He's admirable and talented but what lies ahead for the King George hero?
Kitty Trice analyses Pyledriver's pedigree and contemplates his future prospects
The bloodstock industry is always looking to the future and, although it can sometimes be wrong to focus too much on that in preference to the here and now, one can't help but mull over what it will hold in terms of a stallion career for newly crowned King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes winner Pyledriver.
The thoroughly likeable five-year-old now has two Group 1 wins to his name with six black-type successes and seven wins overall - for a record of 12 wins or places from 18 starts so far.
So why would any stud not want to snap up such a top-class and consistent colt?
The main - and rather frustrating - reason is he is not fashionably nor desirably bred for the commercial market, one that craves precocity and speed above such high-class middle-distance talent.
He is by Harbour Watch, a Richmond Stakes-winning son of Acclamation who was retired to Tweenhills Farm for five seasons before an untimely end to his stud career as a result of arthritic joint issues.
In his defence, the unfortunate Harbour Watch has sired a number of high-class and versatile performers, ranging from multiple Hong Kong Group 1 winner Waikuku, Belmont Gold Cup and Prix du Conseil de Paris scorer Baron Samedi and Prix Robert Papin victor Tis Marvellous.
Sticking to the positive elements, Pyledriver has an interesting page on his dam's side as well for La Pyle, a winner in France on the Flat before going hurdling for Philip Hobbs, is a sister to Park Express Stakes winner Normandel and a half-sibling to Grand Prix de Paris winner Mont Ormel (later Helene Charisma in Hong Kong).
The trio is out of the winning Aga Khan Studs-bred Lidana, a King's Best half-sister to German and Italian Group 1 winner Linngari, a high-class son of Indian Ridge.
La Pyle is no one-trick pony when it comes to producing winners as Pyledriver's one and two-year younger siblings, Country Pyle and Stockpyle, have also got off the mark. There is also the small matter of her Frankel two-year-old filly, who is in training with William Muir and Chris Grassick.
The reality is that Pyledriver is unlikely to be snapped up for Flat stud duties in Britain or Ireland due to prevailing market fashions - but might he find somewhere in France or Germany?
The latter nation shows little to no inclination towards producing sprinters and might surely be interested in taking on the only horse who bettered their Arc hero, Torquator Tasso, at Ascot on Saturday, should he meet Germany's stringent but successful stallion conditions of course.
Hindsight tells us it was a huge mistake that nobody picked him up as a foal from the Tattersalls December Sale in 2017 - what chance history repeating itself over his second career?
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