Hubie de Burgh still using the Colin Hayes criteria for yearling selection

by Brian de Lore
Published 31 January 2019

World renown bloodstock agent Hubie de Burgh credits his success and longevity after 40 years in the business to the early grounding he was given by the late and great South Australian trainer Colin Hayes.

Making a return visit to New Zealand this week for Book One of the Karaka Sales, de Burgh under his company name of deBurgh Equine has been inspecting and buying yearlings for His Highness Sheikh Hamdan Bin Rashid Al Maktoum of the UAE and Australian syndication company Darby Bloodstock.

It’s 36 years since de Burgh made his National Sales debut at Trentham in the company of the legendary Colin Hayes and Colin McAlpine, and 31 years since he selected and purchased Zabeel in the first year at Karaka in 1988.

“In Zabeel’s year he was the best-looking horse on the sales ground,” recalled de Burgh, “any idiot could have bought him that year. He had a Nuryev head on him; he had balance and he walked beautifully; he was obviously a very good horse.”

But far from being an ‘idiot,’ the then 33-year-old de Burgh representing Sheikh Hamdan put his hand-up to fire in the winning bid at $650,000, a huge amount at the time which today converts on the CPI index to the equivalent of just under $1.5 million.

“We decided we were not going home without Zabeel,” continued de Burgh, “and bought him for a lot of money but there were two horses we wanted that year and Doctor Chapman bought the other which turned out to be Dr. Grace. We ran out of money otherwise we would have had the two of them.”

Both horses were by Champion Sire Sir Tristram and were reared, prepared and offered for sale in the Ra Ora Stud draft on behalf of racing magnate Robert Sangster. Zabeel was out of the diminutive but quality Nureyev mare Lady Giselle who was a twin, and Dr. Grace was out of the South Australian Derby winning mare English Wonder, by Twig Moss.

They were both high-quality yearlings who became high-quality racehorses and those facts can be verified by this writer who was privileged to be representing Sangster and Ra Ora Stud in the vendor’s box behind the auctioneer in what was the debut year for Karaka.

The irony of the sale of those two yearlings is that Rosehill trainer Dr. Geoff Chapman was underbidder on Zabeel before winning the bidding war on Dr. Grace. About 20 months later, early in October 1989, Zabeel defeated Dr.Grace by one length in the $250,000 Group Two Moonee Valley Stakes over 1600m.

Third in that same race was the New Zealand-bred Courtza, the previous season’s Golden Slipper winner raced by the late Nick Columb. Of course, Courtza would subsequently return to Waikato Stud where she was bred and play a huge role in that stud’s rise to prominence as the dam of Champion Three-Year-Old and Sire, O’Reilly.

Dr. Grace went on to win 12 races including the ATC Derby, The BMW, two Manion Cups, a Liston an Underwood and finished his career with a victory over Super Impose in the Chelmsford, accruing $2.7 million in stakes.

De Burgh was adamant about the Hayes influence, saying, “The time I spent with Colin in the early days was the most formative of my career. He was like a second father – I learned so much from him. He was ruthless on his appraisal of the anatomy of horses.

“On my first trip to New Zealand with Colin and Colin McAlpine, we looked at a lot of horses at all levels. It was so interesting, and then we’d be together at Lindsay Park on the gallops discussing it and then we’d be at dinner discussing it, and everything he talked about was way ahead of his time.”

De Burgh was lucky to get to Australia at all, let alone meet Colin Hayes, and after he did arrive in the lucky country his father came visiting to take him home. He explained, “I first worked for Claiborne Farm in America and then for Clay Camp who was one of the big consignors at Saratoga.

“Then I went back to the UK and ended up getting the job to bring horses to Australia on the shuttle at 48-hours notice – I was at the Curragh Bloodstock Agency at the time – the guy that was going to take them burst an eardrum waterskiing just two days before departure so the next day they told me I was going. I didn’t even know where Australia was.

“Then I fell in love with Australia. I took the horse down and afterward my father came down and made me come home otherwise I was intending to stay. When I came back I worked for Jimmy O’Connor at Milluna and then David Coles at Coles Bloodstock. And while all that was going on I was following a man that I worshipped and that was Colin Hayes.

“I was 28 when I got the job with Sheikh Hamdan. I was young but had already lived for five years in Australia by then and I was in love with the Star Kingdom horses and the first one I bought was Nouvelle Star – I wanted to get her to Europe – they were very tough horses. She was a Nolholme mare and mated to Blushing Groom she later produced the first classic winner for the Sheikh.

“Then we picked out At Talaq which was a horse we already had and sent him to Colin Hayes. I had never met Colin but I rang him and he said, ‘yes, of course,’ but he was such a global thinker even then – years ahead of his time. He was a visionary.

“At Talaq won the Melbourne Cup and then we decided to come down and buy yearlings and that’s how the whole thing started.

“We bought the 1990 Blue Diamond Stakes winner Mahaasin out of the Magic Millions Sale. All these events including Zabeel started this extraordinary relationship between the Hayes family and Sheikh Hamdan and its gone on unbroken all the way through to David Hayes’s return to Australia from Hong Kong and beyond, and we’ve had lots of group winners all the way through.”

And just as de Burgh benefitted from the Hayes mentoring all those years ago, the knowledge is now being passed on to the next generation in the form of a young Will Johnson who himself comes with a group one pedigree.

“Will Johnson is a fantastic young guy, very knowledgable,” says de Burgh. “He was an assistant trainer to Roger Varian in England. His father is Tim Johnson – they are the Johnsons that bred Vain. His mother is a Cox from the family that the Cox Plate was named after so he was meant to be in this business.

“When you look around the world now there are teams of young guys coming through that are global people; young people around 30 years old from France, Ireland and England that are very impressive – very different to the era when I was in. Will is a very good example of them.

After three or the four days of Book One completed, de Burgh with Johnson’s assistance had purchased four yearlings – three for Sheikh Hamdan and one for Darby Racing.

They are Lot 19, a filly by I Am Invincible for $500,000, Lot 272, a Redoubt’s Choice filly for $200,000, Lot 275, an Iffraaj colt for $360,000, and for Darby Racing Lot 411, a Savabeel colt for $150,000.

On the difference between buying for Sheikh Hamdan as opposed to Darby Racing de Burgh commented, “We bought for Darby and were underbidder on a couple earlier in the sale. Darby’s budget has to be met – they have to be very strict on what they pay for a horse because they have to turn around and sell it down. Australia is a world leader on syndication; the infrastructure, the marketing, the networking; how the whole thing works. 

“It really makes owning a racehorse just good fun. You can sell one percent here and there. In Europe, we are still a little bit too elitist but are all picking up on the success of companies like Darby Racing and they now all want to do the same thing – they are 10 years behind.

“Darby has about 90 horses and god-knows how many owners on its books. A horse can go on their social network site and they are getting hits within 30 seconds.

And on buying in Australia or New Zealand, de Burgh says, “I still work off the criteria Colin taught me 40 years ago because when you are buying horses in the southern hemisphere it’s a very different type you are seeing than when buying a European horse.

“The big mistake some European buyers make down here is they buy these big, long-striding European things – they float along and you think they’re great – but actually, a lot of them don’t have the turn of foot so while you have to have motion, you don’t have to have these long-striding things.

“They are a completely different structure down here because they have more speed. So, I never changed from the basic rules that Colin taught me.”

Hubie de Burgh still using the Colin Hayes criteria for yearling selection

By Brian de Lore

World renown bloodstock agent Hubie de Burgh credits his success and longevity after 40 years in the business to the early grounding he was given by the late and great South Australian trainer Colin Hayes.

Making a return visit to New Zealand this week for Book One of the Karaka Sales, de Burgh under his company name of deBurgh Equine has been inspecting and buying yearlings for His Highness Sheikh Hamdan Bin Rashid Al Maktoum of the UAE and Australian syndication company Darby Bloodstock.

It’s 36 years since de Burgh made his National Sales debut at Trentham in the company of the legendary Colin Hayes and Colin McAlpine, and 31 years since he selected and purchased Zabeel in the first year at Karaka in 1988.

“In Zabeel’s year he was the best-looking horse on the sales ground,” recalled de Burgh, “any idiot could have bought him that year. He had a Nuryev head on him; he had balance and he walked beautifully; he was obviously a very good horse.”

But far from being an ‘idiot,’ the then 33-year-old de Burgh representing Sheikh Hamdan put his hand-up to fire in the winning bid at $650,000, a huge amount at the time which today converts on the CPI index to the equivalent of just under $1.5 million.

“We decided we were not going home without Zabeel,” continued de Burgh, “and bought him for a lot of money but there were two horses we wanted that year and Doctor Chapman bought the other which turned out to be Dr. Grace. We ran out of money otherwise we would have had the two of them.”

Both horses were by Champion Sire Sir Tristram and were reared, prepared and offered for sale in the Ra Ora Stud draft on behalf of racing magnate Robert Sangster. Zabeel was out of the diminutive but quality Nureyev mare Lady Giselle who was a twin, and Dr. Grace was out of the South Australian Derby winning mare English Wonder, by Twig Moss.

They were both high-quality yearlings who became high-quality racehorses and those facts can be verified by this writer who was privileged to be representing Sangster and Ra Ora Stud in the vendor’s box behind the auctioneer in what was the debut year for Karaka.

The irony of the sale of those two yearlings is that Rosehill trainer Dr. Geoff Chapman was underbidder on Zabeel before winning the bidding war on Dr. Grace. About 20 months later, early in October 1989, Zabeel defeated Dr.Grace by one length in the $250,000 Group Two Moonee Valley Stakes over 1600m.

Third in that same race was the New Zealand-bred Courtza, the previous season’s Golden Slipper winner raced by the late Nick Columb. Of course, Courtza would subsequently return to Waikato Stud where she was bred and play a huge role in that stud’s rise to prominence as the dam of Champion Three-Year-Old and Sire, O’Reilly.

Dr. Grace went on to win 12 races including the ATC Derby, The BMW, two Manion Cups, a Liston an Underwood and finished his career with a victory over Super Impose in the Chelmsford, accruing $2.7 million in stakes.

De Burgh was adamant about the Hayes influence, saying, “The time I spent with Colin in the early days was the most formative of my career. He was like a second father – I learned so much from him. He was ruthless on his appraisal of the anatomy of horses.

“On my first trip to New Zealand with Colin and Colin McAlpine, we looked at a lot of horses at all levels. It was so interesting, and then we’d be together at Lindsay Park on the gallops discussing it and then we’d be at dinner discussing it, and everything he talked about was way ahead of his time.”

De Burgh was lucky to get to Australia at all, let alone meet Colin Hayes, and after he did arrive in the lucky country his father came visiting to take him home. He explained, “I first worked for Claiborne Farm in America and then for Clay Camp who was one of the big consignors at Saratoga.

“Then I went back to the UK and ended up getting the job to bring horses to Australia on the shuttle at 48-hours notice – I was at the Curragh Bloodstock Agency at the time – the guy that was going to take them burst an eardrum waterskiing just two days before departure so the next day they told me I was going. I didn’t even know where Australia was.

“Then I fell in love with Australia. I took the horse down and afterward my father came down and made me come home otherwise I was intending to stay. When I came back I worked for Jimmy O’Connor at Milluna and then David Coles at Coles Bloodstock. And while all that was going on I was following a man that I worshipped and that was Colin Hayes.

“I was 28 when I got the job with Sheikh Hamdan. I was young but had already lived for five years in Australia by then and I was in love with the Star Kingdom horses and the first one I bought was Nouvelle Star – I wanted to get her to Europe – they were very tough horses. She was a Nolholme mare and mated to Blushing Groom she later produced the first classic winner for the Sheikh.

“Then we picked out At Talaq which was a horse we already had and sent him to Colin Hayes. I had never met Colin but I rang him and he said, ‘yes, of course,’ but he was such a global thinker even then – years ahead of his time. He was a visionary.

“At Talaq won the Melbourne Cup and then we decided to come down and buy yearlings and that’s how the whole thing started.

“We bought the 1990 Blue Diamond Stakes winner Mahaasin out of the Magic Millions Sale. All these events including Zabeel started this extraordinary relationship between the Hayes family and Sheikh Hamdan and its gone on unbroken all the way through to David Hayes’s return to Australia from Hong Kong and beyond, and we’ve had lots of group winners all the way through.”

And just as de Burgh benefitted from the Hayes mentoring all those years ago, the knowledge is now being passed on to the next generation in the form of a young Will Johnson who himself comes with a group one pedigree.

“Will Johnson is a fantastic young guy, very knowledgable,” says de Burgh. “He was an assistant trainer to Roger Varian in England. His father is Tim Johnson – they are the Johnsons that bred Vain. His mother is a Cox from the family that the Cox Plate was named after so he was meant to be in this business.

“When you look around the world now there are teams of young guys coming through that are global people; young people around 30 years old from France, Ireland and England that are very impressive – very different to the era when I was in. Will is a very good example of them.

After three or the four days of Book One completed, de Burgh with Johnson’s assistance had purchased four yearlings – three for Sheikh Hamdan and one for Darby Racing.

They are Lot 19, a filly by I Am Invincible for $500,000, Lot 272, a Redoubt’s Choice filly for $200,000, Lot 275, an Iffraaj colt for $360,000, and for Darby Racing Lot 411, a Savabeel colt for $150,000.

On the difference between buying for Sheikh Hamdan as opposed to Darby Racing de Burgh commented, “We bought for Darby and were underbidder on a couple earlier in the sale. Darby’s budget has to be met – they have to be very strict on what they pay for a horse because they have to turn around and sell it down. Australia is a world leader on syndication; the infrastructure, the marketing, the networking; how the whole thing works. 

“It really makes owning a racehorse just good fun. You can sell one percent here and there. In Europe, we are still a little bit too elitist but are all picking up on the success of companies like Darby Racing and they now all want to do the same thing – they are 10 years behind.

“Darby has about 90 horses and god-knows how many owners on its books. A horse can go on their social network site and they are getting hits within 30 seconds.

And on buying in Australia or New Zealand, de Burgh says, “I still work off the criteria Colin taught me 40 years ago because when you are buying horses in the southern hemisphere it’s a very different type you are seeing than when buying a European horse.

“The big mistake some European buyers make down here is they buy these big, long-striding European things – they float along and you think they’re great – but actually, a lot of them don’t have the turn of foot so while you have to have motion, you don’t have to have these long-striding things.

“They are a completely different structure down here because they have more speed. So, I never changed from the basic rules that Colin taught me.”

Hubie de Burgh still using the Colin Hayes criteria for yearling selection

By Brian de Lore

World renown bloodstock agent Hubie de Burgh credits his success and longevity after 40 years in the business to the early grounding he was given by the late and great South Australian trainer Colin Hayes.

Making a return visit to New Zealand this week for Book One of the Karaka Sales, de Burgh under his company name of deBurgh Equine has been inspecting and buying yearlings for His Highness Sheikh Hamdan Bin Rashid Al Maktoum of the UAE and Australian syndication company Darby Bloodstock.

It’s 36 years since de Burgh made his National Sales debut at Trentham in the company of the legendary Colin Hayes and Colin McAlpine, and 31 years since he selected and purchased Zabeel in the first year at Karaka in 1988.

“In Zabeel’s year he was the best-looking horse on the sales ground,” recalled de Burgh, “any idiot could have bought him that year. He had a Nuryev head on him; he had balance and he walked beautifully; he was obviously a very good horse.”

But far from being an ‘idiot,’ the then 33-year-old de Burgh representing Sheikh Hamdan put his hand-up to fire in the winning bid at $650,000, a huge amount at the time which today converts on the CPI index to the equivalent of just under $1.5 million.

“We decided we were not going home without Zabeel,” continued de Burgh, “and bought him for a lot of money but there were two horses we wanted that year and Doctor Chapman bought the other which turned out to be Dr. Grace. We ran out of money otherwise we would have had the two of them.”

Both horses were by Champion Sire Sir Tristram and were reared, prepared and offered for sale in the Ra Ora Stud draft on behalf of racing magnate Robert Sangster. Zabeel was out of the diminutive but quality Nureyev mare Lady Giselle who was a twin, and Dr. Grace was out of the South Australian Derby winning mare English Wonder, by Twig Moss.

They were both high-quality yearlings who became high-quality racehorses and those facts can be verified by this writer who was privileged to be representing Sangster and Ra Ora Stud in the vendor’s box behind the auctioneer in what was the debut year for Karaka.

The irony of the sale of those two yearlings is that Rosehill trainer Dr. Geoff Chapman was underbidder on Zabeel before winning the bidding war on Dr. Grace. About 20 months later, early in October 1989, Zabeel defeated Dr.Grace by one length in the $250,000 Group Two Moonee Valley Stakes over 1600m.

Third in that same race was the New Zealand-bred Courtza, the previous season’s Golden Slipper winner raced by the late Nick Columb. Of course, Courtza would subsequently return to Waikato Stud where she was bred and play a huge role in that stud’s rise to prominence as the dam of Champion Three-Year-Old and Sire, O’Reilly.

Dr. Grace went on to win 12 races including the ATC Derby, The BMW, two Manion Cups, a Liston an Underwood and finished his career with a victory over Super Impose in the Chelmsford, accruing $2.7 million in stakes.

De Burgh was adamant about the Hayes influence, saying, “The time I spent with Colin in the early days was the most formative of my career. He was like a second father – I learned so much from him. He was ruthless on his appraisal of the anatomy of horses.

“On my first trip to New Zealand with Colin and Colin McAlpine, we looked at a lot of horses at all levels. It was so interesting, and then we’d be together at Lindsay Park on the gallops discussing it and then we’d be at dinner discussing it, and everything he talked about was way ahead of his time.”

De Burgh was lucky to get to Australia at all, let alone meet Colin Hayes, and after he did arrive in the lucky country his father came visiting to take him home. He explained, “I first worked for Claiborne Farm in America and then for Clay Camp who was one of the big consignors at Saratoga.

“Then I went back to the UK and ended up getting the job to bring horses to Australia on the shuttle at 48-hours notice – I was at the Curragh Bloodstock Agency at the time – the guy that was going to take them burst an eardrum waterskiing just two days before departure so the next day they told me I was going. I didn’t even know where Australia was.

“Then I fell in love with Australia. I took the horse down and afterward my father came down and made me come home otherwise I was intending to stay. When I came back I worked for Jimmy O’Connor at Milluna and then David Coles at Coles Bloodstock. And while all that was going on I was following a man that I worshipped and that was Colin Hayes.

“I was 28 when I got the job with Sheikh Hamdan. I was young but had already lived for five years in Australia by then and I was in love with the Star Kingdom horses and the first one I bought was Nouvelle Star – I wanted to get her to Europe – they were very tough horses. She was a Nolholme mare and mated to Blushing Groom she later produced the first classic winner for the Sheikh.

“Then we picked out At Talaq which was a horse we already had and sent him to Colin Hayes. I had never met Colin but I rang him and he said, ‘yes, of course,’ but he was such a global thinker even then – years ahead of his time. He was a visionary.

“At Talaq won the Melbourne Cup and then we decided to come down and buy yearlings and that’s how the whole thing started.

“We bought the 1990 Blue Diamond Stakes winner Mahaasin out of the Magic Millions Sale. All these events including Zabeel started this extraordinary relationship between the Hayes family and Sheikh Hamdan and its gone on unbroken all the way through to David Hayes’s return to Australia from Hong Kong and beyond, and we’ve had lots of group winners all the way through.”

And just as de Burgh benefitted from the Hayes mentoring all those years ago, the knowledge is now being passed on to the next generation in the form of a young Will Johnson who himself comes with a group one pedigree.

“Will Johnson is a fantastic young guy, very knowledgable,” says de Burgh. “He was an assistant trainer to Roger Varian in England. His father is Tim Johnson – they are the Johnsons that bred Vain. His mother is a Cox from the family that the Cox Plate was named after so he was meant to be in this business.

“When you look around the world now there are teams of young guys coming through that are global people; young people around 30 years old from France, Ireland and England that are very impressive – very different to the era when I was in. Will is a very good example of them.

After three or the four days of Book One completed, de Burgh with Johnson’s assistance had purchased four yearlings – three for Sheikh Hamdan and one for Darby Racing.

They are Lot 19, a filly by I Am Invincible for $500,000, Lot 272, a Redoubt’s Choice filly for $200,000, Lot 275, an Iffraaj colt for $360,000, and for Darby Racing Lot 411, a Savabeel colt for $150,000.

On the difference between buying for Sheikh Hamdan as opposed to Darby Racing de Burgh commented, “We bought for Darby and were underbidder on a couple earlier in the sale. Darby’s budget has to be met – they have to be very strict on what they pay for a horse because they have to turn around and sell it down. Australia is a world leader on syndication; the infrastructure, the marketing, the networking; how the whole thing works. 

“It really makes owning a racehorse just good fun. You can sell one percent here and there. In Europe, we are still a little bit too elitist but are all picking up on the success of companies like Darby Racing and they now all want to do the same thing – they are 10 years behind.

“Darby has about 90 horses and god-knows how many owners on its books. A horse can go on their social network site and they are getting hits within 30 seconds.

And on buying in Australia or New Zealand, de Burgh says, “I still work off the criteria Colin taught me 40 years ago because when you are buying horses in the southern hemisphere it’s a very different type you are seeing than when buying a European horse.

“The big mistake some European buyers make down here is they buy these big, long-striding European things – they float along and you think they’re great – but actually, a lot of them don’t have the turn of foot so while you have to have motion, you don’t have to have these long-striding things.

“They are a completely different structure down here because they have more speed. So, I never changed from the basic rules that Colin taught me.”

Hubie de Burgh still using the Colin Hayes criteria for yearling selection

By Brian de Lore

World renown bloodstock agent Hubie de Burgh credits his success and longevity after 40 years in the business to the early grounding he was given by the late and great South Australian trainer Colin Hayes.

Making a return visit to New Zealand this week for Book One of the Karaka Sales, de Burgh under his company name of deBurgh Equine has been inspecting and buying yearlings for His Highness Sheikh Hamdan Bin Rashid Al Maktoum of the UAE and Australian syndication company Darby Bloodstock.

It’s 36 years since de Burgh made his National Sales debut at Trentham in the company of the legendary Colin Hayes and Colin McAlpine, and 31 years since he selected and purchased Zabeel in the first year at Karaka in 1988.

“In Zabeel’s year he was the best-looking horse on the sales ground,” recalled de Burgh, “any idiot could have bought him that year. He had a Nuryev head on him; he had balance and he walked beautifully; he was obviously a very good horse.”

But far from being an ‘idiot,’ the then 33-year-old de Burgh representing Sheikh Hamdan put his hand-up to fire in the winning bid at $650,000, a huge amount at the time which today converts on the CPI index to the equivalent of just under $1.5 million.

“We decided we were not going home without Zabeel,” continued de Burgh, “and bought him for a lot of money but there were two horses we wanted that year and Doctor Chapman bought the other which turned out to be Dr. Grace. We ran out of money otherwise we would have had the two of them.”

Both horses were by Champion Sire Sir Tristram and were reared, prepared and offered for sale in the Ra Ora Stud draft on behalf of racing magnate Robert Sangster. Zabeel was out of the diminutive but quality Nureyev mare Lady Giselle who was a twin, and Dr. Grace was out of the South Australian Derby winning mare English Wonder, by Twig Moss.

They were both high-quality yearlings who became high-quality racehorses and those facts can be verified by this writer who was privileged to be representing Sangster and Ra Ora Stud in the vendor’s box behind the auctioneer in what was the debut year for Karaka.

The irony of the sale of those two yearlings is that Rosehill trainer Dr. Geoff Chapman was underbidder on Zabeel before winning the bidding war on Dr. Grace. About 20 months later, early in October 1989, Zabeel defeated Dr.Grace by one length in the $250,000 Group Two Moonee Valley Stakes over 1600m.

Third in that same race was the New Zealand-bred Courtza, the previous season’s Golden Slipper winner raced by the late Nick Columb. Of course, Courtza would subsequently return to Waikato Stud where she was bred and play a huge role in that stud’s rise to prominence as the dam of Champion Three-Year-Old and Sire, O’Reilly.

Dr. Grace went on to win 12 races including the ATC Derby, The BMW, two Manion Cups, a Liston an Underwood and finished his career with a victory over Super Impose in the Chelmsford, accruing $2.7 million in stakes.

De Burgh was adamant about the Hayes influence, saying, “The time I spent with Colin in the early days was the most formative of my career. He was like a second father – I learned so much from him. He was ruthless on his appraisal of the anatomy of horses.

“On my first trip to New Zealand with Colin and Colin McAlpine, we looked at a lot of horses at all levels. It was so interesting, and then we’d be together at Lindsay Park on the gallops discussing it and then we’d be at dinner discussing it, and everything he talked about was way ahead of his time.”

De Burgh was lucky to get to Australia at all, let alone meet Colin Hayes, and after he did arrive in the lucky country his father came visiting to take him home. He explained, “I first worked for Claiborne Farm in America and then for Clay Camp who was one of the big consignors at Saratoga.

“Then I went back to the UK and ended up getting the job to bring horses to Australia on the shuttle at 48-hours notice – I was at the Curragh Bloodstock Agency at the time – the guy that was going to take them burst an eardrum waterskiing just two days before departure so the next day they told me I was going. I didn’t even know where Australia was.

“Then I fell in love with Australia. I took the horse down and afterward my father came down and made me come home otherwise I was intending to stay. When I came back I worked for Jimmy O’Connor at Milluna and then David Coles at Coles Bloodstock. And while all that was going on I was following a man that I worshipped and that was Colin Hayes.

“I was 28 when I got the job with Sheikh Hamdan. I was young but had already lived for five years in Australia by then and I was in love with the Star Kingdom horses and the first one I bought was Nouvelle Star – I wanted to get her to Europe – they were very tough horses. She was a Nolholme mare and mated to Blushing Groom she later produced the first classic winner for the Sheikh.

“Then we picked out At Talaq which was a horse we already had and sent him to Colin Hayes. I had never met Colin but I rang him and he said, ‘yes, of course,’ but he was such a global thinker even then – years ahead of his time. He was a visionary.

“At Talaq won the Melbourne Cup and then we decided to come down and buy yearlings and that’s how the whole thing started.

“We bought the 1990 Blue Diamond Stakes winner Mahaasin out of the Magic Millions Sale. All these events including Zabeel started this extraordinary relationship between the Hayes family and Sheikh Hamdan and its gone on unbroken all the way through to David Hayes’s return to Australia from Hong Kong and beyond, and we’ve had lots of group winners all the way through.”

And just as de Burgh benefitted from the Hayes mentoring all those years ago, the knowledge is now being passed on to the next generation in the form of a young Will Johnson who himself comes with a group one pedigree.

“Will Johnson is a fantastic young guy, very knowledgable,” says de Burgh. “He was an assistant trainer to Roger Varian in England. His father is Tim Johnson – they are the Johnsons that bred Vain. His mother is a Cox from the family that the Cox Plate was named after so he was meant to be in this business.

“When you look around the world now there are teams of young guys coming through that are global people; young people around 30 years old from France, Ireland and England that are very impressive – very different to the era when I was in. Will is a very good example of them.

After three or the four days of Book One completed, de Burgh with Johnson’s assistance had purchased four yearlings – three for Sheikh Hamdan and one for Darby Racing.

They are Lot 19, a filly by I Am Invincible for $500,000, Lot 272, a Redoubt’s Choice filly for $200,000, Lot 275, an Iffraaj colt for $360,000, and for Darby Racing Lot 411, a Savabeel colt for $150,000.

On the difference between buying for Sheikh Hamdan as opposed to Darby Racing de Burgh commented, “We bought for Darby and were underbidder on a couple earlier in the sale. Darby’s budget has to be met – they have to be very strict on what they pay for a horse because they have to turn around and sell it down. Australia is a world leader on syndication; the infrastructure, the marketing, the networking; how the whole thing works. 

“It really makes owning a racehorse just good fun. You can sell one percent here and there. In Europe, we are still a little bit too elitist but are all picking up on the success of companies like Darby Racing and they now all want to do the same thing – they are 10 years behind.

“Darby has about 90 horses and god-knows how many owners on its books. A horse can go on their social network site and they are getting hits within 30 seconds.

And on buying in Australia or New Zealand, de Burgh says, “I still work off the criteria Colin taught me 40 years ago because when you are buying horses in the southern hemisphere it’s a very different type you are seeing than when buying a European horse.

“The big mistake some European buyers make down here is they buy these big, long-striding European things – they float along and you think they’re great – but actually, a lot of them don’t have the turn of foot so while you have to have motion, you don’t have to have these long-striding things.

“They are a completely different structure down here because they have more speed. So, I never changed from the basic rules that Colin taught me.”

Hubie de Burgh still using the Colin Hayes criteria for yearling selection

By Brian de Lore

World renown bloodstock agent Hubie de Burgh credits his success and longevity after 40 years in the business to the early grounding he was given by the late and great South Australian trainer Colin Hayes.

Making a return visit to New Zealand this week for Book One of the Karaka Sales, de Burgh under his company name of deBurgh Equine has been inspecting and buying yearlings for His Highness Sheikh Hamdan Bin Rashid Al Maktoum of the UAE and Australian syndication company Darby Bloodstock.

It’s 36 years since de Burgh made his National Sales debut at Trentham in the company of the legendary Colin Hayes and Colin McAlpine, and 31 years since he selected and purchased Zabeel in the first year at Karaka in 1988.

“In Zabeel’s year he was the best-looking horse on the sales ground,” recalled de Burgh, “any idiot could have bought him that year. He had a Nuryev head on him; he had balance and he walked beautifully; he was obviously a very good horse.”

But far from being an ‘idiot,’ the then 33-year-old de Burgh representing Sheikh Hamdan put his hand-up to fire in the winning bid at $650,000, a huge amount at the time which today converts on the CPI index to the equivalent of just under $1.5 million.

“We decided we were not going home without Zabeel,” continued de Burgh, “and bought him for a lot of money but there were two horses we wanted that year and Doctor Chapman bought the other which turned out to be Dr. Grace. We ran out of money otherwise we would have had the two of them.”

Both horses were by Champion Sire Sir Tristram and were reared, prepared and offered for sale in the Ra Ora Stud draft on behalf of racing magnate Robert Sangster. Zabeel was out of the diminutive but quality Nureyev mare Lady Giselle who was a twin, and Dr. Grace was out of the South Australian Derby winning mare English Wonder, by Twig Moss.

They were both high-quality yearlings who became high-quality racehorses and those facts can be verified by this writer who was privileged to be representing Sangster and Ra Ora Stud in the vendor’s box behind the auctioneer in what was the debut year for Karaka.

The irony of the sale of those two yearlings is that Rosehill trainer Dr. Geoff Chapman was underbidder on Zabeel before winning the bidding war on Dr. Grace. About 20 months later, early in October 1989, Zabeel defeated Dr.Grace by one length in the $250,000 Group Two Moonee Valley Stakes over 1600m.

Third in that same race was the New Zealand-bred Courtza, the previous season’s Golden Slipper winner raced by the late Nick Columb. Of course, Courtza would subsequently return to Waikato Stud where she was bred and play a huge role in that stud’s rise to prominence as the dam of Champion Three-Year-Old and Sire, O’Reilly.

Dr. Grace went on to win 12 races including the ATC Derby, The BMW, two Manion Cups, a Liston an Underwood and finished his career with a victory over Super Impose in the Chelmsford, accruing $2.7 million in stakes.

De Burgh was adamant about the Hayes influence, saying, “The time I spent with Colin in the early days was the most formative of my career. He was like a second father – I learned so much from him. He was ruthless on his appraisal of the anatomy of horses.

“On my first trip to New Zealand with Colin and Colin McAlpine, we looked at a lot of horses at all levels. It was so interesting, and then we’d be together at Lindsay Park on the gallops discussing it and then we’d be at dinner discussing it, and everything he talked about was way ahead of his time.”

De Burgh was lucky to get to Australia at all, let alone meet Colin Hayes, and after he did arrive in the lucky country his father came visiting to take him home. He explained, “I first worked for Claiborne Farm in America and then for Clay Camp who was one of the big consignors at Saratoga.

“Then I went back to the UK and ended up getting the job to bring horses to Australia on the shuttle at 48-hours notice – I was at the Curragh Bloodstock Agency at the time – the guy that was going to take them burst an eardrum waterskiing just two days before departure so the next day they told me I was going. I didn’t even know where Australia was.

“Then I fell in love with Australia. I took the horse down and afterward my father came down and made me come home otherwise I was intending to stay. When I came back I worked for Jimmy O’Connor at Milluna and then David Coles at Coles Bloodstock. And while all that was going on I was following a man that I worshipped and that was Colin Hayes.

“I was 28 when I got the job with Sheikh Hamdan. I was young but had already lived for five years in Australia by then and I was in love with the Star Kingdom horses and the first one I bought was Nouvelle Star – I wanted to get her to Europe – they were very tough horses. She was a Nolholme mare and mated to Blushing Groom she later produced the first classic winner for the Sheikh.

“Then we picked out At Talaq which was a horse we already had and sent him to Colin Hayes. I had never met Colin but I rang him and he said, ‘yes, of course,’ but he was such a global thinker even then – years ahead of his time. He was a visionary.

“At Talaq won the Melbourne Cup and then we decided to come down and buy yearlings and that’s how the whole thing started.

“We bought the 1990 Blue Diamond Stakes winner Mahaasin out of the Magic Millions Sale. All these events including Zabeel started this extraordinary relationship between the Hayes family and Sheikh Hamdan and its gone on unbroken all the way through to David Hayes’s return to Australia from Hong Kong and beyond, and we’ve had lots of group winners all the way through.”

And just as de Burgh benefitted from the Hayes mentoring all those years ago, the knowledge is now being passed on to the next generation in the form of a young Will Johnson who himself comes with a group one pedigree.

“Will Johnson is a fantastic young guy, very knowledgable,” says de Burgh. “He was an assistant trainer to Roger Varian in England. His father is Tim Johnson – they are the Johnsons that bred Vain. His mother is a Cox from the family that the Cox Plate was named after so he was meant to be in this business.

“When you look around the world now there are teams of young guys coming through that are global people; young people around 30 years old from France, Ireland and England that are very impressive – very different to the era when I was in. Will is a very good example of them.

After three or the four days of Book One completed, de Burgh with Johnson’s assistance had purchased four yearlings – three for Sheikh Hamdan and one for Darby Racing.

They are Lot 19, a filly by I Am Invincible for $500,000, Lot 272, a Redoubt’s Choice filly for $200,000, Lot 275, an Iffraaj colt for $360,000, and for Darby Racing Lot 411, a Savabeel colt for $150,000.

On the difference between buying for Sheikh Hamdan as opposed to Darby Racing de Burgh commented, “We bought for Darby and were underbidder on a couple earlier in the sale. Darby’s budget has to be met – they have to be very strict on what they pay for a horse because they have to turn around and sell it down. Australia is a world leader on syndication; the infrastructure, the marketing, the networking; how the whole thing works. 

“It really makes owning a racehorse just good fun. You can sell one percent here and there. In Europe, we are still a little bit too elitist but are all picking up on the success of companies like Darby Racing and they now all want to do the same thing – they are 10 years behind.

“Darby has about 90 horses and god-knows how many owners on its books. A horse can go on their social network site and they are getting hits within 30 seconds.

And on buying in Australia or New Zealand, de Burgh says, “I still work off the criteria Colin taught me 40 years ago because when you are buying horses in the southern hemisphere it’s a very different type you are seeing than when buying a European horse.

“The big mistake some European buyers make down here is they buy these big, long-striding European things – they float along and you think they’re great – but actually, a lot of them don’t have the turn of foot so while you have to have motion, you don’t have to have these long-striding things.

“They are a completely different structure down here because they have more speed. So, I never changed from the basic rules that Colin taught me.”

Hubie de Burgh still using the Colin Hayes criteria for yearling selection

By Brian de Lore

World renown bloodstock agent Hubie de Burgh credits his success and longevity after 40 years in the business to the early grounding he was given by the late and great South Australian trainer Colin Hayes.

Making a return visit to New Zealand this week for Book One of the Karaka Sales, de Burgh under his company name of deBurgh Equine has been inspecting and buying yearlings for His Highness Sheikh Hamdan Bin Rashid Al Maktoum of the UAE and Australian syndication company Darby Bloodstock.

It’s 36 years since de Burgh made his National Sales debut at Trentham in the company of the legendary Colin Hayes and Colin McAlpine, and 31 years since he selected and purchased Zabeel in the first year at Karaka in 1988.

“In Zabeel’s year he was the best-looking horse on the sales ground,” recalled de Burgh, “any idiot could have bought him that year. He had a Nuryev head on him; he had balance and he walked beautifully; he was obviously a very good horse.”

But far from being an ‘idiot,’ the then 33-year-old de Burgh representing Sheikh Hamdan put his hand-up to fire in the winning bid at $650,000, a huge amount at the time which today converts on the CPI index to the equivalent of just under $1.5 million.

“We decided we were not going home without Zabeel,” continued de Burgh, “and bought him for a lot of money but there were two horses we wanted that year and Doctor Chapman bought the other which turned out to be Dr. Grace. We ran out of money otherwise we would have had the two of them.”

Both horses were by Champion Sire Sir Tristram and were reared, prepared and offered for sale in the Ra Ora Stud draft on behalf of racing magnate Robert Sangster. Zabeel was out of the diminutive but quality Nureyev mare Lady Giselle who was a twin, and Dr. Grace was out of the South Australian Derby winning mare English Wonder, by Twig Moss.

They were both high-quality yearlings who became high-quality racehorses and those facts can be verified by this writer who was privileged to be representing Sangster and Ra Ora Stud in the vendor’s box behind the auctioneer in what was the debut year for Karaka.

The irony of the sale of those two yearlings is that Rosehill trainer Dr. Geoff Chapman was underbidder on Zabeel before winning the bidding war on Dr. Grace. About 20 months later, early in October 1989, Zabeel defeated Dr.Grace by one length in the $250,000 Group Two Moonee Valley Stakes over 1600m.

Third in that same race was the New Zealand-bred Courtza, the previous season’s Golden Slipper winner raced by the late Nick Columb. Of course, Courtza would subsequently return to Waikato Stud where she was bred and play a huge role in that stud’s rise to prominence as the dam of Champion Three-Year-Old and Sire, O’Reilly.

Dr. Grace went on to win 12 races including the ATC Derby, The BMW, two Manion Cups, a Liston an Underwood and finished his career with a victory over Super Impose in the Chelmsford, accruing $2.7 million in stakes.

De Burgh was adamant about the Hayes influence, saying, “The time I spent with Colin in the early days was the most formative of my career. He was like a second father – I learned so much from him. He was ruthless on his appraisal of the anatomy of horses.

“On my first trip to New Zealand with Colin and Colin McAlpine, we looked at a lot of horses at all levels. It was so interesting, and then we’d be together at Lindsay Park on the gallops discussing it and then we’d be at dinner discussing it, and everything he talked about was way ahead of his time.”

De Burgh was lucky to get to Australia at all, let alone meet Colin Hayes, and after he did arrive in the lucky country his father came visiting to take him home. He explained, “I first worked for Claiborne Farm in America and then for Clay Camp who was one of the big consignors at Saratoga.

“Then I went back to the UK and ended up getting the job to bring horses to Australia on the shuttle at 48-hours notice – I was at the Curragh Bloodstock Agency at the time – the guy that was going to take them burst an eardrum waterskiing just two days before departure so the next day they told me I was going. I didn’t even know where Australia was.

“Then I fell in love with Australia. I took the horse down and afterward my father came down and made me come home otherwise I was intending to stay. When I came back I worked for Jimmy O’Connor at Milluna and then David Coles at Coles Bloodstock. And while all that was going on I was following a man that I worshipped and that was Colin Hayes.

“I was 28 when I got the job with Sheikh Hamdan. I was young but had already lived for five years in Australia by then and I was in love with the Star Kingdom horses and the first one I bought was Nouvelle Star – I wanted to get her to Europe – they were very tough horses. She was a Nolholme mare and mated to Blushing Groom she later produced the first classic winner for the Sheikh.

“Then we picked out At Talaq which was a horse we already had and sent him to Colin Hayes. I had never met Colin but I rang him and he said, ‘yes, of course,’ but he was such a global thinker even then – years ahead of his time. He was a visionary.

“At Talaq won the Melbourne Cup and then we decided to come down and buy yearlings and that’s how the whole thing started.

“We bought the 1990 Blue Diamond Stakes winner Mahaasin out of the Magic Millions Sale. All these events including Zabeel started this extraordinary relationship between the Hayes family and Sheikh Hamdan and its gone on unbroken all the way through to David Hayes’s return to Australia from Hong Kong and beyond, and we’ve had lots of group winners all the way through.”

And just as de Burgh benefitted from the Hayes mentoring all those years ago, the knowledge is now being passed on to the next generation in the form of a young Will Johnson who himself comes with a group one pedigree.

“Will Johnson is a fantastic young guy, very knowledgable,” says de Burgh. “He was an assistant trainer to Roger Varian in England. His father is Tim Johnson – they are the Johnsons that bred Vain. His mother is a Cox from the family that the Cox Plate was named after so he was meant to be in this business.

“When you look around the world now there are teams of young guys coming through that are global people; young people around 30 years old from France, Ireland and England that are very impressive – very different to the era when I was in. Will is a very good example of them.

After three or the four days of Book One completed, de Burgh with Johnson’s assistance had purchased four yearlings – three for Sheikh Hamdan and one for Darby Racing.

They are Lot 19, a filly by I Am Invincible for $500,000, Lot 272, a Redoubt’s Choice filly for $200,000, Lot 275, an Iffraaj colt for $360,000, and for Darby Racing Lot 411, a Savabeel colt for $150,000.

On the difference between buying for Sheikh Hamdan as opposed to Darby Racing de Burgh commented, “We bought for Darby and were underbidder on a couple earlier in the sale. Darby’s budget has to be met – they have to be very strict on what they pay for a horse because they have to turn around and sell it down. Australia is a world leader on syndication; the infrastructure, the marketing, the networking; how the whole thing works. 

“It really makes owning a racehorse just good fun. You can sell one percent here and there. In Europe, we are still a little bit too elitist but are all picking up on the success of companies like Darby Racing and they now all want to do the same thing – they are 10 years behind.

“Darby has about 90 horses and god-knows how many owners on its books. A horse can go on their social network site and they are getting hits within 30 seconds.

And on buying in Australia or New Zealand, de Burgh says, “I still work off the criteria Colin taught me 40 years ago because when you are buying horses in the southern hemisphere it’s a very different type you are seeing than when buying a European horse.

“The big mistake some European buyers make down here is they buy these big, long-striding European things – they float along and you think they’re great – but actually, a lot of them don’t have the turn of foot so while you have to have motion, you don’t have to have these long-striding things.

“They are a completely different structure down here because they have more speed. So, I never changed from the basic rules that Colin taught me.”

Hubie de Burgh still using the Colin Hayes criteria for yearling selection

By Brian de Lore

World renown bloodstock agent Hubie de Burgh credits his success and longevity after 40 years in the business to the early grounding he was given by the late and great South Australian trainer Colin Hayes.

Making a return visit to New Zealand this week for Book One of the Karaka Sales, de Burgh under his company name of deBurgh Equine has been inspecting and buying yearlings for His Highness Sheikh Hamdan Bin Rashid Al Maktoum of the UAE and Australian syndication company Darby Bloodstock.

It’s 36 years since de Burgh made his National Sales debut at Trentham in the company of the legendary Colin Hayes and Colin McAlpine, and 31 years since he selected and purchased Zabeel in the first year at Karaka in 1988.

“In Zabeel’s year he was the best-looking horse on the sales ground,” recalled de Burgh, “any idiot could have bought him that year. He had a Nuryev head on him; he had balance and he walked beautifully; he was obviously a very good horse.”

But far from being an ‘idiot,’ the then 33-year-old de Burgh representing Sheikh Hamdan put his hand-up to fire in the winning bid at $650,000, a huge amount at the time which today converts on the CPI index to the equivalent of just under $1.5 million.

“We decided we were not going home without Zabeel,” continued de Burgh, “and bought him for a lot of money but there were two horses we wanted that year and Doctor Chapman bought the other which turned out to be Dr. Grace. We ran out of money otherwise we would have had the two of them.”

Both horses were by Champion Sire Sir Tristram and were reared, prepared and offered for sale in the Ra Ora Stud draft on behalf of racing magnate Robert Sangster. Zabeel was out of the diminutive but quality Nureyev mare Lady Giselle who was a twin, and Dr. Grace was out of the South Australian Derby winning mare English Wonder, by Twig Moss.

They were both high-quality yearlings who became high-quality racehorses and those facts can be verified by this writer who was privileged to be representing Sangster and Ra Ora Stud in the vendor’s box behind the auctioneer in what was the debut year for Karaka.

The irony of the sale of those two yearlings is that Rosehill trainer Dr. Geoff Chapman was underbidder on Zabeel before winning the bidding war on Dr. Grace. About 20 months later, early in October 1989, Zabeel defeated Dr.Grace by one length in the $250,000 Group Two Moonee Valley Stakes over 1600m.

Third in that same race was the New Zealand-bred Courtza, the previous season’s Golden Slipper winner raced by the late Nick Columb. Of course, Courtza would subsequently return to Waikato Stud where she was bred and play a huge role in that stud’s rise to prominence as the dam of Champion Three-Year-Old and Sire, O’Reilly.

Dr. Grace went on to win 12 races including the ATC Derby, The BMW, two Manion Cups, a Liston an Underwood and finished his career with a victory over Super Impose in the Chelmsford, accruing $2.7 million in stakes.

De Burgh was adamant about the Hayes influence, saying, “The time I spent with Colin in the early days was the most formative of my career. He was like a second father – I learned so much from him. He was ruthless on his appraisal of the anatomy of horses.

“On my first trip to New Zealand with Colin and Colin McAlpine, we looked at a lot of horses at all levels. It was so interesting, and then we’d be together at Lindsay Park on the gallops discussing it and then we’d be at dinner discussing it, and everything he talked about was way ahead of his time.”

De Burgh was lucky to get to Australia at all, let alone meet Colin Hayes, and after he did arrive in the lucky country his father came visiting to take him home. He explained, “I first worked for Claiborne Farm in America and then for Clay Camp who was one of the big consignors at Saratoga.

“Then I went back to the UK and ended up getting the job to bring horses to Australia on the shuttle at 48-hours notice – I was at the Curragh Bloodstock Agency at the time – the guy that was going to take them burst an eardrum waterskiing just two days before departure so the next day they told me I was going. I didn’t even know where Australia was.

“Then I fell in love with Australia. I took the horse down and afterward my father came down and made me come home otherwise I was intending to stay. When I came back I worked for Jimmy O’Connor at Milluna and then David Coles at Coles Bloodstock. And while all that was going on I was following a man that I worshipped and that was Colin Hayes.

“I was 28 when I got the job with Sheikh Hamdan. I was young but had already lived for five years in Australia by then and I was in love with the Star Kingdom horses and the first one I bought was Nouvelle Star – I wanted to get her to Europe – they were very tough horses. She was a Nolholme mare and mated to Blushing Groom she later produced the first classic winner for the Sheikh.

“Then we picked out At Talaq which was a horse we already had and sent him to Colin Hayes. I had never met Colin but I rang him and he said, ‘yes, of course,’ but he was such a global thinker even then – years ahead of his time. He was a visionary.

“At Talaq won the Melbourne Cup and then we decided to come down and buy yearlings and that’s how the whole thing started.

“We bought the 1990 Blue Diamond Stakes winner Mahaasin out of the Magic Millions Sale. All these events including Zabeel started this extraordinary relationship between the Hayes family and Sheikh Hamdan and its gone on unbroken all the way through to David Hayes’s return to Australia from Hong Kong and beyond, and we’ve had lots of group winners all the way through.”

And just as de Burgh benefitted from the Hayes mentoring all those years ago, the knowledge is now being passed on to the next generation in the form of a young Will Johnson who himself comes with a group one pedigree.

“Will Johnson is a fantastic young guy, very knowledgable,” says de Burgh. “He was an assistant trainer to Roger Varian in England. His father is Tim Johnson – they are the Johnsons that bred Vain. His mother is a Cox from the family that the Cox Plate was named after so he was meant to be in this business.

“When you look around the world now there are teams of young guys coming through that are global people; young people around 30 years old from France, Ireland and England that are very impressive – very different to the era when I was in. Will is a very good example of them.

After three or the four days of Book One completed, de Burgh with Johnson’s assistance had purchased four yearlings – three for Sheikh Hamdan and one for Darby Racing.

They are Lot 19, a filly by I Am Invincible for $500,000, Lot 272, a Redoubt’s Choice filly for $200,000, Lot 275, an Iffraaj colt for $360,000, and for Darby Racing Lot 411, a Savabeel colt for $150,000.

On the difference between buying for Sheikh Hamdan as opposed to Darby Racing de Burgh commented, “We bought for Darby and were underbidder on a couple earlier in the sale. Darby’s budget has to be met – they have to be very strict on what they pay for a horse because they have to turn around and sell it down. Australia is a world leader on syndication; the infrastructure, the marketing, the networking; how the whole thing works. 

“It really makes owning a racehorse just good fun. You can sell one percent here and there. In Europe, we are still a little bit too elitist but are all picking up on the success of companies like Darby Racing and they now all want to do the same thing – they are 10 years behind.

“Darby has about 90 horses and god-knows how many owners on its books. A horse can go on their social network site and they are getting hits within 30 seconds.

And on buying in Australia or New Zealand, de Burgh says, “I still work off the criteria Colin taught me 40 years ago because when you are buying horses in the southern hemisphere it’s a very different type you are seeing than when buying a European horse.

“The big mistake some European buyers make down here is they buy these big, long-striding European things – they float along and you think they’re great – but actually, a lot of them don’t have the turn of foot so while you have to have motion, you don’t have to have these long-striding things.

“They are a completely different structure down here because they have more speed. So, I never changed from the basic rules that Colin taught me.”

Hubie de Burgh still using the Colin Hayes criteria for yearling selection

By Brian de Lore

World renown bloodstock agent Hubie de Burgh credits his success and longevity after 40 years in the business to the early grounding he was given by the late and great South Australian trainer Colin Hayes.

Making a return visit to New Zealand this week for Book One of the Karaka Sales, de Burgh under his company name of deBurgh Equine has been inspecting and buying yearlings for His Highness Sheikh Hamdan Bin Rashid Al Maktoum of the UAE and Australian syndication company Darby Bloodstock.

It’s 36 years since de Burgh made his National Sales debut at Trentham in the company of the legendary Colin Hayes and Colin McAlpine, and 31 years since he selected and purchased Zabeel in the first year at Karaka in 1988.

“In Zabeel’s year he was the best-looking horse on the sales ground,” recalled de Burgh, “any idiot could have bought him that year. He had a Nuryev head on him; he had balance and he walked beautifully; he was obviously a very good horse.”

But far from being an ‘idiot,’ the then 33-year-old de Burgh representing Sheikh Hamdan put his hand-up to fire in the winning bid at $650,000, a huge amount at the time which today converts on the CPI index to the equivalent of just under $1.5 million.

“We decided we were not going home without Zabeel,” continued de Burgh, “and bought him for a lot of money but there were two horses we wanted that year and Doctor Chapman bought the other which turned out to be Dr. Grace. We ran out of money otherwise we would have had the two of them.”

Both horses were by Champion Sire Sir Tristram and were reared, prepared and offered for sale in the Ra Ora Stud draft on behalf of racing magnate Robert Sangster. Zabeel was out of the diminutive but quality Nureyev mare Lady Giselle who was a twin, and Dr. Grace was out of the South Australian Derby winning mare English Wonder, by Twig Moss.

They were both high-quality yearlings who became high-quality racehorses and those facts can be verified by this writer who was privileged to be representing Sangster and Ra Ora Stud in the vendor’s box behind the auctioneer in what was the debut year for Karaka.

The irony of the sale of those two yearlings is that Rosehill trainer Dr. Geoff Chapman was underbidder on Zabeel before winning the bidding war on Dr. Grace. About 20 months later, early in October 1989, Zabeel defeated Dr.Grace by one length in the $250,000 Group Two Moonee Valley Stakes over 1600m.

Third in that same race was the New Zealand-bred Courtza, the previous season’s Golden Slipper winner raced by the late Nick Columb. Of course, Courtza would subsequently return to Waikato Stud where she was bred and play a huge role in that stud’s rise to prominence as the dam of Champion Three-Year-Old and Sire, O’Reilly.

Dr. Grace went on to win 12 races including the ATC Derby, The BMW, two Manion Cups, a Liston an Underwood and finished his career with a victory over Super Impose in the Chelmsford, accruing $2.7 million in stakes.

De Burgh was adamant about the Hayes influence, saying, “The time I spent with Colin in the early days was the most formative of my career. He was like a second father – I learned so much from him. He was ruthless on his appraisal of the anatomy of horses.

“On my first trip to New Zealand with Colin and Colin McAlpine, we looked at a lot of horses at all levels. It was so interesting, and then we’d be together at Lindsay Park on the gallops discussing it and then we’d be at dinner discussing it, and everything he talked about was way ahead of his time.”

De Burgh was lucky to get to Australia at all, let alone meet Colin Hayes, and after he did arrive in the lucky country his father came visiting to take him home. He explained, “I first worked for Claiborne Farm in America and then for Clay Camp who was one of the big consignors at Saratoga.

“Then I went back to the UK and ended up getting the job to bring horses to Australia on the shuttle at 48-hours notice – I was at the Curragh Bloodstock Agency at the time – the guy that was going to take them burst an eardrum waterskiing just two days before departure so the next day they told me I was going. I didn’t even know where Australia was.

“Then I fell in love with Australia. I took the horse down and afterward my father came down and made me come home otherwise I was intending to stay. When I came back I worked for Jimmy O’Connor at Milluna and then David Coles at Coles Bloodstock. And while all that was going on I was following a man that I worshipped and that was Colin Hayes.

“I was 28 when I got the job with Sheikh Hamdan. I was young but had already lived for five years in Australia by then and I was in love with the Star Kingdom horses and the first one I bought was Nouvelle Star – I wanted to get her to Europe – they were very tough horses. She was a Nolholme mare and mated to Blushing Groom she later produced the first classic winner for the Sheikh.

“Then we picked out At Talaq which was a horse we already had and sent him to Colin Hayes. I had never met Colin but I rang him and he said, ‘yes, of course,’ but he was such a global thinker even then – years ahead of his time. He was a visionary.

“At Talaq won the Melbourne Cup and then we decided to come down and buy yearlings and that’s how the whole thing started.

“We bought the 1990 Blue Diamond Stakes winner Mahaasin out of the Magic Millions Sale. All these events including Zabeel started this extraordinary relationship between the Hayes family and Sheikh Hamdan and its gone on unbroken all the way through to David Hayes’s return to Australia from Hong Kong and beyond, and we’ve had lots of group winners all the way through.”

And just as de Burgh benefitted from the Hayes mentoring all those years ago, the knowledge is now being passed on to the next generation in the form of a young Will Johnson who himself comes with a group one pedigree.

“Will Johnson is a fantastic young guy, very knowledgable,” says de Burgh. “He was an assistant trainer to Roger Varian in England. His father is Tim Johnson – they are the Johnsons that bred Vain. His mother is a Cox from the family that the Cox Plate was named after so he was meant to be in this business.

“When you look around the world now there are teams of young guys coming through that are global people; young people around 30 years old from France, Ireland and England that are very impressive – very different to the era when I was in. Will is a very good example of them.

After three or the four days of Book One completed, de Burgh with Johnson’s assistance had purchased four yearlings – three for Sheikh Hamdan and one for Darby Racing.

They are Lot 19, a filly by I Am Invincible for $500,000, Lot 272, a Redoubt’s Choice filly for $200,000, Lot 275, an Iffraaj colt for $360,000, and for Darby Racing Lot 411, a Savabeel colt for $150,000.

On the difference between buying for Sheikh Hamdan as opposed to Darby Racing de Burgh commented, “We bought for Darby and were underbidder on a couple earlier in the sale. Darby’s budget has to be met – they have to be very strict on what they pay for a horse because they have to turn around and sell it down. Australia is a world leader on syndication; the infrastructure, the marketing, the networking; how the whole thing works. 

“It really makes owning a racehorse just good fun. You can sell one percent here and there. In Europe, we are still a little bit too elitist but are all picking up on the success of companies like Darby Racing and they now all want to do the same thing – they are 10 years behind.

“Darby has about 90 horses and god-knows how many owners on its books. A horse can go on their social network site and they are getting hits within 30 seconds.

And on buying in Australia or New Zealand, de Burgh says, “I still work off the criteria Colin taught me 40 years ago because when you are buying horses in the southern hemisphere it’s a very different type you are seeing than when buying a European horse.

“The big mistake some European buyers make down here is they buy these big, long-striding European things – they float along and you think they’re great – but actually, a lot of them don’t have the turn of foot so while you have to have motion, you don’t have to have these long-striding things.

“They are a completely different structure down here because they have more speed. So, I never changed from the basic rules that Colin taught me.”

Operationalising the Messara Report

by Brian de Lore
Published 17 January 2019

The Ministerial Advisory Committee or MAC as it has become known is currently hard at work to meet the deadline and produce its interim report for the Minister by the designated date of February 28th.

The detail of MAC’s progress is unlikely to be discussed openly either by the chairperson Dean McKenzie or the Minister Winston Peters prior to its completion by that date but working out what is on the MAC agenda is simply a matter of a closer scrutiny of the Terms of Reference.

When Minister Peters announced his committee on December 13th, he stated in the press release, “This government is committed to reforming the racing industry. The Ministerial Advisory Group will develop a plan to operationalise the Messara Report to deliver better governance and economic outcomes.”

The key word for the industry to digest is ‘operationalise’ – the role for MAC is not to review the Messara Report as some industry pundits have interpreted but to put it into action and expedite the Messara vision of reform this industry so badly needs.

When the Minister made the announcement on the Beehive website, the press release came with an attachment entitled ‘Terms of Reference’ which in simple terms is a task-list and a time-schedule set out by the Minister for completion by the committee.

The Minister’s decision to appoint MAC and not immediately replace the NZRB board has been a point of contention for some racing people but the reasoning is all about the parliamentary process and getting the Racing Act of 2019 written as an acceptable document that will serve the industry for the decades to come.

During the process of re-writing the Act and getting it to its first reading, the matter of parliamentary lobbying will also be taking place. The Bill will require cross-party support from MPs for a smooth transition into law, and this will also have been a consideration in the Minister going down this path.

The political wheels within wheels are always turning and while the industry raises doubts about the process the Minister is following, those doubts are not based on the knowledge the Minister has accumulated from decades of successfully negotiating the uncertain and murky game of politics – not just surviving it but successfully winning on more occasions than not.

The racing industry is emotional after decades of neglect, decline and more recently despair. Our one ray of hope is Minister Peters leading the industry through the mire without too much explanation while humming the Frank Sinatra tune ‘My Way.’

About a year ago Peters stated that he ‘wouldn’t be leaving port with plotting the correct course.’ The Terms of Reference has defined that course on the map and MAC is the ship he has selected to reach the Messara dictated destination.

Under ‘Context’ in the Terms of Reference shown below, he refers to meagre prizemoney, declining foal crops, less wagering due to field sizes, infrastructure and poor governance. Under ‘Purpose’ the emphasis is clearly about prioritising the areas identified as the main drivers, and at the top of the bullet point list, is governance and finance and distribution to the codes.

MAC is charged with scoping up the operational decision points for racing reform – that’s the key sentence!

We are already experiencing smaller field sizes and less wagering as a result. The industry knows how poor the governance has been; if it had been any different we wouldn’t today be in the ‘serious state of malaise’ which is the language extracted verbatim from the Messara Report.

Few people in the industry have read and have fully absorbed the Terms of Reference and that’s why the salient points are printed below. The Messara Report is a very comprehensive document and the Minister is sticking with his edict that it wasn’t commissioned to strip the value from it.

To have a full understanding of the Messara Report and then juxtaposition it with the Terms of Reference is to know the direction this industry is heading towards by the middle of the year.

MAC has now met twice, the second of which was a two-day meeting on Sunday and Monday of last week. They will meet again for a full day on Tuesday next week. No amount of urgency or commitment is being left unused in its endeavours to meet the requirements of the Minister.

The current state of the industry triumvirate is tantamount to the juggler with three balls in the air – MAC, NZTR and NZRB – a situation that’s unnerving to the industry stakeholders.  MAC is making the recommendations but officially has no power. NZTR supposedly runs the thoroughbred industry but presently is nothing more than a thoroughbred register for births, deaths and marriages. NZRB has been defrocked and limps its way through a luke-warm reception to the launch of the FOB platform.

To some it might seem like a rudderless ship but within a month of the conclusion of the Karaka Yearling Sales series, the shroud of secrecy should at least be raised to a point in which industry participants will see a renewed level of confidence in the direction MAC is taking us.

The salient points contained in the Terms of Reference are as follows:

Terms of Reference for the Ministerial Advisory Committee

Context

The racing industry is responsible for generating more than $1.6 billion in value-added contribution to the New Zealand economy, although this value has been eroded over time because the New Zealand industry is in a state of serious decline. Prize money is meagre, so returns to owners are significantly below other jurisdictions. Foal crops are declining which inhibits future field sizes, leading to less wagering and less revenue for the racing industry. Industry infrastructure and governance is poor.

The Government is committed to reforming the New Zealand racing industry and seeks the scoping up of a detailed plan to operationalise the Messara Report, the ‘Review of the New Zealand Racing Industry’s’ recommendations once approved by Cabinet, to deliver better governance and economic outcomes for the industry.

To enable the timely delivery of a racing reform programme, a Ministerial Advisory Committee (the Committee) is being created as a precursor to a Racing Industry Transitional Authority being established in legislation (subject to future Government decisions on the recommendations of the Messara Report).

Purpose of the Committee

The Committee is a ministerial advisory committee appointed by the Minister for Racing. The Committee will be charged foremost with setting a sense of direction for the intended racing reformswith particular focus on prioritising those recommendations that have been identified as the main drivers required for successful industry reform. This will provide the basis for a prioritised work plan for the Committee, to be provided to the Minister of Racing early in 2019.  It is also charged with scoping up the operational decision points (whether technical, legal, financial or process orientated) for racing reform, engaging with industry throughout, and offer analysis to the Minister for Racing on opportunities (i.e., the industry’s untapped potential) as well as roadblocks to returning the industry to a well-managed and sustainable economic growth path.

It will involve the Committee gathering and analysing a wide range of inputs and carrying out engagement, investigation, and analysis about the effects of specific proposals under core areas of the Messara Report, including:

  • the governance and structure of racing;
  • finance and distribution to the codes;
  • new legislation to support the various dimensions of racing reform;
  • wagering and the TAB;
  • club consolidation, racecourses and prizemoney; and
  • any other matters that the Committee considers relevant to its work, including establishing the Racing Industry Transitional Authority (RITA).

Outputs

Interim report

The Committee will provide an interim report to the Minister for Racing by 28 February 2019.

The Committee’s interim report should include:

  • Advice to the Minister based on the Committee’s analysis of the six core areas listed immediately above;
  • A detailed plan for the Committee’s remaining work until RITA is established in legislation; and
  • Any other matters the Committee wishes to raise with the Minister for Racing.

Further direction may be provided by the Minister for Racing in March 2019

The Government is expected to make decisions on the recommendations of the Messara Report in March 2019. This will identify which of the Report’s recommendations the Government agrees to implement and at this time the Minster of Racing may provide the Committee with further direction about its direction of travel.

Final Committee Report

The Committee is to provide its final report to the Minister for Racing no later than 30 June 2019. The purpose of the Committee’s final report is to support a transitional agency to manage the implementation of the changes approved by the Government, particularly any structural changes.

The requirements for the Committee’s final report are:

  • final advice on any operational or other matters that the Government should consider in its response to the Report; and
  • a draft transition plan for the racing sector, identifying key steps, processes, and timings.