Godolphin Secures Sea The Stars Filly at Tattersalls

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The Sea The Stars filly consigned as Lot 411 in the ring at the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale

After a couple of frustrating reversals, Godolphin got one over on the Coolmore team when they secured the Sea The Stars  filly out of Best Terms who topped Book 1 of the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale Oct. 7 at 1,500,000 guineas (US$2,138,850).

The rival camps were stationed in their usual places by the parade ring, with Sheikh Mohammed at the center of the Godolphin huddle and M.V. Magnier joined by Coolmore linchpins Paul Shanahan and Michael Tabor, as well as title-chasing trainer Andrew Balding.

After going hammer and tongs into seven-figure territory it was Anthony Stroud who delivered the decisive play that saw Magnier offer a shake of the head in the bid spotter's direction.

"Needless to say, she's a very nice filly," said Stroud. "She comes from a very good farm and is very athletic. Godolphin has had a lot of success buying fillies in this sale before, and she's exactly the type of filly we're looking for."

Godolphin signed for 15 yearlings across the three days of Book 1, a collection that cost a combined 9,375,000 guineas ($13,367,812). During Thursday's session the operation also purchased a Frankel  colt closely related to Eminent  at 900,000 guineas ($1,283,310) and a son of Kingman  out of Bristol Bay at 750,000 guineas ($1,069,425).

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Anthony Stroud<br><br />
Tattersalls October Yearling Sale Book 1<br><br />
04/10/21
Photo: www.tattersalls.com
Anthony Stroud at the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale

However, Stroud went on to say that the operation had found opportunities to buy fillies hard to come by. "We haven't bought that many. I think this catalog has been a bit short on fillies, but for us she was the pick," he said. "When you're looking at a filly you're always looking for a combination of conformation and pedigree, and I think she ticked the boxes for both.

"Obviously Coolmore were underbidders and they're fantastic judges, and I think Juddmonte were in too, and that just shows you how valuable these fillies are. We pulled up on colts by Frankel, Sea The Stars, and Kingman yesterday but, as I said, there weren't very many fillies in the sale and sometimes you have to put your head down and go for it."

Lot 428 Kingman (GB) / Bristol Bay (IRE) B.C. (IRE)       Camas Park Stud, Ireland    Godolphin    750,000   <br><br />
Tattersalls October Yearling Sale Book 1<br><br />
07/10/21<br><br />
Photo: www.tattersalls.com
The Kingman colt consigned as Lot 428 in the ring at the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale

The youngster was consigned by Newsells Park Stud on behalf of breeder Robert Barnett, whose family has been involved with the pedigree right back into the distant generations that include the influential Epsom Oaks (G1) winner Time Charter.

Best Terms won the Jaguar Cars Lowther Stakes (G2) and Queen Mary Stakes (G2) during her time on the track and has since gone on to produce the listed winners Star Terms and Fresh Terms.

"The mare is at Newsells, she's been a great mare; she was great fun on the racecourse too, where she won a couple of group 2s," said Barnett. "We'd always admired Sea The Stars, it's the look of them, the bulk of them, so it's about trying to get the right size and the right conformation.

"She's the most athletic yearling we've had for quite some time. A lot of the breeders are actually buying them to race and breed, and in England as well, which is nice to see."

Al Shira'aa Spree Continues

Tattersalls October Yearling Sale Book 1<br><br />
04/10/21
Photo: www.tattersalls.com
The Dubawi filly consigned as Lot 336 at the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale

The Dubawi  half sister to Arc hero Waldgeist  may have required a bit of persuasion to enter the Park Paddocks sales ring, but prospective purchasers needed no such help and after a prolonged bidding rally the blue-blooded filly was knocked down to Al Shira'aa Farms at 1,250,000 guineas ($1,782,375).

The filly was the very first lot on offer on the third and final day of Book 1 and had plenty of onlookers in position early.

The filly, who was bred in partnership between Newsells Park Stud and Gestut Ammerland, is out of the group 3-winning Monsun mare Waldlerche, meaning she is also a half sister to the Prix de Malleret (G2) scorer Waldlied and Bet365 Gordon Richards Stakes (G3) winner Waldkonig, as well as the four-time group 1 hero and Ballylinch Stud resident Waldgeist.

"She was the boss' pick of the whole sale and pages like that very rarely come on the market," said Al Shira'aa's Kieran Lalor, who was joined during the bidding by David Cox.

"As an individual she's a really beautiful filly too, so she was an obvious one. We're trying to build a broodmare band to compete with the farms at the top and she fits that bill."

Al Shira'aa recently spent €1,100,000 at the Goffs Orby Sale, where they secured the half sisters to Mother Earth  and Poetic Flare , as well as a €650,000 Frankel half sister to Creggs Pipes. The Tattersalls haul also included the 475,000 guineas ($677,302) Lope de Vega  half sister to Broome and Point Lonsdale and the 925,000 guineas ($1,318,957) No Nay Never  half sister to Bolshoi Ballet .

As well as a sizeable impact in the sales ring, Al Shira'aa has enjoyed a fruitful season on the racecourse, with color bearers Mutamakina  landing the Dance Smartly Stakes (G2T) at Woodbine and the Frankel filly Rumi  claiming the Prix de la Nonette (G2) at Deauville. The operation also bred and sold smart juvenile and Darley Dewhurst Stakes (G1) contender Dhabab.

"We're a business, so we do sell, although we tend to keep the fillies, particularly from the big families," said Lalor. "We've got around 15 in training between France and the U.S. and we've had a very good year. We've got a runner in a grade 1 coming up with Mutamakina in the E.P. Taylor, which is exciting.

"These fillies we've bought this year will really reinforce the foundation of what we're trying to do. These are blue hen pedigrees and if we want to compete at the top we need to be involved in these families. We've also got 25 mares, which will grow, and since we bought Meadow Court Stud in 2016 it's undergone a significant overhaul. We'll slowly develop it and start to understand the families.

"We'll sit down after all the sales and the boss will make the decisions about who will train these horses, but it'll probably be someone in France or Ireland. There are no restrictions though so anything is possible."

Although Newsells Park's general manager Julian Dollar said he was pleased with the filly's seven-figure sale, he said the transaction was tinged with sadness as it brought to an end a long-running association between the Hertfordshire farm and leading German breeder Gestut Ammerland.

"I'm very pleased with the price, although I'm sad that she came to the sales and we didn't get a chance to make a bid," said Dollar. "We would have supported her as it was dispersing the partnership we've enjoyed for many years with Dietrich and Annabel von Boetticher.

"That was really a personal relationship between themselves and Andreas Jacobs, so when Graham (Smith-Bernal, Newsells Park owner) took over, as much as they all get along, it was time to end the partnership."

Dollar continued: "She deserved that price with that pedigree, though. She'll be a wonderful filly for anyone to own and she'll make a fantastic broodmare. She was so typical of the family but people don't understand that pedigree at the sales; they're not sales horses, they're racehorses, and sometimes I think we get the two confused.

With the partnership between Newsells Park and Ammerland drawing to a close, Dollar revealed that the British farm had purchased full ownership of Waldlerche, while her most recent foal, a brother to Waldgeist, would most likely head to the sales in due course.

"Waldlerche is still with us and we've managed to buy her privately," he said. "It looks like one of her daughters, Waldlied, will come to the December Sales, she's got a lovely Siyouni  filly at foot who'll probably come to the sales next year.

"There's also a Galileo full brother to Waldgeist who'll probably be at the sales next year as well. After that, if we can, we'll try to keep all her babies for ourselves."

Magnier Makes Amends

Lot 383 Galileo (IRE) / Anthem Alexander (IRE) B.C. (IRE)     Mountarmstrong Stud, Ireland    M V Magnier    1,100,000   <br><br />
Tattersalls October Yearling Sale Book 1<br><br />
07/10/21
Photo: www.tattersalls.com
The Galileo filly consigned as Lot 383 in the ring at the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale

Although the Coolmore team lost out on the 1,500,000 guineas ($2,138,850) Sea The Stars filly, they still managed to add 2,190,000 guineas ($3,122,721) worth of stock to their Book 1 haul, headed by the 1,100,000 guineas ($1,568,490) Galileo colt out of Anthem Alexander offered by Noel O'Callaghan's Mountarmstrong Stud.

Anthem Alexander, a first crop daughter of Starspangledbanner , was bought back by her breeder at just 48,000 guineas ($81,129) when offered at Book 1 in 2013, but provided a considerable silver lining for O'Callaghan when going on to win the Queen Mary Stakes (G2) and Racing Post Lacken Stakes (G3).

"He's a proper horse and let's hope he'll be very lucky for the new people," said O'Callaghan.

Just a few lots earlier Magnier struck a winning bid of 750,000 guineas ($1,069,425) for the brother to Battaash  offered by Paul McCartan's Ballyphilip Stud.

Lot 379 Dark Angel (IRE) / Anna Law (IRE) B/Gr.C. (IRE)      Ballyphilip Stud, Ireland    M V Magnier    750,000   <br><br />
Tattersalls October Yearling Sale Book 1<br><br />
07/10/21
Photo: www.tattersalls.com
The Dark Angel colt consigned as Lot 379 in the ring at the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale

The Dark Angel  colt is out of Anna Law, a daughter of Lawman  who joined McCartan's broodmare band at just 14,000 guineas ($23,568) at the horses-in-training sale in 2012. Her yearlings have now generated 1,930,000 guineas ($2,751,987) worth of receipts at Tattersalls alone.

"We're delighted with that, it's a great price," said McCartan. "He's gone to a great home as well. The mare has been very lucky for us and has made plenty of money.

"I would say this guy is the best looking of her offspring. We always said Battaash was the best-looking horse that we'd bred but I think this guy is better, no doubt about it."

Thady Gosden Sticks With Familiar Family

John Gosden<br><br />
Tattersalls October Yearling Sale Book 1<br><br />
04/10/21
Photo: www.tattersalls.com
John Gosden at the

Tattersalls October Yearling Sale

John Gosden's name has appeared on the dockets of some notable talents down the years, none more so than five-time group 1 winner Palace Pier .

The master of Clarehaven now jointly holds the license with his son Thady, and the younger generation of the Gosden family signed for four lots at a spend of 1,490,000 guineas ($2,124,591) across the trio of Book 1 sessions.

Heading the quartet was the Frankel filly out of Alienate consigned by Ballyhimikin Stud, who drew a final bid of 650,000 guineas ($926,835). Gosden has already had first-hand experience with other members of the family as the filly is out of an Oasis Dream  half sister to the yard's William Hill St. Leger (G1) hero Logician .

Gosden said: "She's a lovely moving filly from a Juddmonte family that we know very well. Good horses keep coming up in it and she's by a great sire and damsire. She's for a new client and she's a filly with residual value, so hopefully she can do something for them in the long run."

The filly, who was bred in partnership by Anthony Stroud, Trevor Stewart, and James Hanly, helped Frankel finish the blue-chip auction with an average price of 373,438 guineas ($532,485), with 16 of his sons and daughters selling for a combined 5,975,000 ($8,519,752) guineas.

Final Figures

Tattersalls October Yearling Sale Book 1<br><br />
04/10/21
Photo: www.tattersalls.com
Yearlings on show at the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale

Trade reached something of a crescendo during Thursday's third and final installment of Book 1, a point underlined by the sale of the 1,500,000 guineas ($2,138,850) top lot and three of the auction's five seven-figure yearlings.

The top end of the market proved rather more subdued than has been the case in recent years, with the top lot fetching less than half of 2020's sales-topper, the 3,400,000 guineas ($4,612,106) sister to Japan and Mogul, while four more yearlings broke the 1,000,000 guineas mark some 12 months ago.

However, the relatively tepid conditions at the top of the market did not prevent Book 1 of the October Yearling Sale, which continues Oct. 11 with day one of Book 2, posting some noteworthy year-on-year gains.

The three days of trade saw some 452 yearlings come under the hammer, and 375 of those found a buyer for a clearance rate of 83%. Those transactions generated turnover of 86,369,000 guineas ($123,153,557), a 5% gain compared to the pandemic-impacted renewal 12 months ago.

The average climbed by 3% to 230,317 guineas ($328,409), while the median proved the most robust financial indicator with a 23% improvement to 160,000 guineas ($228,144), a point that suggests there was a consistency to demand despite blockbuster lots being in shorter supply.

Godolphin not only claimed the sales-topping Sea The Stars filly but leading spender honors too, with 15 lots secured for an outlay of 9,375,000 guineas ($13,367,812)—11% of turnover. Newsells Park Stud topped the consignors' chart for the fourth year running with 22 lots sold for receipts totaling 10,785,000 guineas ($15,378,331), a figure equivalent to 12% of total sales.

At the close of trade, Tattersalls' chairman Edmond Mahony commented: "Book 1 of last year's Tattersalls October Yearling Sale was widely regarded as a sale which showed remarkable resilience in the face of the well-documented challenges which we all endured, which makes the gains achieved this week even more creditable.

"Year after year Book 1 of the October Yearling Sale showcases the finest British, Irish, French, and German-bred yearlings, and year after year these yearlings go on to achieve extraordinary racecourse success on the global stage.

"Even by the lofty standards of Book 1, 2021 has been a truly phenomenal year with the world's highest rated 3-year-old, St Mark's Basilica , the world's highest-rated miler Palace Pier, dual Classic winner Hurricane Lane , Europe's highest-rated 2-year-old Native Trail , and the highest-rated turf horse in America, Domestic Spending , all purchased at October Book 1, and it is this consistent success which brings so many of the world's leading buyers to the sale.

"While the figures may not have returned to the dizzy heights of 2019, and the very top of the market has made an adjustment, the average, median, and clearance rate have all improved significantly and the turnover has also climbed despite a smaller catalogue.

"Particularly encouraging has been the depth and diversity amongst the buyers in all sectors of the market. Nine different buyers have bought yearlings for 750,000 guineas ($1,069,425) or more and in addition to the strong British and Irish participation, buyers from Abu Dhabi, Australia, Bahrain, China, Dubai, France, Hong Kong, Japan, Saudi Arabia, and the USA have all made significant contributions."

He continued: "Particularly notable has been the powerful American contingent. They have been a real feature of October Book 1 in recent years and the extraordinary level of racecourse success has driven even greater demand, with around 50 Book 1 yearlings acquired over the past three days heading across the Atlantic.

"Turf racing in America continues to grow and thrive and American buyers have clearly identified Book 1 of the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale as the premier source of superior turf horses.

"In addition to the major impact of the international buyers, it has also been rewarding to see that the lucrative £20,000 Tattersalls October Book 1 Bonus Scheme continues to entice buyers at all levels of the Book 1 market.

"Owners in Britain and Ireland have been rewarded with almost £7,000,000 in bonus prize-money since the scheme's inception in 2016 and to see so many owners, syndicates, and trainers busy this week is a tribute to the enduring appeal of the Book 1 Bonus.

"Above all, after the rigors of last year, it has been a pleasure to have welcomed so many people back to Park Paddocks. We now turn our attention to Books 2, 3, and 4 of the 2021 Tattersalls October Yearling Sale and look forward to sustaining the momentum established this week at Europe's premier yearling sale."