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  • Blog Entries

         15 comments
      Today we have seen the only remaining truly independent racing industry publication "hang the bridle on the wall."  The Informant has ceased to publish.
      Why?
      In my opinion the blame lies firmly at the feet of the NZRB.  Over the next few days BOAY will be asking some very pertinent questions to those in charge.
      For example:
      How much is the NZRB funded Best Bets costing the industry?  Does it make a profit?  What is its circulation?  800?  Or more?  Does the Best Bets pay for its form feeds?  Was The Informant given the same deal?
      How much does the industry fund the NZ Racing Desk for its banal follow the corporate line journalism?
      Why were the "manager's at the door" when Dennis Ryan was talking to Peter Early?
      Where are the NZ TAB turnover figures?
      The Informant may be gone for the moment but the industry must continue to ask the hard questions.
       
         0 comments
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    • There are many ways to celebrate breeding a Classic winner, but Ed Harper must be in the minority in having selected a betting shop on Newmarket High Street as his first destination after departing the town's Rowley Mile, the landmark achievement of his family's Whitsbury Manor Stud still barely having sunk in. As it was, little more than an hour after the homebred Chaldean had skipped to glory in the 2023 edition of the 2,000 Guineas, Harper found himself in front of a wall of screens, ready to watch the 17:55 at Doncaster. A five-furlong maiden for two-year-olds, it attracted a field of six, with the market dominated by another Whitsbury Manor homebred now going by the name of Elite Status and racing in the colours of Sheikh Mohammed Obaid Al Maktoum. It was a debut which, by hook or by crook, Harper was never going to miss. “He was a real talking horse even before he debuted at Doncaster,” Harper remembers. “The day he debuted was actually the day of the 2,000 Guineas won by Chaldean, whom we bred. “My fiancée was very surprised when I dragged her from Newmarket Racecourse, where we'd just watched our pride and joy win the 2,000 Guineas, to a betting shop on the High Street in Newmarket to go and watch a horse that had never run before. “She thought, 'How can this possibly be important enough to leave Newmarket and go and watch this?', but I explained that we had high hopes for Elite Status and he didn't disappoint. He won pulling a cart at Donny and then went on to win the [Listed] National Stakes by an absolute mile. He adds, “I've never had so many text messages about a horse we've bred than after the National Stakes at Sandown. My phone just absolutely blew up with people saying, 'What was that?'” Now, Harper is optimistic that his phone will be red hot with enquires once again as Elite Status prepares to join his sire, Havana Grey, on the Whitsbury Manor stallion roster for 2026. His return to the place of his birth is imminent, just shy of three years since “the champ” departed to be offered at the Tattersalls December Foal Sale. “From the get-go he was just a standout foal,” says Harper. “Walking around the paddocks, he could make a lot of the others look very weak. I nicknamed him 'the champ' very, very early on – he just stood out. “He sold very well [for 56,000gns] at the foal sales for what he was. He was by a second-crop stallion [Havana Grey] that wouldn't have been on everyone's immediate list from that point of view but, as soon as they saw him, he couldn't have been busier. Then, obviously, he came back as a yearling and made 325,000gns to Karl Burke, so he was an exceptional yearling.” That “exceptional yearling” soon showed himself to be a racehorse of significant quality, too. He registered his third success as a juvenile in the G3 Prix de Cabourg at Deauville, before twice lowering the six-furlong track record at Newbury as a three-year-old, first when winning the Listed Carnarvon Stakes and then when going faster still in the G3 Hackwood Stakes. “He beat some proper horses that day,” Harper says of that Hackwood victory. “He beat the Group 1 winners Kind Of Blue and Regional – and he did it well. It could easily have been a Group 1 on a different day.” He continues, “We've been so keen to get the right son of Havana Grey here. He'll be the first son of a current standing stallion that we've ever stood at Whitsbury. We didn't know whether it was going to be possible, but he fits the bill for us so well. He's the highest-rated runner by Havana Grey on RPRs at 119, he's absolutely beautiful, and we know every inch of his pedigree.” Those inches extend to an intimate knowledge of Elite Status' broodmare sire, the former Whitsbury Manor stallion Swiss Spirit, in addition to the operation's overwhelming success story that is Havana Grey. Surely, given Harper's longstanding love affair with “the champ” and his bloodline, the homecoming of Elite Status for this next phase of his life must give the stud director that warm and fuzzy feeling inside? “I'm not a sentimental person in terms of just loving a horse for the sake of it – it's got to be right,” Harper counters. “We make very, very commercial decisions here at Whitsbury and I'm not afraid to make the tough decisions. “But it does answer the questions that we sometimes can't answer with other stallions. When we're looking to buy a stallion, just from its race career, we don't know what they were like as a foal most of the time. We don't know what they were like as a yearling, we don't know what their temperament was like, and we don't know what they were like to prep. “We answer all of these questions with Elite Status and Dragon Symbol. We know they were absolutely bombproof and rock solid at Whitsbury – and those are the attributes that we want back.” Confidence In Dragon Symbol's First Foals The attributes Dragon Symbol has passed on to his progeny will be in evidence at the forthcoming foal sales, with eight from his first crop scheduled to sell at Goffs, before another 48, no less, go through the ring at Tattersalls. Like Elite Status, Dragon Symbol returned home to Whitsbury Manor at the conclusion of a racing career which yielded five wins, plus six top-four finishes at Group 1 or Group 2 level during his three-year-old campaign alone. Described by Harper as “the most consistent sprinter around for many years”, the son of Cable Bay covered full books numbering over 140 mares in both 2024 and 2025, including a healthy number in his Whitsbury Manor harem. “Everybody knows that Whitsbury supports its stallions very, very strongly,” Harper continues. “People won't be surprised to see the strong foals that we bring to the sales and we've also scattered a few foals amongst other consignors, so that our consignment isn't just solid Dragon Symbols. We've spread some nice ones about, so there will be a good choice across all of the days.” He adds, “It's a big test when you take the first foals to the sales, but we know that they look right and we're very confident that they're going to show themselves well. I've had it in the past where, after the first day of showing, some cracks start appearing, maybe in the attitudes and the way they show. But I'm very confident that's not going to be the case with Dragon Symbol. “We know the stallion particularly well because we bred him – we saw him as a foal and as a yearling – and we've done extra work with these [foals] and absolutely know that they're going to do their bit. “It's a totally different environment at the sales. Foals have to put up with a lot of showing, especially the nice foals – they will be doing up to 80 shows a day. It's that 70th or 80th show of the day that really shows what they're made of and we're very confident that people will like what they see.” A colt out of Abraj Dubai (Street Cry) is singled out for particular praise by Joe Callan, Whitsbury Manor's head of bloodstock and sales. The half-brother to Havana Grey's Listed winner Star Of Lady M will be offered as lot 649 at Tattersalls, while lot 467, a half-brother to this year's Listed Windsor Castle Stakes third Azizam (Havana Grey), is another to earn a favourable mention when it comes to the Whitsbury Manor draft at Park Paddocks. At Goffs, meanwhile, Baroda Stud will consign the first Dragon Symbol foal to go under the hammer, specifically lot 47, a half-brother to four winners out of the unraced Invasor mare Ealaan. “He's a very good representative of what the stallion can do,” says Callan. “Hopefully, he'll catch the attention of people and they can see straight off the bat what the stallion is producing. We sold his sister [Little Havana] last year for 200,000gns to Amo Racing. She ran once and showed a lot of promise. I know they're quite positive on her, despite her missing a bit of time this year, so he could be an exciting lot on the first day.” Summing up what prospective buyers can expect of Dragon Symbol's first foals, Callan adds, “He's definitely stamping them. They all have good depth, good shoulder, good hip and very similar heads. Very importantly, they all have a great temperament and they're good movers. There's a mix of colours, some bay and some grey, but overall he's definitely stamping them and we're extremely pleased. “A real testament to a stallion is when they cover a larger second book than they do first book. That's a real gauge on people being impressed and we've seen that with Dragon Symbol. The next step is to get them in front of buyers at the sales and, hopefully, everyone is as pleased as we are.” “You Have To Go Hard Or Go Home In This Game” Certainly, there seems to be an air of quiet contentment among a team at Whitsbury Manor which has never been afraid to do things differently. A case in point was the decision to limit Havana Grey to mares who are 16hh or smaller. That restriction remains in place for the 2026 breeding season when, Harper points out, Elite Status will be in situ and able to cover some of the bigger mares deemed not suitable for his sire. What also sets the Whitsbury Manor team apart from many studs of a similar size is its dedication to working with small breeders, plenty of whom benefitted from the early successes of Havana Grey and stud stalwart Showcasing when they began their stallion careers at basement fees. Given that track record, it's little wonder that those same breeders have been found forming an orderly queue when a new sire has been recruited to Whitsbury Manor in recent years – see Sergei Prokofiev and Dragon Symbol – safe in the knowledge that the team at the Hampshire farm will be giving it both barrels with its own broodmare band. “The amazing thing that Showcasing and Havana Grey have done for our business is they've given us the firepower to really bring it up a notch,” Harper explains. “Every time we retire a new stallion, we can raise the bar of the support they get. People will see that at the sales and, hopefully, British breeders can benefit from that down the line when they know they're sending their mares to horses that are going to get the best possible chance.” He continues, “Hopefully, Whitsbury does have that reputation of working with breeders, because we've been there and done it from the bottom up. It's a survival technique, really. Dad did it for 30 or 40 years before and he's very much passed on the idea that, if we don't help the breeders survive, we don't have a business model. “Our aim is to buy and stand stallions that will keep small breeders in business. When they succeed and go up into the next echelons, then those stallions tend to look after themselves after that point. But to get them there, we really need to work with breeders.” Whether Elite Status can make it into the upper echelons of the stallion ranks, only time will tell, but already he's come a long way from that Doncaster debut. For Harper, too, a lot of water has passed under the bridge since that pit stop at the Newmarket betting shop, with this year alone bringing the birth of a child and a typically hectic yearling sales season. “Things at Whitsbury are pretty dynamic and finding a slot for things like this [the interview] is not easy at this time of year,” he sums up. “But we've got an amazing team, everybody pitches in, and I fully trust everyone. I try not to micromanage. My philosophy is to get good people and let them do what they have to do. “We couldn't be more excited. We have five stallions heading into next year. It's a bit scary – that's going to be busy – but you have to go hard or go home in this game and that's what we try and do.” The post Whitsbury Manor Wheels Keep On Turning with New Recruit Elite Status and Dragon Symbol’s First Foals appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
    • Brian Spearman, who has served as the chairman of Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners since 2015, has decided to step away from his day-to-day role with the company at the end of this year, marking a decade of unprecedented success for the Eclipse stable and overall business during his tenure, the syndicate said in a press release late Friday. “Brian's business acumen, combined with his sheer passion for the Thoroughbred horse racing industry has played a vital role in Eclipse's rise within the public partnership space and our considerable success on the racetrack,” Eclipse Founder and President Aron Wellman said. The post Chairman Brian Spearman Steps Away From Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions. View the full article
    • Jockey Club chief executive Winfried Engelbrecht-Bresges estimated HK$160 million in turnover was lost in an “unacceptable” incident that saw race eight on Sha Tin’s Saturday card voided following a loose horse galloping the wrong way down the track. As the runners were dispatched for the Class Four Lukfook Jewellery CCool Collection Handicap (1,200m), Matthew Poon Ming-fai was dislodged from Dreaming Winner, with that runner turning around and galloping the wrong way around the...View the full article
    • After 104 winless rides and some agonisingly close misses, Richard Kingscote was relieved to finally get the monkey off his back with a surprise win aboard Loch Tay at Sha Tin on Saturday. The British jockey’s start to his second Hong Kong stint was no doubt frustrating, having to settle for nine seconds and as many thirds before the drought-breaking success. “I’ve had lots of horses running well and the trainers and owners have been supporting me, to be fair, letting me keep riding a lot of the...View the full article
    • Former Gr.1 New Zealand Derby (2400m) winner Asterix (NZ) (Tavistock) returned to top form and scored his first Australian victory in the A$300,000 NZB The Beauford (2300m) at Newcastle on Saturday. The Chris Waller-trained gelding showed signs that he might be finding form with a close last-start fifth in the A$500,000 St Leger (2600m) at Randwick on October 18, and his stamina and class were on full display on Saturday as he outstayed his 11 rivals in the hands of jockey Jason Collett. “I thought his run was great the other day in the St Leger,” Collett said. “It was just a slow-run race. He led the start before that and it didn’t work one bit, so last start we tried to make sure he did things right, which he did, and he found the line great. “His trial was good leading into this and when I had the gate today, I was able to use it and put him in a close enough spot which gave us our chance. “He’s won a New Zealand Derby. He’s got the credentials there and this will no doubt build confidence.” Waller was represented at Newcastle by Zane Jones. “He was a good horse in New Zealand before coming to Australia,” he said. “We never lost faith in the horse, it was just a matter of turning up, getting things to go his way and today it did.” Asterix was bred by Sir Owen Glenn’s Go Bloodstock and is by Tavistock out of the Shirocco mare Mourasana. Curraghmore offered Asterix at the 2020 NZB Ready to Run Sale at Karaka, where Bruce Perry Bloodstock bought him for $450,000. Asterix began his career in the Matamata stable of Lance O’Sullivan and Andrew Scott, for whom he won four of his 14 starts including the 2022 New Zealand Derby and the 2024 edition of the Gr.2 Avondale Cup (2400m). Asterix has now had a total of 23 starts for five wins, a placing and A$923,671 in stakes. View the full article
    • Promising New Zealand-bred galloper Taken (NZ) (Ardrossan) won four races in a row to close out his last campaign, and he picked up where he left off with a first-up victory at Caulfield on Saturday. The A$130,000 RM Williams Handicap (1400m) was Taken’s first raceday appearance since June, and he finished second at Cranbourne on October 20 in his only preparatory trial. Ridden by Ethan Brown for trainers Mick Price and Michael Kent Jr, the four-year-old dug deep in the straight despite a tiring three-wide run, snatching victory by a short half-head. “Great training performance – first-up, one trial,” Brown said. “Three-wide, and it is never easy to sit three-deep first-up, so there are signs of a very nice horse. “He was well and truly entitled to be found wanting, but he dug deep and he was a winner. “He’ll get a mile at least and maybe further. A bit more work and he’ll be running out a mile.” Taken has now had 10 starts for five wins, five placings and A$381,860 in stakes, and he is pleasing his trainers with his progress through the grades. “Very good,” Kent said. “Underdone, only had one trial, so we were concerned with fitness, and then he got close to three-wide, four-wide, so a very good win. “He’s an unassuming customer. We were worried early on as to whether he would get a strong 1400m, but he just keeps strengthening, and to improve from three to four, you need to bulk up, and he definitely has. “We knew he was going super, just with all the rain he missed a trial. They don’t usually win off one trial, but he’s a nice horse. “He’s had a faultless campaign, really. The ceiling’s untapped. He likes a mile better, I think. Very good start to his preparation. “No real plans, just to go through the ratings. I think he’ll probably go 1400m next start and then go a mile third up, but there’s no real plans for him.” Originally prepared in New Zealand by Sam Mynott, Taken was sold to the Price-Kent stable following a trial win at Tauranga. By Waikato Stud’s emerging young sire Ardrossan, Taken is out of the Henrythenavigator mare Katherine Wright (NZ) and stems from the same family as Ardrossan’s Group Three winner Beau Dazzler (NZ). Taken was bred by the Dewar Partnership, which was put together to support Ardrossan when he launched at stud by some people who raced the Group One-performed son of Redoute’s Choice. View the full article
    • Expat New Zealand trainer John Sargent expected a strong showing from Meridiana (NZ) (Preferment) at Newcastle on Saturday, and that was exactly what he got in the A$160,000 Lees Racing ‘Legend’ Mile (1600m). The New Zealand-bred mare was heading into the Benchmark 78 handicap after a last-start second in the A$500,000 Four Pillars (1500m) at Rosehill on November 1. “She was a bit stiff in that race,” Sargent said. “She couldn’t get out when we wanted to and it cost her the race, because they weren’t really coming from the back. “She seemed to have improved with the run, she was only second-up that day, and this looked like a nice race for her over a mile at a big track. We’ll see after this whether she carries on for another one or goes for a break.” Meridiana was sent out as a $2.15 favourite and lived right up to those expectations in the hands of jockey Jason Collett. After settling in midfield – much closer than the 15th spot she found herself in through the early part of the Four Pillars – the four-year-old chimed in with a smart turn of foot in the straight and went on to win by just over a length. Meridiana has now had seven starts for three wins, two placings and A$285,650 in prize-money for her group of over a dozen owners. Meridiana was bred by Qiji Bloodstock Ltd and is by Preferment out of the Strategic Image mare North And South (NZ), who won 10 races headed by the Listed Levin Stakes (1200m). View the full article
    • Brilliant New Zealand-bred gelding Jimmysstar (NZ) (Per Incanto) lifted his Group One tally to three with another scintillating performance in Saturday’s A$1 million CF Orr Stakes (1400m) at Caulfield, in which progeny of Little Avondale Stud stallion Per Incanto finished first and third. Jimmysstar burst into the top level of Australian sprinters last season with explosive victories in the Gr.1 Oakleigh Plate (1100m) and All Aged Stakes (1400m). The Ciaron Maher-trained gelding has gone on to perform at the highest level in Sydney this spring, running a gallant third from a wide draw in the A$20 million Gr.1 The Everest (1200m) before returning to winning form in the A$3 million Russell Balding Stakes (1300m). Maher was delighted to see him triumph on the Group One stage again on Saturday. “He’s a ripper,” he said. “I was so confident over the last couple of weeks with him. I know he’d had a few runs in big races, but we only kept him fresh enough to run at six furlongs (1200m). He was better at six and a half (1300m) and I knew he’d be better again today.” Regular rider Ethan Brown gave Jimmysstar a perfect run on Saturday, keeping him in striking distance and then letting him rip down the outside of the home straight. Fellow Per Incanto gelding Evaporate (NZ) kicked hard off the corner and was going to take some catching, but Jimmysstar changed gears and soon powered past. Angel Capital (Harry Angel) ran on from the back to provide a late challenge, but Jimmysstar had things well in control and crossed the finish line a length in front. Evaporate was the same margin away in third. “He’s my favourite horse by far,” Brown said. “He’s such a beauty. It’s well publicised, my love for him, and it’s obvious why. “He wasn’t easy to deal with early doors. Even when he won the Oakleigh Plate, he was very full of himself, but he has really come of age since then. He’s turned into the ultimate professional and his races are showing it. “I believed I was on the best horse, so I rode him accordingly. He began really well. I thought halfway up the hill ‘woo boy, come back’. “Once that rush came across, he relaxed beautifully in what was a good tempo. When they came up for air a bit down the side, then quickened I just had to be on top of that. He does hit a flat spot. “He sort of felt Angel Capital there and I think that helped him and off he went. He gives me such an amazing feeling and he’s such a good horse.” Maher was also quick to give credit to Brown for his part in the Jimmysstar story. “Browny just rides him so well,” he said. “He was in the driver’s seat most of the way. He’s got a great rapport with him and he’s a great fella. “I also can’t thank my team enough. He’s been to Sydney for a long time and he’s come down to Melbourne seamlessly. This was very good to watch and I’m proud of everyone.” Maher is now already casting his mind ahead to the 2026 edition of The Everest next October. “He’s earned a breather now,” he said. “I did have him in in Perth, but I thought now he’s earned a nice break. It’ll all probably be centred around The Everest next year, I’d imagine.” The winner of two of his three starts in New Zealand for Hastings trainer Guy Lowry, a majority share in Jimmysstar was sold to clients of leading Australian trainer Ciaron Maher following a Rating 65 win at Hawke’s Bay, and the chestnut has now gone on to amass more than A$6.6 million in stakes. He has recorded 11 wins and seven placings in a 23-race career. Jimmysstar was bred by Wairarapa couple Pete and Chrissy Algie in partnership with Masterton’s Little Avondale Stud. Stud proprietors Sam and Catriona Williams along with the Algies remain in the ownership of the star galloper. The chestnut gelding is by Little Avondale Stud’s outstanding stallion Per Incanto out of Anniesstar (NZ) (Zed). That daughter of Zed won five races including the Listed Feilding Gold Cup (2100m), while her full-brother Jacksstar (NZ) (Zed0 was a seven-time winner up to Group Two level and also placed in the Gr.1 Auckland Cup (3200m) and her half-brother Bourbonaire (NZ) (Bourdonaire) was runner-up in the Gr.1 New Zealand 2000 Guineas (1600m). Anniesstar is the dam of three named foals, all of them have been winners, including Charms Star (NZ) (Per Incanto), winner of the Gr.3 Manawatu Breeders’ Stakes (2000m), and she was also runner-up in the Gr.1 New Zealand Oaks (2400m) and Queensland Oaks (2200m) as a three-year-old. View the full article
    • Respected Wanganui trainer Kevin Myers captured his fourth Gr.3 Martin Collins New Zealand Cup (3200m) at Riccarton on Saturday courtesy of a supreme staying performance by Bozo (NZ) (Satono Aladdin). An extraordinary storm in the early part of Saturday afternoon made the track a gruelling Heavy9 and turned the $450,000 staying showpiece into a case of survival of the fittest. Five-year-old mare Bozo, who was previously a five-time winner from 14 starts on heavy tracks, was the horse to fit that bill. Bozo was ridden by Tina Comignaghi, who was happy to take up a position near the back of the field and wait for the energy-sapping track conditions to take their toll on the opposition. With a final race time of 3:33.05 – almost 16 seconds outside the race record of 3:17.22 set by Soundoration in 1990 – that was exactly what happened. Bozo and Comignaghi began to improve their position through the pack coming up to the home turn, then angled to the outside to make their run down the straight. Bozo skipped through the sloppy ground and went past her labouring rivals like they were standing still, powering clear in the closing stages to win by three and a half lengths. Saturday’s triumph brought a long-range plan to fruition with Bozo, whose five previous starts this season included a win and a placing on Heavy10 tracks at Riccarton and Wanganui in August, followed by a sixth at Trentham on October 18, an unplaced finish on a Good4 track in the Listed Spring Classic (2000m) on October 25 and an eye-catching run for third in the Feilding Cup (2050m) at Tauherenikau on November 1. That race proved to be a strong form reference on Saturday, with its winner Agera (NZ) (Complacent) taking out the Gr.2 Tauranga Stakes (1530m). Myers, who had previously won the New Zealand Cup with Spring Cheer (NZ) (Bachelor Duke) (2013), Mondorani (NZ) (Burgundy) (2021) and Aljay (NZ) (Rock ‘N’ Pop) (2022), was represented at Riccarton on Saturday by his son Jason. “This is a special win,” he said. “We set horses for these races in November from as much as six or 12 months out. “We scratched this horse on the middle day of the carnival on Wednesday to give her the best chance of winning this race today, once it looked like there would be some rain around. Our confidence kept growing, the more rain we got. “Tina gave her a great ride. We thought, with a bit of pace in the race, they would end up going quite slow late in the race in these track conditions. We just wanted to get her to the outside and see if she could finish over the top of them. “From the 1000m, once she started picking runs in between horses, I was starting to grow in confidence. She looked to be travelling pretty well, and then she was just too strong for them in the end.” Bozo has now had 30 starts for seven wins, eight placings and $486,970. The daughter of Satono Aladdin was bred by Rick Hill, who shares ownership with Sandra and Anne Hill. It was a second New Zealand Cup success for Comignaghi, who also teamed up with Myers to win the race with Aljay in 2022. “This is amazing, I can’t believe it,” she said. “They kept saying she would run well today. I wasn’t quite so sure, but obviously they know better than me! She felt really good in that ground. She really relished the testing conditions.” Notabadspillane (NZ) (Time Test) was a gallant second under a ground-saving ride from apprentice jockey Elen Nicholas, while Canheroc (NZ) (El Roca) crossed the line in third place in an exact repeat of his placing in last year’s edition of the time-honoured race. View the full article
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