November 24, 2024

Galileo colt brings 400,000 guineas

Last updated: 11/27/09 6:30 PM


A 400,000 guineas Galileo (Ire) colt out of 2004 Prix Saint-Alary (Fr-G1)
heroine Ask For The Moon (Fr) (Dr Fong) stole the show at Friday’s flagship
penultimate session of the December Foal Sale at Tattersalls in Newmarket. Demi
O’Byrne signed for the well-developed January-born colt. High-stakes pinhooker
Eugene McDermott of Kennycourt Stud was the underbidder on Lot No. 991.

“He’s for the usual team and has been bought to race,” O’Byrne said. “He was
very mature and you could almost put a saddle on him now. He was a lovely strong
horse out of a good mare. He’ll come back home and go into training when the
time comes.”

The colt, bred by A-Mark Racing et al, was prepared for the sale by
Jacqueline Norris’s Jockey Hall Stud on behalf of James Hanly’s Ballyhimikin
Stud.

“In my 15 years doing this job, he was the most impressive foal I have
prepped,” Norris said. “He probably had 200 shows before going through the ring
and just had everything.”

It was a day where most of the top lots went to end users, rather than
pinhookers, and so was the case with Lot 933, a filly by Medicean. Purchased by
Alan Cooper on behalf of Maria Niarchos and family, the half-sister to Epsom
Derby (Eng-G1) runner-up Dragon Dancer (Sadler’s Wells) realized a 320,000
guineas final bid. Blandford Bloodstock’s Tom Goff was the underbidder on the
filly, who comes from the outstanding family of Kirsten Rausing’s foundation
mare Alruccaba (Crystal Palace).

“She’s a lovely filly and the Machiavellian (Medicean’s sire) on a Hernando
(Fr) mare is our blood,” Cooper said. “We have the three-parts brother — Ajaan
— with Henry Cecil and we hope he goes on next year. This  family of
Kirsten’s is extraordinary and let’s hope the filly can run.”

Another filly bought as a long-term breeding prospect was a sister to this
season’s Fillies’ Mile (Eng-G1) runner-up Lady Darshaan (Ire) (High Chaparral
[Ire]), sold by Shanaville Stables for breeders Seamus Kennedy and Michael
Woodlock. Hugo Lascelles, acting for Anthony Oppenheimer of Hascombe and Valiant
Studs, bought the filly with Eddie O’Leary of Lynn Lodge Stud coming out second
best when the bidding hit 300,000 guineas.

“She was an absolute queen and I thought she was the best filly in the sale,”
Lascelles said. “There’s a lot to look forward to with Lady Darshaan, so you’ve
got a lot of chances with something like her.”

“She’s for Mr. Oppenheimer to keep and race and is one for the long haul that
will come to the stud eventually. We try and upgrade the stock when we can.”

Eugene McDermott, who was underbidder on the sale-topping Galileo, had
earlier fought off John Ferguson to get a 240,000 guineas Oasis Dream (GB) colt
bred by Ptarmigan Bloodstock and sold through Kirsten Rausing’s St Simon Stud.

“He’ll come back to my Kennycourt Stud and then be reoffered and we hope to
make a profit,” McDermott said. “We tend to trade at the high end of the market
and I thought this colt was the pick of the day. I think that everything about
Oasis Dreams is the tops.

“We got eight foals at Goffs and this was the fourth one we have got here and
I’m definitely optimistic about the yearling market next year.”

But despite Dubai’s current economic problems, Ferguson was as busy as ever
stocking up on 2011 racing prospects for Sheikh Mohammed. He was the day’s
biggest spender after getting eight foals for 1,115,000 guineas, headed by a
colt by Invincible Spirit who brought 260,000 guineas. Offered late in the
session as Lot 1022, the colt — bred by former jockey Walter Swinburn and sold
from his family’s locally-based Genesis Green Stud — is a half-brother to
French Two Thousand Guineas (Fr-G1) winner Landseer (GB) (Danehill).

Although still adrift of the 2007 record-breaking figures, the sale bounced
back from a disappointing renewal 12 months ago. The 9,951,900 guineas turnover
was up 55 per cent, the 61,813 guineas average rose by 21 percent and the 40,000
guineas median was up 14 percent. The clearance rate was 80 percent, compared to
69 percent last year.