Vibrant Trade At Goffs Online Sale

Goffs on Thursday staged the first-ever bloodstock auction in England or Ireland conducted exclusively online, and the result was largely positive in the midst of the country’s second national lockdown. With the Goffs team auctioning virtually in an empty ring at Kildare Paddocks, 86 horses in training were offered, with the clearance rate of 72% for 62 sold matching last year’s figure. Turnover, similarly, was up 3% to €1,019,800 despite fewer offered and sold, and the average climbed 24% to €16,448. The median was down 22% at €7,000.

The top price of €125,000 far exceeded last year’s €70,000 top lot, and taking the honours was Godolphin offering Paso Doble (Ire) (Dawn Approach {Ire}) (lot 553), who was bought by Tom Malone. The 3-year-old Paso Doble was previously trained by Jim Bolger and has won twice and been third three times in five runs this year over extended trips.

The Aga Khan consignment was responsible for the next three highest-priced lots, headed by JS Bloodstock and Matt Cumani’s purchase Taramansour (Ire) (Dansili {GB}) (lot 574). The 3-year-old colt heads Down Under after having won in July for Dermot Weld. He was most recently ninth behind Paso Doble in a Fairyhouse handicap on Oct. 1. Also from the Aga Khan draft were 3-year-old geldings Alatar (Ire) (Ruler of the World {Ire}) (lot 572) and Zarzyni (Ire) (Siyouni {Fr}) (lot 577). They were bought, respectively, by John McConnell and David Barron for €64,000 and €62,000.

Matt Cumani was not the only Australian trainer active in the online bidding; Chris Waller swooped for Bashiyr (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}) (lot 575), a 4-year-old gelding also from the Aga Khan draft, for €50,000.

Goffs Group Chief Executive Henry Beeby said upon conclusion of the sale, “2020 is proving to be a year of firsts and the overwhelming majority are largely negative caused by the Covid-19 pandemic. However today’s Goffs HIT Sale has been a positive as it has the distinction of being the first live auction conducted purely online in UK or Ireland. Whilst we are not pretending this was by design as we were forced to react to the current restrictions in Ireland, we have been very pleased with the reaction from both vendors and purchasers with plenty of spirited online bidding as well as several telephone bids leading to a very acceptable trade for the catalogue on offer headed by a very respectable six-figure top price that comfortably surpassed last year’s and a proper rise in the average price. Indeed, today’s experience has been encouraging enough for us to decide that our Autumn Yearling Sale will also be run as a live online auction in a couple of weeks’ time.

“We would like to thank those vendors that stood their ground and gave us the chance to prove the worth of our online platform as it was truly a leap of faith for every one of them. We are also very grateful to the large number of purchasers who interacted with us remotely and wish them the very best of luck with their purchases, all of which were offered with veterinary certificates, online films and as much information as we could provide. Indeed, we were overwhelmed by the level of interest with 250 individual registrations to bid online which is quite something for an 86 lot sale.

“I confess that today was quite surreal in many ways as we auctioned to an empty sales arena but it certainly proved that the bloodstock industry is extremely adaptable which gives us all belief that we will navigate a way through this terrible time.”

The post Vibrant Trade At Goffs Online Sale appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Maryland’s Sagamore Farm Will Now Produce Whiskey, Not Racehorses

Sagamore Racing, the Maryland-based breeding and racing operation founded 14 years ago by Under Armour chief executive Kevin Plank, is getting out of the sport. Its horses have been in the gradual process of being sold off, and the historic 530-acre Sagamore Farm in Glyndon will transition into supplying rye, corn and limestone-filtered spring water to support a Plank-backed whiskey distillery.

Sagamore led all breeders of Maryland-breds by earnings in 2019, and at its peak during Plank’s tenure the farm housed 100 horses. The news comes 10 years to the date that Sagamore Racing color bearer Shared Account upset the GI Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Turf at 46-1, which marked the first elite-level win for the stable.

The Baltimore Sun and WBAL radio both broke the story around the same time on the morning of Nov. 5.

Plank told the Sun that his decision to exit the Thoroughbred business is not related to Under Armour’s woes in the athletic apparel sector. Shares in the company’s stock have plummeted nearly 70% in value over the last five years. In a Nov. 3 article, the financial news outlet Motley Fool attributed the decline to “executive shake-ups, brand missteps, and an extremely difficult competitive environment.”

Plank was upbeat about his new venture in his WBAL radio interview, saying he was cognizant that he has a duty of stewardship to protect the farm in the heart of Maryland’s horse country that formerly stabled Alfred G. Vanderbilt Jr.’s breeding and racing operation between 1933 and 1986.

“I’m a revolution guy, not an evolution guy, and [I believe in] being intentional in what you’re doing,” Plank told WBAL. “And [when we] started looking at what we can do with racing, I said, ‘We’re either 100% behind it and we’re going to go make it win, or you’re not. So that’s what we just looked at, the racing aspect of the operation, and said, ‘It’s time for us to move.’

“Horse racing, it is a terrific sport, and it’s a passion; a labor of love,” Plank continued. “And now I get to move this and transition into a passion and labor where I think we’re going to make the world’s most famous rye whiskey.”

Sagamore Racing will attempt to go out on a high note when it sends out Global Campaign (Curlin) in Saturday’s GI Breeders’ Cup Classic. The six-for-nine colt is 20-1 on the morning-line coming off a wire-to-wire win in the GI Whitney S. at Saratoga Sept. 5.

“How about the serendipity of the bookends between Shared Account [and Global Campaign]?” Planks asked rhetorically in his WBAL interview. Back when Shared Account won, Plank said, “we were just a couple of years into horse racing. I didn’t even know how big of a deal winning the Breeders’ Cup was at the time.”

Plank continued: “It brings in an old Under Armour saying that I’ve used, which is, ‘We were always smart enough to be naïve enough to not know what we couldn’t accomplish.’ And so it felt like that first victory for the Breeders’ Cup was like, ‘Yeah, every farm does this every year, don’t ya?’ So to be here 10 years later, and to be at the Breeders’ Cup and be in the Classic of all things, [we know] Global Campaign will be longer odds than most of them. But there’s a reason that horse is in the race and he’s got a shot.”

Sagamore Farm was bequeathed to Vanderbilt by his mother for his 21st birthday in 1933. Vanderbilt would go on to become the owner and president of Pimlico Race Course while serving at various times as head of the New York Racing Association and The Jockey Club. Over the decades, Sagamore was home to three eventual Hall of Fame horses, most notably the 21-for-22 Native Dancer, who won both the 1953 Preakness and Belmont S. The Queen of England even kept a broodmare on the property during its heyday.

Vanderbilt sold the farm to a developer in 1986 and it eventually sunk into disrepair. Plank purchased it in 2007, and in 2011 he told the New York Times that he had a 20-year plan in place to grow the stable while championing Maryland racing and breeding.

“Buying the first string of horses in 2006 and then [having the] privilege to call Sagamore Farm home for the last 14 years [has] been an amazing journey that we’ve had of being in the racing business,” Plank told WBAL. “There’s just so many great memories here. But like many things, it’s time for us to turn the page right now, and to start a new chapter out here in Sagamore Farm. And so that 14-year run we had is something that we’re super proud of, and we’ll always love it. The trophies will live on.”

Plank said his plan is to keep Sagamore Farm open to the public as a “community asset,” with the distillery hosting public tours. Native Dancer’s gravesite on the property is expected to remain intact, and a small number of retired Thoroughbreds will remain on the farm as pasture horses, according to WBAL.

The post Maryland’s Sagamore Farm Will Now Produce Whiskey, Not Racehorses appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Best Bets: Breeders’ Cup Saturday and Undercard Picks

America’s Best Racing and handicapper (and avid gambler) Monique Vág team up to provide horseplayers with their best bets of the weekend. Vág will identify her top picks as well as at least one longshot play of the weekend, a nice opportunity to swing for the fences on a win bet or to take a shot with a show bet. She also will occasionally look for strong exacta plays for the weekend or try to spot a nice opportunity for other wagers. This Weekend's Bets

Read More...

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights