De Burgh ends four-day stint with a bang at Karaka

NZ Racing Desk
30 January 2019
Bloodstock agent Hubie De Burgh went to $500,000 to secure Lot 657, a Savabeel colt out of O’Reilly mare Cupid from Waikato Stud’s draft. Photo: Sarah Ebbett
 
 
International Bloodstock Agent Hubie De Burgh kicked off the annual National Yearling Sale with a bang and he has ended his four-day visit to New Zealand on a similar note.
 
De Burgh outlaid $500,000 for an I Am Invincible filly early on day one at Karaka and he matched that figure when he purchased Lot 657, a Savabeel colt out of O’Reilly mare Cupid from the Waikato Stud draft.
 
The colt is a three-quarter brother to Waikato Stud’s $1.4 million sale-topping Savabeel/Make A Wish colt, a fact that wasn’t lost on De Burgh.
 
“He is closely related to the $1.4million colt, who is a beautiful horse that we wanted to buy, but I didn’t have that sort of cheque book,” he said.
 
“If we were looking for a Cox Plate horse then I guess this guy (Lot 657) is what he is.
 
“He’s a really athletic horse who is beautifully balanced and really walks – he just floats on air.
 
“He is by this great stallion, out of the great Savabeel/O’Reilly cross, and also has Pins in his next dam.
 
“When you package that up and he has also come from a great Stud who breeds so many group winners, you are reducing the level of risk.”
 
As with the I Am Invincible filly, the colt is headed to Lindsay Park in Melbourne for Sheikh Hamdan Bin Rashid Al Maktoum and his Shadwell Racing operation.
 
“We’re done now, we’ve blown the chequebook,” De Burgh said.
 
“We bought four for Sheikh Hamdan and tried to balance things up.
 
“The I Am Invincible filly should be an early two-year old with a lovely page (pedigree), where we gave what I thought was a fair price.
 
“I still go back and talk about the prizemoney you can win. It (the sale price) is a lot of money, so let’s not be flippant about it, but if you have been lucky enough to buy a horse that can gallop then you can win that back.
 
“The problem is that you come here to this sale and when there is a nice horse, they don’t hide. You can’t just say I will wait as no-one else has seen it as they pick them out.
 
“It is the same in Europe and in Australia for the good horses. It is the same in property and art and in any commodity, the rules are the same.”
 
De Burgh also purchased Lot 272, a Redoute’s Choice filly from the Pencarrow Stud draft for $200,000 along with Lot 275, an Iffraaj colt for $360,000 from Haunui Farm for Sheikh Hamdan plus Lot 411, a Savabeel colt from Waikato Stud for $150,000 for another client. 

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