Diamond Fields Advertiser

Bruss takes breeders award

- DAVID THISELTON

ROBIN Bruss’s Northfield­s Stud deservedly received the Outstandin­g Breeders Award at the Equus Awards having bred the like of Vodacom Durban July winner Do It Again, Mercury Sprint winner Will Pays and overseas Grade 1 runner up Horse Of Fortune.

His achievemen­ts with a tiny band of broodmares defy the statistics, which have one in every 1000 foals winning a Grade 1, and should have received more fanfare.

Bruss, pictured, who bred his first thoroughbr­ed in 1975, reached a height of keeping eight broodmares but affordabil­ity has allowed him to operate with an average of just five.

Yet he has now bred eight Grade 1 winners, including winners of all of the big three, The Vodacom Durban July, The Sun Met and the Premier’s Champions Challenge.

In the past season Bruss had 12 runners and seven winners, including: Do It Again, who won the July, the Grade 2 Daisy Guineas, was second in the Grade 1 Investec Cape Derby and was Equus Champion Three-year-old colt (season earnings R3,257,500); Will Pays, who won the Grade 1 Mercury Sprint, the Grade 2 Hawaii Stakes, the Grade 3 Spring Spree Stakes and was third in the Grade 2 Drill Hall Stakes and he was named Equus Champion Sprinter (season earnings R1,240,700); Hong Kong-based Horse Of Fortune (originally named Strongman), who was runner up in the Grade 1 S$1 million Kranji Mile (season earnings of HK$1,007,500 plus S$273,500 translates to R4,771,298); Mighty Emperor, who recorded his 7th win in Singapore (season earnings of S$85,864 translates to R828,335).

Bruss said: “I believe the purpose of horseracin­g is to make your mark in history. In one click you can look at the pedigree of any racehorse to 20 generation­s, but us humans would battle to know our family trees beyond three generation­s.

Horseracin­g is probably the world’s most documented sport. Money comes and goes but the winners of the signal races are always remembered. The record book for Grade 1s should be the aim of every breeder.”

Bruss, like all small breeders, is unable to afford the service fees of the proven stallions so owes his success to decades of observatio­n and studying.

He is not a great fan of line-breeding and prefers to have pedigrees with “class close up.” He explained another of his tricks. “It is better to own the daughter of a Group 1 winner than a Group 1 winner herself.”

He has used that theory to own Group 1 class mares without having to pay for the Group 1 status.

Of the eight Grade 1 winners he has bred, only one of them was by a proven stallion and that was due to a foal-share agreement he had made with Drakenstei­n Stud.

That horse was Deo Juvente, the son of Trippi, who won the 2017 Grade 1 R4,5 million Champions Challenge and was second in the Summer Cup.

His first Grade 1 winner was Basic Instinct (Comic Blush-Joyfields (Northfield­s), who won the Grade 1 Golden Spur sprint in 1998.

His mare Teclafield­s gave him three Grade 1 winners, Circle Of Life (Complete Warrior), who won the Garden Province Stakes in 2000, African Lion (Shalford), who won the Champions Cup in 2003 and Zebra Crossing (Jallad) the 2006 Met winner. Circle Of Life is the dam of Deo Juvente. August Rush, a colt by Var out of the Zimbabwean-bred Huntingdal­e mare Bushgirl, won the 2011 Mercury Sprint.

Will Pays is by Imperial Stride out of the Jallad mare Rattlebag and Do It Again is by Twice Over out of Casey Tibbs mare Sweet Virginia.

Bruss’ beginning point when matching pedigrees is to produce a horse that will stay the July distance.

However, he pointed out horses who win the July and Met invariably had the speed to win over sprint trips so finding a combinatio­n of speed and stamina was important.

He pointed out one of the anomalies of breeding.

“Aiming for the winning post is different to aiming for the sales rings. A horse who is going to win the July is not going to be peaking at the National Yearling Sales and although people want July and Met winners strangely those are not the ones that sell well at the sales.”

The National Yearling Sale (NYS) is always Bruss’s target sale.

Do It Again was also sold through a foal-share deal with Drakenstei­n Stud and was by far the most expensive yearling Bruss has ever sold, fetching R1,1 million.

Of his other Grade 1 winners, Basic Instinct fetched R40,000, Circe of Life and African Lion were not sold, Zebra Crossing went for R600,000 but the buyer reneged so Bruss had to form a syndicate of friends, August Rush was not considered of sufficient standard to make it on to the NYS, Will Pays went for R60,000 and Deo Juvente for R250,000.

Bruss has produced three Grade 1winning sprinters but this was not by intention and he pointed out that all of them had won their Grade 1s as older horses. Will Pays is in fact by a mileand-a-half horse out of an Oaks winner.

Bruss bought Sweet Virginia for a bargain R200,000.

She beat the boys in the Grade 3 Winter Classic and Grade 3 Winter Derby but was small and Bruss recalled breeders felt she would produce “weedy” horses.

Instead she has produced a number of fine horses for different stallions, the others being Strongman (Stronghold), Mighty Emperor (Kahal) and Graded-placed Vilikazi

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa