as one of the toughest members of his generation thereafter, winning the G1 Coral-Eclipse Stakes and G1 Irish Champion Stakes, as well as finishing second in the G1 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Diamond Stakes. Northern Dancer, represented by dual Classic winner El Gran Senor (2000 Guineas and Irish Derby) as well as Epsom Derby hero Secreto in addition to Sadler’s Wells, set record earnings figures in Britain and Ireland in 1984, becoming the first stallion to pass the GBP1-million mark (the previous best was GBP559,999).

“He was a hell of a good racehorse,” former jockey Pat Eddery told PA Sport. “I won the Eclipse and the Irish Champion on him, and also finished second in the King George. He was a very tough horse with a great pedigree. He probably was the best sire of them all.”

Rated at 132 by Timeform, Sadler’s Wells entered stud in 1985 at Coolmore as one of the most desirable stallion prospects in years, with El Gran Senor and Secreto heading across the Atlantic, and his 3/4-brother Nureyev (Northern Dancer - Special) departing France for Kentucky after one breeding season. Expectations were understandably high for Sadler’s Wells with his initial Ir125,000gns stud fee, but the robust bay managed to exceed even the highest hopes. The tone for his stud career was set when a pair of colts from his first crop - Prince of Dance (GB) and Scenic (Ire) - deadheated for victory in the 1988 G1 Dewhurst Stakes. They were joined by Old Vic (GB), who doubled up in the G1 Prix du Jockey-Club and G1 Irish Derby; and In the Wings (GB), who captured the 1990 G1 Breeders’ Cup Turf.

These early successes kept breeders clamoring for his services, and Sadler’s Wells continued to deliver while covering big books of well-bred mares. The services of his Classic-winning sons Galileo (Ire) and Montjeu (Ire) are in high demand. Another son, El Prado (Ire), led the U.S. sire list in 2002, and is responsible for MGISW Medaglia d’Oro, who has gotten off to a tremendous start at stud.

“It’s the end of an era,” Robert Sangster’s son Ben told PA Sport. “It is the most phenomenal record for any horse to be champion sire 14 times - a record that is likely to remain unequalled. His legacy will live on through his sons and daughters and their sons and daughters.”

Extract from Thoroughbred Daily News

Monday
May242010

FAME AND GLORY ALL CLASS IN TATTERSALLS GOLD CUP

fame and glory tattersalls gold cup 2010 video

Click above to watch
Fame And Glory winning the Tattersalls Gold Cup (Gr1)
(Photo : Lahipodromodigital - Footage : At The Races)

TATTERSALLS GOLD CUP (Gr1)
The Curragh, Turf, 2112m

THE CURRAGH, IRELAND - Already victorious here on his finest hour in last year’s Irish Derby (Gr1), Fame and Glory (Montjeu) successfully shortened up in trip to emulate his sire, and one of his best progeny in Hurricane Run, by adding this contest to that mile-and-a-half Classic. Denied a larger share of the limelight in 2009 due to the misfortune of being foaled in the same year as Sea the Stars, the bay would by now also have an Epsom Derby and Irish Champion Stakes to his name had he not encountered that formidable rival.

Any fears that he might not be the same force following a comeback third in the course-and-distance Listed Alleged Stakes on April 11 were assuaged by his easy win under a five-pound penalty in the G3 Mooresbridge Stakes back here last time May 3. Allowed time to arrive at this feature on his own terms by Aidan O’Brien, he justified the patient approach with an awesome display of power.

Towed to the top of the stretch by the Ballydoyle rabbit Dixie Music, he took control from 2 1/2 lengths out and drew away from the chasing Lady O’Reilly pair of Recharge and Chinese White as Johnny Murtagh took his foot off the pedal in the final yards.

“It was a true-run race, and he is really there now”, Aidan O’Brien commented. “All the class is there in abundance, and you can see that in the way he traveled and quickened today. Johnny said he could have waited a lot longer, and he was a different class really. He’s always been an amazing horse and is in a great place at the moment. He has matured, and so, although it is a quick turnaround, the G1 Coronation Cup (4 June at Epsom) will be next provided he is well. It was lovely the way he handled the fast ground, and it all comes the same to him now.”

Extract from Thoroughbred Daily News

RESULTS

# LBH Horse Kg Dr Jockey Trainer
1 0 FAME AND GLORY 57.0 5 JP Murtagh Aidan O’Brien
2 7L RECHARGE 57.0 3 CD Hayes Kevin Prendergast
3 nk CHINESE WHITE 56.0 6 PJ Smullen Demot Weld
4 1/2 L HALICARNASSUS 57.0 1 RL Moore Mick Channon
5 13 L CUTLASS BAY 57.0 2 A Ajtebi Saeed bin Suroor
6 13 L DIXIE MUSIC 57.0 4 JA Heffernan Aidan O’Brien
Sunday
Nov012009

THE BEST JUVENILE IN EUROPE : ST NICHOLAS ABBEY

st nicholas abbey

St Nicholas Abbey
(Photo : Daily Mail)

ST NICHOLAS ABBEY

Tony Morris, to our way of thinking is, in the realm of bloodstock analysis, the best since bubblegum. He has few equals , and this is worth reading to the end. This is what he had to say about the most exciting juvenile in Europe.

It might seem scarcely conceivable that within a few days of the retirement of one superstar another should arrive from the next crop. Is St Nicholas Abbey really as good as he looked in Saturday’s Racing Post Trophy, and could he emulate the achievements of Sea the Stars in 2010?

We have come to expect Aidan O’Brien to extol the virtues of his young charges, some cynics suggesting that it’s in his contract. But nobody who witnessed the Montjeu colt’s stunning display at Doncaster needed the master of Ballydoyle’s assurance that this was something out of the ordinary.

All 11 runners were winners last time out, and St Nicholas Abbey was one of five with an unbeaten record.

Held up in last place, and travelling easily, the favourite made smooth headway from the two-furlong marker, slipped effortlessly between the Godolphin contenders Al Zir and Al Ghazal approaching the last, and delivered an explosive turn of foot to go well clear. Johnny Murtagh never even drew his whip.

Of course, we have seen plenty of apparently top-grade performances in the past by two-year-olds who went on to disappoint at three; the names of such as Apalachee and Tromos spring readily to mind. But the bookmakers already had St Nicholas Abbey as Derby favourite before the weekend, and they were not going to leave him at 10-1 after the race.

There are still several races which might draw attention to juveniles as yet undiscovered, including a couple of Group Ones at Saint-Cloud, but there can be little doubt that St Nicholas Abbey will head the European two-year-old rankings, and unless something extra-special happens at the Breeders’ Cup, he will be proclaimed the clear leader of his division in the world, as dominant as Sea the Stars has proved in his.

Superstars in consecutive crops? It’s rare, but it does happen once in a while, and in 2010 we might just be regretting that this season’s exceptional three-year-old is not around to cross swords with a new hero, just as we rued the absence of Nijinsky from the year when Brigadier Gerard and Mill Reef displayed their greatness.

In 1960s America the crop that produced Buckpasser and Graustark was followed by one that delivered an equally distinguished pair in Damascus and Dr Fager. 

The 1967 Woodward Stakes actually brought three of them together, though the result – a ten-length victory for Damascus, with Buckpasser shading Dr Fager by half a length for second place – almost certainly provided a misleading guide to the trio’s relative merits.

Their overall records suggested that the reverse order was the correct one.

St Nicholas Abbey is not going to have to contend with Sea the Stars, which – as things stand at present – allows the belief that he will dominate the 2010 season as comprehensively as his immediate predecessor. The prospect is hugely exciting, but we must never forget that any horse may be vulnerable to the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune; this one has only to tread on a stone at an inopportune moment for all our extravagant hopes to be dashed.

Of course, one of the factors that enables us to believe in a fabulous future for St Nicholas Abbey is that he is by Montjeu. Two previous Racing Post Trophy winners by the same sire – Motivator and Authorized – went on to Derby glory at Epsom.

The stallion has also provided three winners of the Irish Derby in Hurricane Run, Frozen Fire and Fame And Glory, and two of his sons – Nom du Jeu and Roman Emperor – are Derby winners in Australia.

And this is a horse who did not have a three-year-old runner until 2005. Amazingly, we have already become accustomed to the idea : think Derby, think Montjeu.

But while the hyping of St Nicholas Abbey is in full spate, let’s reflect what it suggests. If he is really to prove that he belongs in the same league as Sea the Stars, he is not only going to be better than all those other celebrated sons of Montjeu. He is going to be better than Montjeu himself. And we need to realise just what a tall order that is.

Montjeu, an accomplished middle-distance performer with an exceptional turn of foot, was rated 137 by Timeform as both a three-year-old, when he won the Prix du Jockey-Club, Irish Derby and the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe, and a four-year-old, when he won the Grand Prix de Saint-Cloud and positively cantered away with the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes, winning it in a style that resembled a carbon copy of Nijinsky’s victory over Blakeney in 1970.

Timeform ratings have set the standard in Thoroughbred racing for more than six decades, and in all that time no horse with a rating of 137 or higher has ever sired a horse better than himself. That is not to say that it’s impossible, but it has never happened yet, and all the evidence indicates that 137 represents a peak from which the only direction in the next generation is downward.

A horse rated in the high 120s or low 130s will sometimes get runners of a higher quality than himself, Sadler’s Wells – rated 132 – being an obvious example, but the real superstar performer tends to get plenty of above-average performers without ever managing to sire a runner within several pounds of his own class.

So what does a racehorse of Montjeu’s class, and a sire of Montjeu’s proven quality, require to get a son as good as himself? Basic genetics tells us that stallion and mare make equal contributions at conception; it’s a 50-50 partnership in terms of genes supplied to the offspring.

Montjeu was never going to have a mate with a rating as high as his own, and the influence of inferior partners was always liable to result in progeny who could not hope to match his brilliance as a runner.

To get a runner of his own calibre, Montjeu would need to supply all the beneficial genes crucial to racecourse performance, dominating those of his mate in every respect. That would be a longshot, and it did not happen when St Nicholas Abbey’s sister Cascata was conceived.

She did win first time out at Great Leighs as a two-year-old, but she has not scored since, and her best Timeform rating to date is 87 – clearly above the average for the breed, but far removed from the mark that her sire achieved in every race he ran.

But maybe – just maybe – that longshot has come up in St Nicholas Abbey. His dam, Leaping Water, would not have regarded as indifferently bred when she was foaled.

Bred by Sheikh Mohammed, she was by a high-class miler in Sure Blade, and her dam Flamenco Wave had been a juvenile Group 1 winner in Ireland. But she was either unsound or very slow – perhaps both – and never got to the races; and she could not have been much of a looker, either, as she fetched only 3,200gns when culled as a three-year-old at the 1993 Newmarket July Sales. With Sure Blade proving no better than other sons of Kris at stud, who could say that she was cheap at the price?

Leaping Water had an extraordinary career at stud. She had three years with Pips Pride, producing one winner of little account, was sent to America carrying a Definite Article colt who turned out to be Grammarian, successful in a couple of moderately-contested Grade 2 events on grass there, then produced three non-runners, a filly by Boundary and one of each sex by the bad sire King of Kings.

The fact that her next mating was with Sadler’s Wells was down to the fact that two young half-brothers by the multiple champion sire, Aristotle and Ballingarry, had both become Group 1 winners. The plan brought no joy, as the resultant filly never ran, and the subsequent first liaison with Montjeu, as already related, had only moderate success.

Smart though Aristotle and Ballingarry were, both were essentially natural stayers with no great powers of acceleration; they were typical of their sire’s output, and admirable enough, but not in the superstar category of Montjeu, the best runner Sadler’s Wells ever got.

If Montjeu truly does have a son as good as himself, it is because St Nicholas Abbey is a son of his sire through and through. The Racing Post Trophy hero’s stunning turn of foot suggests that his dam’s influence has been negligible, and we must hope that is the case.

Wednesday
Jul162008

SADLER'S WELLS again : An abiding influence

montmartre
Montmartre
(Racing Post)

The result of the Group One Grand Prix de Paris on Sunday, was another salute to the greatness of SADLER’S WELLS. The winner was a grandson (by MONTJEU), the runner up was a son, and third was a grandson by HIGH CHAPARRAL. What is really illuminating though, was the statement in the European Bloodstock News, in the aftermath, that the winner might possibly be the greatest racehorse in the world;

1. MONTMARTRE (Fr), 3c, Montjeu – Artistique

2. PROSPECT WELLS (Fr), 3c, Sadlers Wells – Brooklyn’s Dance

3. MAGADAN (Ire), 3c, High Chaparral – Molasses

Montmartre . The highest point of Paris and home to the Sacre Coeur, a wonder of pure white where millions from around the globe flock to pay homage. In eleven weeks time, Montmartre will be the subject of mass pilgrimage. But the venue will be Longchamp and the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe and the inspiration will not be of stone, but the niveous wonder of horse flesh bearing the same name. For Montmartre is quite possibly the greatest racehorse in the world.

Tracking the strong gallop set by two pacemakers, the silver son of Montjeu quickened in breathtaking fashion at the 400 metre pole and surged clear with daylight his sole pursuer and jockey Christophe Soumillon blowing kisses to the crowd. An easy winner of last month’s Gr.3 Prix du Lys having become extremely upset in the preliminaries to the Prix du Jockey-Club, Montmartre is one of fifteen Graded/Group winners from the 430 named Northern Hemisphere foals aged three and over by Coolmore’s World Champion Three- Year-Old Montjeu.

He is the eighth to triumph at the highest level, joining such as the Classic heroes Authorized, Frozen Fire, Hurricane Run, Motivator and Scorpion, while Montjeu’s seven Antipodean Group winners feature the Gr.1 AJC Australian Derby ace Nom Du Jeu.

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