Australian Buyers En Route to Tattersalls July Sale

Image: 
Description: 

The Tattersalls July Sale

An unprecedented number of Australasian buyers will be in attendance at next month's Tattersalls July Sale in Newmarket as breeders and owners from Down Under look further afield to enhance their broodmare bloodlines amid intense competition on the domestic sales circuit. 

For the first time in more than two years, Southern Hemisphere bloodstock agents and breeders are making the most of the opportunity to easily travel to the UK for the Tattersalls sale. Jenny McAlpine, the auction house's Australian and New Zealand representative, has been flooded with inquiries in recent weeks from interested parties.

The July Sale has a precedent of producing quality broodmares suited to the Australian market. The 2016 edition was the source of 60,000gns (US$82,045) purchase Harlech, the dam of two-time group 1-winning Yulong-owned mare Hungry Heart, and two years later the stakes-placed Bumbasina  sold for 75,000gns ($104,541) to Astute Bloodstock's Louis Le Metayer.

Bumbasina is the dam of this season's brilliant, 3-for-3 Perth juvenile filly Amelia's Jewel, who was bred and is raced by Western Australia's Peter Walsh, a client of Australia-based French agent Le Metayer. The pair once again will attend the July Sale, as will agents James Harron, Justin Bahen, Paul Moroney, Jim Clarke, and Julian Blaxland.

Will Johnson, Harry McAlpine, and Ciaron Maher Racing's bloodstock manager Will Bourne also plan to be in attendance, as does Ashleigh Dowley from syndicator First Light Racing. Arthur Mitchell of Yarraman Park and Kia Ora's Michael Kirwan are also expected to be on the grounds.

Sign up for

"With the Aussie interest, I don't think we've had that many in the past intending to go to the actual sale, and they're seriously looking to do business," Tattersalls' McAlpine told ANZ Bloodstock News.

The influx of buyers follows on from the many participants who recently attended Royal Ascot, where they witnessed Nature Strip 's devastating King's Stand Stakes (G1) victory, Ladbrokes Cox Plate (G1) winner State of Rest 's Prince Of Wales's Stakes (G1) success and the barnstorming Platinum Jubilee Stakes (G1) third placing of Artorius .

Nature Strip and James McDonald win the G1 Kings Stand Stakes, Royal Ascot, Ascot, UK, 6-14-22, Mathea Kelley
Photo: Mathea Kelley
Nature Strip wins the Kings Stand Stakes at Ascot Racecourse

The Newgate Farm-China Horse Club syndicate-owned Artorius is set to back up in the July Cup (G1) at Newmarket July 9, the day after the Tattersalls sale concludes.

Newgate Farm's Henry Field also plans to be at the sale ahead of Artorius' shot at international glory. The Yulong team, headed by founder Yuesheng Zhang, who combined with agent Sheamus Mills to buy Harlech six years ago, has indicated it, too, will attend. 

It is a strong sign of Yulong's intent to be a global player of considerable strength, having spent up at last month's Magic Millions National Broodmare Sale on 63 horses, and last week they added Baggy Green, the dam of AU$3.1 million ($2,670,522) group 1 winner Tofane, for NZ$1.75 ($1,104,128) million through the Gavelhouse.com auction.

The appeal of breeding to the likes of Juddmonte's Kingman  and Frankel  to Southern Hemisphere time appeals to many Australasian breeders. McAlpine will be hosting the large touring party during July Sale week that includes a trip to the famous Newmarket stud.

"Traditionally, there hasn't been a huge amount of support for the July sale, but now, with stakes-winning fillies here (in Australia) so hard to buy and so expensive, breeders are definitely looking elsewhere for opportunities," McAlpine said. "To be able to buy at the July sale and have access to the beautiful European pedigrees, then be able to breed to a European stallion who doesn't shuttle to Australia, it is definitely an attractive option for many breeders." 

At the Magic Millions National Broodmare Sale last month, 10 mares in foal to Frankel were sold at an average of AU$880,000 ($610,324) while three were sold at the Inglis Chairman's Sale in early May, the trio purchased by Yulong.

Zhang Yuesheng September Yearling Sale Tattersalls Ireland
Photo: Patrick McCann/Racing Post
Yuesheng Zhang (bottom left) at Tattersalls

The three-day, 852-Lot July Sale, which starts July 6, comprises significant drafts from the likes of Ireland's Baroda Stud, Godolphin, Coolmore, Juddmonte, The National Stud, and trainers Ed Walker, William Haggas, Karl Burke, and David Simcock.

"People have just got so much more global with what's going on," McAlpine said. "The whole online (sales) has really ramped up a notch, and I do have a lot of breeders looking to go to the December sales to buy broodmares because the market here in Australia is so hot, so people are looking everywhere else.

"The mares who are outcrosses to Danehill (blood), they are looking for those types of mares.

"Promise Of Success—2022 Canadian Club Emancipation Stakes (G2) winner—came out of the December sale for Rosemont for 27,000gns ($37,774). You look at some of those prices, you're looking at 30,000, 40,000gns, and 40,000gns translate to AU$80,000. You put another AU$35,000 on top to get them home and you're still in front.

"People are doing the numbers, looking at the pedigrees, and going, 'Well, it is certainly worthwhile to get on a plane and have a look.' In years and decades past, people said it was too expensive, the pound is double the Australian dollar, but now the exchange rate doesn't matter so much."