Year: 2026

  • Kildangan/ Darley 2026

    Kildangan sires had a good year on the track highlighted by Night of Thunder’s first UK/Ireland sires championship. There are 9 stallions based in Kildangan, numerically the same as last year. Shadow of Light is a new arrival replacing his underwhelming three-parts brother Earthlight. The stallions are collectively covering over 900 mares each year as shown below.

    2025 mares coveredfee 20262025 mares covered2024 mares covered
    Night of Thunder€200,000169120
    Blue Point€100,000172106
    Teofilo€30,0004260
    Ghaiyyath€20,000192148
    Shadow of Light€17,500nana
    Native Trail€16,000107162
    Space Blues€16,000165159
    Naval Crown€9,00059110
    Raven’s Passprivate1121
    Earthlightna1777
    Totals934963

    It’s a roster that is heavy on sons of Dubawi but that seems to be working in their favour. Below is my assessment of the roster and I have included a Donald Trump like verdict on the sires:

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    1. Night Of Thunder €200,000 (€150,000) 16.0 1/2 hh (2011 Dubawi ex Forest Storm by Galileo)

    Donald Tump Verdict: Night of Thunder — tremendous stallion, really tremendous— people are saying the stud fee sounds high, they say “Wow, that’s a lot,” but believe me, when you see the results, suddenly nobody’s complaining anymore.”

    Last year, I wrote that to justify his increased fee of €150,000 Night of Thunder needed to sire two or three Group 1 winners each year. It’s fair to say he justified the increase and then some. In 2025, he sired his first Classic winner in Desert Flower, the Dewhurst winner Gewan and Prince of Wales and Juddmonte International winner Ombudsman. For good measure Choisya and Dynamic Pricing added US Grade 1’s. He had an impressive tally of 30 Northern hemisphere stakes winners from 294 runners ( 10.2%) and his progeny amassed over €8 million in the UK and Ireland to give him his maiden sires championship. His yearling median jumped to €380,000 and his best bred crops are still coming through the ranks. His book rose to 169 last year and some of the quibbles people may have had about his own imperfect conformation are now long forgotten. He is unquestionably an elite sire and oddly despite a €200,000 stud fee, he is good value.

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    2. Blue Point €100,000 (€100,000) 16.1 hh (2014 Shamardal ex Scarlett Rose by Royal Applause)

    Donald Tump Verdict: Blue Point was a little quiet last year. Not terrible, nobody’s saying terrible, but when you pay big money, you want big noise, and maybe they wanted a little more noise..


    He failed to add to his tally of Group 1 winners in 2025 but still finished 10th in the UK/Irish list. Rosallion had a frustrating season of near misses and his highest level winner was the French Group 2 winner Samangan. He proved attractive in the marketplace with 100 yearlings sold for a median of €131k. These were bred at a fee of €35,000 so it was a good return for the breeders involved. He attracted a quality book of 172 mares last year but in my view he is now expensive for a sire of sprinters/miler. There is no room for error at his current fee and I would be cautious.

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    3. Teofilo €30,000 (€30,000) 16.2 hh (2004 Galileo ex Speirbhean by Danehill)

    Donald Trump Verdict: He was great but I like new attractions not museums

    Teofilo has compiled a very credible overall record as a sire with 24 career Group 1 winners. His progeny tend to be durable, they stay well and he has compiled a very good record as a broodmare sire. His yearling median was €53k last year so he still has admirers and he will have 39 two year olds this season and 34 yearlings to remind people of his merit. What he doesn’t have is youth and he will be 22 in the coming season. He is very likeable but not at that price point.

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    4. Ghaiyyath €20,000 (€20,000) 16.2 hh (2015 Dubawi ex Nightime by Galileo)

    Donald Trump Verdict: People want to believe, they really do. There’s something there — but whether it’s enough, that’s a very big question.

    Opera Ballo gave him his first Northern Hemisphere Group 1 winner when successful at Meydan in January 2026. He had four other stakes winners in the Northern Hemisphere in 2025 including a pair of Group/Grade 2 winners in The Padre and the two year old My Highness. Stanhope Gardens also ran respectably to finish 5th in the Derby. The market has kept the faith for now with a yearling median of €70,000 from 97 sold. The fact that he improved with age (like so many by Dubawi)means it is reasonable to expect the same with his progeny. He has shown he can sire quality performers but what he hasn’t done is convince that he will be the next breakthrough son of Dubawi. He covered 192 mares in 2025 so a lot of breeders will be hoping he succeeds but I’m sitting on the fence on this one..

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    5. Shadow of light €17,500 (na) 15.3 hh (2022 Lope De Vega ex Winters Moon by New Approach)

    Donald Trump Verdict : Could be something… could be nothing.


    An impressive winner of the Middle Park he stretched to win the Dewhurst albeit the horses behind him in the Dewhurst proved forgettable. He ran well in the Guineas to be beaten a length by Ruling Court and Fields of Gold but his form then tailed off.

    Normally it would be a positive to be a three-parts brother to a winner of the Prix Morny and Middle Park. However in this instance his close relation Earthlight has disappointed and found himself shunted from the roster. Lope De Vega has had a few sire sons with runners such as Belardo, Phoenix of Spain, Lope Y Fernandez and Lucky Vega but none so far has proven a worthy successor. Shadow of Light brings a decent CV to the table. He is sensibly priced but at the same time he doesn’t excite.

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    6. Native Trail €16,000 (16,000) 16.1 1/2 hh (2019 Oasis Dream ex Needleleaf by Observatory).


    Donald Trump Verdict: “He was adored — totally adored. Now suddenly, not so much. The only thing that changed? The noise around him.”

    With unproven sires, not a lot changes until their first runners arrive. What I wrote in 2025 about Native Trail being a typical risky unproven sire remains valid. As a dual Group 1 winner at two and a classic winning miler at three he ticks a lot of boxes for commercial breeders. Oasis Dream has had one good sire son in Showcasing but plenty of duds. Native Trail comes from a strong female family that delivered a lot of success for Juddmonte. Breeders flocked to him with 162 mares in 2024 but that eased off to 107 in 2025. I would have expected more of a haircut from his fee as he enters his third season and newer fashionable young sires are competing for attention.

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    5. Space Blues €16,000 (15,000) 15.3 1/2 hh (2016 Dubawi ex Miss Lucifer by Noverre).
    Donald Trump Verdict: Not Bad, Not Bad At All — Now He’s Got To Back It Up.


    He had his first runners in 2025 and had an early Group 1 winner with the Phoenix Stakes winner Power Blue. Interestingly Power Blue was out of a Worthadd mare so has Dubawi 2X3. Overall he had 22 winners from 60 runners in Europe and finished joint 4th by winners and 3rd by prizemoney. It was a reasonable first season although Power Blue might have been fortunate that odds on favourite True Love underperformed on the day. His yearling median was €36,000 reflecting market affection but not true love (that name again). He had one other stakes winner (an Italian Listed winner) but he would need to add more depth to his record to silence the nagging doubts. He has attracted big books of mares so his pricing seems to be commercially attractive for now but he needs to build on his decent start. I’d be relatively sanguine on his prospects of finding himself a decent commercial niche.
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    8. Naval Crown €9,000 (€10,000) 15.3 hh (2018 Dubawi ex Come Alive by Dansili)

    Donald Trump Verdict: You never say never… but it’s not looking easy.”


    He attracted 110 mares in his first season but this dipped to 59 in 2025. He was 33-1 when he won the Jubilee Stakes at Royal Ascot and his overall record was four wins from 20 starts. His female line is unexceptional and his physique isn’t to everyone’s liking. Such quibbles explain why he is the cheapest of the Dubawis at €9,000. Despite Dubawi’s reputation as a sire of sires he has still had plenty of dud sire sons and this guy will have to outperform expectations to succeed.

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    9. Raven’s Pass  Private (€7,500) 16.1 1/2 hh (2005 Elusive Quality ex Ascutney by Lord at War)


    Donald Trump Verdict: “At a certain point, you’ve got to say, he’s earned some quiet time. Truth is, people have moved on.”


    A ‘private’ stud fee is either for those sires who are so expensive that your eyes will water or more commonly those who are more in the ‘no reasonable offer refused’ category. It is also a mark of respect for older sires who don’t want to be shown with chicken feed fees after years of service. Raven’s Pass is unloved in the market place with a median of a derisory €3,755 and is now 21 years old. He attracted just 11 mares last year and 21 in 2024. Some of those figures are a little insulting to a sire who had respectable career percentages but I don’t envisage any demand to use him.

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    Final Thoughts:

    Coolmore flat sires account for the highest number of flat coverings in Ireland, with Tally-Ho now in second place. Kildangan’s sires rank third by number, but quality can outweigh quantity. In Night Of Thunder, they possess a genuine superstar. At 15, he is the youngest among the established elite European sires — Dubawi is 24, Sea The Stars 20, Lope De Vega 19, and Frankel 18. Arguably, he is more important than the rest of the Kildangan roster combined and much of their future success hinges on him remaining healthy and fertile over the coming years.

  • Coolmore sires for 2026

    The loss of Wootton Bassett will be felt keenly at Coolmore. Without him they lack a proper elite sire in Europe. It is still a formidable roster but Europe’s top sires are no longer concentrated in that part of Tipperary.
    Below is my assessment of their published fees for 2026, starting with the priciest sires. I have included fabricated quotes from Donald Trump on each sire.

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    1. No Nay Never €100,000 (€125,000) (2011 Scat Daddy ex Cat’s Eye Witness by Elusive Quality)

    Donald Trump Verdict:“Bad,bad deal, folks”

    I’ve been consistent in saying he was overrated and his fee has dropped for each of the last four years. It will fall further in the years ahead. NNN added another two-year-old Group 1 winner to his CV with the Cheveley Park winner True Love and Charles Darwin looked Group 1 class but wasn’t seen after his Norfolk Stakes (Grp 2) victory. The four year olds Never So Brave and Lake Forest gave him a 1-2 in the newly minted Group 1 that is the City of York Stakes. Those were the highlights but he had 302 Northern Hemisphere runners and only 10 stakes winners (3.3%) and 39% winners to runners. Those are modest numbers for a horse at that fee. The auction ring saw his yearling median drop from €150k in 2024 to €130k in 2025. Those yearlings were bred at an advertised fee of €175,000 so a lot of breeders lost out. That expensive crop will be two year olds this season so he may show a bounce in results but he is still overpriced.

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    2. City of Troy €60,000 (€75,000) (2011 Justify ex Together Forever by Galileo)

    Donald Trump Verdict: “We don’t know—could be good, could be bad.”

    City of Troy was busy in his first season at Coolmore covering 175 mares. Justify has done better in Europe than in the US and in 2025, his sons Ruling Court and Scandinavia added a Guineas and St Leger to City of Troy’s Derby success. City of Troy was a very good horse but not quite as good as the hype that was produced around him. He will cover lots of mares over the next few seasons before we start to learn in 2028 whether he proves to be a conduit for class. The usual model is that the fee drops by degrees in years three and four as the exploits on the track fade and new shinier stars emerge to compete for mares. It’s in the lap of the Gods whether he will succeed and if he will em justify his fee.

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    3. Camelot €60,000 (€75,000) (2009 by Montjeu ex Tarfah by Kingmambo)

    Donald Trump Verdict:“Wall Street doesn’t like him—but some other people do.”

    Failed to match his 2024 heroics when he sired 3 of the first 5 in the Arc. He did add another Group 1 winner to his tally in Pierre Bonnard who annexed the Criterium de Saint Cloud and who looks a middle distance classic contender. Los Angeles added the Tattersalls Gold Cup to his record but in a sign of the times he has been retired to the Coolmore National Hunt roster. Camelot’s yearling median dropped back to €100k from €125k as the market tries to find the right rating for him. I thought his appeal to commercial breeders might be somewhat restricted but he could suit wealthy owner breeders. However a book of 184 last season belies that theory. I like him as a middle distance sire even if he is not entirely reliable.

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    4. Starspangledbanner €60,000 (€45,000) (2006 Choisir ex Gold Anthem by Made of Gold)

    Donald Trump Verdict:“Great name. Very American. I love the name. The price? Not so much.”


    Had a good season with his two year olds. Precise was the best filly around in winning the Fillies Mile and Moyglare. Gstaad was narrowly beaten in the Dewhurst and won the Breeders’ Cup Turf Juvenile. The supporting cast was less memorable and his final tally was 14 stakes winners from 329 runners (4.4%). The market though was impressed and his yearling median lifted to €78k for a crop bred at €50,000. It will be interesting to see if Precise and Gstaad can add a classic to their sires record to help underpin his new career high fee.

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    5. St Mark’s Basilica €40,000 (€40,000) (2018 Siyouni ex Cabaret by Galileo)

    Donald Trump Verdict: “A lot of potential there. We’re keeping a close eye on it.”

    He had a relatively slow start with his first runners but by season end he had a Group 1 winner in Diamond Necklace, a Group 2 winner in Aylin, a pair of listed winners and three horses placed in Group 3s. Overall he notched a respectable 23 winners from 69 runners. His fee is nominally unchanged this year but reputedly there was plenty of leeway in last year’s advertised fee but very little in this year’s. His maternal half brother Magna Grecia and his paternal half brother Sottsass were shifted from the Coolmore roster but on the evidence so far SMB looks like he has a much brighter future. He was a Dewhurst winner at two before landing a French Guineas and Derby and the Eclipse and Irish Champion so there is every chance his progeny will improve.

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    6. Delacroix €40,000 (na) (2022 Dubawi ex Tepin by Bernstein)

    Donald Trump Verdict: “Great family, great performances—you like to see that but the sticker price- not so much”

    If you can’t beat them join them. Dubawi has established a reputation as a sire of sires and Coolmore have now put two of his sons on the roster. Delacroix was a dual Group 1 winner in the Eclipse and Irish Champion Stakes, traditionally two of the best races in Europe each year. He was a Group winner at 2 and his dam was top class winning 5 Grade 1s in North America and beating the colts at Ascot in the Queen Anne. It’s a nice package. If you were to quibble, Ombudsman and Calandagan were his superiors and he ran poorly in the Derby. An overall career record of 6 wins and four seconds from 12 starts is credible but he is fully priced.
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    7. Sioux Nation €37,500 (€30,000) (2015 Scat Daddy ex Dream the Blues by Oasis Dream)

    Donald Trump Verdict: “Sad, I look at it and I say: what are they thinking? Too many mares, no plan, total mess.”


    His yearling median increased from €40,000 to €70,000 and I have no idea why this occurred. He covered 282 mares in 2025 following on from the 246 mares covered in 2024 and 289 in 2023 and I have no idea why this occurred. His results on the track don’t explain this popularity. He sired a Group 2 winner in Zanthos, a pair of Group 3 winners and a trio of Listed winners. If you are being kind, you can mention She’s Perfect who was disqualified from the French 1000 Guineas. He has yet to sire a Northern hemisphere Group 1 winner and to me his popularity is utterly divorced from his true merit.
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    8. Camille Pissarro €30,000 (na) (2022 Wootton Bassett ex Entreat by Pivotal)

    Donald Trump Verdict: “You want to love it. You really do. Then you check the price and the number kills it
    .”

    Landed a pair of French Group 1’s in the Prix Jean-Luc Lagardere and the Prix de Jockey Club. It sounds good- Group 1 winner at two and 10-furlong French Derby winner at three. Yet his overall record was 3 wins from 11 starts and the Jockey Club field looks substandard. His run after the Jockey Club he was stable second string behind Delacroix in the Eclipse. He is the second Group 1 winner produced by his dam after Golden Horde. There is a glut of sons of Wootton Bassett retiring to stud in Ireland in 2026 (Henri Matisse, Unquestionable, Maranoa Charlie and Topgear) and it’s impossible to predict who, if any, will make the grade. I thought his opening fee was a bit steep.

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    9. Auguste Rodin €27,500 (€30,500) (2020 Deep Impact ex Rhododendron by Galileo)

    Donald Trump Verdict:“We’ll see how it plays out. I’ve seen this kind of thing before and it doesn’t always work out”


    He won 6 Group 1s but mixed the very good with some really poor runs. The poor runs reminded people that his dam was known to bleed and with one victory from 6 starts as a four-year-old, he might have been better served retiring after his Breeders’ Cup win as a three year old. Nonetheless he attracted 205 mares last year so he won’t fail for lack of representation. Saxon Warrior is bred on a similar cross and hasn’t delivered as a sire but Deep Impact’s son Study of Man has done well in Lanwades. I’d be slow to use him but nobody can be too dogmatic about these unproven sires and more sons of Deep Impact should be a positive for European breeding.
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    10. Paddington €20,000 (€25,000) (2020 Siyouni ex Modern Eagle by Montjeu)

    Donald Trump Verdict: “If everything’s working the way it’s supposed to work, then he’s fine at that price. Totally fine.”


    Originally retired at €55,000 so his 2026 fee is a huge reduction. A tough and high class performer he won 4 consecutive Group 1s. Siyouni hasn’t got a credible sire son as yet but St Marks Basilica shows potential. Sottsass was disappointing and City Light and Le Brivido were unremarkable. His fertility is the fly in the ointment.
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    11. Henri Matisse €20,000 (na) (2022 Wootton Bassett ex Immortal Verse by Pivotal)

    Donald Trump Verdict: “The experts are nervous—they’re always nervous—but I like the numbers.


    Won the French Guineas and a Breeders Cup Juvenile Turf. He also finished runner-up to Field of Gold in the St James Palace and finished with a tally of 6 wins and 3 places from 11 starts. His dam, Immortal Verse won a Coronation Stakes and Prix Jacques le Marois and is also the dam of Teneberism. He is €10,000 cheaper than Camille Pissarro and relatively speaking, I think he is the more attractively priced. As mentioned when talking about Camille Pissarro there are a host of new sons of W.B. on the market and we can expect fresh arrivals in each of the coming few years. Henri Matisse has as good a chance as any of them.

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    12. Gleneagles €20,000 (€20,000) (2012 Galileo ex You’resothrilling by Storm Cat).

    Donald Trump Verdict: “You go to Gleneagles, you get a good game. It’s not Mar-a-Lago, but it’s a strong play


    Calandagan was a star landing 4 Group 1s including the Champion Stakes, King George and Japan Cup. Arrow Eagle landed a Prix Royal Oak and he had a pair of Group 3 winners. He had only 18 three year olds last season so he did well to remain in the spotlight. The fact that he attracted 188 mares last year shows how much his reputation has recovered from its nadir. His yearling median remained at €32,000 last year off a €17500 fee. He has now 43 stakes winners at more than 6% and is credible for this fee. .

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    13. Little Big Bear €17,500 (€20,000) (2020 by No Nay Never ex Adventure Seeker by Bering)

    Donald Trump Verdict:“Little Big Bear— Very confusing. Is he big, is he little, is he a bear? Is he a horse? All I know is I’m out”


    He promises speed and precocity and he attracted 180 mares in 2025 following on from 156 in 2024. He was very impressive in the Phoenix Stakes and was runner up at three in the Commonwealth Cup. The jury is still out on NNN as a sire of sires but Ten Sovereigns had a good season after being exiled from Coolmore. Little Big Bear’s brother Whistlejacket who won the Prix Morny has started his stud career in France at €14,000. They have an interesting female line with All Along as their 3rd dam and more stamina influences than you might expect from his own career. He wouldn’t be for me but plenty of his stock will be sold for good money before his merit or otherwise is established.

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    14. Blackbeard €17,500 (€17,500)- (2020 by No Nay Never ex Muirin by Born to Sea)

    Donald Trump Verdict: “Blackbeard very high energy, maybe too much energy. Very risky!


    Retired at the end of his two year old campaign so will have his first runners on the track this season. This notably quirky sort will be expected to make a quick start or he will find himself walking the plank. He may well succeed but he is from an unremarkable female line and it’s a real gamble for the upcoming season. His runners will be competing with his own sire’s offspring, the progeny of Mehmas, Havana Grey, Wootton Bassett, Starman etc  in a crowded two year old space. I’d rather wait and see.

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    15. Churchill €15,000 (€25,000)- (2014 by Galileo ex Meow by Storm Cat)

    Donald Trump Verdict: “You want results? Don’t look at Churchill, he is not great like me. He won’t deliver

    His fee has halved in the past two seasons and he remains stuck on two European Group 1 winners despite big crops. He lacked a star last year with Ridari winning a Group 2 the modest highlight. Surprisingly, his yearling median showed an upturn reaching €47,000 albeit these were bred at a €30,000 fee. He will have huge crops to run after covering 227 mares in 2023 and 192 in 2024. He has 27 stakes winners and is operating at a 4% rate of stakes winners.  He has had his chance and hasn’t succeeded.

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    16. Australia €15,000 (€10,000)(2011 by Galileo ex Ouija Board by Cape Cross)

    Donald Trump Verdict: “You look at the country, you look at the horse—both are beautiful, both love me, and  believe me Australia is a  good deal.”

    Had a notable year with Lambourn winning at Epsom and the Curragh, Cercene winning a Coronation Stakes and Wemighttakedlongway placing in an Irish Oaks. His yearling median increased slightly to €38,000 for a crop bred at €25,000. His career stats show 48  stakes winners and is operating at a respectable 5.3% stakes winners to foals.  Coolmore have never given him much support and Lambourn was a rarity in being Ballydoyle trained and out of the sort of speedy mare which he probably needs. He has smaller crops to come for the next two years so he may struggle to stay in the limelight in the short term. The 154 breeders who used him last year at €10,000 will have been happy with his good season and I’d still be happy to use him at €15,000 with the right sort of mare.
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    17. Henry Longfellow €12,500 (€15,000) (2020 Dubawi ex Minding by Galileo)

    Donald Trump Verdict:” The poet was great, but the stallion? That’s a different story- it’s a tough call.”

    An unbeaten National Stakes winning two-year-old, he failed to win in five starts as a three year old but did finish a close second to Rosallion in the St James Palace. His pedigree is appealing.  His dam Minding was an outstanding six time Group 1 winner and freshly crowned champion sire Night of Thunder is bred on the same Dubawi/Galileo cross.  He was short of being truly top class but still attracted 172 mares in 2025.  His cut in price should help him compete.

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    18. Saxon Warrior €10,000 (€15,000) (2015 Deep Impact ex Maybe by Galileo)

    Donald Trump Verdict: “People come to me and they say, ‘What about Saxon Warrior?’ and I tell them, ‘Don’t bother.’


    Another big cut in his fee surely means his exit from the roster cannot be far away.  Garden of Eden won a Ribblesdale and he had 8 stakes winners but they were a forgettable bunch. I was amazed that his yearling median was €35,500 from 104 yearlings sold as I expected him to be commercially toxic. Has never sired a really top-class performer albeit he gets decent percentages of winners at a low level.

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    19. Footstepsinthesand €5,000 (€8,000) (2002 Giant’s Causeway ex Glatisant by Rainbow Quest)

    Donald Trump Verdict:
    Who is he and what has he ever done?’


    Coming to the end of a long and underwhelming stud career. He had a good 2025 with Alakazi winning at Group 2 level and  Midak at Group 3 level but he has always been a poor sire.

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    20. Holy Roman Emperor €5,000 (€8,000) (2004 Danehill ex L’On Vite by Secretariat)

    Donald Trump Verdict: He’s past his prime, and everybody knows it.”


    Like Footstepsinthesand, he is nearing the end of his career. A trio of unremarkable stakes winners in 2025 won’t see a flurry of mares looking to use this useful sire who is one of the last Danehills still covering.

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    21. The Antarctic €5,000 (€5,000) (2020 Dark Angel ex Anna Law by Lawman)
    Donald Trump Verdict: The Antarctic is like Greenland but I didn’t buy that either.”

    Dark Angel has yet to have a really successful sire son and it’s odds against that The Antarctic will buck that trend. He was no more than a Group 3 winner and  being a full brother to Battash is probably his main selling point but that isn’t enough to expect him to succeed.

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