Record Trade at Arqana’s Pandemic-Proof Breeze

DONCASTER, UK–It takes more than mere pandemic-induced travel restrictions to blunt the ardour of the bloodstock industry. A new record for turnover and median set the tone for a robust day of trade in Doncaster and, just as would be expected in normal times, the buyers' list at the Arqana Breeze-Up Sale represented many nations, with plenty of help from the Middle East.

The familiar duo of Anthony Stroud and David Loder leaned nonchalantly on the parade ring rail to make their play for the Medaglia d'Oro colt who would become the top lot of the day, bidding against an unseen rival from inside the ring. Farther away still but connected via telephone, Singapore-based new player Kuldeep Singh gave his instructions to Arqana's Freddy Powell and is now the proud owner of a Kingman (GB) half-brother to a Classic winner. Other buyers unable to attend placed their bids online.

These diverse options which were hastened into existence by the blight of coronavirus have changed the traditional vibe of the bloodstock auction, with some of the buzz created by the intense exchange of bids from one side of the auditorium to the other perhaps now lost for good. But they have enabled trade to continue, largely unabated if sometimes delayed, to the enormous relief of those whose annual business is conducted predominantly within a few hectic weeks of spring.

In a close replay of last year, Arqana upped sticks and moved to the Goffs UK complex, and once again provided the most expensive breezer of the European season, in lot 90, the son of Darley America stallion Medaglia d'Oro, who brought the day's high price of £675,000.

The colt, a first foal of the five-time winner Shelbysmile (Smart Strike), herself a half-sister to Dubaian group winners Derbaas (Seeking The Gold) and Chiefdom (The Factor), will now be trained in France by Andre Fabre, having been prepared for sale by master pre-trainer Malcolm Bastard.

“Malcolm does such a fantastic job,” said Stroud. “He really brings his horses on so well. [The colt] had really good vet work so we decided that he was the one we'd have a go on.”

Bastard was a partner in the horse with Alex Kershaw, who bought him at Fasig-Tipton's October Sale for $175,000. He said,  “He is a fantastic horse, he breezed great and he has a superb temperament. There is a lot of improvement to come from him. The sale being put back a few weeks has only helped him because he's still immature. He's a beautiful horse who will only improve with time.”

Bastard added, “I don't got excited, I'm realistic, but it's turning out to be a good sale. But the horses have to go on and win for the owners.”

Strong Trade In Whichever Currency
As the sale was held in England, trade was conducted in sterling, but the figures have already been converted to euros on the Arqana website which shows, incredibly, that in the midst of a lengthy world health crisis Arqana has set new records for both aggregate (€15,219,820/£13,052,500) and median (€98,600/£85,000). The clearance rate settled at 88.6% for 109 horses sold from 123 offered at an average price of €139,631/£119,748.

Reflecting on the day's action, Arqana's executive director Freddy Powell said, “It shows that the catalogue was so strong, that it has been appreciated worldwide. We've had people bidding from all over.”

He continued, “All things considered we have to be satisfied. It's difficult to compare the figures to last year when we had far fewer horses, but the figures will be very similar to 2019 and 2018, when we had an aggregate of around €15 million. The median is close to €100,000 which is incredible from that number of horses. I think it shows the depth of the catalogue. The vendors have been amazing to adapt again–we had to change the date and change the venue–and when you have horses of that value for things to change all the time is not easy when you are preparing them for a breeze. That is why we had to make our decision early. But today has been very satisfying, especially the clearance rate, and we have had the highest median ever as well as record aggregate.”

Expensive Thrills For Marley And Cullinan
For much of the day the colts were well on top in the table but a pair of fillies sold two lots apart brought a dramatic late conclusion to the day's trade. Roger Marley had waxed lyrical on the merits of first-season sire Ribchester (Ire) when quizzed by TDN earlier this year, and his one breezer by the Darley stallion certainly did not make a fool of him. Sold as lot 147 through the Church Farm & Horse Park Stud draft Marley runs in association with his Irish partner John Cullinan, the daughter of Cheap Thrills (GB) (Bertolini) gave her vendors quite a few expensive thrills when knocked down at £590,000 following a ding-dong battle between Richard Brown of Blandford Bloodstock and Alex Elliot and Paul Shanahan bidding outside the ring. Tucked away in his office, Brown prevailed and was delighted to have succeeded on the horse he declared to be the best filly he has seen at the breeze-ups all season.

He said, “She did a phenomenal breeze and she has a great stride on her. She's a very attractive filly and it's a proper family–it's Chris Wright's good family.”

Brown added, “I'm a massive fan of Ribchester–there's a huge word about him. This was more than I thought I would have to give but time will tell if we're right or not. I can't say who her new owner is but they agreed with me.”

Indeed, the filly had been bought from Wright's Stratford Place Stud for just £45,000 at last year's Goffs UK Premier Yearling Sale. With a terrific pinhooking result and six juveniles sold for an average of £215,833, it was a good day of trade for Cullinan and Marley. The latter said, “I couldn't have seen that coming in a month of Sundays but she has been very popular and is so straightforward. She has an amazing action and covers so much ground. I loved her from the minute she came over from Ireland.”

Lot 37, a Distorted Humor half-brother to Grade II winner Silentio (Silent Name {Jpn}), started the ball rolling for the Church Farm & Horse Park Stud team, bringing a price of £260,000 from Norwegian owner Stall Perlan. Peter and Ross Doyle were in Doncaster to act on their behalf.

“The owner wants to win the Swedish Derby and this colt will be trained in Oslo by Norway's champion trainer Wido Neuroth,” said Peter Doyle.

Thunder Across To Germany
Just two lots earlier, Richard Brown had been outbid by one of his partners in Blandford Bloodstock, Stuart Boman, who held his nerve all the way to £500,000 for a Yeomanstown Stud-consigned daughter of Night Of Thunder (Ire) for Jurgen Sartori. The German owner has already enjoyed success with a filly by the Darley stallion in last season's G2 German 1000 Guineas runner-up No Limit Credit (Ger). This filly will join that same stable of rising trainer Andreas Suborics.

“That was rather unexpected,” Boman said of the eventual price paid for lot 145. “I loved her stride and Yeomanstown Stud are not consignors who really focus on the times so when you factor that in she did a really good breeze and maintained that stride all the way through.”

The April-born filly is also out of a daughter of Bertolini, this one the unraced Catchline, who has bred two winners to date and is a half-sister to G1 Premio Vittorio di Capua winner Ancient World (Spinning World).

He added, “She has been bought for Mr. Sartori and will be trained in Germany by Andreas Suborics. This is the first horse we've bought together and I hope she is really lucky for them.”

Grove Stud Livens Up The Action
If the sale was a little steady away, it wasn't long before a pair of colts from Brendan Holland's Grove Stud livened up proceedings.

Lot 49, the Kingman (GB) half-sister to German Classic winner Miss Yoda (Ger) (Sea The Stars {Ire}), was the boldest pinhook in the book–as a foal–but the strong, bay colt duly played his part with an impressive breeze on Wednesday before fetching a bid of £500,000.

Bred by Gestut Etzean, the colt's life began in Germany and he was among the leading lights of the Tattersalls December Foal Sale of 2019 when bought by David Cox of Baroda Stud. It was thus a long wait for the pinhooker to return him to the ring but it was one which proved worthwhile. It is unclear at this stage who will train the colt but he was the first purchase for new owner Kuldeep Singh of Singapore, who was bidding on the phone to Freddy Powell.

The son of the G2 Diana Trial winner Monami (Ger) (Sholokhov {Ire}) brought up a quick-fire double of decent returns for Grove Stud. The previous lot (48), a colt by No Nay Never and the first foal of the unraced Mona Vale (Fr) (Zoffany {Ire}), had minutes earlier been sold for £300,000 to Alex Elliott and Jamie McCalmont.

“It just so happened that we had two exceptionally nice horses in early, both by really good young sires,” said Holland. “One has a stallion's pedigree and they both breezed exceptionally well. I was very hopeful coming here and I knew they could run but it still has to happen. It's a strong international sale this one and it seems to be going along so well. Best of luck to the horses' new owners.”

Confirming that the No Nay Never colt would be trained in England, Elliott said, “He's by an exceptional sire in No Nay Never, he did an exceptional breeze and he was an exceptional physical. I bought him with Jamie McCalmont for a new partnership and he was a horse that we both honed in on. I used to work for Jamie when I first came back to England from the States and it's nice to link up together and buy a horse. Partnerships are becoming more and more common; it limits people's risk and if people are prepared to do it, it gives you great advantage to buy a horse because you can pool your funds. These horses cost when you want to buy them as they are the obvious horses to everyone so you have to stretch to buy them. We're very excited by the new partnership. We looked at buying in America at the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Sale but we didn't get anything.”

He added, “Arqana have done a fantastic job to get this whole thing going and they have produced some top horses. It's a really good catalogue and the physicals match up to the book, and the breezes matched up to the physicals and the book. Being so close to Royal Ascot is not ideal but I would just like to commend Arqana and Goffs for getting the whole thing going.”

Lone Dubawi (Ire) To Nass
Norman Williamson of Oak Tree Farm, whose top graduate from this sale in the past is the GI Preakness S. winner War Of Will (War Front), brought two colts to Arqana this time and was the leading consignor by average, thanks to the £480,000 sale of lot 130.

The colt was the only Dubawi (Ire) juvenile in the sale and is out of the treble listed winner All At Sea (GB) (Sea The Stars {Ire}). He was a £110,000 purchase from his breeder Lanwades Stud by Mags O'Toole at the Goffs Orby Sale.

Oliver St Lawrence, who bought the colt on behalf of Fawzi Nass after outlasting underbidder Morten Buskop, said, “He's a backward colt who I thought had done very well over the winter. I looked up my notes on him from the yearling sale. Norman has done very well with him. I don't know if he will see a racecourse this year. He has some maturing to do.”

Voute Also Strikes For Gold
A private sale was agreed between Jim McCartan of Gaybrook Lodge Stud and Ted Voute for the Medaglia d'Oro colt (lot 64), who eventually made the leading list at £325,000 after having been marked as withdrawn. The first foal of the GI Alcibiades S. placegetter Paige (Sky Mesa) hails from the family of Preakness and Belmont S. winner Point Given (Thunder Gulch), a half-brother to the colt's granddam Perfect Story (Tale of the Cat).

Voute said the colt had been bought for Prince Faisal's Nawarra Stud. He added, “Between us we go through the catalogue and we liked him, we liked Malcolm's [lot 90], we liked the Kingman [lot 49] and we've got him. He'll go to George Peckham to have a bit of R&R and he'll be a back-end 2-year-old.”

Rolling The Dice With Almanzor (Fr)
Alex Elliott had teamed up with Brad Spicer of Spicer Thoroughreds during last season's yearlings sales and the duo already has colts by Camelot (GB) and Sir Percy (GB) heading south for Australia. Joining them on the export flight will be lot 85, the Almanzor (Fr) half-brother to the French Classic-placed Dice Roll (Fr) (Showcasing {GB}), who started his career in Chantilly with Fabrice Chappet, then raced in Hong Kong under the name of Gold Win and, now known as Dice Roll once more, has had renewed success.

After bidding £245,000 on the first-crop son of Haras d'Etreham's dual-hemisphere shuttler, Elliott said, “Dice Roll has been doing really well down there [in Australia], and Almanzor hasn't had a runner there yet but he has been very popular at the sales down there. It's been great working with Brad and we now have three colts heading out there.”

Smart Pair For Crisford
Anthony Stroud and Simon Crisford signed for a pair of colts for an undisclosed owner, the first of which was lot 57, a Night Of Thunder colt who represented a decent pinhook for Johnny Collins of Brown Island Stables having leapt in price from a €57,000 yearling to a £215,000 breezer.

Stroud said, “Johnny Collins is a very good consignor and this horse did a lovely breeze. He fitted the profile of what we were looking for and he is for a client of Simon Crisford.”

Late in the session, Stroud was back for lot 134, a Lope De Vega half-brother to the hardy treble Group 2 winner Breton Rock (GB) (Bahamian Bounty {GB}). Consigned by Mocklershill, the son of Anna's Rock (Ire) (Rock Of Gibraltar {Ire}) was sold for £350,000.

Churchill Set For America
An early highlight was provided by Mocklershill's daughter of Churchill (Ire) (lot 4), who was eventually sold for £210,000 to agent Stephen Hillen after interest from Ted Durcan and Sheila Lavery among others. The first foal of the winning Invincible Spirit (Ire) mare Energie Green (Ire) was bred by Ecurie des Charmes and was a €75,000 purchase from Arqana's October Yearling Sale. She will now commence her racing career in America

“She has been bought for Dean Reeves and will be trained by Christophe Clement,” said Hillen. “I saw her in Ireland before the sale and she did a great breeze. She has a good long stride and she looks like she will get a mile or a mile and a quarter.”

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Pletcher Triumvirate Log Final Workouts For Belmont

Friday morning was a busy one for Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher as he worked Known Agenda, Bourbonic and Overtook in their final moves for the Grade 1 Belmont Stakes presented by NYRA Bets.

The trio of runners completed their preparations for the third leg of the Triple Crown under partly cloudy skies and temperatures in the 60s, while dodging heavy rain expected for the Nassau County region on Friday evening.

Arriving at the main track around 8:45 a.m. in the first set after the break, Known Agenda, with Irad Ortiz, Jr. up, breezed in tandem with stablemate and fellow St. Elias Stable color-bearer Dr Post, ridden by exercise rider Hector Ramos.

NYRA clockers caught the pair through splits of 24.60 and 36.00 with Known Agenda, to the inside, finishing off ahead of his workmate in 1:01.00 while Dr Post completed his five furlongs in 1:01.20.

There were some slightly anxious moments during the breeze as the pair found themselves in behind another pair of workers. Despite the unexpected close company, Pletcher said that neither he nor Ortiz, Jr. were fazed.

“We got caught in behind a couple of horses and they were kind of off the rail and spread out a bit which made it a little tricky,” Pletcher said. “In the end, Irad thought it was good. He said that Known Agenda had more of a target, jumped into the bridle and was on the muscle. He finished up and galloped out well. Dr Post had to eat a little bit of dirt, that's just kind of the way it worked out. After the break it can be a little bit busy.”

Ninth in the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby last out, Known Agenda won the Grade 1 Florida Derby on March 27 at Gulfstream Park with a ground-saving trip from fifth before drawing clear in upper stretch to a 2 ¾-length win. A maiden winner at second asking defeating eventual graded stakes winner Greatest Honour by a head, Known Agenda was fifth in the Grade 3 Sam F. Davis at Tampa Bay Downs before defeating winners at Gulfstream Park by 11 lengths.

“He's obviously an experienced horse,” Pletcher said. “He's unfazed. Irad was able to place him where he wasn't getting much kickback. Dr Post got more of the kickback, so I told Irad to get away from that and hold him out at that point. In his case, it worked out very well. Dr Post, I would have preferred not to take much kickback, but he seemed to handle it fine. Irad liked the way he handled it and so did I. He thought it was a positive. He took a bit [of kickback in the Derby], but not a ton. With the trip he got in the Florida Derby and in Tampa, he's got plenty of experience, so we aren't worried about that.”

While Known Agenda targets the Belmont Stakes, Dr Post, second in last year's running, will point to the Grade 1, $1 million Hill 'N' Dale Metropolitan Handicap.

About ten minutes later, Bourbonic and Overtook put the final touches on their Belmont Stakes preparations when caught through an opening quarter-mile in 23.60 before completing the half-mile work in 48.49. The pair galloped out five furlongs in an authoritative 1:00.80. Jockey Manny Franco was aboard Overtook while exercise rider Amelia Green piloted Bourbonic.

A winner of the Grade 2 Wood Memorial presented by Resorts World Casino at 72-1 odds, Bourbonic finished 13th in the Kentucky Derby and will attempt to give historic Calumet Farm their first Belmont Stakes triumph in 73 years since Citation swept the Triple Crown in 1948.

Pletcher indicated that Bourbonic typically displays a strong gallop out in his works.

“He's a horse that at times will work like he's capable of stepping up,” Pletcher said. “The one thing he does is gallop out strongly. He's always given indications that the distance would suit him.”

Pletcher said he has been particularly impressed with Overtook since his late-closing third in the Grade 3 Peter Pan and that the regally bred son of Curlin has been showing improvement into his next engagement.

“Overtook is historically not an overly ambitious work horse, but I thought he went well this morning,” Pletcher said. “I was looking for him and Bourbonic to just show they have some decent energy. I think his two breezes since the Peter Pan have been better than what we were seeing beforehand, so I'm happy with that.”

Both Bourbonic and Overtook boast pedigrees that should suit the 12-furlong distance, being out of mares sired by Belmont Stakes winners. A son of Bernardini, Bourbonic is out of graded stakes winner Dancing Afleet who is by 2005 Belmont Stakes winner Afleet Alex. Overtook, by Curlin, is out of Grade 1-winner Got Lucky, a daughter of 1992 Belmont Stakes winner A.P. Indy.

“The one thing they both have going for them is that they're bred for the distance. It seems like that should be helpful,” Pletcher said. “[Bourbonic is by] Bernardini and out of an Afleet Alex mare, so there are a lot of Belmont wins in that pedigree. Same thing with Overtook, being by Curlin out of an A.P. Indy mare, it seems that his breeding also should be helpful with the distance.”

A $1 million purchase from the 2019 Keeneland September Yearling Sale, Overtook is a direct descendant of prestigious broodmares Numbered Account and La Troienne. He is owned by Repole Stable and St. Elias Stable in partnership with Coolmore triumvirate Michael Tabor, Mrs. John Magnier and Derrick Smith.

A victory with any of his three runners would give Pletcher a fourth Belmont Stakes triumph, putting him on even terms with fellow Hall of Fame inductees Max Hirsch, R.W. Walden and former boss D. Wayne Lukas. Pletcher previously saddled Rags to Riches [2007], Palace Malice [2013] and Tapwrit [2017] to Belmont scores.

Earlier in the morning, Robert and Lawanna Low's Colonel Liam logged his final work for the Grade 1, $750,000 Resorts World Casino Manhattan over the Belmont training track. The two-time Grade 1-winning son of third-crop sire Liam's Map went in company with Promise Keeper as the pair finished off their four-furlong breeze in 48.62 seconds.

“I was very happy with both of them,” Pletcher said. “It was a good, steady breeze for them both. I was particularly pleased with the gallop out. They went well in hand and very relaxed. It's kind of what we have come to expect from Colonel Liam. It was a good breeze from Promise Keeper as well.”

Woodford Thoroughbreds, WinStar Farm and Rock Ridge Thoroughbreds' Promise Keeper, a winner of the Grade 3 Peter Pan on May 8, is not in pursuit of the Belmont Stakes, “unless there is a major defection.” Pletcher plans to ship the son of third-crop sire Constitution to Thistledown for the Grade 3, $500,000 Ohio Derby on June 26.

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This Side Up: Mourning Two Exceptions, Lamenting the Rule

The shocking loss this week of the young gun Laoban, preceded just days earlier by that of the venerable Malibu Moon, could not fail to renew the kind of questions we should all keep asking themselves about how a stallion can make an enduring reputation.

Both had started out in a regional program, having shown only marginal eligibility for a stud career on the racetrack, before quickly earning migration to Kentucky. If that was just about all they had in common, then their different roles on two of the biggest commercial rosters will have made the exit of both deeply grievous for their respective farms.

Malibu Moon will be remembered as an important horse perhaps not so much for his genetic legacy, notable as it was, as for his founding contribution to the new Spendthrift. He arrived from Castleton Lyons in 2008 as one of just three stallions to relaunch a farm that has since presided over a revolution in commercial breeding. By that stage, he had already elevated his fee to $40,000, from an opening $3,000 under the estimable Pons family at Country Life Farm. Over the years that followed, Malibu Moon weighted down the roster as B. Wayne Hughes set about trying to float young stallions like Into Mischief.

That horse was famously launched into the backdraft of the financial crisis, with incentives that other farms considered ruinous until they started introducing similar schemes themselves. We'll never know whether Into Mischief might have fallen between the cracks in a more conventional environment. As it was, Malibu Moon remained the elder statesman even as the younger paragon established the viability to an experiment meanwhile expanding giddily in both quantity (to two dozen stallions) and quality (over the past couple of years Hughes has corralled a conspicuous series of upgrades).

Laoban, in contrast, was last fall drafted onto another industrial roster that had lately found itself in need of rejuvenation. The brutal loss two years ago of Pioneerof The Nile, at just 13, left all WinStar's top sires in the same veteran bracket as Malibu Moon: Distorted Humor was then 26, Tiznow and More Than Ready 22, and Speightstown 21. Tiznow has since been pensioned, and Distorted Humor is being managed with due restraint; but Speightstown has bucked one of the most witless prejudices around by actually earning a fee increase in the pandemic economy. I look forward to him emulating Danzig, who conceived War Front and Hard Spun respectively when aged 24 and 26, and so rebuking those who discern some inherent deterioration in the corrosive work of fashion plus competition from cheaper sons.

Be that as it may, happily WinStar have meanwhile seen Constitution step up to the plate, with plenty of promising new recruits in his slipstream. What was interesting about Laoban, much like Daredevil after his repatriation from Turkey to Lane's End, is that he had effectively been rebranded. At precisely the stage where most young sires are creaking under the weight of new, unproven competition, Laoban had demonstrated that the rewards for a fast start are just about as impulsive and disproportionate as the punishment for a slow one.

Think about sires like–well, how about Orb, the most accomplished son of Malibu Moon? When Orb, like Laoban, was about to launch his third crop of juveniles two years ago, he was already confined to just 28 mares. Last year, incredibly, he received seven. Unsurprisingly, he has since been given a fresh start in Uruguay–leaving behind O Besos, who made up more ground than any rival when fifth in that processional GI Kentucky Derby.

One of few others to close in the race was Laoban's son Keepmeinmind, whose Grade I placing the day after Simply Ravishing won the GI Darley Alcibiades S. last fall was sufficient to start an overnight auction to bring their sire to Kentucky. Was that 24-hour breakout more significant than, say, Orb producing GI Spinaway winner Sippican Harbor? Yes, Laboan was working from New York mares, and has come up with handful of other stakes operators; whereas Orb failed to build on his opportunities at no less a farm than Claiborne. But if Laoban was indeed about to become an important stallion, then it would have remained pretty challenging to explain why.

A fairly ordinary page was only somewhat improved by his own contribution. Yes, he was a conduit for a very expensive sire whose other sons in this intake, Nyquist and Outwork, suggest something that can be recycled. But now that all bets are off, I must confess that a fee of $25,000 for Laoban, in a market where Malibu Moon himself (126 stakes winners, 51 graded stakes winners, 17 Grade I winners) was down to $35,000, seemed strong.

Built into that fee, it seemed, was the expectation of renewed market momentum accompanying a “rebirth” in the Bluegrass. It's almost as though a stallion like this gets to be a freshman twice over.

I feel terribly sorry for the WinStar team, to lose Laoban so soon. A young stallion is one of the ultimate symbols of virility in all Nature, and an abrupt death like his–or that of Pioneerof the Nile–is all the more shocking as a result. For the rest of the industry, meanwhile, it's a shame that we won't now get to find out properly whether bringing Laoban to Kentucky was opportunism or an inspired gamble. Because it does us all good, especially the inflexible purists among us, when things happen that don't fit our templates.

It's not as though even the aristocratic Malibu Moon could satisfy us entirely, as he was routinely wheeled out on behalf of any number of instant breakdowns: “This could be another Danzig, another Malibu Moon!” What a difficult business this is, when that is so much more resonant a hope than announcing: “This could be another Orb!”

As it is, Orb's failure leaves the Malibu Moon branch of the A.P. Indy dynasty looking rather precarious–though I must say I do give a decent chance to Gormley, down to a giveaway fee as his first runners hit the track.

When Laoban reached the same crossroads last year, he just hit the pedal and raced straight ahead. But so many stallions, nowadays, are at this point diverted into a blind alley by nervous breeders. The world has changed since Malibu Moon lent gravitas to an experimental new regime at Spendthrift. Nowadays, the rookie stallion is the absolute last to require an incentive scheme. If you were to introduce Share The Upside (and equivalent offers elsewhere) today, you'd surely retreat a step and offer future breeding rights for supporting those stallions under most pressure. It's not commitment to first and second books that stud accountants need, but to third and fourth, or fourth and fifth.

We mentioned Daredevil. Well, he covered 376 mares across his first three seasons at WinStar. Yet he plummeted from 140 mares to 21 as his first runners were approaching the track. Hence his sale to Turkey.

As I've often said, it's neither the farms nor the breeders who are principally to blame for commercial obsession with unproven sires, but those directing consumer investment. Breeders are just anticipating the market. Orb, Daredevil and Laoban are all extreme examples of what happens when young stallions reach the squeeze point. Orb, to be fair, was indulged with four consecutive three-figure books before being abandoned. It's the nature of the beast that most stallions would never succeed, even if guaranteed 140 mares for a decade. Nonetheless, stallions at this stage generally tend to be punished or rewarded unduly according to their first dividends.

The kind of imbalance that has caused paternalist intervention–and litigation–on stallion books could perhaps be avoided if the consumers, on the one hand, were not so poorly advised; and if the farms, on the other, could move back their incentive schemes to support the stallions who nowadays could most do with the help. Otherwise, unlike with Malibu Moon and Laoban, the only respects we ever pay them will be in obituaries.

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Freshman Sire Unified Gets First Win at Churchill

Lucky Seven Stable's Behave Virginia (Unified) launched her career in style, rolling home an impressive 5 1/2-furlong winner at Churchill Downs Friday to become the first winner for freshman sire Unified (Candy Ride {Arg}). Narrowly in front into the far turn, she was briefly headed by 6-5 favorite Trade Secret (Goldencents), but wrested the lead back from that rival turning for home. In command from there, the 7-1 chance drew clear through the stretch, crossing the wire 5 1/2 lengths ahead of Trade Secret while under a hand ride.

Her 'TDN Rising Star' sire was winner of the 2016 GIII Bay Shore S. and GII Peter Pan S. and the following year's GIII Gulfstream Park Sprint S. before a narrow second in the GI Carter H. The Lane's End inmate's first juveniles have been well received this spring, with a pair of colts at OBS March selling for $530,000 and $400,000, respectively. Behave Virginia's dam, She's Behaving, produced a colt by Tamarkuz last season.

3rd-Churchill Downs, $98,116, Msw, 5-28, 2yo, f, 5 1/2f, 1:04.15, wf, 5 3/4 lengths.
BEHAVE VIRGINIA (f, 2, Unified–She's Behaving, by Mineshaft)
Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $57,488. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.
O-Lucky Seven Stable (Mackin); B-Khalid Mishref Alkahtani (KY); T-Kenneth G. McPeek. *$30,000 Wlg '19 KEENOV; $115,000 Ylg '20 KEESEP.

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