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Entries in Sir Patrick Hogan (3)

Tuesday
Jan312012

SIR PATRICK HOGAN : BATTLER TO BRAVO

Sir Tristram

Sir Tristram
(Photo : Stallions)

SIR TRISTRAM (IRE)
Sir Ivor (USA) - Isolt (USA)

How dominant has Cambridge Stud been at the New Zealand Bloodstock’s Karaka National Yearling Sales, which kicked off yesterday. For 30 straight years, Sir Patrick and Lady Justine Hogan’s operation has led all consignors by gross at Karaka. Or, put another way, since Reagan gave his first State of the Union in 1982.

The history of Cambridge is a fantastic tale of success from humble origins. In the early 1970s, the Hogans operated a small farm that staffed just one worker, in addition to the Hogans themselves. In its first year, the farm had just five foals, and was soon in crisis mode after they lost not one but four mares for various reasons. That left them with a single mare and serious questions about just what the future had in store for them. But in 1975, a saviour came to Cambridge. His name was Sir Tristram (Ire).

Now world-renowned as one of Australasia’s most prolific sires, Sir Tristram was a virtual unknown when he came to New Zealand to stand his first season at Cambridge. A son of Sir Ivor, he had won two of 19 starts racing primarily in Europe for trainer Clive Brittain. However, Brittain thought enough of the colt to send him to the States to compete in the Kentucky Derby in 1974, a fact that may surprise some American race fans. (At 25-1, Sir Tristram ran 11th to Cannonade under Hall of Fame rider Bill Hartack.)

Sir Tristram’s immediate pedigree was as modest as his race record. His dam Isolt, by Round Table, was unraced and didn’t produce a stakes winner, and his second dam, the stakes-placed All My Eye (*My Babu), didn’t produce a stakes winner, either. But Sir Tristram’s third dam was a half-sister to the outstanding international sire Hyperion, and his successful sire siblings Sickle, Pharamond II and Hunter’s Moon, so there was some reason for hope. Still, breeders were hardly clamoring for Sir Tristram’s services, and he began his career at Cambridge for a fee of NZ$1,300.

Improbably, from that modest start, he built up a dynasty in Australia and New Zealand that included a record nine sire championships. He sired over 130 stakes winners, including a world-record 46 individual Group 1 winners, and was the sire of three Melbourne Cup winners.

Paddy”, as he was called at Cambridge, ultimately saw his fee rise to NZ$200,000, and when he was euthanized in 1997 after breaking his shoulder, he was buried standing up following a 40 minute service. Sir Tristram’s exploits built Cambridge into a powerhouse in New Zealand, and he left a lasting gift to the nursery : his son Zabeel (NZ), a Cambridge homebred.

Foaled in 1986, Zabeel won the G1 Australian Guineas three years later, but really made his mark once returned to stand at Cambridge. Twice he’s been Australia’s champion sire and four times New Zealand’s; he has won the Dewar Award (combined Australian / New Zealand earnings) a record 14 times. His get includes over 120 stakes winners and 41 Group 1 winners, and he’s the sire of three G1 Melbourne Cup winners and four G1 Cox Plate winners, including Might and Power (NZ), Savabeel (Aus) and Octagonal (NZ).

Extract from Thoroughbred Daily News…

Wednesday
Dec212011

SIRS PATRICK AND TRISTRAM; MESSRS JOOSTE AND GOSS

Sir Patrick Hogan

Sir Patrick Hogan
(Photo : Racing Victoria)

“Proving it’s better to be lucky than brilliant”

Alec Hogg Graceland FarmAlec Hogg
Graceland Farm
We’re in the process of building an equine library at Jeanette’s Graceland Gallery. With the gallery now specialising in equine art, it makes sense to also stock horse books. Good books about thoroughbreds are hard to find in South Africa, especially since the TBA cancelled its annual pre-National Yearling Sale book sale. Although, in truth, the library is more of an excuse for me to indulge two passions - reading and racing - while investing in my own education.

The idea of an equine library came from my pal Mick Goss, whose leadership has given the country its seven-time Champion Breeders, Summerhill Stud. Always one who believes actions speak louder than words, Mick followed up the library suggestion with a donation - a book about New Zealand’s master breeder Sir Patrick Hogan. Called Give A Man A Horse and written in conversational style by Kiwi journalist and biographer Dianne Haworth, the book’s an inspiration for anyone, not just those in the breeding game.

Haworth’s writing reinforces how life’s lessons come from different places. Reading about Sir Patrick often reminded me of Nassim Taleb’s argument in Fooled by Randomness, a book that changed the way I look at just about everything. Taleb’s classic uses many examples to show how success needs dedication and a passion for what you’re doing - but with the important rider that getting to the very top is dependent not on these everyday attributes, but on a huge dollop of luck.

In my other life as a financial journalist, three decades of observation proves the accuracy of Taleb’s thesis. Every big success story I’ve come across owes a great deal more to luck than good judgment. Where beneficiaries of such providence go wrong is when they believe some super-human talents are the real reason for the success. Appreciating this reality helps keep perspective in a world where society wants heroes, often putting personalities onto pedestals they cannot possibly retain, tumbling after getting caught up in the hype. For me, the difference between a great man and a lucky poser often begins with their realization - or not - of life’s randomness.

Warren Buffett, for instance, had the good fortune as a young man to meet his teacher Benjamin Graham and then lifetime business partner Charlie Munger. Without the influence of these two, Buffett would surely have done well. But without them it’s hard to believe he could have become the best in the world. Buffett acknowledges he was in the right place at the right time, calling himself fortunate to have been born in the USA when he was; and to have a brain “hard-wired for capitalism”. His strongest message to young people is that they realize we’re all knowledgeable and perhaps even talented in some areas; success comes from knowing where these sweet spots are and sticking to them.

Well known personalities in local horseracing provide more examples. Table topping owner Markus Jooste, for instance, owes much to being fractionally the lower bidder for SA Breweries’ furniture manufacturing assets at the absolute peak of the market in the late 1980s. The winning bidder, Pat Cornick, offered a mere 25c more a share (R19.50 versus R19.25), and ended up going bust because of overpaying. Had Jooste’s Steinhoff won the auction, it would surely have suffered a similar fate. Instead, Steinhoff was around to pick up the same assets from a bankrupt Pat Cornick at a fraction of what it had been prepared to pay just a year or so earlier. That was the enterprise making deal which created the low cost asset base from which Steinhoff’s global empire was built. Jooste was blessed with good fortune once more when he dipped his toe into the racing world. His first investment: a share in a yearling called National Emblem who became the country’s Champion racehorse and then a leading stallion.

Mick Goss tells a similar story. The mighty Summerhill Stud, he readily explains, was the result of two pieces of great fortune - the first, flight cancelling bad weather that put him together for an extended period with the country’s greatest tax and legal minds (from which tax-incentive breeding partnerships were created); the second, a chance bumping into Northern Guest when he and brother Pat were visiting Ireland to see a different horse. Every barn, stable and pasture at Summerhill, Goss reckons, owes its existence to Northern Guest, the unraced marvel who became South Africa’s multiple Champion stallion.

The benefit of good luck seeps right through the Hogan book. Feted around the world as a genius in the Tesio tradition, Sir Patrick’s talent might never have been recognised had it not been for a nasty natured, poorly conformed (“terrible hind quarters… shocking hind leg”) Irish racehorse who he was strongly advised against buying. That stallion was Sir Tristam who became the greatest producer of Group One winners worldwide, putting Sir Patrick’s Cambridge Stud and, indeed, New Zealand breeding onto the global map.

Hogan’s real talent - something shared in breeding by Goss and in business by Jooste and many others - was an ability to use his random good fortune as a base. He kicked on. Strongly. Doubling up through buying back one of Sir Tristam’s best sons, Zabeel, from Sheikh Hamdan. The Dubai Prince had bought the Cambridge-bred Group One winner as a yearling for $650,000. For reasons best known to the Sheikh and his advisors at Shadwell, he decided not to stand Zabeel as a stallion (or to send him, like Kahal and Muhtafal, to Goss’s Summerhill Stud - what a difference that would have made to South African racing). Instead, Hogan was invited to submit a bid in a private auction and prevailed by a mere $50,000. Over three dozen Gr1 winners later, Zabeel has proved that in racing, sometimes lightning does strike twice. What makes New Zealand’s most famous horseman so extraordinary, though, is how he appreciates this, never losing his humility or his humanity. It’s that part of the man, even more than his amazing breeding achievements, which is most inspiring.

Extract from www.gracelandfarm.co.za

Thursday
Apr242008

MICK GOSS : A Horseman's Eye

mick gossMick GossUsually accustomed to judging Thoroughbred horses when buying or selling at the sales ring, our esteemed boss will be jetting off to Australia in August to preside over various Thoroughbred classes at “the Ekka” (the Royal Queensland Show) in Brisbane, Australia. His expert eye, developed over many years of “picking” a good horse, will assess horses in several different categories. These include stallion, yearling, filly and mare, raced and unraced, all shown in-hand.

This prestigious show was first held in 1876, and this year’s Ekka marks 130 years of annual celebration of Queensland’s progress and prosperity. The show attracted over 600,000 visitors last year and is the biggest annual event of its kind in the state.

Mick Goss will be in the company of some of the finest horsemen in the world, with Sir Patrick Hogan (Cambridge Stud, New Zealand) and Her Highness Princess Teresa de Borbon (president of the Spanish Arabian Horse Association) and judges from the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand.

Posted by Marlene Breed

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