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Full Brother to Highland Chief Set for Debut at Kempton

The 2-year-old son of Gleneagles named Clan Chieftain is a homebred for Fitri Hay.

Highland Chief training at Keeneland ahead of the Breeders' Cup

Highland Chief training at Keeneland ahead of the Breeders' Cup

Keeneland/Coady Photography

A full brother to Gleneagles's first winner and subsequent 2022 grade 1 winner, Highland Chief, is set to be among the well-bred newcomers at Kempton Park Dec. 14.

The Fitri Hay homebred, who is called Clan Chieftain, is the sixth foal out of the Montjeu mare Pink Symphony, a group 3 winner during her own racing days and herself a close relation of multiple group/grade 3 winner and Poule d'Essai des Pouliches-French One Thousand Guineas (G1) third Fantasia.

Fantasia, the dam of Unibet Classic Trial (G3) winner Berlin Tango from three winners, and Pink Symphony are out of the winning Darshaan mare Blue Symphony, a daughter of the talented Shadwell Stud Cheveley Park Stakes (G1) heroine Blue Duster.

Pink Symphony has produced four winners from five offspring to have made the track, notably Highland Chief, who provided his sire with his first winner at Newbury in April 2019.

The colt was multiple black type-placed over the next year for Paul and Oliver Cole, including when third to champion juvenile Pinatubo in the Chesham Stakes at Royal Ascot and second to group 1 winners Mogul and Pinatubo in the John Pearce Racing Gordon Stakes (G3) and Sky Bet Great Voltigeur Stakes (G2). He also added the Golden Gates Handicap at Ascot to his CV in 2020.

Switching to Graham Motion in April after just one run when fifth in the Coral Coronation Cup (G1) behind Pyledriver in 2021, the colt landed the Man o' War Stakes (G1) at Belmont Park in May, defeating Breeders' Cup hero Yibir, who was third. He also won the Sycamore Stakes (G3) at Keeneland in October.

Highland Chief wins the 2022 Man o' War Stakes at Belmont Park
Photo: Coglianese Photos/Janet Garaguso
Highland Chief wins the Man o'War Stakes at Belmont Park

Highland Chief is one of two top-flight winners for Coolmore's bred-in-the-purple champion 2-year-old and miler, the other being 2021 Prix de Royallieu heroine Loving Dream.

Gleneagles, who will stand the 2023 season for a fee of €17,500 (US$18,434), is responsible for 39 stakes performers, including 14 individual group winners to date. 

Among them are this term's impressive Richmond Stakes (G2) winner Royal Scotsman, who was narrowly second to Chaldean in the Darley Dewhurst Stakes (G1); Kilboy Estate Stakes (G2) winner Insinuendo, also third in the QIPCO British Champions Fillies & Mares Stakes (G1) in October, and this term's Valiant Stakes winner Jumbly, last seen selling to M.V. Magnier and Joseph O'Brien for 1,250,000gns ($1,569,694) at the Tattersalls December Mares Sale. 

Clan Chieftain is set to face 13 rivals in the British Stallion Studs EBF Novice Stakes, among them Tajawal, a Frankel  colt out of the group 3-placed Street Cry mare Feedyah, and Saint George, Qatar Racing's son of Roaring Lion and out of the stakes-placed Galileo mare Lady Dragon.

Qatar Racing and Andrew Balding also combine in the Unibet/British Stallion Studs EBF Novice Stakes with Gentle.

A daughter of No Nay Never, she was bred by Gestut Ammerland and is from one of their signature families, being out of the group-placed Light The Stars, a Sea The Stars sister to Lope De Vega , plus group winners Bal De La Rose and Lady Frankel.