James Tzaferis – Racing.com

13 February, 2023

 

Caraman Park team with their Toronado colt (Image: Inglis)

The timely online purchase of broodmare Devil In Her Heart in 2021 paid handsome dividends for the family-run Carramar Park at the Inglis Classic Yearling Sale on Monday.

Carramar Park’s Tim Alchin paid $27,500 for the unraced Star Witness mare via Inglis Digital, with the mare nursing a Palentino foal at foot and also in foal to Toronado.

Months later, Devil In Her Heart’s siblings Wandabaa and Malkovich emerged as Stakes winners, while Toronado’s stocks have continued to rise via the deeds of Masked Crusader

The Toronado colt caught the attention of several prospective buyers once he stepped into the ring at Riverside Stables before eventually being knocked down to Hong Kong-based Legend Bloodstock and Dullingham for $270,000.

Alchin said Monday’s result was a dream come true.

“Growing up with the horses, I always wanted a mare so I was looking online and this girl came up,” Alchin said.

“The family was active – it had Seewhatshebrings and then Malkovich emerged and then Wandaba started winning.

“Toronado had Masked Crusader at the time.

“The rest is history.

“It really is a dream result, it’s unreal.”

 

 

The result continued solid Inglis Classic Sale for Swettenham Stud’s Toronado, who had 10 yearlings sells for an average $211,000.

The Hong Kong Jockey Club paid $420,000 for Lot 256, a Toronado colt from SA’ Cornerstone Stud, while the stallion’s progeny were also snapped up by Mick Price, Michael Kent and Michael Hickmott.

 

 

Mark Smith, Breednet – Saturday January 28

Joe Pride has the Midas touch in rejuvenating older horses and has worked his magic on Newhaven Park Stud’s six-year-old Toronado mare Mariamia.

Mariamia in full flight (image Steve Hart)

With Tim Clark in the saddle, Mariamia opened her stakes account in Saturday’s Group II Furphy Expressway Stakes (1200m) at Rosehill.

Enjoying a cosy run, one out one back, Mariamia increased her margin at every call in the straight to defeat the Caulfield Guineas winner Golden Mile (Astern) by two and three-quarter lengths with Nicolini Vito (Nicconi) a further one and three-quarter lengths back in third.

 

A dual Group III placegetter, Mariamia, was purchased by Newhaven Park for $335,000 off Shane Stockdale at the 2022 Inglis March (Early) Online Sale.

She has won three of seven for Pride, advancing her overall record to seven wins, three seconds, and seven thirds from 35 starts with earnings of $573,610.

Mariamia was a late entry for the race when nominations were extended.

“It’s not very often I late nom horses if you think you haven’t got the right race, you probably shouldn’t be there. But it looked like an opportunity for her, and I was surprised how well she went today,” Pride said.

“I will take a mare anywhere there is some opportunity, and that presented itself early on in the week.

“I have a lot of time for that mare, but she pinged there today. It was only off a two-week break after a really good first up run. A really good performance.”

“Based on what she did today, there will be some really nice races for her over the carnival.

“She came to the stable less than 12 months ago and has done really well in that time. I love these tried horses. They’ve been great, the Kellys, to source some really good horses over the years for me. The job is not done yet. She will definitely go to stud at the end of this season but hopefully, some more fun before then.”

Mariamia an $18,000 Inglis Premier yearling

An $18,000 purchase from the Swettenham Stud draft from book 2 of the 2018 Inglis Premier Yearling Sale, Mariamia is the best of two winners from three to race for the Encosta de Lago mare Quinta Lago.

A sister to Group II-placed Halekulani and a half-sister to the dam of Group 1 VRC Derby hero Warning (Declaration of War), Quinta Lago was dropped from official records in 2020.

Bred by Adam Sangster, Mariamia is the 30th stakes-winner for Swettenham Stud’s High Chapparal (IRE) stallion Toronado (IRE).

By TBV, January 19, 2023

 

Beltoro ridden by Teo Nugent wins the Maluckyday Living Legends Plate at Flemington Racecourse on January 14, 2023 in Flemington, Australia. (Photo by Reg Ryan/Racing Photos)

 

When you’re offered around $1.2 million by wealthy Hong Kong owners for a horse that won his first two starts, it would be an easy decision for a lot of people to have grabbed the cash back in 2020.

Victorian syndicator Delbridge Racing’s managing director Mark Leo admits he would have taken the money, but a democratic vote among the other group of more than 20 owners rejected the offer for Beltoro (Toronado x Believabeel).

The now five-year-old gelding, which Leo bred at Three Bridges Thoroughbreds, went another 10 starts before winning his third and race and it was another 12 starts before he scored his fourth win at Flemington last Saturday.

The Flemington 1600m victory, at start 24, came 10 months after his Bendigo victory over 1500m.

Beltoro raced in Group company after his second win, at Flemington, and also finished fourth in the St Ledger Trial (2200m) at Bendigo and since then his races have been no further than 1600m.

With three seconds and four thirds, Leo described Beltoro as a consistent horse that hadn’t always had things go his way in races.

“But everything did on Saturday and he took advantage of it,” he said.

“I was really pleased for the horse because he deserved a win, and for the owners as well. They are a good group and have been involved in it for a long time.”

Many of the owners also raced Beltoro’s dam Believabeel (Zabeel x Chatto Creek),  which only had one start at Kyneton in a 1469m maiden, and are partners in her progeny.

“We bred Beltoro and we have had three from the mare Believabeel and they’ve all won,” Leo said.

“He is the second one from the mare to race.

“Believabeel was a Zabeel mare and Kav (trainer Mark Kavanagh) purchased her (for $120,000) at the Sydney Easter Sale and she only had one run but it wasn’t a bad run but she did a tendon in a training accident.

“So it’s been a long road to hoe.”

Believabeel’s first foal by Americain was named Amicabeel and the mare won two races. The next foal, by Toronado, died after birth. The mare’s third foal to race Belluna (Puissance De Lune), like Beltoro, is trained at Ballarat by Robert Hickmott and so far has raced 11 times for one win and is entered in a 1300m race at Wangaratta on Thursday.

Believabeel missed to Puissance De Lune in 2021, but is in foal to Widden Victoria’s Nicconi and while the Delbridge Racing crew tend to breed stayers, they thought they’d attempt to inject a bit of speed into the progeny

Leo and his syndicate members have also bred a full brother to Beltoro, an unraced two-year colt named Torbelo which is in the Ballarat stable of Ciaron Maher and David Eustace.

“Beltoro has been the best one so far so we hope he can kick on after the weekend,” Leo said.

“Torbelo has had a couple of preps but just needs a bit more time and he is up at Three Bridges.

“With Three Bridges, I have been there for 20 years with the Listons.”

Leo said some of the owners in Beltoro and Believabeel and her progeny had been with him since he started his syndication business in 2002.

“But some are reasonably new,” he said.

“A share in Beltoro changed hands during preps after someone moved on, a new person came in, so it’s a varied bunch but the majority of them know each other well as they’ve all been involved in the mare.”

Beltoro has now won $391,500 which is obviously well short of the big Hong Kong offer which Leo said was rejected because the owners wanted to have fun racing the horse.

He said it just wasn’t about money.

“They just wanted to have a horse with good ability to go the races,”  Leo said.

“I admit I was keen to sell but that’s the way it goes. It was a really good offer and they were prepared to go higher but I stopped discussions because I knew they wouldn’t sell and it didn’t matter how high they went.

“They were wasting their and our time.”

Leo said to get $100,000 to $80,000 for a 10 per cent share for the sale of Beltoro wasn’t perhaps life changing when it was split around and trying to get everyone to agree to sell was a challenge.

He said only about 10 per cent of the owners wanted to sell and the rest wanted to keep going which made the decision pretty clean cut.

“The offer was over a million,” he said.

“They (buyers) asked me to come back with a figure but I said look they are not going to sell.”

Beltoro raced in the Group 1 Australian Guineas (1600m) at his fifth start and ran sixth to Lunar Fox, beaten 2.75 lengths, after drawing an inside barrier which Leo said wasn’t ideal for the horse which flashed home.

“It was a really good run on the weekend and we are going to Sandown in three weeks in a 1800m benchmark 100 and he has run second in a benchmark 100 before but this is the first time we are getting out beyond a mile since his three-year-old days,” he said.

Leo said he had wound down his operation over the past 10 years after constantly having about 25 horses on his Delbridge Racing books.

Now he tends to just syndicate the progeny of Believabeel and from their other broodmare Cinnamon Girl (Denman x Indian Spice).

While $1.2 million is a lot of money to knock back, Leo said he never heard any of the owners say that they wished they’d sold to Hong Kong.

“No one ever mentions it to me but whether they say it amongst themselves when they are having a few drinks and worry about it, but I can assure you on Saturday they wouldn’t have been,” Leo said.

“They made the decision for the right reasons and it hasn’t been a topic of conversation at all.

“I suppose the way they look at it is that he has won nearly $400,000 and he has had 24 starts and probably 80 per cent of them have been in the city, so they have had plenty of fun.

“If you have a look at his record there is only a couple of times when he has been out of the top six and he could have won a few more but for barriers and if things had gone his way.

“But they are rapt and just love him as a horse and they were talking on the weekend about how much enjoyment they had got out of it.”

The syndicate has four horses with Hickmott, including Cinnamon Girls’ two unraced Inference full brothers – three-year-old Spiceline and two-year-old Epice Dieu.

Leo said he supports the Super VOBIS scheme which had contributed $27,000 in bonuses to Beltoro’s overall prizemoney.

It was also a good week for Three Bridges Thoroughbred when a colt they offered by Swettenham Stud’s Toronado sold for $850,000 at The Magic Millions Yearling Sale on the Gold Coast.

The colt, the equal highest price paid for a Toronado yearling, is out of the Three Bridges bred mare Tereka (Pierro x Trial Of Secrets).

by TBV, December 13, 2022

The lights were shining brightly for Swettenham Stud at The Valley on Friday night when a mare and two fillies by Toronado won three of the first four races on the program.

And over at Canterbury, another Toronado got the money.

At one of biggest race days of the year, the John Size-trained Toronado gelding Sweet Encounter won at the Hong Kong International Races where four Group 1 races were held at Sha Tin.

There was more joy for Swettenham principal Adam Sangster and his stud’s stallions at Canterbury with Rubick providing the winners of two races, while Highland Reel had one winner.

The good vibes continued for Swettenham when Godfather, a full brother to their stallion I Am Immortal (I Am Invincible x Meliora) won the Listed Phelan Ready Stakes (1000m) on debut at Eagle Farm on Saturday. Godfather was a $1.1m yearling purchase.

He said the win of Godfather just shows how good the pedigree is and believes I Am Immortal’s yearlings next year will become perfect horses for the big VOBIS races, including The Showdown.

“If anyone wants speed, speed and speed, he is the right horse,” he said.

“He is out of the best-performed Ad Valorem mare ever, Meliora, a Group 2 winner and she too was speed on speed.

“And he was an early two-year-old with sheer speed.

“It’s good for The Showdown and all those races.”

The flurry of winners across the weekend for Swettenham Stud certainly left Sangster with a big smile on his face come Monday morning.

“It was also exciting to see Highland Reel’s Hi Dubai (Eureka Dubai) winning on debut at Canterbury on Friday night for Gai Waterhouse and Adrian Bott,” Sangster said

“And there were two Rubicks (Glint Of Silver and Media Starguest) that won at Canterbury as well.

“So to have three Toronados, a Highland Reel and two Rubicks all winning on Friday night was big and certainly something to celebrate and then there was Godfather on Saturday.

“There were certainly plenty of good things happening, even in Hong Kong on Sunday.”

Sangster said here was also plenty to like about the way another two-year-old Toronado colt, Celui, won on debut over 1000m at Bendigo on Sunday.

He said each week Toronado has a winner in Hong Kong and the stallion was represented by three of his progeny at Sha Tin on Sunday.

“He is the leading sire in Hong Kong,” Sangster said.

“There is a big thirst for Toronado over there.”

Toronado has 32 yearlings entered for Melbourne Premier and another 23 headed to the Gold Coast Magic Millions.

He said the “thirst” for Toronado wasn’t just for the domestic market but also Hong Kong.

“It’s clearly the best representation he has had at Magic Millions and he has got some really nice ones going up there,” Sangster said

“And what he has got going to Melbourne Premier are also off a $25,000 service fee and there is still a huge upside for the breeders.

“They are certainly going to make their money but there is something there for everyone.”

Sangster said it was good to see a nice colt like Celui win for Brent Stanley who engaged his son Jett to ride the bay.

“He is a really nice horse and I spoke to Brent and he said he is a lovely Blue Diamond horse and hopefully he can go through the grades, but he did say Blue Diamond and Slipper.”

Starting at $3.80, Celui scored by 1.75 lengths and recorded the slick time of 57.07secs.

The colt was a $200,000 purchase by Stanley at this year’s Inglis Melbourne Premier Yearling Sale.

The five-year-old mare Toronado mare Uniquely won the opening Moonee Valley race (2040m), taking her career wins to five from 30 starts.

Li’l Wonder, out of Li’l Cashey, won the third race (1200m), breaking the three-year-old filly’s maiden status at her fifth start.

And then Lady Jones, out of Domesday mare Lady Slevoir, won the fourth race over 1600m. The three-year-old filly has also raced five times for one win. But she has had two seconds, firstly at Caulfield and then Sandown.

Sangster said to have three of the first four winners at The Valley and over a variety of distances was an example of Toronado’s versatility.

“He keeps getting good horse after good horse and it’s fantastic,” he said

“Not a day seems to go by where we don’t see another new Toronado winner in some way shape or form.

“And he has still gone the best ones to come.

“The fillies are as good as the colts and geldings and they can also seem to run and it’s an exciting time to have one and I just wish we had more of them.”

Sangster said Toronado’s statistics for stakes winners were about 50/50 for colts/geldings and fillies and mares.

“There was a perception a while ago about whether his fillies were as good as his colts,” he said.

“I know the colts and geldings will still command more money, but the fillies get the residual value and I think he’ll be an exceptional broodmare sire.”

Sangster said the Swettenham Stud stallions still had plenty of mares to cover.

“And almost every mare we have covered has been in foal and there are just a few new mares that have been a little bit late and we’ll keep pushing on and I’ll be surprised if we are not covering a few in January.”

Sangster said all of their stallions were fertile and they’d picked up a few late mares.

“We’ll just keep going and if people are happy to breed them, we are happy to cover them,” he said.

“We are still covering our own mares that were late to foal, so why not.”

 

by Mark Smith – Saturday December 10

It was a memorable Friday night for Adam Sangster and the Swettenham Stud team as winners flowed freely at Moonee Valley and Canterbury.

New Australian citizen Toronado (IRE) kicked off the Moonee Valley meeting with three winners in the first four races. And it was an easy watch for fans of the son of High Chaparral (IRE).

The sign of things to come. Uniquely wins the opener at Moonee Valley (image George Salpigtidis/Racing Photos)

The 5yo Dan O’Sullivan-trained mare Uniquely got the night off to a winning start when successful by a length and a half over 2040m under Alana Kelly.

Then it was the turn of the 3yo fillies Li’l Wonder and Lady Jones.

The Michael, Wayne and John Hawkes-trained Li’l Wonder broke her maiden over 1200m by three and three-quarter lengths under Damien Oliver.

It was a similar painless watch as Harry Coffey guided the Steve Brown-trained Lady Jones to two and three-quarter lengths score over 1600m.

On to Canterbury, where the 3yo Highland Reel (IRE) filly Hi Dubai made a statement on debut over 1100m. Ridden by Nash Rawiller for Gai Waterhouse and Adrian Bott, Hi Dubai coasted to a 4-length win.

Time for Rubick to enter the fray.

The 3yo David Pfieffer-trained filly Glint Of Silver was rewarded for her consistency when breaking her maiden over 1250m under Jay Ford and relegating the $950,000 I Am Invincible x Snitzerland gelding Himalaism to second.

Shortly after, Rubick’s 5yo son Media Starguest battled to a nose win over 1900m for Ron Quinton and Sam Clipperton.

All in all, a good day at the office for Swettenham Stud.

Toronado (IRE)

by Mark Smith, Breednet – Wednesday November 2

The three-year-old Toronado (IRE) filly Laced Up Heels brought the unbeaten run of Amelia’s Jewel to an end in the Listed Tabtouch-Burgess Queen Stakes (1400m) at Ascot on Tuesday.

Laced Up Heels ends Amelia’s Jewel’s unbeaten run (image Western Racepix)

Ridden by Chris Parnham for Luke Fernie, Laced Up Heels was well back early with the favourite Amelia’s Jewel on her back.

When Parnham asked the Toronado filly for an effort on straightening she stole a two-length break on Amelia’s Jewel (Siyouni), who could only close the gap to a long neck on the line.

Miss Drakova (Capitalist) was a further two and a quarter lengths back in third.

Coming into the race off a narrow win over a 1000m at Ascot on October 15, Laced Up Heels advances her record to three wins from five starts with earnings of $115,915.

“She didn’t have any luck in the three-year-old Classic, and I look at her and know there’s a machine there, Fernie told RWA.

“I just needed a little bit of luck to go our way, and she got that today.”

Owned by Geisel Park Stud, Laced Up Heels was a $100,000 purchase for Boomer Bloodstock (FBAA) from the Supreme Thoroughbreds draft at the 2021 Inglis Melbourne Premier Yearling Sale.

Laced Up Heels a $100,000 Inglis Premier yearling

She is the best of four winners from as many to race out of the Exceed And Excel mare A City Girl, who was purchased for just $4,000 at the 2012 Inglis August Thoroughbred Sale.

The pedigree received a significant boost when A City Girl’s stakes-winning half-sister Missy Cummings (Magnus) produced the top-class Zoustar filly Mizzy.

Mizzy earned her Group 1 in the Canterbury Stakes almost 12 months after first past Savatiano the post was disqualified. Mizzy would make $2.2m to the bid of Tom Magnier at the 2021 National broodmare Sale.

A full brother to Laced Up Heels was a $110,000 purchase for E Cummings / Myrtle House from the Supreme Thoroughbreds draft at the 2022 Inglis Premier Yearling Sale.

A City Girl has a yearling filly by Shalaa (IRE) and a filly foal by Nicconi.

Laced Up Heels is the 28th stakes-winner for Toronado (IRE), who enjoyed a profitable Melbourne Cup Day with Fender winning at Randwick, Vain Fox at the Sunshine Coast, and cult hero Shelby Sixtysix finishing second in the Listed MSS Security Sprint on the Melbourne Cup undercard.

By Tara Madgwick, Breednet – Tuesday November 1

A regular shuttler to Swettenham Stud in Victoria, Galileo’s champion son Highland Reel (IRE) is off the mark with his first Australian stakes-winner with High Approach making light of testing wet conditions at Flemington to score a courageous win  in the Listed VRC Tab Trophy Stakes (1800m).

High Approach wins on the big stage at Flemington – image Grant Courtney

Trained by Archie Alexander, Highl Approach broke his maiden over 1500m at Ballarat at his fourth start and jumped straight from there to Black Type company with a happy result.

He staged a thrilling battle up the straight with runner-up Linderman, prevailing to win by a long head for Ben Melham and has now won two of five starts earning nearly $150,000 in prizemoney.

He’s a horse that has come from a maiden win to town, but we wouldn’t have been here if we didn’t like the horse and we’ve always liked him and it’s a great result for everyone,” said Archie Alexander.

High Approach was a $50,000 Inglis Premier purchase.

A $50,000 Inglis Premier purchase for Alexander Racing / Rogers Bloodstock from the MB Thoroughbreds draft, High  Approach was bred by Dr Judith Mulholland.

“I can’t take any credit for it (his purchase), my racing manager Jeremy Rogers, on the last day of the sale said ‘come on you better have a look at this horse’ … $50,000 later and here we are,” Alexander said.

“We’ve always thought he was a Derby horse and thought maybe right now, but it all came a bit soon. He’ll have a break now and come back in the autumn and maybe aim up at a Derby, who knows.”

High Approach is the best of eight winners from good producing Encosta de Lago mare Encapsulate, a half-sister to the dam of Group II winning sprinter Super Cash.

Encapsulate was covered last spring by Strasbourg after missing to him the year before.

Highland Reel (IRE)

High Approach is from the first Australian crop of Highland Reel and is his first Australian stakes-winner and the third worldwide for the six time Group I winner.

Highland Reel is at Swettenham stud this spring at a fee of $16,500.

By TBV, 28-10-2022

 

 

22-year-old star on the rise, Marcus Heritage is a lover of all sports; AFL, American Football, Golf, but most of all racing.

Currently working in Nominations at Victoria’s prestigious Swettenham Stud, Heritage ensures that all clients looking to have a mare served at Swettenham are getting the best possible results, helping them match to the best stallion for the mare.

“As part of my role, I help the breeders, whether it is booking their mare to a stallion, doing mating’s for them or helping them at sales, purchasing or selling horses,” he said.

“At Swettenham, our business model is just to help as many people as we can, which is where my role comes to the fore.”

Growing up on the Gold Coast, Heritage found himself at the Magic Millions sales and race day every year alongside his father who races horses, ultimately falling in love with the horse from there.

“I was going to Magic Millions with my old man as he races a few horses,” Heritage said.

“Fairly early on in my life I knew that somewhere in breeding or racing was where I wanted to work in the future.”

“You have to get a feel across all aspects in the industry to learn as much as you can which gives you the chance to succeed as you go further in life.”

When starting off his career in this marvellous industry, Heritage found himself undertaking a traineeship with Racing Queensland, allowing him to learn the ground works of how the industry operates.

“I started a traineeship via Racing Queensland which helped me learn the basics of the game.

“I actually started working with Simon Hunter who is now Greg Eurell’s bloodstock consultant.

“He was a trainer on the Gold Coast at the time and he taught me the ins and outs of trackwork.”

Post-school, Heritage made the move down to Victoria to work as a stablehand with one of the state’s leading stables, Lindsay Park which ultimately led him to his current opportunity at Swettenham Stud.

“After school I moved down to Victoria where I worked in the stables with Lindsay Park,” Heritage said.

“Through the team there, I come to meet to the team at Swettenham where I then did a season working with the stallions.

“I moved to work with Danny O’Brien and subsequently the guys at Aquis Farm where I was doing a similar job to what I am doing now.

“You have to get a feel across all aspects in the industry to learn as much as you can which gives you the chance to succeed as you go further in life.”

When asked about an end goal in his career, Heritage aims to one day become a bloodstock agent, but right now is quite content with where his career is at.

“Growing up and going to Magic Millions I did fall in love with the bloodstock side of things,” he said.

“Buying a horse as a yearling and following it through their racing career with an end goal of breeding from them interests me highly.

“I’d love to be a bloodstock agent one day but in the meantime, I am loving my work here at Swettenham.”

As for what the future of both breeding and racing looks like and what changes could be made in the near future, it revolves around giving the younger generation a better opportunity to establish themselves in a work environment that suits everyone – including better pay for those on the ground.

“The Australian racing and breeding industry is very strong at the moment with prize money and sales results improving every year and from this, you would not want to be working in the industry anywhere else in the world,” Heritage said.

“But, there is a reason as to why everyone is crying out for staff.

“How do we make it more appealing? The hours are not always very friendly and we still throw around big amounts of prize money to some of these races with staff working for next to nothing in stables.

“Share some of this money around, improve it as an industry so that people are greatly rewarded for hard work and that will in-turn create more staff, especially the younger people wanting to work.”

Already establishing himself as one of the young guns in this industry, Heritage has a few words of advice for anyone pursuing a career in both racing and breeding.

“For any young person out there looking for a profession in this industry, the amazing thing is that there is no set structure to create a successful career,”

“Ask plenty of questions and work at a few different places because everyone does things differently and the more you know, the better off you hold yourself going forward.”

BREED NOW, BENEFIT LATER!

Breeding mares in November and December has been a huge success, on the track as well as in the sales ring.

If it wasn’t for astute breeder’s sending their mares to stud later in the year, we wouldn’t have Legends such as LOHNRO and VERRY ELLEEGANT.

Other recent stars that were conceived from November or December covers include:

Coolangatta, Eduardo, Mazu, Madame Pommery, She’s Licketysplit, La Crique, Front Page, Virtuous Circle, Mr Maestro, Chain Of Lightning, Duais, Grand Impact, Berkeley Square, Mo’unga, Mr Brightside, Fangirl, Streets Of Avalon, Paulele, Behemoth, Savatoxl, In The Boat & Roch ‘n’ Horse.

It is a common misconception that foals from November and December covers don’t sell as well.

 

THE RESULTS TELL THE REAL STORY

Top priced yearling at Magic Millions Gold Coast 2022 is an OCTOBER foal ($1,900,000)

Top priced yearling at Inglis Classic 2022 is an OCTOBER foal ($825,000)

Top priced weanling at Australian Weanling Sale 2022 is an OCTOBER foal ($400,000)

Top priced weanling at Gold Coast National Weanling Sale 2022 is an OCTOBER foal ($750,000)

 

Inglis Easter

Lots that sold for $750k plus:

12 – Born October or later

10 – Born in August

 

Inglis Premier

Lots that sold for $250k plus:

32 – Born October or later

14 – Born in August

 

Inglis Classic

Lots that sold for $250k plus:

18 – Born October or later

12 – Born in August

Magic Millions Adelaide

Lots that sold for $100k plus:

11 – Born October or later

4 – Born in August

 

FERTILITY IS KEY

The exceptional roster of stallions at Swettenham Stud boasts incredible fertility across the board.

We have a first-class team of staff, a resident vet and management living on farm, giving your mare the best possible treatment and a strong likelihood of a successful pregnancy.

The Swettenham stallions are flying!

On the track & in the sales ring.

 

WE ARE HERE TO HELP

Contact our friendly team today for assistance or to arrange a booking.

 

Marcus Heritage

0429 632 397

marcus@swettenham.com.au

 

Sam Matthews

0487 851 572

sam@swettenham.com.au

by Tara Madgwick, Breednet – Thursday October 13

 

A third of the runners in this year’s $15million The Everest are by Swettenham Stud based sires past and present, but it’s their new recruit Wooded (IRE), who holds the promise of producing sprinting stars for the future.

Wooded (IRE) is a G1 winning sprinter by Wootton Bassett.

A brilliantly fast speedster by Wootton Bassett that scored his career defining Group I win at three in the Prix de l’Abbaye de Longchamp (1000m), Wooded is covering his first book of mares in Victoria this spring.

“He’s the only Group I winning first season stallion in Victoria this year and we’ve seen how popular his sire Wootton Bassett has been in NSW, so it’s not surprising Wooded is being supported by some of the nation’s most respected and successful breeders… and importantly their mares are all going in foal!” said Sam Matthews of Swettenham Stud.

Over 90% of the mares covered by Wooded have gone in foal first cycle and that’s important as we get deeper into the breeding season.

“Wooded’s fertility is as good as I’ve seen, a few of the mares he has got in foal have proven to be very difficult mares previously,” Matthews revealed.

“Any mare that has given us trouble in the past has been sent to him and to absolutely no surprise they are now in foal. This great fertility and strong libido has made his book very easy to manage and has freed up spots for breeders that have either been bumped or missed elsewhere.”

Standing at a fee of $22,000, Wooded joined the Swettenham Stud roster after two years in France at Haras de Bouquetot and his first Northern Hemisphere bred foals have greatly impressed their breeders.

“Our first foals by Wooded are consistently showing strength and depth as well as being good sized foals, proving quite similar to Wootton Bassett’s progeny.” – Benoit Jeffroy, Haras de Castillon & Haras de Bouquetot

“Our Wooded filly looks fast and strong. She has a great action, a deep shoulder, a good topline and hip-to-tail. She is well balanced.” – Olivier Foucher, Domaine de Quetieville

“Our colt has real points of strength; he is good sized and well balanced with plenty of depth and bone.” – Giulia Gariboldi, Haras de la Mercerie

Wooded has many positives to consider for the Australian breeder as a Danehill free outcross sire with his impressive physical scope sure to compliment the Australian mare pool. He is a genuine speed horse as reflected by his race record and is a C:C on the speed gene testing meaning his progeny should be best suited from 1000m to 1600m.

“He’s the fastest son of Wootton Bassett and we strongly believe he has what is required to produce these top class sprinters Swettenham has become renowned for,” Matthews concluded.

“We look forward to seeing his Everest runners in the years to come.”

Call Marcus Heritage (0429 632 397) for information and enquiries.