15/11/2017. Enable Crowned Horse of the Year // November Mares Preview – Sister to Cartier 3YO Colt Cracksman at Goffs

 

Enable Crowned Horse of the Year

 

 

Enable after winning the Arc | racingfotos.com

Juddmonte homebred Enable (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}), the winner of five consecutive Group 1s this year, was named Cartier Horse of the Year and champion 3-year-old filly in a ceremony at the Dorchester Hotel in London, England on Tuesday night.

Trained by John Gosden and ridden throughout the season by Frankie Dettori, Enable was third behind stablemate Shutter Speed (GB) (Dansili {GB}) in a Newbury conditions race on her first start of the year and hasn’t lost since. She put herself in Classic contention with a 1 3/4-length score in the Listed Cheshire Oaks in May before trouncing Rhododendron (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) by five lengths in the G1 Investec Oaks. She was a similarly facile winner of the G1 Irish Oaks six weeks later before besting Ulysses (Ire)(Galileo {Ire}), the Cartier champion older horse, by 4 1/2 lengths in the G1 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth S. at Ascot in July. Enable won the G1 Yorkshire Oaks by five lengths in August before besting Cloth of Stars (Ire) (Sea the Stars {Ire}) and Ulysses in the G1 Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe.

The Cartier awards, established in 1991, are decided upon by a combination of points earned in pattern races (30%), end-of-season opinions of a panel of racing journalists/handicappers (35%) and votes from readers of Racing PostThe Daily Telegraph and ITV Racing viewers (35%).

Enable’s John Gosden stablemate Cracksman (GB) (Frankel {GB}) was given the highest rating in Europe in 2017 for his runaway victory in the G1 Champion S. on Oct. 21, and the Anthony Oppenheimer colourbearer was named Cartier 3-year-old colt on Tuesday. The winner of his lone start at two, Cracksman won the Investec Derby Trial in his second start on Apr. 26. He missed the G2 Dante S. after connections deemed it would be too much to try him on testing ground 2 1/2 weeks out from the Derby, and he subsequently put in an eye-catching performance to be third in the blue riband on just his third start. Cracksman was a neck second to Capri (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) in the G1 Irish Derby, with connections thereafter announcing the bay would be put away to prepare for a 4-year-old campaign after the G2 Great Voltigeur S. The nature of a six-length win in that contest caused a re-think, however, and Cracksman traveled to France to take in the G2 Prix Niel on Sept. 10, winning by 3 1/2 lengths.

Bypassing the Arc and avoiding Enable, Cracksman could not have been more impressive when winning the Champion S. by seven lengths and, like Enable, stays in training next year.

Flaxman Stables and Cheveley Park Stud’s Ulysses was named Cartier older horse on the merit of wins in the G1 Coral-Eclipse and G1 Juddmonte International. The 4-year-old, who retires to Cheveley Park Stud next year for a fee of £30,000, hit the board in all six starts in 2017, finishing third in the G1 Prince of Wales’s S., second in the King George and third in the Arc for trainer Sir Michael Stoute.

Ulysses’s sire Galileo was responsible for two other Cartier award winners on Tuesday: Cartier stayer Order of St George (Ire) and Cartier 2-year-old filly Happily (Ire), both trained by Aidan O’Brien for the Coolmore partners. Also hailing from Ballydoyle was Cartier 2-year-old colt US Navy Flag (War Front).

Order of St George becomes the first horse since Yeats (Ire) (Sadler’s Wells) (2005 to 2009) from the same stable to win back-to-back Cartier stayer titles. The 5-year-old took the honours last year off the back of a win in the G1 Gold Cup.

Order of St George couldn’t defend that title this year, going down by a short head to Big Orange (GB) (Duke of Marmalade {Ire}) after setting the pace, but he notched wins in the G3 Irish St Leger Trial-over G1 Melbourne Cup winner Rekindling (Ire) (High Chaparral {Ire})-G1 Irish St Leger and G2 British Champions Long Distance Cup. He was also fourth in the Arc, and stays in training next year.

The beautifully bred Happily, a full-sister to Cartier champion and Classic winner Gleneagles (Ire) as well as G1 Irish 1000 Guineas winner Marvellous (Ire) and two other Group 1 horses, won four of seven starts in 2017. Those included Group 1 wins in the Moyglare Stud S. and the Jean-Luc Lagardere, the latter over males on the Arc undercard. Happily broke her maiden at second asking and became a black-type winner in her third start when taking Leopardstown’s G3 Silver Flash S. in July.

US Navy Flag may have been a slow burner early in the season, but he put it all together late to record a Group 1 double in the Middle Park S. and Dewhurst S. The full-brother to three-time Group 1 winner Roly Poly made his debut on May 1 but took five starts to break his maiden, which he accomplished at The Curragh on July 1. He was second in the G2 July S. next out and fourth behind stablemate Sioux Nation (Scat Daddy) in the G1 Keeneland Phoenix S. in August before winning the G3 Round Tower S. by six lengths on Aug. 27. The Group 1 double came next, and connections opted to try the dirt in the GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile on Nov. 4 but that experiment didn’t prove fruitful, with US Navy Flag beating just two home. His stablemate Mendelssohn (Scat Daddy), second in the Dewhurst, nonetheless provided him a boost on the same weekend with a win in the GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf.

Godolphin, Britain’s champion owner of 2017, took home some more hardware on Tuesday courtesy of its Cartier sprinter Harry Angel (Ire) (Dark Angel {Ire}). Trained by Clive Cox, Harry Angel flashed promise with a second-start win in the G2 Mill Reef S. last September and he more than built on that this year with wins in the G2 Sandy Lane S., G1 July Cup and G1 Sprint Cup, the latter by four lengths. He was also second to Caravaggio (Scat Daddy) in Royal Ascot’s G1 Commonwealth Cup. The 3-year-old is set to stay in training next year.

Sir Michael Stoute, trainer of Cartier winner Ulysses, received the Cartier Award of Merit. A leading trainer the last five decades, Stoute was born and raised in Barbados, where he worked with racehorses as well as in the media as a writer and commentator. Stoute moved to Britain at age 19 with the goal of furthering his media career, but after he missed out on a racing position with the BBC, he spent three years in North Yorkshire working for trainer Pat Ronan before relocating to Newmarket. Stoute was employed by Tom Jones and Doug Smith before taking out his license in 1972. Stoute very quickly enjoyed success in some of Britain’s top handicaps and in 1978 he sent out his first Classic winner, Fair Salinia, to win the Group 1 Epsom, Irish and Yorkshire Oaks’. Three years later Stoute’s Shergar emerged onto the scene, winning the Epsom and Irish Derbies and the King George. Stoute earned his first champion trainer title that year. Stoute would go on to add a further 12 Classic victories throughout the 80s. His reach began to go global in the 1990s, his worldwide luminaries including Singspiel and Pilsudski, who both won the G1 Japan Cup and were one-two in the 1996 GI Breeders’ Cup Turf, Pilsudski the winner. Singspiel also became the first British-trained winner of the G1 Dubai World Cup in its second running in 1997.

Stoute added three new Derby winners after the turn of the century, most recently Workforce (GB) (King’s Best) in 2010, who also provided the trainer with his first Arc win in the same year. Stoute is also renowned for his success with older horses, more recent luminaries including King George winners Golan, Conduit and Harbinger. Stoute has been champion trainer 10 times, holds 26 Classic wins and 75 Royal Ascot victories, a tally equaled only by his late rival and friend Sir Henry Cecil.

“Sir Michael Stoute has been a master of his profession for over 40 years and he is a most worthy recipient of the Cartier/The Daily Telegraph Award of Merit,” said Cartier Racing Consultant Harry Herbert. “His handling of Ulysses in 2017 was outstanding and sees that colt named as Cartier Older Horse.”

Of the equine award winners, Herbert said, “Enable enjoyed five commanding victories at Group 1 level and her performances, particularly at Ascot and Chantilly, mark her out as a filly of rare distinction. She is a very appropriate winner of Cartier Horse of the Year. Similarly, her stable companion Cracksman was an outstanding winner at Ascot in the autumn, capping a superb season for her trainer John Gosden. The prospect of Enable, Cracksman and Harry Angel, the Cartier Sprinter for 2017, all returning next year is a mouth-watering prospect.”

“Of course, 2017 will be remembered as the year when Aidan O’Brien sent out a record 27 Group 1 winners and he and the Coolmore team are rewarded with Cartier Racing Awards for US Navy Flag, Happily and Order Of St George,” Herbert added.

fonte : TDN

 

La campionessa #Enable insignita del titolo di Cartier horse of the year. Premi anche per Ulysses e Cracksman..

 

Intanto dall’Inghilterra è arrivata una legittimazione tutto sommato attesa. Enable (Nathaniel), vincitrice di Oaks, King George ed Arc de Triomphe, è stata incoronata Cartier horse of the year in una cerimonia che si è tenuta presso il Dorchester Hotel di Londra. 

Enable, capace di accumulare 22 lunghezze e mezzo complessive nelle sue vittorie, è la seconda femmina di 3 anni a vincere questo titolo dopo quello conseguito lo scorso anno da Minding. La votazione è avvenuta grazie a 300 ospiti selezionati che hanno votato il proprio preferito, e tra le altre nomination ovviamente c’erano quelle di Ribchester, che alla fine non ha guadagnato nulla, e poi Cracksman e Ulysses che per la loro categoria comunque si sono portati a casa il titolo meritato tra i 3 anni e tra gli anziani. 

Si tratta della sesta femmina in assoluto a vincere questo titolo da quando, nel 1991, si è cominciato a distribuire questo prestigioso premio. Per Gosden è il terzo in pochi anni dopo Kingman, Golden Horn ed appunto Enable

Per il resto ecco chi sono i vincitori delle restanti categorie. 

 

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#KOROPICK entra in razza in Irlanda! Tasso di monta a €3,000 per unodei migliori figli di KODIAC sul mercato!!

 

 

L’esaltante mondo dell’allevamento ha una nuova eccitante proposta per gli allevatori europei ed italiani. Lui si chiama KOROPICK, è un figlio dell’eccezionale Kodiac, che funzionerà in Irlanda presso l’ANNSHOON STUD al tasso di monta di €3,000 al 1° Ottobre in condizioni special live foal. 

LINEE DI SANGUE: KODIAC non ha bisogno di presentazioni: Figlio di Danehill e Rafha, dunque un mezzo fratello del campione e stallone Invincible Spirit funzionante per €120,000 in Irlanda, Kodiac ha vissuto un esaltante lustro nel quale a suon di risultati ha visto il suo tasso di monta decuplicarsi nel giro di qualche anno
. Dai €4,000 a cui era disponibile nel 2010, è arrivato ai €50,000 di tasso di monta nel 2017 con la continua espansione delle sue linee di sangue. Si, perchè ha creato campioni veloci, precoci e soprattutto cavalli in grado di vincere su ogni circuito ed in ogni superficie.

Proprio qualche giorno fa è entrato di diritto nella storia grazie ad un suo figlio che si chiama Statehood, diventato il vincitore numero 52 in un anno! Un numero incredibile che gli ha permesso di superare il precedente record del 2004 che apparteneva ad una leggenda come Sunday Silence in Giappone. I figli di Kodiac sono tenaci, coraggiosi, muovono le gambe velocemente e vincono. Tanto che il suo nome è perennemente in cima alle classifiche di tutto il mondo in termini di vincitori!
 
I vincitori, proprio negli ultimi giorni, sono diventati 54 in un anno! Record che lo ha fatto cementare in vetta alla classifica dei padri di 2 anni in assoluto come da classifica!
 
Motivo per cui molti figli di Kodiac sono entrati in razza per dare una nuova opportunità agli allevatori che hanno ben compreso quali siano le sue potenzialità.
Basta leggere le fattrici coperte dai suoi figli entrati in allevamento: ADAAY 127, PRINCE OF LIR 122, KODI BEAR 105.

 
CARRIERA: Dunque disponibile sul mercato c’è anche KOROPICK che per il training di Hugo Palmer ha vinto al debutto ed è giunto secondo di THE LAST LION nelle Sirenia Stakes G3. Nel 2017 ha vinto le Chipchase Stakes G3 ed è arrivato secondo di Battaash, vincitore del Prix de l’Abbaye de Longchamp G1 e delle King George Stakes G2. Nella stessa Listed KOROPICK ha battuto ARDAAD, altro figlio di Kodiac vincitore poi di G2, entrato in razza quest’anno in Inghilterra al tasso di £6,500!
 
KOROPICK, un 113 di RPR, è bello, ha pedigree, ha curriculum ed è disponibile ad un prezzo speciale! Cosa volere di più da uno stallone?? 
Per gli allevatori interessati al prezzo di €3,000 al 1° Ottobre in condizioni special live foal! Un vero affare ed un OTTIMO compromesso QUALITA/PREZZO per chi intende coprire le proprie fattrici con uno stallone bello, mentalmente e psichicamente forte in corsa e nella struttura, come si vede dalle foto, e dal temperamento da professionista delle corse. Fisico da velocista, pedigree da razzatore di livello!
 
La mamma di Koropick è Kathoe (Fayruz), della famiglia Classica di JAAZEIRO, vincitore di G1 in Irlanda, con inserti del sangue di Riverman
 
 
CONTATTI: PER INFORMAZIONI SU KOROPICK IL CONTATTO è ANDY DAVID DELLA WLS BLOODSTOCK (http://www.wlsbloodstock.com)
Telefono ufficio: 00353 (0) 71 96 51121 – Telefono mobile 00353 (0) 87 249 87 37. MAIL: info@wlsbloodstock.com
 

 

November Mares Preview - Sister to Cartier 3YO Colt Cracksman at Goffs

 

Lot 957, SAXON PRINCESS (Dalakhani) has seen a recent page boost with half-brother CRACKSMAN being crowned Cartier Three-Year-Old Colt of the year following his emphatic win in the Group 1 QIPCO Champions Stakes since the catalogue went to print, adding the Group 1 win to his already multiple Group 2 winning record.

 

 

Saxon Princess (above) is out of the Listed winning mare RHADEGUNDA, and is a full sister to the Group 3 winner, FANTASTIC MOON, who was sold as a yearling for 210,000gns to Rabbah Bloodstock. Saxon Princess has a foal by Raven’s Pass, and with the recent success of the stallion’s progeny, TOCCO D’AMORE winning at Listed level on her second time out, and BIG DUKE placing at Group 1 level in Australia, there could be plenty left to boost the page in the coming years. Saxon Princess is in foal to top class 2yo and Group 1 winner The Last Lion.

 
 
Foals Part 1: 20 – 22 November
Breeding Stock: 23 – 24 November
Foals Part 2: 25 – 26 November
View Catalogue

fonte : Goffs