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Entries in Sunday Silence (68)

Thursday
Apr112013

SILENCE PLEASE: IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT

Admire Main by Sunday SilenceAdmire Main (JPN)
(Photo : Greig Muir)

“A COCKTAIL FOR AN EXPLOSION”

Now we all know what the Japanese have known all along. For decades, the citizens of the Rising Sun have been proclaiming the virtues of the Sunday Silence male-line, and you need only visit their sires’ charts for confirmation of the strain’s overwhelming dominance. For just as long, the sceptics have argued that while the stallion’s pre-potency in his homeland is undisputed, until he proves it against the best elsewhere, it remains a Japanese phenomenon, and not much else. That myth has been exploded time and again around the world, and if numbers mean what they usually do, it seems his outstanding son, Deep Impact might have an even greater impact in the long run.

Yet it’s by no means limited to Deep Impact, with three other sons of Sunday Silence having ascended to the apex of their national premiership, and at least one, Hat Trick, now firmly established as an international Group One sire from his base at the Beck family’s Gainesway Farm in Lexington, Kentucky. The perennial leading breeders in Japan, the Yoshida family’s Shadai, Northern and Shiraoi Farms, have been at the head of affairs in that realm for as long as we can remember, and they’re there because they’re world class horsemen and supreme strategists. At a time when Europeans were discarding their mile and a half horses (yes, the Derby and “Arc” aces), in favour of the “faster” Americans, the Yoshidas saw a gap in the segment of the racing population which had served European breeding so well for centuries, and was now being cast aside. They grabbed these prospects gleefully, redesigned their own domestic racing programmes to suit the classic mile and a half horse, and voila! It’s tougher now, of course, to acquire these horses, because Europeans have rediscovered their faith in them, hence the retention of the likes of Sadler’s Wells, Rainbow Quest, Galileo and Montjeu, who’ve transformed European breeding on their own.

In addition, look at any broodmare sale around the world, and you’ll find the name “Yoshida” in one form or another among the leading buyers; the combination of the best racehorses in their category and the best broodmare prospects in theirs, and you have a cocktail for an explosion. And then, as a means of spreading the Sunday Silence gospel, the Yoshidas followed the well-worn Japanese industrial path of globalising their product, by dispersing some of Sunday Silence’s best progeny to other parts of the world, hence the presence at Summerhill of Admire Main, who but for a neck defeat in the Japanese Derby might’ve been the champion three-year-old of his year. They’ve also found it in them to part with the superbly performed Hat Trick to the United States, and my goodness, has he performed.

Before we go there though, let’s bring the story home to Scottsville Monday afternoon, when Admire Main’s first South African-bred runner, Admiral’s Eye, was sent off as the 13/20 chalk in the Juvenile Fillies event. Let it be said, she is a sister to three small Black type runners, two of them daughters of the miler, Modern Day, and the third a Group One-performing son of the middle distance performer, Solskjaer. (Saltwater Girl and Rapid Flow), both excelled at distances of 2400m and 3000m, while Shogunnar put his best foot forward with a runner-up effort in the most recent staging of the Summer Cup (Gr.1) over Turffontein’s 2000m, where he was doing his best work at the business end. It’s a fair bet then, that being a daughter of a proven 2400m specialist from the Sunday Silence male-line, Admiral’s Eye will be an Oaks filly, if she’s nothing else.

Yet here she was lining up for a 1200m sprint on one of the fastest tracks in the land, and she showed her class by heading the field in the early stages before she was challenged by Mike de Kock’s Tiger Ridge daughter Tamayim, who looked to have her cold for a few strides as she cruised past. In a flash, Admiral’s Eye remembered what she was bred for, and the foot went flat on the juice. In a matter of strides, she bulleted clear, and finished eased-down under champion jockey Anton Marcus. She clocked a sharp 1 min 8 seconds and change, quicker than the colts did and fully a second quicker than her older counterparts in the next race. Impressive? Yes. Jet fuel? Maybe, but it’s early days still. You’re not to be surprised, however: in the rush to get Admire Main to South Africa, his first season in Japan was cut short to the degree that he left only 17 foals on the ground; remarkably, 14 of these stepped onto the course at two, 7 of them already know the inside of the winner’s circle, 4 others have made the money, 2 of them in Stakes class. 

Don’t be startled by the connection either. It was the old firm of Naidoo and Lafferty at work again. Alesh Naidoo loves the families that have served him well, and he knows what he has under his belt. At November’s Emperors Palace Ready To Run Sale, he was a prolific player, raising his catalogue for two fillies with stable connections. One was Admiral’s Eye, whose sisters Saltwater Girl and Rapid Flow, both carried the turquoise, red and white of his Fire Racing Trust, and the other was the sister to last weekend’s S.A.Classic (Gr.1) hero, Love Struck. The Fire Racing Trust is as hot as hell right now, and no-one deserves it more.

In the midst of Monday’s celebration, we picked up our weekend editions of the Thoroughbred Daily News. Another Group One winner for Hat Trick, this time in Argentina (his previous Group One winner was the unbeaten Juvenile Champion in France, Dabirsim, while he already has two at Grade Two level in America). Argentinean victor, Zapata, remains unbeaten in his two starts, and at this stage, stands aloft as their best juvenile of the present season. Back in America, Barry Irwin’s Team Valor, victorious with Animal Kingdom in the Dubai World Cup (Gr.1) on the same weekend as the S.A.Classic, notched up another victory with Howe Great, by Hat Trick out of the South African-bred daughter of Western Winter, Ginger Sea. Howe Great is a Grade 2 winner of six from his thirteen starts to date, and his consistency is evident in the fact that he’s made the frame on 10 occasions for stakes verging on $435 000. Spare a thought for Irwin: he’s swimming in the stuff right now, and doesn’t know what to do with it.

Sunday Silence and his tribe have nothing left to prove. If there are any residual prejudices about Japanese breeding, they can only reside in the minds of the ignorant. If South Africans need any more persuading, and we’ve had less than a handful, you only need look to Lionel Cohen’s Sun Classique for inspiration.

Care for a bit of “Silence”? Admire Main has just one entry on the Emperors Palace National Yearling Sales, and whilst they’re numerically thin, anyone with a modicum of intelligence and intuition will make a beeline for him when he arrives in Germiston. Did you hear that, Mr Irwin?

Summerhill Stud Logo

Enquiries :
Linda Norval +27 (0) 33 263 1081
or email linda@summerhill.co.za
www.summerhill.co.za

Tuesday
Apr092013

ADMIRE MAIN RECORDS FIRST SOUTH AFRICAN WINNER

Admiral's Eye by Admire MainAdmiral’s Eye (Admire Main - Surfer’s Eye)
(Photo : Gold Circle)

ADMIRE MAIN (JPN)
Sunday Silence - Promotion

Beautifully bred Summerhill resident Stallion, Admire Main (JPN), has sired his first South African winner with Admiral’s Eye at Scottsville Tuesday. The bay filly won over 1200m by two lengths for owner Alesh Naidoo, representing The Fire Racing Trust, trainer Paul Lafferty and breeders Honourable Judge Alan Magid and Summerhill Stud. The Fire Racing Trust / Paul Lafferty combination celebrated Grade 1 success last weekend with another Summerhill-bred, Love Struck, in the SA Classic at Turffontein.

A big chestnut standing at 16.2hh, Admire Main has an equally big and impressive walk to match his athletic good-looks. A top-class racehorse in his native Japan, Admire Main had four wins - including the Grade 2 Aoba Sho Derby Trial over 2400m, and the Grade 3 Mainchi Hai over 2000m. He also placed second in the Grade 1 Japanese Derby and third in the Grade 1 Kikuka Sho - with career earnings in excess of US$2million. He won his races by a combined 22.5 lengths.

Admire Main, the only son of the legendary racehorse and Sire of Sires, Sunday Silence, standing in South Africa, covered a few mares in Japan in 2009 prior to his transfer to Summerhill Stud in South Africa. His first juveniles in Japan made a smart start last season achieving 12 wins from seven runners - over distances of 900m to 1800m. Five more of his progeny have placed - impressive and very exciting statistics from this athletic stallion.

Out of the mare Promotion - herself by Hector Protector out of Assertion by Assert - Admire Main’s damline includes Mount Hagen - a stallion that stood at the KwaZUlu-Natal stallion station many years ago.

Admire Main has one colt on offer at the upcoming Emperors Palace National Yearling Sale - Lot 223 Attestation out of Tribute, by Desert Team. The mare has produced three winners including Salutation, a 6-time winner who also ran second in the Grade 2 SA Oaks and third in the Grade 3 Racing Association Handicap. This is the dam-line of Black Wing, Grade 1 winner Last Watch, Stud Master, Charisma and Chestnut Grove.

Admiral’s Eye is a R340,000 Emperors Palace Ready To Run Sales graduate from 2012 - and it will be a special win for owner Alesh Naidoo who raced the filly’s half-sisters to great success; two full-sisters Rapid Flow (6-time winner and placing in a Grade 3) and Saltwater Girl (7-time winner placing in a Grade 2), both by Modern Day. Admiral’s Eye is also a half-sister to Grade 1 Summer Cup placed Shogunnar, by Solskjaer. This dam-line is bursting with Bold Black Type and includes sires Lombard (GER) and Vaguely Noble (IRE) and local champion mare Arabian Lass.

Summerhill Stud are also offering Lot 195 Surfing Belle at the upcoming National Yearling Sales; a half-sister to Admiral’s Eye by Kahal.

Extracts from Bloodstock South Africa and KZN Breeders

Summerhill Stud Logo

Enquiries :
Linda Norval +27 (0) 33 263 1081
or email linda@summerhill.co.za
www.summerhill.co.za

Monday
Apr012013

AND NOW FOR SOMETHING COMPLETELY DIFFERENT...

Admire Main by Sunday Silence

Admire Main
(Photo : Greig Muir)

…FROM THE LAND OF THE RISING SUN.

Everyone in racing is looking for the inside track.
In stallion parlance, we’re all trying to find the “rising son”.

On his record so far, the legendary Sunday Silence has given us the answer.
His son, Admire Main, reads like this:
14 juvenile runners, 7 winners, 4 placed, 2 Black-type performers.

Already.

summerhill stud, south africa

Enquiries :
Linda Norval 27 (0) 33 263 1081
or email linda@summerhill.co.za
www.summerhill.co.za

Wednesday
Feb132013

ADMIRE THE MAN

Progeny of Admire Main - Gallops Playlist
Emperors Palace Summer Ready To Run Sale

EMPERORS PALACE SUMMER READY TO RUN SALE
School Of Excellence, Summerhill Stud, Mooi River
20 February 2013

It’s remarkable how often we turn to history for our lessons when little else makes sense. In the early fifties, the mighty American breeding industry was doing just fine with the Calumet stallion, Bull Lea, in full cry. But it wasn’t the international giant it was destined to come. Just about then, a new prophet emerged in the form of the legendary Bull” Hancock who had recently taken over the reins of the family property, Claiborne, from his father. His vision was that if America was to fulfil its potential, it had scour the world for the best genetics. He realised that if America was to leverage the best results from what was already the largest breeding industry in the world, as well as putting the country’s new-found prosperity to best use, he would have to trawl the gene banks of the world for that magical beast that outbreeds his own bloodlines and performances.

Bull Hancock went out and paid the Irishman, Joe McGrath, a world record sum for Nasrullah, whose legacy lives on through the most potent American dynasty of the modern era, A.P. Indy. Nearby at Spendthrift Farm, the indomitable Lesley Combs was not to be denied, acquiring Nasrullah’s three-quarter brother, Royal Charger, who founded the enduring male lines of Roberto and Halo. While at one time, the former looked like making the greater impression, the tribes greater destiny appears to have landed firmly in the lap of Halo, through the likes of Southern Halo in South America, More Than Ready in North America and Australia, and decisively in Japan, where Sunday Silence is all-powerful.

In a more modern era, Hancock repeated the dose with the great Nijinsky, while a fresh force emerged at Gainesway, which snatched the spectacular likes of Blushing Groom, Lyphard and Riverman from under the noses of our friends in France.

At Summerhill, in our own small way, we’ve been no less adventurous in our quest at capturing the best bloodlines in the world, and in the process we brought to South Africa the most successful son in the Southern Hemisphere of the most successful stallion of all-time, Northern Dancer, himself a product of a parallel instance on the part of the Canadian E.P.Taylor, of acquiring the bluest blood in Europe. Hancock’s policy of plundering the best resources wherever they were found, produced a rich vein of success in Argentina, too, with the acquisition of Forli, whose largesse spread to the other side of the Atlantic, and eventually to Summerhill. Home Guard left three Group One winners in Europe, before concluding his career in KwaZulu-Natal, where, in an abbreviated stint, he sired Group One winners from 1000m to 3200m, including a two-year-old champion in Hot Guard, the multiple champion sprinter Taban, and S.A. Classic hero, Last Watch, and the Gold Cup ace Floating Casino.

While there is always hope that there are several Northern Guests and Home Guards in our present band, if you were to ask which of our gambles we would like most to pay off, if only for its uniqueness and if only to prove the value of reaching out to the nether regions of the world, our choices would include Admire Main, son of the Land of the Rising Sun.

Staying horses are never easy to subscribe, and while this handsome son of Sunday Silence oozes class at almost any trip, his sin was to excel at 2400m, so filling him has not been as easy as it might’ve been were he an exceptional miler. Yet his brief record at stud in Japan tells us that he does not need numbers to prove his merit, as he’s already had seven juvenile winners from 14 runners, with another four earning cheques in their first couple of starts. Two of these (and we must remember they’ve just completed their two-year-old programmes) have earned cheques in Group class races; for the nation’s sake, we can only hope that the Admire Mains are as adaptable to the conditions of the South African veld as the tribe has shown themselves to be in America and Europe. Of course, we already have the exceptional record of Lionel Cohen’s champion mare, Sun Classique, to advertise the virtues of the strain, and it has to be said, those that turned up the Emperors Palace Ready To Run in November, waived their catalogues with gusto, rewarding him with an average in excess of R200,000 for his first offerings.

On Wednesday week, you get a second stab at these jewels.

summerhill stud

Enquiries :
Tarryn Liebenberg +27 (0) 83 787 1982
or email tarryn@summerhill.co.za
www.summerhill.co.za

Wednesday
Jan092013

CLOUD CUCKOO LAND

Admire MainAdmire Main (JPN)
(Photo : Greig Muir)

“It’s difficult to comprehend, but the prize money generated by runners
bred at Northern Farm is very nearly R800million.”

We just received the year end breeding statistics from our friends and fellow investors in Admire Main, Katsumi Yoshida’s Northern Farm. It’s difficult to comprehend, but the prize money generated by runners bred at Northern Farm is very nearly R800million, while Katsumi’s brother Teruya’s Shadai Farm lies second, with earnings not far short of R700million. The family’s Shiraoi Farm ranks third, with almost a quarter of a billion in stakes. Between them, they have generated close to R1.7billion in total stakes, and to put that into perspective, while they obviously have fewer runners, Sheikh Mohammed’s Darley Japan Farm, has earnings of “only” R90million.

In the general sires log, all ten of the Top 10 stand at the Yoshida family’s Shadai Stallion Station (we thought Coolmore were dominant in Europe!), while eight of the Top 10 juvenile sires (all eight of the Top 8) are also Shadai inmates. Interestingly, 7 of the Top 10 sires in the nation are sons of the great Sunday Silence, and in the light of the success of Japanese runners across the world, that’s about the best alarm signal South Africans can get. There’s only one source in our country, and he’s right here at Summerhill.

2012 JRA Purse Rating / Breeder

# Breeder Total Purse (ZAR)
1 Northern Farm 781 162 767
2 Shadai Farm 663 784 970
3 Shiraoi Farm 223 144 321
4 Oiwake Farm 95 192 058
5 Darley Japan Farm 88 914 005
6 Chiyoda Farm 87 297 865
7 North Hills Management 83 426 473
8 Big Red Farm 81 058 753
9 Shimokobe Farm 80 628 779
10 Mishima Farm 56 901 110

2012 JRA Leading Sire

# Stallion Total Purse (ZAR)
1 Deep Impact 429 687 703
2 King Kamehameha 381 567 635
3 Stay Gold 208 642 186
4 Symbol Kris S 196 796 840
5 Kurofune 178 559 949
6 Fuji Kiseki 168 066 524
7 Daiwa Major 162 453 886
8 Agnes Tachyon 147 004 184
9 Heart’s Cry 140 103 160
10 Manhattan Café 136 895 559

2012 JRA Leading Sire of 2-Year-Olds

# Stallion Total Purse (ZAR)
1 Deep Impact 36 482 750
2 Daiwa Major 29 788 471
3 King Kamehameha 25 043 638
4 Heart’s Cry 23 502 306
5 Symbol Kris S 23 412 212
6 Neo Universe 22 929 291
7 Kurofune 21 864 646
8 Agnes Tachyon 20 442 015
9 Admire Moon 16 593 766
10 War Emblem 14 865 329

japan horseracing

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