Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Godolphin repeats as Royal Ascot top owner

- By Nicole Russo

Dubawi, Europe’s leading sire, recorded five winners at last week’s Royal Ascot meeting to help power Godolphin to the leading owner title for the second year in a row.

Dubawi, a 20-year-old Dubai Millennium horse who stands for Godolphin at Dalham Hall Stud in England, sired more winners than any other stallion during the five-day meeting, from June 14-18. His performers were led by Group 1 St James’s Palace winner Coroebus and Group 1 Platinum Jubilee winner Naval Crown. He also sired Group 2 Queen’s Vase winner Elder Eldarov, King George V winner Secret State, and Wolferton winner Dubai Future.

Elder Eldarov is owned by KHK Racing. Godolphin owns the other four plus Noble Truth, a son of Kingman who won the Group 3 Jersey Stakes.

Dubawi had an additional influence on the royal meeting as his son New Bay, who stands at Ballylinch Stud in Ireland, sired a pair of winners in Group 2 Duke of Cambridge winner Saffron Beach and Group 3 Hampton Cup winner Claymore.

“I am delighted to have received the leading owner trophy on behalf of Godolphin and our principal, His Highness Sheikh Mohammed,” Hugh Anderson, Godolphin’s managing director in the UK and Dubai, said in a statement. “It has been a fantastic week for our whole team, from Godolphin Stables to Moulton Paddocks, and our breeding operation and stallions. Winning this trophy is testament to the hard work of the entire team, all of whom deserve congratula­tion.”

Godolphin is the reigning Eclipse Award winner as both owner and breeder in North America, with Dubawi helping along the way by keying a historic weekend for the outfit at the Breeders’ Cup. The stallion became the first sire to have three offspring win Breeders’ Cup races in a single year, represente­d last November at Del Mar by Juvenile Turf winner Modern Games, Mile winner Space Blues, and Turf winner Yibir, who earned the division’s Eclipse. All three race as homebreds for Godolphin, making the operation the first owner and breeder to win three races in a single Breeders’ Cup event.

Joining Dubawi and New Bay with multiple individual winners at this year’s Royal Ascot meeting were the late Galileo (Coolmore) and Kingman (Juddmonte) with three each; and Dark Angel (Yeomanstow­n Stud), No Nay Never (Coolmore), and Starspangl­edbanner (Coolmore) with two each.

Quality Road has Ascot winner

Quality Road is leading the North American general sire list, in large part thanks to Emblem Road, winner of the world’s richest race, the $20 million Saudi Cup. But the Lane’s End Farm resident is far from a one-hit wonder.

The versatile sire, whose progeny excel on both dirt and turf, continued to succeed internatio­nally as the only U.S.based stallion to sire a winner at Royal Ascot this year, with Missed the Cut taking the Golden Gates Stakes on closing day.

This was the second career Royal Ascot winner for Quality Road, a 16-year-old son of Elusive Quality. Hootenanny, from his first crop, won the 2014 Windsor Castle.

Along with Emblem Road – who accounts for more than $10.1 million of his sire’s $16,131,898 in earnings through Sunday – and Missed the Cut, Quality Road is the sire of six stakes winners in the United States so far this season, on all three surfaces and around both one and two turns. His runners are led by Bleecker Street, who remained unbeaten in seven career starts while winning the Grade 1 New York Stakes on the Belmont Park turf earlier this month.

Quality Road also is the sire of Friar’s Road winner of the Grade 2 San Marcos; the 3-yearolds Ethereal Road, winner of the Sir Barton, and Blackadder, winner of the El Camino Real Derby; Grade 3-placed stakes winner Park Avenue; and stakes winner Alydiva.

Big week for Galileo family

In one of the most anticipate­d races of the Royal Ascot meeting, Kyprios cemented his status as a top-class stayer by winning the Group 1 Gold Cup, with Mojo Star second and the great Stradivari­us a rallying third.

Kyprios became the 95th Grade 1/Group 1 winner for the late Galileo, extending the leading sire’s world record for toplevel victors. But the race also served to highlight the legacy of Galieo’s dam, the late Broodmare of the Year Urban Sea, as Galileo’s half-brother, Sea The Stars, is the sire of both Mojo Star and Stradivari­us. Both of those stallions – as well as Galileo’s several successful sons at stud – made an impact.

Urban Sea, a 1989 Miswaki mare, scored her greatest win in the 1993 Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe. As a broodmare, Urban Sea produced eight winners from nine starters. Those are led by 2009 European Horse of the Year Sea The Stars, who counted the Epsom Derby and Arc de Triomphe among his six Group 1 victories while winning 8 of 9 starts, overall; and European champion 3-year-old Galileo, who won the Epsom and Irish Derbies.

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