Cover image courtesy of Goffs
Written by TDN Europe
Yulong continued to throw mammoth support behind their dual-hemisphere stallion Lucky Vega (Ire) as they, alongside BBA Ireland's Mick Donohoe, snapped up 19 mares to the tune of €5,625,000 (AU$8,718,200) at the Goffs November Breeding Stock Sale on Friday and the group was headed by €790,000 (AU$1,224,400) purchase Aspiring (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), who will visit the young stallion next year.
Led by BBA Ireland's Mick Donohoe, who did most of his bidding online, the Lucky Vega Syndicate were continuing their recruitment drive for mares to visit the Irish National Stud-based sire after similarly strong sales this year and last.
Aspiring, an unraced half-sister to Danedream (Ger) (Lomitas {GB}), was sold in foal to Wootton Bassett (GB). She is also a sister to Venice Beach (Ire) and Broadway (Ire).
Donohoe said, “I thought she was a lovely physical, she has a great cover and she's from a fantastic family. She's going to go to Lucky Vega. Mr Zhang is doubling down on his support this year by buying some select mares. He sent 30 mares to him last season and he'll probably send the same number next year but is going to up the quality on the strength of what he's seen from his foals on the ground in Australia.”
Kelsey Wang, Michael Donohoe and Yuesheng Zhang | Image courtesy of Goffs
Lucky Vega stands the Northern Hemisphere season at The Irish National Stud for €15,000 (AU$23,200), and the Southern Hemisphere season at Yulong's farm in Victoria for AU$19,250 (inc GST).
On the track he carried the green and white colours of Yuesheng Zhang, who has been a familiar face on the sale circuit this year, and was in attendance at Goffs again on Friday. The Chinese businessman's horses in Ireland are concentrated in the Jessica Harrington yard, which is where another of Yulong’s purchases, Bocca Baciata (Ire) (Big Bad Bob {Ire}), was based when she recorded Group 2 success.
Lucky Vega (Ire) | Standing at Yulong Stud
The Kiltinan Castle Stud-consigned mare, who is foal to Mehmas (Ire), was another to join the Lucky Vega Syndicate for €530,000 (AU$821,400).
Donohoe said, “Obviously, Mr Zhang has horses in training with Jessie (Harrington) and she trained her so she recommended the mare to him. Jessie is high on the 2-year-old sister (Foniska) that she trains, too. He actually bought Lucky Vega's sister as well. It's undecided where she'll go next year but she'll go to stud in Ireland.”
Donohoe went on to underbid the top lot Ladies Church (GB) (Churchill {Ire}), who sold to Dermot Farrington for an undisclosed client for €970,000 (AU$1,503,400), where he did most of his bidding online through his iPad on the balcony directly opposite the rostrum. That was until he appeared to lose signal and, alongside Mr Zhang, was forced to bid the old-fashioned way.
Ladies Church (GB) sells for €970,000 (AU$1,503,400) to Dermot Farrington at Goffs | Image courtesy of Sarah Farnsworth
Alas, it wasn't to be on Ladies Church but, on bidding online, he said, “Mr Zhang is quite familiar with the online bidding in Australia, the online bidding format there has a couple of years head start on Europe, so he feels comfortable bidding that way. That's the way they do it in Australia and that's the way it's going here because you can bid in a nice relaxed atmosphere.”
Donohoe added, “We can nip down and look at the horses in the parade ring and do our final checks, then go up and have lunch and bid in comfort. We value the horses and we bid to what we think their value is, so it doesn't really matter who's bidding against us. Sometimes when you're bidding in the ring you can maybe go one or two bids that you might regret afterwards when you've been wrapped up in the theatre of it. It's all a bit more composed doing it this way.”
The Lucky Vega Syndicate remained strong deep into the evening, spending €1.23 million (AU$2,014,900) on back-to-back lots (1314 and 1315) Pleasant Dreams (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) and Eaves (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}).
Gallery: The back-to-back lots secured by the Lucky Vega Syndicate at Goffs, images courtesy of Goffs
Pleasant Dreams, who made €630,000 (AU$976,400), was consigned by Grenane House Stud and was sold in foal to Starspangledbanner, while Eaves made €600,000 (AU$929,900) in foal to Wootton Bassett. All told, BBA Ireland signed for six Galileo (Ire) mares to visit Lucky Vega for €3,195,000 (AU$4,951,900).
Lucky Vega’s father, Lope De Vega (Ire), has proved a good match with daughters of Galileo. The cross has produced 45 winners from 63 runners and they are headed by eight stakes winners.
The aggregate was up 19 per cent to €16,525,500 (AU$24,681,100) while the average was ahead 17.6 per cent to €82,328 (AU$123,000). The median of €42,000 (AU$62,700) represented a 35.5 per cent rise while the clearance rate was 83 per cent.
Ladies Church to stay in training
Billed as one of the star attractions of the sale, Group 2-winning sprinter Ladies Church was knocked down for €970,000 (AU$1,503,400) to Dermot Farrington who could not reveal the new connections.
However, Farrington did confirm that Ladies Church, trained by Johnny Murtagh to win three times, including that career highlight in the G2 Sapphire S. at the Curragh in July, would race on as a 4-year-old.
Farrington said, “I can't say who she was bought for but she will definitely stay in training next year.”
Dermot Farrington signs for Ladies Church (GB) | Image courtesy of Goffs
Ladies Church was consigned by Murtagh's Fox Covert Stables and, as well as being a high-class racemare with a British Horseracing Authority rating of 110, she boasts a strong page being a daughter of the French Listed winner Rioticism (Fr) (Rio De La Plata {USA}).
Having been bought as a foal at Tattersalls in November 2019, she was then sold to Murtagh and agent Peter Nolan the following year for €160,000 (AU$239,000) at the Goffs Orby Sale in 2020.
She was one of seven horses owner Mark Dobin, who spreads his small but select string between Murtagh, Gavin Cromwell, Joseph O'Brien and Ger Lyons, ran in Ireland this season.
Maljoom's dam makes €450,000
BBA Ireland's Adrian Nicoll was also busy, signing for Nictate (Ire) (Teofilo {Ire}), the dam of Maljoom (Ire) (Caravaggio {USA}), from Limekiln Stud for €450,000 (AU$672,000).
Maljoom has not run since going down by less than 1l in fourth in the G1 St James's Palace S. at Royal Ascot back in June. Nictate was sold in foal to Tally-Ho's Starman (GB) and Nicoll was flanked by Paul Shanahan's son Charles when the gavel fell.
Nicoll said, “She's for an Irish partnership so she'll stay here. She's bred a good horse, she's a nice mare but I don't know which stallion she'll go to next. She's top of the range and when you're buying the dam of a black-type winner you've got to expect to pay that sort of figure.”
Nictate (Ire) goes through the ring at Goffs | Image courtesy of Goffs
Freyer pays €140,000 for Festival Day
Arrowfield Stud’s Bloodstock Manager Jon Freyer was active on Friday when he teamed up with International Thoroughbreds to purchase Festival Day (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) for €140,000 (AU$217,000).
The daughter of Dubawi (Ire) was offered in foal to Cheveley Park’s resident stallion Ulysses (Ire), a son of Galileo, and she is out of placed Storm Cat (USA) mare Ama (USA), making her a sister to Listed winner Lunar Maria (GB).
Festival Day (GB) | Image courtesy of Goffs
It is a pedigree that packs a punch, with the her second dam being Champion racemare and top-class broodmare Miesque (USA) (Nureyev {USA}), the dam of Group 1 winner and influential sire Kingmambo (USA) and Champion filly East Of The Moon (USA) (Private Account {USA}).