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  • breeze up sales- ready to run?

    Breeze up sales were a logical development. One of the supposed advantages  is that the horses offered are almost ready to run.  I put this assumption to the test in this month’s International Thoroughbred magazine.  To read the article follow the link and go to pages 50-52

    http://www.issuu.com/international_thoroughbred/docs/issuu_april

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  • Volkswagen sires

    Some cars retain their value more that others. Some stallions have offspring that retain their value better than others. In this month’s International Thoroughbred magazine I examine this issue with reference to National Hunt markets. To read the article follow the link http://issuu.com/international_thoroughbred/docs/itb_march/58

    One response to “Volkswagen sires”

    1. Joe Smith Avatar

      I’ll be sure to take a look at that as soon as possible. It’s a fair point to be made and as you point out there’s a method behind it.
      Thanks for the advice and keep writing.

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  • Stowaway revealed

     Jumps sires are often dead or infirm by the time their merits become apparent.  Stowaway has just turned 17 so given average luck he should be active for another 4 or 5 years (hopefully more).  His merits are now becoming abundantly clear and National Hunt breeders should be placing him near the top of their lists when planning their future matings. Use him before we lose him is my advice.

    Statistics

    Stowaway is currently lying in 70th position in the Anglo-Irish jumps list with earnings of around £100,000. He has had 7 winners from 23 runners (30%). In 2009/2010 he finished in 170th position with total earnings of £76,648 and 3 winners from 22 runners (14%). In 2008/2009 he finished in 218th position with total earnings of £57,513 and 5 winners from 21 runners (24%).  “So what?” , would be most people’s response to these figures. However in this case the statistics tell an incomplete story. His winners to runners percentages are not particularly great but they mask the quality of some of the individuals that are now coming through. In addition the mares he initially covered were extremely modest as you would expect from a covering fee of €600.  Also Stowaway did not commence stud duties until 2001 so his oldest progeny have just turned 9.

    Shark Hanlon and Stowaway

    January 23rd 2011 saw Stowaway record a major double at Leopardstown. Hidden Cyclone (ex Hurricane Debbie by Shahanndeh) was a good winner of a Grade 2 Novice hurdle over 2 1/2 miles.  He was introduced into the betting for the Neptune Novices Hurdle at Cheltenham but his trainer John Joseph aka ‘Shark’ Hanlon feels that in time he will make a top class staying chaser. Shark Hanlon also trained the bumper winner Mart Lane (ex Western Whisper by Supreme Leader) who is also under consideration for Cheltenham.  Mart Lane is a full brother to the best horse sired to date by Stowaway in Western Leader (ex Western Whisper by Supreme Leader) who has won four times including a Grade 2 hurdle, prior to running second at Aintree in the Sefton hurdle.  All of these horses were bred by Ronnie O’Neill who stands Stowaway in Whytemount Stud in Kilkenny and who was the primary supporter in the early years. For good measure Stowaway Pearl (ex Kelly’s Pearl by Miner’s Lamp) won at Thurles on the 10th February and he is also trained by Shark Hanlon who has been key to the rise of Stowaway.

    Stowaway race record

    Stowaway was first seen on the racecourse as a two year old in October 1996, when he made a winning debut in a mile maiden at Newcastle for trainer Michael Jarvis. The potential he showed that day meant that he was transferred to Godolphin for the rest of his career.  He was beaten on his reappearance at three but then stepped up in class to win the Group 3 Gordon Stakes at Goodwood over 12 furlongs. He followed up in August by winning the Group 2 Voltigeur Stakes from Derby runner-up Silver Patriarch. The St Leger is the traditional target of Voltigeur winners and it was talked about for Stowaway but he failed to make it to Doncaster and in his absence the classic was won by Silver Patriarch. The Champion Stakes saw him return to action that season. He did respectably, finishing fourth behind Pilsudski over a trip short of his best but still finishing ahead of the likes of Derby winner Benny the Dip and Group 1 winners Revoque and Bijou D’Inde.

     Stowaway spent the winter in Dubai and made a winning reappearance in the Dubai Sheema Classic at Nad Al Sheba.  However this was before that race attained graded status. Alas this also proved to be  his last racecourse appearance. His career finished with a record of four wins from six runs and he had proven himself to be amongst the best of his generation. However it was also a career that seemed to fall short of its potential. He seemed an ideal candidate for the St Leger but never got the opportunity to compete in that classic. He never got the opportunity to run beyond 12 furlongs and he seemed a likely sort to improve with age but we never really saw that assumption tested. In addition he never raced on ground worse than good, but race reports filed after his maiden indicate that he had a high knee action so he should have been suited by softer ground.

    Stowaway’s Pedigree

    Sire: Slip Anchor

    Stowaway is a son of the runaway 1985 Derby winner Slip Anchor.   Slip Anchor did not follow on from his sire  and grandsire in throwing a Derby winner but he compiled a reasonable record from his time at stud. From 586 foals he had 302 winners(52%) and 28 (5%) stakes winners.  His best offspring included Oaks, Irish Oaks and St Leger winner User Friendly (ex Rostova by Blakeney), Italian Derby winner and Irish Derby runner-up Morshdi (ex Reem Albaraari by Sadler’s Wells), Italian Group 1 winner and Hardwicke Stakes winner Posidonas (ex Tamassos by Dance in Time) and Melbourne Cup runner-up Give the Slip (ex Falafil by Fabulous Dancer).  His best offspring weren’t precocious, stayed well and tended to be durable. The average winning distance of his offspring is a very high at 12.4 furlongs.  Slip Anchor’s stud fee began at £30,000 in 1987 before dropping to £25000 in 1989, £20000 in 1990. He was available at 3-4k throughout the noughties before his retirement from stud duties in 2007.

    Dam: On Credit

    On Credit, the dam of Stowaway showed high class form in France. She won as a juvenile, won twice over 10 furlongs at three and was twice runner-up in editions of the 11 furlong Group 3 Prix Fille de L’Air. She is also a half sister to Falafil (by Fabulous Dancer) the dam of the previously mentioned Give the Slip (by Slip Anchor). At stud she is also the dam of Credit-A-Plenty (by Generous) who was runner up in the Group 3 Park Hill Stakes.  Stowaway’s grand-dam Noble Tiara was twice a winner( over 10 and 12 furlongs) from nine starts she made as a three year old. This was her only season to race but aside from winning she placed fourth in both the Prix de Flore (Gr3) and Prix de Royallieu (Gr3). On Credit was a daughter of French Guineas winner, No Pass No Sale a son of Northfields. Slip Anchor worked well with Northfields and from only 7 horses bred on this cross they included Slicious (ex Precious Jade) winner of a Group 1 Premio Roma and Anchorite (ex Elysian) who was a high class two year old.

    The secret of Success

    Stowaway’s success has taken people by surprise.  At the time of his arrival at Whytemount Stud in 2001, it had been three years since he had set foot on a racecourse. Understandably there weren’t big queues of breeders to use this forgotten horse. His initial crop sizes numbered 30 with many of these mares being provided by the horses new owner, Ronnie O’Neill.  Following some success he secured 120 mares in 2009 and this rose to 200 mares in 2010 at a heady €1000 service fee. His fee for 2011 is listed as private, but even if the fee is trebled or quadrupled it may still represent value.

    Understanding his success may be easier than we think.  It is well to remember what a high class racehorse he was and it is certainly likely that we never saw the best of him.  Physically he is a big good looking bay. His sire is a potent influence for stamina and the Mill Reef line is responsible for plenty of high profile National Hunt sires.  He has covered mostly moderate mares and made the most of his opportunities.  There is no secret to his success apart from his own abilities.

    Nicks and the future

    Stowaway seems to throw winners to all sorts of lines.  An unfamiliar name that occurs a lot amongst his offspring as broodmare sire is Shahanndeh (Assert ex Shademah by Thatch) who was a half brother to Sharastani who previously stood at Whytemount Stud and was the sire of many of his earlier mates.  Apart from Presenting the Irish national hunt stallion scene is dominated by sons of Sadler’s Wells. Given the success enjoyed on the flat by crossing Sadlers Well’s and Shirley Heights line mares it seems natural that many of these mares will be tried with Stowaway. His first 3 figure sized crop are now yearlings so it will take a few years to make an impact on the track. In the meantime, breeders should take advantage of his availability and I am confident that he will be highly placed on the sires table throughout the mid to late years of this decade.

    STOWAWAY (GB) 1994

    Slip
    Anchor (GB) 1982
    Shirley
    Heights (GB) 1975
    Mill
    Reef (USA) 1968
    Never
    Bend (USA) 1960
    Milan
    Mill (USA) 1962
    Hardiemma
    (GB) 1969
    Hardicanute
    (GB) 1962
    Grand
    Cross (GB) 1952
    Sayonara
    (GER) 1965
    Birkhahn
    (GER) 1945
    Alchimist
    (GER) 1930
    Bramouse
    (FR) 1936
    Suleika
    (GER) 1954
    Ticino
    (GER) 1939
    Schwarzblaurot
    (GER) 1947
    On
    Credit (FR) 1988
    No
    Pass No Sale (IRE) 1982
    Northfields
    (USA) 1968
    Northern
    Dancer (CAN) 1961
    Little
    Hut (USA) 1952
    No
    Disgrace (IRE) 1976
    Djakao
    (FR) 1966
    Exbury
    Grace (FR) 1970
    Noble
    Tiara (USA) 1981
    Vaguely
    Noble (GB) 1965
    Vienna
    (GB) 1957
    Noble
    Lassie (GB) 1956
    Tayyara
    (IRE) 1975
    Targowice
    (USA) 1970
    Shahla
    (IRE) 1968

    3 responses to “Stowaway revealed”

    1. mike Avatar
      mike

      Yet again a potentially significant trend is spotted first by montjeu.com

    2. Roy Hadley Avatar
      Roy Hadley

      Just a magnificent read…………as always.

      Congratulations on a wonderful blog

    3. Nick Avatar
      Nick

      Your comments are so correct – this is a super looking/bred horse with balance & a hardy presence – his pedigree with the Shirley Heights / Never Bend line should be a big help to improve breeding lines – so many people breed both flat & nh for sales trends and forget about proper breeding resulting in poor blood lines and destruction of realy valuable lines – I think one should breed to have a proper bred filly foal and success will folow.
      Thank you,
      N.Asple.

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  • French Lessons

    The increasing success of French bred horses has been the most striking element of National Hunt breeding over the last decade. Mon Mome in the Grand National, Binocular and Hors la Loi in the Champion Hurdle, Kauto Star in the Gold Cup and Master Minded, Voy Pur Ustedes and Azertyuiop in the Queen Mother Champion Chase have taken jumps racing top prizes. Trainers and owners aren’t oblivious to such success and the respective champion trainers Paul Nicholls and Willie Mullins are long time converts to the merits of French breds. The Irish and British breeding sectors do not seem to have actively responded to the new market realities and if nothing is done they will continue to lose market share. If the Anglo- Irish racing and breeding authorities wish to meet the challenge they need to think strategically and act courageously.

    Understanding the marketplace
    Someone once explained the difference between advertising and marketing as follows- with advertising you try and sell what you’ve made, with marketing you only make what you can sell. With respect to Irish Thoroughbred Marketing and British Bloodstock Marketing they are actually in the advertising game trying to promote a product that has already been produced. Their governing bodies need to think about true marketing and how their respective breeding and racing industries can produce and showcase products that are truly in demand.

    The French breds that are in demand in the UK and Ireland have previously demonstrated ability on the racecourse. For a buyer this means that the horses are broken, schooled, fit and ready to run and yet they are at an age when many of their Anglo-Irish peers are still being left to develop. The problem for the Anglo-Irish store horse is that the evidence in favour of this model versus the French model is inconclusive at best. However there can be no doubt in an owner’s mind regarding the costs and time involved in bringing his store horse to the racetrack. The traditionalists used to argue that horses who had started “too early” would burn out quickly but the racing careers of such as Kauto Star (36 runs over 8 seasons and counting), Big Bucks (30 runs and counting), Mon Mome (41 runs) have changed that assumption. In addition some veterinary evidence may indicate a beneficial impact of early exercise and training on subsequent injury rates.

    Meeting the challenge- race planners

    Underpinning the French system is the race programme that provides lots of opportunities to test younger horses. There is no reason why elements of the French racing programme cannot be adopted by the Anglo-Irish race-planners. It might horrify some (or many), but why not run three year old bumpers, three year old hurdles from February onwards and four year old chases on a regular basis? The world would not end and traditional race programming would still exist for less precocious types. In a business situation rather than allowing a competitor an unchallenged position you would seek to win back the business and such moves would allow a segment of the market to compete directly with the French runners. An additional benefit of such moves is that it would allow breeders earlier indications of the merits of jumping stallions. Given that many jumps stallions are deceased before their worth has been established this is another important consideration.

    Meeting the challenge- breeders

    1. I don’t believe that French jumps stallions are manifestly superior to their Anglo-Irish counterparts but there are some lessons that might be learned. Firstly a much greater number of French stallions have actually raced over jumps. In the UK and Ireland the likes of Alderbrook, Midnight Legend, Broadsword and Monksfield performed over jumps but they represented a tiny minority of the stallion population. It seems incongruous that jumps breeders do not seem to place any weighting (and often a negative weighting) on stallions having demonstrated an ability to jump. It is also worth remembering that one of the outstanding steeplechase sires of the modern era, Roselier, won the French champion hurdle.

    2. There has been a loss of diversity in the National Hunt stallion ranks. This is driven by huge books for fashionable stallions, many of whom are unproven. There has also been an unhealthy concentration on certain sire lines especially sons of Sadler’s Wells. The consequence is reduced opportunities for other stallions to make a breakthrough. The French have smaller book sizes and many stallions get an opportunity there that would not be available in the UK or Ireland. Irish and UK breeders should be less fashion conscious and more adventurous.

    3. Invest in proven French stallions. Larger book sizes give Irish and UK stallion masters an economic advantage over their French rivals. This affords them the opportunity to tap into successful French lines. The purchase of Robin Des Pres and Robin Des Champs for stud duty in Ireland are indicators that some studs are adopting this policy. More studmasters should use this key difference between the marketplaces to their advantage. In a business context this is analogous to poaching your opposition’s key staff, something that can strengthen your position and weaken theirs.

    Conclusion

    Competition between breeding nations is healthy and can lead to improved standards all round. The French have done a superb job in gaining a very substantial share of the Anglo-Irish market, driven by racecourse success. This success has naturally resulted in higher prices for promising young stock and some purchasers are now questioning whether there is still value to be obtained. However it would be a very dangerous assumption by Anglo-Irish breeders that the French will price themselves out of the market. With the Anglo-Irish industry in crisis, doing nothing is not an option so radical and new thinking is required to regain competitiveness.

    One response to “French Lessons”

    1. Darren Avatar
      Darren

      I found the above blog very interesting with some very valid points and as I am a NH breeder, it is in my interest that the above topic should reach an improved conclusion sooner rather than later.
      I have attended breeding seminars where some of these topics were discussed. I remember Martin Pipe saying how Irish stores took months to get the fat off before he could start to train them and he would like more done with them, and then Tony Mullins said that he would never buy a horse broken but guaranteed untried at any sale.The vet also gave evidence that early training could be beneficial with reguard to injury later on.
      I agree that unproven stallions are covering too many large books and it is giving less chances to others.The problem is that unlike the flat, most NH breeders are on a very small scale(and sell as foals) so we don’t really have a choice,when in order to survive we must have stock that are going to be commercial and in demand at the sales.If there is one upside to this over use of some it is that when the lesser used stallions with limited chances do succeed (such as is the case with Stowaway)they prove your point, become commercial and show and are viewed as being top class because they did it the hard way.If we as breeders could pin-point stallions like Stowaway about to “make it” then so would we as we would be in at the bottom fee’s.
      With reguard to buying french stallions, would they be for sale ? Would they be as successful here ? One example is Marignan. He was a good racehorse and sire in france but didn’t make it in the UK and dosn’t look like he will hit any highs here in Ireland either.
      All the top horses such as Kauto Star etc.. that have been imported overed over the years have a few things in common. They are all bought by leading agents for wealthy oweners and for big powerful yards. These people are not going to a store sale in France hoping to get lucky,rather to pilage the best that they have that are proven.
      It is well documented that Kauto Star’s trainer did not want him to be sold, but the power of money made sure he was.It is a fact that the likes of stallions such as Roselier’s jumping ability propably was a factor and help to him getting so many good chasers, but unfortunately the length of time it takes these horses to mature is not what is selling. For the most part most buyers want a horse to run six to nine months after the sale. I really do fear for what staying chasers will look like in a few decades, as very few trainers have oweners willing to wait.They all seem to want speed at the expence of stamina.
      Finally on the point of having 3 year old bumpers and hurdles,how will this effect NH breeding and pedigree’s?It will futher increase a need for speed with more flat pedigree influance. I would agree with these type of races, but only for horses that were NH bred so it would be a level playing field and would not dilute great NH pedigree’s.There are plenty example’s of these “flat bred” 3 year olds winning bumpers but they rarely do any good when steped up from 1 mile 6 to two miles plus.If I was to buy a bumper winning filly to go breeding I want to know she stayed beyond a mile and 6.Yes there are exceptions over a mile 6 using the great Istabraq as an example. He won a flat maiden over 1m6f but he is an exception and not the rule.
      I would be interested in your views on any points I’ve raised. Keep up the good work.

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