Top-class globetrotter Mishriff introduced at €20,000 for first season at Sumbe
Son of Make Believe joins Recorder, Golden Horde and De Treville
Prince Faisal's three-time Group 1 winner and globetrotter Mishriff has been introduced at an opening fee of €20,000 as the Sumbe operation revealed its fees for 2023.
The homebred son of Make Believe retired to Sumbe's Haras de Montfort et Preaux in France with seven wins and prize-money of £11,859,305 in a career that saw him win the Prix du Jockey Club at three before landing the Saudi Cup, Dubai Sheema Classic and Juddmonte International in a stellar campaign at four.
Mishriff, who also won the Listed Newmarket Stakes and Group 2 Prix Guillaume d'Ornano, placed a further seven times in his career, including when second to Adayar in the 2021 King George and a luckless second to Vadeni in this year's Eclipse Stakes.
Out of the winning Raven's Pass mare Contradict and a half-brother to stakes winner Orbaan and the Group-placed Momkin, Mishriff hails from Prince Faisal's wonderful family of Prix de Diane heroine Rafha and her sons, the top-class stallions Kodiac and Invincible Spirit.
Golden Horde, a son of Lethal Force who won the Richmond Stakes at two and the Commonwealth Cup at three, will retain his 2022 fee of €8,000.
The half-brother to the black type pair of Line of Departure and Exhort welcomed his first foals this year.
Recorder, winner of the Acomb Stakes for the Queen and William Haggas, has had his fee trimmed to €3,000 from €4,000. The son of Galileo is responsible for two stakes winners from plenty of winners.
Completing the team is De Treville, a son of Oasis Dream out of the brilliant Dar Re Mi. The Group-placed half-brother to Too Darn Hot, Lah Ti Dar and So Mi Dar has sired the stakes winner and Group-placed Gregarina from very small numbers conceived. He has had his fee doubled to €5,000 for 2023.
Read more fee news
Brilliant Baaeed to stand at an opening fee of £80,000 at Nunnery Stud
Sea The Stars on the rise as Aga Khan Studs reveals 2023 roster
Solid year for Cheveley Park Stud sires as leading operation releases prices
'It's taken a lot of thought' - Havana Grey stud fee raised to £18,500 for 2023
Frankel's fee rockets to £275,000 after another stunning year
'There's no bigger name in the business' - Dubawi goes to career-high £350,000
'He has made an explosive start to his career' - New Bay to stand for €75,000
Time Test to remain at £15,000 as National Stud reveals 2023 roster
World's best horse Flightline introduced to breeders at Lane's End for $200,000
Published on inFeatures
Last updated
- 'This latest season has underlined his status as a breed-shaping sire' - Tony Morris's take on the 2024 European Pattern
- Broken glass and burst blood vessels at a totes emosh renewal of the December Foal Sale
- All work and no play makes James a dull boy at the Goffs November Sale
- Highs, lows and my Serbian counterpart provide a stern test of sales reporting stamina
- A glitch in the bloodstock matrix as Coolmore throw shade, Mangan messes with my dinner plans and a new master of sales ring satire emerges
- 'This latest season has underlined his status as a breed-shaping sire' - Tony Morris's take on the 2024 European Pattern
- Broken glass and burst blood vessels at a totes emosh renewal of the December Foal Sale
- All work and no play makes James a dull boy at the Goffs November Sale
- Highs, lows and my Serbian counterpart provide a stern test of sales reporting stamina
- A glitch in the bloodstock matrix as Coolmore throw shade, Mangan messes with my dinner plans and a new master of sales ring satire emerges