Multiple group 1 winner The Gurkha has been given a second chance as a stallion at Roveagh Lodge Stud in County Galway.
The Poule d'Essai des Poulains (G1) and Qatar Sussex Stakes (G1) winner by Galileo had stood at Coolmore since his retirement following surgery to repair a displaced colon in 2016, but had been removed from the roster for 2022.
However, a place has been found for him at Stephen Harris's farm in Kilcolgan, alongside Fuisse and Monitor Closely . Roveagh Lodge Stud manager Oscar Cherek confirmed that the 9-year-old arrived in Galway on Thursday and covered his first mare on Friday morning (April 1).
"He was put straight to work and got on with the job right away," said Cherek.
Roveagh Lodge only began operating as a stallion farm last year with the acquisition of Ladbrokes Great Voltigeur Stakes (G2) winner and the Ladbrokes St. Leger (G1) third Monitor Closely, who is an Oasis Dream half brother to the late Mount Nelson (GB), and Fuisse, successful in the Prix du Moulin Longchamp (G1) and a brother to group 1 winner Full of Gold and Prix Alain du Breil Hurdle winner and sire For Fun.
"We have been breeding here for a number of years and there are about 50 mares on the farm. We will be covering a lot of our own mares with The Gurkha but he is available for outside breeders too," Cherek remarked.
The move west from Tipperary was set in motion when Harris and Cherek inquired about The Gurkha's availability from Coolmore and eventually led to his relocation to the beautiful Galway Bay area.
His oldest runners are four this year and that debut crop was his largest with 117 registered but his numbers dropped off each subsequent season and he has only 21 juveniles registered with Weatherbys. He covered just six mares last season.
"He is kind of an enigma isn't he?" said Cherek. "We will be able to monitor him here especially when he will be covering so many of our own mares."
Three-year-old Imperial Fighter , trained by Andrew Balding for Michael Blencowe, is the best of his offspring on RPRs with a rating of 110 following second-placed finishes in the Tattersalls Acomb Stakes (G3) and Emirates Autumn Stakes (G3) last season.
Balding also trains The Gurkha's best daughter on RPRs, the Tote Stand Cup Stakes winner Invite .
His unbeaten 3-year-old daughter Tosen Lydia could provide him with a boost this season as his stud career undergoes rehabilitation. The Joseph O'Brien trainee made a winning reappearance at Naas last weekend and holds an entry in the Irish Oaks (G1).
The Gurkha is bred on the outstanding cross of Galileo and Danehill Dancer which has produced champions such as Minding and her Tattersalls Irish One Thousand Guineas (G1)-winning sister Empress Josephine , as well as the group 1-winning milers Circus Maximus and Alice Springs and the classic winners Serpentine and Sovereign .
His pedigree is an excellent one nurtured by the Wertheimers; his dam Chintz won the C.L. Weld Park Stakes (G3) and has produced the Irish Stallions Farms E.B.F. Brownstown Stakes (G3) third Queen Nefertiti and Woodland Garden , who was second in last season's Ardilaun Hotel Oyster Stakes. Both of them are, like The Gurkha, by Galileo.
Chintz is out of the French listed winner Gold Dodger, a Slew o' Gold half sister to Qatar Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe (G1) winner Solemia and to Brooklyn's Storm, the second dam of Prix Marcel Boussac-Criterium des Pouliches (G1) and Pour Moi Coolmore Prix Saint-Alary (G1) winner Silasol .
Galway's equestrian heritage has been long secured due to the global exploits of the Connemara pony but it does not have a reputation as a source of high-class Thoroughbreds on the flat. With the acquisition of a dual group 1-winning miler, the team at Roveagh Lodge is hoping to change perceptions and give breeders better options.
"It is great for breeders in Galway and the wider West of Ireland region to have access to a flat stallion of his quality. There wouldn't be many stallions with as good a race record and pedigree as The Gurkha in Galway," was Cherek's understated assessment.
The Gurkha is available to breeders in Galway, and beyond, at a fee of €3,500 (US$3,866).