Sheikh Mohammed's racing operation spread $40 million worth of horses around the country. These trainers are the big winners
Of Godolphin's headline horses, the group 1-winning Tom Kitten has been placed with Anthony and Sam Freedman, Melbourne Cup fourth-place getter Zardozi has joined Maher, Golden Mile went to Pride, while Waller also picked up Commemorative and Beiwacht.
Several of the Godolphin horses have already trialled for their new stables.
As part of its shift in approach, Godolphin sold 25 ready-to-race horses for almost $2.2 million on Inglis Digital a fortnight ago, including South Australian Derby place-getter Lavalier for $380,000 and group 3-winner Pisces for $330,000.
While the father-son Freedman combination has prepared a number of young horses for Godolphin in the past, including 2022 Blue Diamond winner Daumier, Sam Freedman sees the racing giant's change in strategy as a winning move.
'It's an exciting change for the whole Godolphin brand, and exciting for Australian racing to see their stock spread out,' Freedman said.
'I have no doubt it will be a success. There's obviously a lot to work through and there will be little hiccups on the way, I'm sure, but on the whole it feels like a really positive change.
'I think, ultimately, the one-trainer model is becoming more and more rare.'
While Freedman said they did not lobby for any horses, they felt privileged to be handed ready-made group 1 star Tom Kitten.
Loading
'He'd be the highest-rated horse we've got,' the 2023 Melbourne Cup-winning trainer said. 'As an established weight-for-age horse, he's right at the top.
'It's very rare that you get a horse like that in the stable that's able to compete from 1400m to 2000m at weight-for-age against the best horses in the country. It's exciting.'
Freedman said the four-year-old gelding would likely resume in the group 1 1400m Memsie Stakes At Caulfield on August 30 before heading to the group 1 1600m Makybe Diva Stakes at Flemington a fortnight later.
'If he's really flying along, and it looks like a realistic target, that could mean he'll line up in the Cox Plate,' Freedman said.
'But his first two runs are sort of pencilled in, and then we are just going to assess him after that.'
Godolphin Australia managing director Andy Makiv and racing and bloodstock manager Jason Walsh oversaw the mass relocation of their horses.
'It certainly wasn't an easy decision, and it doesn't preclude opportunities for others (trainers) in the future,' Makiv said.
Godolphin's breeding arm Darley will continue to stand stallions, including those that raced during Cumming's tenure such as Anamoe, Bivouac, Broadsiding and Cylinder.
But their number of runners has fallen away significantly in recent years. After a high of 1276 starters in the 2018/19 season, those figures have dropped to 804 in 2023/24 and 680 last season.
But Makiv denied this will be an ongoing trend.
'Moving away from a private training model gives us greater business agility,' he said at the end of April.
'We will continue to have the same number of horses in training — it's fundamental to what we do.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


West Australian
5 minutes ago
- West Australian
Swimming World Championships: Kaylee McKeown, Cameron McEvoy hold the hope of an Aussie gold rush
Backstroke star Kaylee McKeown and freestyle sprinter Cameron McEvoy will lead the charge as Australia attempt to claw their way back above the US at the swimming world championships in Singapore. A silver and bronze medal on Friday night dropped Australia (five gold, two silver, six bronze) into second spot on the medal tally behind the US (five gold, 10 silver, five bronze). Mollie O'Callaghan started as the hot favourite in the women's 100m freestyle final, but her late charge wasn't enough to beat Dutchwoman Marrit Steenbergen, who prevailed by 0.12 of a second. It means O'Callaghan's bid to surpass Ian Thorpe's Australian record of 11 world championship gold medals will have to wait for another day. The only other medal for Australia on Friday night was a bronze to the men's 4x200m freestyle relay team of Flynn Southam, Charlie Hawke, Kai Taylor and Maximillian Giuliani. The quartet entered their final as big underdogs, but they came within a whisker of nabbing silver. Great Britain won gold in a time of 6:59.84, with China (7:00.91) just edging Australia (7:00.98). While day six didn't result in a gold rush for Australia, things could be different on Saturday night. McKeown is a two-time Olympic champion in both the 100m and 200m backstroke. The 24-year-old won the 100m world championship backstroke final ahead of arch rival Regan Smith on Wednesday. And McKeown will have the chance to add the 200m crown to her name on Saturday night when she goes up against the likes of Smith, Xuwei Peng, Anastasiya Shkurdai and Claire Curzan in the final. McEvoy qualified fastest with a time of 21.30 seconds for the men's 50m freestyle final, and the Olympic champion is hoping to come up trumps on Saturday night. 'I can't complain, it's only 0.05 off what I did to win Paris,' McEvoy said of his Friday night semi-final swim. 'It's good, but the job's not done. I've got one more tomorrow. 'I need to let the finals atmosphere kind of lift me up a bit. Don't think about the end time. Don't go down that rabbit hole. Let the body speak for itself and see where I end up.' Australians Alexandria Perkins and Lily Price both qualified for the women's 50m butterfly final, while Matt Temple qualified sixth fastest for the men's 100m butterfly final. During the daytime heats on Saturday, Isaac Cooper will feature in the men's 50m backstroke, Meg Harris and Olivia Wunsch are in the women's 50m freestyle, while Sam Short will be hoping to overcome illness to compete in the men's 1500m freestyle. O'Callaghan said tiredness from a busy schedule meant she wasn't at her best in Friday night's 100m freestyle final. Thorpe is sure it's just a matter of time before the 21-year-old surpasses his record mark of 11 world championship gold medals - possibly even in Saturday night's 4x100m mixed freestyle relay final. 'I'm certain and I can't wait to see Mollie surpass that,' Thorpe told the Nine Network. 'What she has the opportunity to do is create her own legacy in swimming, which will continue to inspire people in future generations … leading into the Brisbane Olympics in 2032.'

Sydney Morning Herald
2 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Don't blame the referees for the Wallabies woes, blame the injuries
Noah Lolesio didn't even make it to the starting line, and for the avoidance of doubt about the Wallabies' best No. 10 the Reds-Brumbies game in April needs to be rewatched, with Lolesio bossing Tom Lynagh. Across the first two Tests, the Wallabies have actually won two halves of rugby and lost two halves, effectively sticking two fingers up to the doomsayers (including yours truly), and to do so without four of their most influential players does not point to gap between the Home Unions that is so large that cannot be closed within the next two years before the Rugby World Cup. With Valetini, Skelton and Alaalatoa on the field, the Wallabies are leading the Lions 23-17 because they are fluent in the language of Test rugby. The sight of multiple Lions defenders being sat on their backsides is simply not one that the Wallabies can achieve without their big men in full fitness. Injuries have also weaved their way into the story of the Wallabies' campaign in less obvious ways. Take Lukhan Salakaia-Loto for example. The Reds enforcer is the 'obvious' choice to bring some more steel into the Wallabies pack, and he will surely be included in the Rugby Championship squad. But he played only seven games in Super Rugby Pacific, averaging 50 minutes a game, and none since early May against the Waratahs. He is another player in Australian rugby who can change the course of a game with a brutal carry, but the run of games he enjoyed against the Lions came too late. When the Wallabies and Rugby Australia review this series, it will surely be imbued with a sense of frustration and regret that they simply couldn't get their big men on the field for long enough against a Lions side that has yet to show it would be in top two in the coming Rugby Championship. Loading The flip side of this pain for Australia is that the closeness of the first two Tests have - apart from the first half in Brisbane - killed the most damaging narrative of the tour. The argument that the Wallabies had become detached from the Home Unions, and were destined to float around No. 8 – No. 10 in the rankings as a sort of West Indies of world rugby, has unsteady legs.

The Age
2 hours ago
- The Age
Don't blame the referees for the Wallabies woes, blame the injuries
Noah Lolesio didn't even make it to the starting line, and for the avoidance of doubt about the Wallabies' best No. 10 the Reds-Brumbies game in April needs to be rewatched, with Lolesio bossing Tom Lynagh. Across the first two Tests, the Wallabies have actually won two halves of rugby and lost two halves, effectively sticking two fingers up to the doomsayers (including yours truly), and to do so without four of their most influential players does not point to gap between the Home Unions that is so large that cannot be closed within the next two years before the Rugby World Cup. With Valetini, Skelton and Alaalatoa on the field, the Wallabies are leading the Lions 23-17 because they are fluent in the language of Test rugby. The sight of multiple Lions defenders being sat on their backsides is simply not one that the Wallabies can achieve without their big men in full fitness. Injuries have also weaved their way into the story of the Wallabies' campaign in less obvious ways. Take Lukhan Salakaia-Loto for example. The Reds enforcer is the 'obvious' choice to bring some more steel into the Wallabies pack, and he will surely be included in the Rugby Championship squad. But he played only seven games in Super Rugby Pacific, averaging 50 minutes a game, and none since early May against the Waratahs. He is another player in Australian rugby who can change the course of a game with a brutal carry, but the run of games he enjoyed against the Lions came too late. When the Wallabies and Rugby Australia review this series, it will surely be imbued with a sense of frustration and regret that they simply couldn't get their big men on the field for long enough against a Lions side that has yet to show it would be in top two in the coming Rugby Championship. Loading The flip side of this pain for Australia is that the closeness of the first two Tests have - apart from the first half in Brisbane - killed the most damaging narrative of the tour. The argument that the Wallabies had become detached from the Home Unions, and were destined to float around No. 8 – No. 10 in the rankings as a sort of West Indies of world rugby, has unsteady legs.