How the O'Briens bred two Breeders' Cup winners from a 14,000gns mare and more
James Thomas looks at the big bloodstock talking points from Keeneland
1. Order Of Australia bred for the job
Aidan O'Brien is no stranger to training Breeders' Cup winners, having notched his 13th with outsider Order Of Australia in the Mile on Saturday, a race in which he also fielded the second and third, Circus Maximus and Lope Y Fernandez.
But the result of that Grade 1 contest also reaffirmed O'Brien and his wife Annemarie's prowess as breeders, with the colt bred under the couple's Whisperview Trading banner. The colt is out of Senta's Dream, a daughter of Danehill who now has the extremely rare distinction of having supplied back-to-back Breeders' Cup winners.
Remarkably, considering the success she has gone on to achieve for the O'Briens, Senta's Dream joined the Whisperview Trading broodmare band at a cost of just 14,000gns when purchased through BBA Ireland at the 2013 Tattersalls December Sales.
2. Lope De Vega developing into a global giant
The amount of stallions who can be considered successful on a domestic level is small enough, so the number who go on to achieve international acclaim is, frankly, miniscule. Lope De Vega is one of the rare cases who falls firmly into the latter category.
The son of Shamardal sired his 12th elite winner on Friday when Aunt Pearl, trained by Brad Cox but bred in Ireland by Ecurie Des Charmes and Ballylinch Stud, landed the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf in decisive fashion.
His first Irish-bred crop contained Belardo, winner of the Dewhurst at two and the Lockinge Stakes at four and now a promising sire in his own right, while his fifth produced Irish 2,000 Guineas hero Phoenix Of Spain and his seventh yielded this year's Phoenix Stakes scorer Lucky Vega.
He shuttled from Ireland to Australia's Patinack Farm from 2011 to 2014, a stint that resulted in five-time Group 1 winner Santa Ana Lane, dual top-level scorer Vega Magic and Gytrash, who struck in this year's Black Caviar Lightning.
Rounding out his dozen Group/Grade 1 winners is The Right Man, another member of that debut crop, who went on to win the Al Quoz Sprint at Meydan.
Moreover, Lope De Vega was not the only stallion with ties to Ballylinch who enjoyed a big Breeders' Cup result, as Bearstone Stud's homebred Glass Slippers is by Dream Ahead, who stood at the County Kilkenny farm in the year the lightning fast filly was conceived.
3. Wootton Bassett signing looking an increasingly inspired move
Eyebrows were raised around the bloodstock world in August when it was announced that Coolmore had purchased Wootton Bassett from Haras d'Etreham and would be switching the son of Iffraaj from France to Ireland for the 2021 breeding season.
The sums believed to be involved in acquiring a relatively young stallion on a steep upward curve were understandably eye-watering. The big question was whether Wootton Bassett could continue to build on the immense promise he had shown.
Audarya became Wootton Bassett's second elite winner when landing that French Group 1, joining European champion Almanzor. That list has not only doubled but tripled since Coolmore bought Wootton Bassett, with son Wooded going on to get the better of Glass Slippers in the Prix de l'Abbaye.
That he has sired 28 stakes horses from just 228 runners (12 per cent strike rate), most of whom were bred at chickenfeed prices, means Wootton Bassett has the potential to prove a truly exceptional stallion.
It will be fascinating to see what his more expensively-bred crops can achieve, not least once he has had access to the many blue-blooded Galileo mares within Coolmore's broodmare band.
4. Uncle Mo's influence on the rise
Uncle Mo had a hand in not one but two winners on the opening day of the Breeders' Cup as the Coolmore US stallion capped another productive campaign. Uncle Mo was on the mark as the sire of Golden Pal, who atoned for a narrow defeat in the Norfolk Stakes at Royal Ascot by landing the Grade 2 Juvenile Turf Sprint.
In third is WinStar Farm's Laoban, who was represented by Breeders' Cup Juvenile third Keepmeinmind and Juvenile Fillies fourth Simply Ravishing, while Outwork, another WinStar resident, sits in a close fourth. Outwork fielded Outadore, who finished third to Fire At Will and Battleground in the Juvenile Turf.
More to read:
Five big talking points to emerge from this year's Weatherbys Return of Mares
Gordon Elliott to train €470,000 Cheltenham top lot for big-spending new owners
Authentic's dam, carrying a full-sibling to Breeders' Classic hero, up for sale
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