With individual thoroughbred racehorses costing millions of pounds each, the explosion in the bloodstock industry in the 1980s was the ultimate gamble of the decade - symbol of the business euphoria of the times. Tracing the events of how Sangster and his elite Irish racing experts took the world's most prestigious bloodstock auction, the Keeneland Sales in Kentucky, by storm and written with the co-operation of Sangster himself, this book is the inside track on a breathtaking bid to corner the thoroughbred market. The shock waves from the spectacular crash that followed are still reverberating throughout the world of the sport of kings.
Patrick Robinson was a journalist for many years before becoming a full-time writer of books. His non-fiction books were bestsellers around the world and he was the co-author of Sandy Woodward's Falklands War memoir, One Hundred Days.
At 40, I’ve read my fair share of racing books — most are fine. A few are good. Horse Trader is in a league of its own.
What grabbed me wasn’t just the horses (though that part's great). It was the business brain of Robert Sangster. The way he saw opportunity where others saw risk. The way he turned a punt on Northern Dancer yearlings into a global takeover of the sport.
I loved how it pulled back the curtain on the sales ring — the egos, the deals, the nights out that led to multi-million-dollar moves. It reminded me more of reading about business tycoons than sportsmen. And I liked that. It felt grown-up. Smart. Sharp.
If you’re into racing, read it. If you’re into deals, read it. If you’re a fella who likes a good story about risk and reward, this one delivers.
Fascinating tale of the halcyon days for racehorse breeders, which led to the inevitable collapse of the bloodstock market in the late 80's. The bidding wars between the Irish and Arab consortiums are fascinating and sometimes tragi-comic, Snaafi Dancer being a spectacular example of the folly - over $10M for a yearling that never raced and was a flop at stud. As a keen gambler and horse-lover at the time, so many of these horses have personal attachments for me. The legends of Lester Piggott and Vincent O'Brien are only enhanced by tributes to their genius as jockey and trainer respectively. The sad demise of many great Kentucky stud farms is the terrible coda to the tale.
Excellent and informative book. Nearly 30yrs on since it was written and I still remember most of the horses mentioned which is testimony to what Mr Sangster and The Brethren did.
Interesting, at times gripping, but very much of its time. Women barely feature, except as wives who are traded in as regularly as the racehorses. But as a historical record, it has value.
An extremely interesting book about horse racing and the commercial market in the 1970s and 80s. While it centers around Sangster and the Coolmore group, it isn't just about them with a lot of information about other farms and a bit of the strategy that went behind the development of some of the top bloodlines we see today.