MICHAEL FIGGE Stable star Feuerblitz, winner of the Derby Italiano boys, Michael Figge was brought up in a racing stable and was a successful amateur jockey, riding in FEGENTRI races all over Europe and gathering valuable international experience. The idea was that Michael should also become a trainer, and he became an assistant to his father in 2003. Wolfgang is an excellent trainer with one big weakness: he is not much good as a businessman, and as a result of his failure to file proper returns and pay social security for his employees, he ended up in court and was banned from running his own business. Michael was therefore installed as the manager of the stable and basically his father’s employer. Not surprisingly this arrangement did not last; after several disagreements, there was an acrimonious split in 2006. Wernecke, who is a proper businessman, stepped in to take over Wolfgang’s stable, with happy results for both of them, while Michael started out on his own with just two horses out in the sticks. In 2007 Michael moved back to Riem and was given stabling at the racecourse. “I was lucky,” he now says, “as I had a good owner to start with – an Englishman named Simon Bold – who was based in Gibraltar and wanted to establish his betting business Betbull in Germany. He had a decent handicapper, Cyclonic, who won several races for us, and then a classy horse Double Handful, of whom we had high hopes.” Double Handful even ran in the German Derby, finishing 16th of 17 after making much of the running. When Bold closed down the Betbull operation in Germany, Double Handful was sent to the UK and is now quite a useful hurdler for Venetia Williams. Michael’s main owner became Peter Vischer, a member of a well-known German racing family but who now has his horses trained in “Cappanelle is a similar course to Hamburg. There was excellent prize- money, and although we were not really expecting to win, we certainly hoped to pick up some place money” Michael Figge France. The decisive moment in Michael Figge’s training career, however, came in August 2010, when he met Patrick Bertermann for the first time. Bertermann had built up an online marketing business and was well- known in Munich’s night life. He came to the stables to take photos of Michael’s girlfriend Claudia Fleissner, a model, and was fascinated by the atmosphere of the racing stables. They all went off to lunch together, where Michael explained in detail how racing worked. Bertermann was hooked and wanted to start his own stable straight away. Figge advised him to put a toe in the water before jumping in head first, suggesting he start off by buying a horse out of a “reclamer” in France. Two weeks later they were in Longchamp. Figge had picked out a suitable race and there were two runners in it that he liked. They finished first and second, a tribute to his judgment, and Bertermann made a claim for the runner-up Jolie Salsa, a daughter of Kingsalsa. Bertermann registered his colours – pink and black – and a nom de course – Stall EIVISSA, after the island of Ibiza where he lived for part of the year. Jolie Salsa won a race for him. She was “a very nice filly” but difficult to train as she was frequently in season. She still belongs to Bertermann and is in foal to Soldier Hollow. Later in 2010 Wolfgang Figge, by now on good terms again with his eldest son, trained Night Magic to win the Grosser Preis von Baden. At the next Munich meeting, the filly was paraded in front of the crowd and Bertermann was so impressed by her career and earnings that he then started buying horses in earnest – “one every fortnight,” as Figge puts it – preferably yearling fillies. Out of a Saint-Cloud claimer he also bought Amazing Beauty, now a Listed race performer, and at Deauville (October) he paid €22,000 for Chica Loca, one of Germany’s top fillies last year and seventh in the Poule d’Essai des Pouliches in 2012. Unfortunately she was injured in her next start, and it is not certain when or if she will be able to run again. His best buy, however, was Feuerblitz, whom Figge picked up for an astonishing €3,000 at the BBAG autumn sale for another owner of his. That man ran out of money and Figge passed Feuerblitz, who has a good pedigree and was probably so cheap “because he was ugly,” on to Bertermann. The colt’s price had risen sharply in the meantime, but it was still a good buy. By the spring of this year Figge and Bertermann knew that they had a smart prospect on their hands. Their aim was the German Derby, but after he had run well in a trial for that race, he was sent to Rome to contest the Derby Italiano. ISSUE 39 TRAINERMAGAZINE.com 15