Dam of Goliath fails to sell for €5,000,000 at Goffs

9 min read
The first day of the Goffs November Sale was down across all markers with Gouache (Ger) (Shamardal {USA}), the dam of live Japan Cup hope Goliath (Ger) (Adlerflug {Ger}), failing to sell at €5 million (AU$8 million).

Cover image courtesy of Goffs

At A Glance

Goffs offered 207 mares on Friday and sold 161 which equates to a 78 per cent clearance rate.

The turnover was €10,839,000 (AU$17.3 million) and the average for the first day was €67,323 (AU$1067,000).

Her Honour (Ire) (Shamardal {USA}) was the top price at €725,000 (AU$1.2 million).

Taking the Niarchos draft out of last year's bonanza, Goffs are 15 per cent behind the corresponding sale 12 months ago on turnover and average while the median for 2024’s first day was €40,000 (AU$64,000), down from €42,000 (AU$67,300) on this day last year.

Rosemont and David Redvers Bloodstock purchased Rayaheen (GB) for €90,000 (AU$144,000).

Goliath’s dam fails to sell from huge reserve

Anticlimactic goes by the household name of disappointing and there was no disguising the glum faces at Goffs on Friday when Gouache (Ger) (Shamardal), the dam of live Japan Cup hope Goliath (Ger) (Adlerflug {Ger}), failed to sell at €5 million (AU$8 million).

A collective groan was heard in the jam-packed auditorium when Henry Beeby uttered the words, “I'm afraid that's not enough,” at €5 million. One pressroom colleague suggested that he wouldn't be rushing into a game of poker with the Goffs chief executive any time soon as things seemed to be humming along nicely from one, two, three, and then four into five million euros.

Gouache (Ger) | Image courtesy of Goffs

Alas, it was never going to be enough and the mare that was billed as the 'jewel in the crown' of the November Sale catalogue was led out unsold by Millennium Stud.

Gouache was sourced by Agrolexica International Trading BV for just €200,000 (AU$320,000) at the December Breeding Stock Sale at Arqana last year. After she changed hands from Schlenderhan, the Francis-Henri Graffard-trained Goliath exploded onto the scene in Europe and accounted for the subsequent Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe winner Bluestocking (GB) (Camelot {GB}) in the King George at Ascot. Goliath is a general 7-1 chance to win the Japan Cup on Sunday.

Beeby admitted to being disappointed following the sale on Friday and revealed that the connections of Gouache were hoping to achieve somewhere in the region of €5 million or €6 million. They were understood to value the mare on a par with Alpha Centauri (Ire) (Mastercraftsman {Ire}) and Alpine Star (Ire) (Sea The Moon {Ger}), who lit up this sale 12 months ago when selling for €6 million (AU$9.6 million) apiece.

Beeby commented, “As my late father used to tell me, if you haven't got the horse you can't sell it. So you get the horse and work it out after that. The market spoke and they (the owners) valued the mare very highly. That's their prerogative and I respect that very highly. They wanted more than the market valued her at. They took a line through Alpha Centauri and Alpine Star here last year, because they mentioned those mares when we spoke earlier.”

He added, “They obviously wanted somewhere between five and six million. It's a bit of a disappointment but that's the way it goes. We're still working, as we have done with the Springfort Park Stud mare (Her Honour {Ire} {Shamardal}, who was sold privately to Alex Elliott for €725,000 after failing to reach €850,000 in the ring). We'll keep working through the weekend and, if Goliath happens to win, we'll ring a few people as well. If it happens, it happens.”

“As my late father used to tell me, if you haven't got the horse you can't sell it. So you get the horse and work it out after that. They wanted more than the market valued her (Gouache) at.” - Henry Beeby

Her Honour leads the way at 725k

It was Her Honour who ultimately topped the sale after Elliott negotiated a private deal to secure the dam of Vadream (GB) (Brazen Beau {Aus}) at €725,000 (AU$1.2 million) from Springfort Park Stud. The mare was purchased on behalf of an unnamed British-based client and Her Honour would fit in nicely in just about any breeding operation being the dam of three highly-rated black-type performers and from the family of Emily Upjohn (GB) (Sea The Stars {Ire}).

Elliott commented, “She wasn't sold for €850,000 obviously, but we honoured our last bid in the ring. What a producer. She's a Shamardal mare from a huge family with Harzand (Ire) and Emily Upjohn on the page. She's bred stakes horses by what are inferior stallions really. It's time to upgrade her and Peter and Hugh McCutcheon reluctantly agreed to sell her. They didn't really want to let her go but she'll be bred to some big stallions now. I'd imagine we'll breed her to Frankel or Wootton Bassett. She's been bought for an English breeder and she's going to reside at Baroda Stud with David Cox. The McCutcheon brothers have kept a New Bay filly out of her, so they'll still be cheering her on. She's in foal to Night Of Thunder, too, who's going to stand for €150,000 next year. She's a mare with a bit of age but she's proven.”

Elliott also snapped up M'Lady Nicole (Ire), a Sea The Stars (Ire) mare sold by Newtown Stud, also in foal to Night Of Thunder (Ire). She cost €320,000 (AU$510,000) and is understood to be for the same client.

Alex Elliott | Image courtesy of Tattersalls

Quirke Lands dam of Big Mojo on behalf of RP Racing

To borrow a line from Bonnie Tyler, Goffs was left holding out for a hero on Friday evening, and JM Jackson (Ire) (No Nay Never), dam of G3 Molecomb S. winner Big Mojo (Ire) (Mohaather {GB}), did her bit to lift the spirits shortly after Gouache failed to sell.

Offered by Derek Veitch's Ringfort Stud, JM Jackson found a fitting suitor with Conor Quirke landing the filly on behalf of RP Racing for €480,000 (AU$769,000). Of course, it is the business carried out with Paul Teasdale's RP Racing that has really put the young agent on the map.

Quirke sourced the top-class Big Evs (Ire) and more recently Big Mojo on behalf of RP Racing. There is little speculation involved in trying to work out where JM Jackson, who was sold in foal to Showcasing (GB), might be off to next year.

Quirke said, “The likelihood is that she will go to Big Evs and there is an outside chance that she might go to Blue Point. The sentimentality is there. She's a great physique and she matches both of those stallions. I am delighted for Ringfort Stud as obviously they are passing the baton at the minute. She's a young mare and has bred a very, very good horse and, look, I hope Paddy Power isn't watching because I hope to get a good price for him (Big Mojo) in the Commonwealth Cup next year. That's the kind of faith we have in him so time will tell.”

JM Jackson (Ire) | Image coutesy of Goffs

Ballylinch Stud goes big on quality

Oaks winner Qualify (Ire) (Fastnet Rock) was bought for €650,000 (AU$1 million) by Ballylinch Stud with a visit to Lope De Vega (Ire) in mind. The County Kilkenny stud boss John O'Connor revealed after that sale that, in order to prolong the superstar stallion's career, the 17-year-old would be limited to smaller books as of next year.

Many will remember Qualify for springing a 50-1 surprise for Aidan O'Brien and Colm O'Donoghue in the Oaks back in 2015. She was subsequently bought by John Ferguson on behalf of Godolphin for 1.6 million gns (AU$3.2 million) at the Tattersalls December Mares Sale that year and has gone on to breed a Stakes performer and a promising 2-year-old by Lope De Vega.

Qualify (Ire) | Image courtesy of Goffs

Speaking about Qualify, O'Connor said, “She's an Oaks winner and obviously those kinds of mares are scarce. She's already bred a good horse (the 107-rated Swing Vote) to Shamardal and we've a horse from that sire line that might well suit her! Her 2-year-old (Cualificar) looks promising and is with the right man in Andre Fabre to progress. At the moment, she's most likely to go to Lope De Vega and she will have future dalliances with the same sire line.”

He added, “We buy and sell a few every year. We'll always be selling some and buying some and carrying some fillies in training as well. We try to keep the quality up and keep the numbers under control. That would be a part of our thinking.”

“She's (Qualify) an Oaks winner and obviously those kinds of mares are scarce... she's most likely to go to Lope De Vega and she will have future dalliances with the same sire line.” - John O'Connor

When asked to sum up what has been an amazing season for the progeny of Lope De Vega on the track, O'Connor continued, “He's just confirmed what everybody knows–he's one of the world's top sires. When I last looked, he was the leading sire in the world in terms of black-type winners, Group 1 winners. Lots of different categories, he leads the field.

“He's one of the great sires in the world and we're very lucky to have him. We're going to try to buy or have the mares we think are appropriate to go to him and, from next year, we are going to start managing the numbers of his books a bit more conservatively. He's been plenty busy so it's time to start managing his books in order to extend his career for as long as we can.”

Lope De Vega (Ire) | Image courtesy of Ballylinch Stud

Ballylinch Stud spent €1,160,000 (AU$1. 85 million) on three mares and O'Connor revealed that €170,000 (AU$272,000) purchase Pietrafiore (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) was sourced with a view towards visiting new stallion Look De Vega (Fr) next year.

Speaking after landing Lot 1141, O'Connor said, “We're going to buy some nice mares to go to Look De Vega. He's going to get a lot of support and she'll be one of those. I liked her as a type–thought she was a lovely mare. She's bred a Stakes winner and is back in foal to the same sire. She's a full sister to a Dubai World Cup winner (Monterosso) as well so there are a lot of things there that I like. The Camelot yearling has gone to Andre Fabre so there are quite a lot of positives. Largely, I liked her as a type and she's already proven, which is what I like. The mares who can breed stakes winners are the ones we want to go to with our own sires so she'll go to Look De Vega.”

Pietrafiore (Ire) | Image courtesy of Goffs

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