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Karaka Still The Classic Source

3 minute read

A remarkable five out of the possible seven Group One Guineas races in Australasia in the 2017-18 season were claimed by yearlings who went through the sale ring at Karaka.

It’s a record that will again attract the industry’s heavy hitters from near and far to Karaka in January, many seeking horses that can add to the phenomenal record in Australasia’s biggest three-year-old races as well as some of the most prestigious events around the world.

Mighty Boss (Not a Single Doubt) and Aloisia (Azamour) kicked off last season’s results when they won the G1 Guineas double at Caulfield.

The Group One success continued when Grunt (O’Reilly) overpowered Victoria’s best three-year-olds in the G1 Australian Guineas.

Grunt returned to Flemington this season to win another G1 over the same course and distance in the Makybe Diva Stakes.

Grunt
Grunt Picture: (Vince Caligiuri/Getty Images)

Savabeel colt Embellish was the race favourite for the G1 NZ Two Thousand Guineas at Riccarton where he joined the honour roll.

Two weeks later Savabeel was to the fore again when his filly Hasahalo, sold through the same Waikato Stud Premier Sale draft as Embellish, won the G1 NZ One Thousand Guineas.

New Zealand sourced fillies are stamping their mark in Australia with statistics showing they won 36% of all Australian Group One filly races in the past six seasons.

These were bolstered by the fact that they have reigned supreme in the last five runnings of the G1 ATC Australian Oaks at Randwick with the honour roll featuring Karaka Yearling Sale graduates Unforgotten (Fastnet Rock), Bonneval (Makfi), Sofia Rosa (Makfi) and Gust Of Wind (Darci Brahma), along with Kiwi-bred filly Rising Romance.

These Oaks winners cost as little as NZ$65,000 while the Guineas winners as little as NZ$180,000.

In the 2017-18 Australian season New Zealand thoroughbreds earnt on average 36% more than Australian-bred horses.

Karaka graduates shone again in this season’s G1 NZ Two Thousand Guineas, winning the Riccarton classic for the eighth year in a row with Madison County (Pins) to the fore.

The following weekend Media Sensation (I Am Invincible) took her value to a new level with her outstanding performance in the NZ One Thousand Guineas.

Hong Kong

Hong Kong’s biggest race day, the Longines Hong Kong International Races, saw Karaka Yearling Sale graduates Beauty Generation (Road to Rock) and Mr Stunning (Exceed and Excel) record breath-taking repeats in the two main feature races.

Erasing any doubt as the world’s premier miler, Beauty Generation kicked off the season with three straight wins and delivered a fourth in the HK$25 million G1 Hong Kong Mile as he brilliantly defending his title in the prestigious race.

The reigning Hong Kong Horse of the Year has now won four G1 races in the last 12 months, accumulating more than NZ$11.4 million in prizemoney.

Beauty Generation
Beauty Generation Picture: HKJC

Beauty Generation continues a proud record of Karaka graduates in the Hong Kong Mile with six of the last nine Hong Kong Miles claimed by alumni, including Glorious Days, Ambitious Dragon (NZ), Able One (NZ) and Beauty Flash (NZ).

The similarities of Beauty Generation’s remarkable Group One repeat extends to star sprinter Mr Stunning who again lead the charge HK$20 million Group One Longines Hong Kong Sprint. He has now claimed 11 wins for NZ$8.6 million in prizemoney.

The Hong Kong Sprint honour roll also features Champion Sprinter and fellow graduate Aerovelocity (NZ) (Pins) who scored repeat wins in 2014 and 2016.

The New Zealand dominance in the mecca of racing has also been witnessed at longer distances with more than half of the BMW Hong Kong Derby winners in the past 15 seasons carrying the NZ suffix, and being the leading source of winners since its inception. Ping Hai Star (NZ) (Nom du Jeu), another yearling to walk through the Karaka sale ring, is the reigning victor of the prestigious Derby.

Singapore

The 2017 Singapore Racing Awards named five Kiwi horses as title winners, including three who were purchased as yearlings at Karaka.

Gilt Complex (Gold Centre) was voted Champion Older Horse, Champion Stayer and Most Improved Horse; Be Bee (Showcasing) was named Champion Two-Year-Old; while Nova Swiss (Swiss Ace) was awarded Champion Polytrack Horse.

Other award winners to have been purchased at Karaka sales included Horse of the Year, Champion Four-Year-Old and Champion Miler Infantry (Tavistock), and Champion Three-Year-Old Countofmontecristo (Echoes Of Heaven).

Singapore’s marketplace is littered with these New Zealand-bred winners having claimed 72% of all black-type races last year, and the churn of racetrack stars has increased with 2018 additions.

Karaka Yearling Sale graduate Be Bee continued his winning form in his classic season winning the first three-year-old race of the season, the Singapore 3YO Sprint, with Mr Clint (Power) following suit in the Singapore Guineas two months later.

Debt Collector (Thorn Park) added two black-type victories to his record winning the Raffles Cup and Queen Elizabeth II Cup back-to-back, with Distinctive Darci (Darci Brahma) and Preditor (Savabeel) each adding further black-type Yearling Sale graduate honour roll.

Karaka 2019

In the peak of the summer season, Karaka 2019 will offer 1,284 of the very best thoroughbreds from around the country at the 93rd National Yearling Sales Series.

The first 100 lots from Book 1 will go through the ring on Sunday 27 January, followed by six further days of selling covering the remainder of Book 1 through Books 2 and 3.
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