Frankel Colt Among Japan Sale Leaders

Frankel (GB) is having a stellar season and currently holds a narrow lead over his sire Galileo (Ire) on the European sires' table, and his proficiency has extended to Japan; in fact, it was there that he posted his first Group 1 win as a sire with the subsequent Classic winner Soul Stirring (Jpn) in the 2016 G1 Hanshin Juvenile Fillies, and he now has three Group 1 winners in Japan with Mozu Ascot (Jpn) and Grenadier Guards (Jpn) also making the grade. It should have come as no surprise, then, that his lone horse in the JRHA Select Sale would be popular, and lot 329, a colt foal out of GI Las Virgenes S. winner Callback (Street Sense), certainly was that when selling to Thoroughbred Club Lion for ¥240-million ($2,173,380/€1,839,360/£1,571,566)-the fourth-highest price of the session on Tuesday.

“This is an outstanding individual,” said trainer Yoshito Yahagi, who signed the ticket. “I visited Northern Farm for inspection three times and I have a feeling this colt has been getting better, better and better. While he may not be a typical Frankel, I like him a lot and am sure he is worth paying this amount of money.”

The colt is the third foal out of Callback, who was purchased by Katsumi Yoshida for $2-million in foal to Medaglia d'Oro at Keeneland November in 2019, having previously produced a colt by that same sire who was bought by Donato Lanni for $175,000 at Fasig-Tipton's March Sale of 2-year-olds in training this year.

The JRHA Select Sale began on Monday at Hokkaido's Northern Horse Park with a strong session of yearling trade and wrapped up on Tuesday with foals and another blockbuster day. Twenty-four foals sold for in excess of ¥100-million ($906,935/€765,600/£654,500). Seven of those breached the ¥200-million ($1,814,001/€1,531,778/£1,309,000) mark, with trade topped by a ¥410-million ($3,718,702/€3,139,868/£2,683,471) colt from Northern Farm by Deep Impact (Jpn)'s son Kizuna (Jpn) out of the G2 Diana-Trial winner Selkis (Ger) (Monsun {Ger}) (lot 428) bought by Yoshihisa Ozasa on the phone with his trainer Yoshito Yahagi. New investor Susumu Fujita was underbidder.

Despite prevailing COVID-19 restrictions and uncertainties in Japan, a strong desire for bloodstock among the local ownership ranks remains; the number of registered buyers at the sale was up 10% from last year, and figures climbed decisively on 2020 figures, which was itself a strong renewal of the sale despite falling in the midst of the pandemic.

Tuesday's foal session saw 213 youngsters sold for ¥10,923,000,000 ($98,915,957/€83,783,637/£71,652,375), up 31.1% from last year. The average and median were likewise up at ¥51,281,690 ($464,824/€393,420/£336,396) (+24.9%) and ¥33,000,000 ($299,116/€253,203/£216,472) (+13.8%), respectively. The clearance rate for the foal session was 92.6%.

Cumulatively across two days of yearling and foal trade, ¥22,561,000,000 ($204,302,263/€172,936,517/£147,994,986) was spent on 439 lots from 472 offered, with the clearance rate rounding out at 93%. The cumulative average of ¥51,391,780 ($465,380/€393,932/£336,751) was up 18.3% on 2020.

The JRHA Select Sale catalogue was for the first time this year absent of progeny of leading sire King Kamehameha (Jpn) and included just four yearlings by the likewise late Deep Impact (Jpn), and thus trade could have been expected to fall short of previous renewals where they were so dominant, but the investment of Japanese breeders, in particular the Yoshida family, in quality bloodstock that has built up both the stallion and broodmare ranks shone through.

“This was a much stronger market than I expected,” admitted Teruya Yoshida, active chairman of the Japan Racing Horse Association. “As the catalogue this year did not include King Kamehameha and very few Deep Impacts, I thought the market would shrink, but I was wrong.”

Also pivotal to the good returns was the significant investment of new owner Susumu Fujita, who started buying horses in the spring and this week spent ¥2,367,000,000 ($21,413,893/€18,156,519/£15,510,062) on six foals and 12 yearlings.

“I am very impressed to see so many new players active through the two days of the 2021 Select Sale,” Yoshida continued. “Most impressive was Mr. Susumu Fujita, who attended at JRHA Select Sale for the first time and spent Â¥2,367,000,000 in total through the two days, which is more than 10% of the gross sale.

“The number of buyers registered at this year's sale is more than 700, which is 10% more than  last year, and the market has a number of players at every price range. I think that is what created this strong market. And I think we have a variation of stallions standing in Japan now. There are sires who produce good sprinters, milers and stayers. There are sires of turf runners and dirt runners. The quality of broodmares we have in Japan is much higher than before, and many stallions have a chance to produce class racehorses, and have a chance to have expensive horses at the bloodstock market.

“Breeders including myself will re-invest the funds to acquire more quality mares to improve the quality of Japanese-bred horses. I hope horse racing in Japan will become a more attractive sport.”

Kizuna Colt Leads The Way

Campaigned as a homebred by Gestut Schlenderhan, Selkis won the 2011 G2 Diana-Trial by a nose but was unable to beat another horse home in the G1 Preis der Diana won by Dancing Rain (Ire) (Danehill Dancer {Ire}). Purchased privately by Katsumi Yoshida, Selkis produced Velox (Jpn) (Just A Way {Jpn}) as her fourth foal, and he placed in all three 2019 Japanese colts' Classics. Six of Selkis's foals have been offered at this sale, with prior to Tuesday four foals averaging $329,458 and two yearlings averaging $373,520. Velox himself was a ¥48-million ($435,348/€367,651/£314,162) yearling.

“This is the one I was firmly resolved to acquire,” Ozasa said. “Yoshito Yahagi strongly recommended him, and others who inspected him told me unanimously that this is very nice horse. I thought he would cost Â¥300 million or more or less, but I didn't intend to retreat at all. I won the bidding war and hope the colt will win big races.”

Kizuna is proving a rising star of the sire ranks, currently sitting fourth in the sire standings behind only his sire, Lord Kanaloa (Jpn) and Heart's Cry (Jpn). He is the sire of eight group winners from three crops of racing age.

Ozasa's Tuesday haul also included a first-crop colt by Rey De Oro (Jpn) (King Kamehameha {Jpn}), who will have high hopes riding on him as a sire being by the same sire as Lord Kanaloa and having been both champion 3-year-old and champion older horse courtesy of wins in the G1 Tokyo Yushun and G1 Tenno Sho Autumn. Rey De Oro enjoyed a profitable debut sale, his 15 foals offered all sold for an average of ¥76,133,333 ($690,510/€583,222/£498,749). Ozasa's purchase, (lot 334), was the joint highest-priced of those at ¥180-million ($1,632,987/€1,378,837/£1,179,180). He is a half-brother to the G3 Tokyo Shimbun Hai scorer Black Spinel (Jpn) (Tanino Gimlet {Jpn}).

Ozasa also put his faith in another young sire, champion Satono Diamond (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) with the purchase of his second-most expensive colt, lot 374, the second foal out of GI Spinaway S. winner Lady Ivanka (Tiz Wonderful), for ¥130-million ($1,179,379/€995,870/£851,567). Satono Diamond, whose eldest progeny are yearlings, had a top price of ¥180-million ($1,632,879/€1,378,800/£1,179,093) on Tuesday via lot 390, a colt out of Argentine champion Positive Mind (Arg) (Equal Stripes {Arg}) bought by new owner Susumu Fujita.

Lord Kanaloa (Jpn) has made a meteoric rise through the sire ranks and was on Monday responsible by three of the top five prices during the yearling session. He likewise sired the second-highest-priced colt during the foal session, a son of Australian champion 2- and 3-year-old filly Yankee Rose (Aus) (All American {Aus}) (lot 398) who fetched ¥370-million ($3,356,473/€2,833,331/£2,422,832) from prominent owner Masahiro Noda's Danox Co. Ltd. Yankee Rose, who was purchased privately by Katsumi Yoshida upon conclusion of her racing career, has an as-yet unraced 2-year-old filly by Deep Impact named Romneya (Jpn) and did not produce a foal in 2020.

All Heart

The recently pensioned Heart's Cry (Jpn) sired the three top-priced foals at last year's sale, and made a strong showing again on Tuesday when siring three of the top seven foals. Chief among those was lot 361, who boasted one of the best pedigrees in the book being a half-brother to international Group 1 winners Real Steel (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) and Loves Only You (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}). He was knocked down to Miki Masahiro for ¥280-million ($2,536,025/€2,147,600/£1,834,891). The pedigree goes from strength to strength down the page, his second dam Monevassia (Mr. Prospector) being a full-sister to Kingmambo and also the dam of Group 1 winner and producer Rumplestiltskin (Ire) (Danehill). Monevassia is therefore a daughter of the great Miesque.

Heart's Cry's haul also included the top-priced filly of the session, a ¥200-million ($1,809,370/€1,534,085/£1,310,636) daughter of American champion 2-year-old filly She's A Tiger (Tale of the Cat) (lot 342). She's A Tiger's Deep Impact filly foal was the second-top lot at this sale last year when selling for ¥270-million.

Alterite (Fr) (Literato {Fr}) has certainly racked up plenty of air miles in her 11 years. Having started her racing career in her native France, she was soon purchased privately by Martin Schwartz and transferred to the U.S. after winning at listed level and finishing second in the G1 Prix Saint-Alary. She promptly won the GI Garden City S. in New York and placed in two more Grade Is before returning to France, where she was sold to Katsumi Yoshida for €1.1-million at Arqana December in 2014. Alterite has two winners from three foals of racing age and on Tuesday her latest produce, a son of rising young sire Epiphaneia (Jpn) (lot 366), made ¥220-million ($1,992,591/€1,686,270/£1,440,780) to the bid of Y's Consignment Sales.

Next Generation

Shunsuke Yoshida, son of Northern Farm principal Katsumi Yoshida, has been a pivotal figure in that operation and this year for the first time he offered horses at the JRHA Sale under his own name. He enjoyed three ¥100-million-plus sales on Tuesday, including the joint top-priced Rey de Oro colt and an American Pharoah colt (lot 337) who fetched ¥150-million ($1,358,632/€1,148,825/£982,350) from Danox. The colt is the second foal out of Switch In Time (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), a daughter of dual Grade I winner Switch (Quiet American). Lot 337 is bred on the same cross as American Pharoah's G2 Park Hill S. winner Pista, and similarly to last year's G1 Criterium International winner and European champion 2-year-old Van Gogh, who is out of a daughter of Sadler's Wells. This was the lone horse in the sale by American Pharoah, who has had two stakes winners in Japan: G1 February S. winner Cafe Pharoah and Listed Japan Dirt Derby scorer Danon Pharaoh.

Another American Horse of the Year, Bricks and Mortar, was represented by his first foals on Tuesday, with all seven offered selling for an average of ¥54,142,857 ($490,401/€414,681/£354,419). And yet another, California Chrome, saw his first Japanese-bred foals go through the ring; three sold from four offered for an average of ¥22,666,666 ($205,448/€173,626/£148,376). Justify, whose one offering at the yearling sale sold for ¥200-million, had a one foal offered on Tuesday, a colt out of American champion 2-year-old filly Caledonia Road (Quality Road) (lot 344) who sold to Miki Masahiro for ¥135-million ($1,223,629/€1,034,235/£884,097).

The post Frankel Colt Among Japan Sale Leaders appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Choux Flies In Face Of Adversity

Over the past week, trainer David Evans has sent out 10 runners with six returning as winners, including all four of his starters on Friday evening. Though the impressive climb of the Wokingham S. winner Rohaan (Ire) (Mayson {GB}) may have grabbed plenty of headlines, one of his stable-mates who is equally deserving of plenty of attention is the juvenile filly Choux (Ire) (Exceed And Excel {Aus}).

On the face of it, her story looks pretty straightforward. Choux was clearly so fancied by some on debut that she was the subject to the biggest betting plunge of the season when leaving the paddock at Thirsk as a 40/1 shot and being backed in to 10/3 by the time the stalls opened. She duly obliged on the soft ground that day and went straight to Royal Ascot for the G2 Queen Mary S.

Good to firm ground both there and at Newmarket for the Listed Empress Fillies' S. was not to her liking, but back on very soft turf at Deauville on Sunday, Choux struck with her first black-type victory in the listed Prix Yacowlef.

Her life hasn't always been plain-sailing though, as Choux's co-breeder Mairead O'Grady explains. “We sold her as a foal for €23,000 and then they sent us a video of her windsucking. She was a bit of a surprise boomerang as we certainly hadn't witnessed it at home.”

A Kildare-based vet who specialises in cattle, O'Grady owns broodmares in partnership with fellow vet Adrian McMullan, who owns a mixed veterinary practice in Northern Ireland.

She adds, “It was not what we expected and it was certainly a bit of an ordeal to get her back from the UK. But so bet it: it happens and you just have to take it on the chin and move on, and that's what we did. The yearling sales weren't an option and we chatted to a few people about the breeze-up sales, but in the end Richard Kent was fantastic and he introduced us to Dave and Emma Evans.”

The breeders bought Choux's dam Puff Pastry (GB) (Pivotal {GB}) from Philippa Cooper's Normandie Stud at the December Sale of 2016 for 21,000gns. Now 13, Puff Pastry is a daughter of Soft Centre (GB) (Zafonic), whose half-sister French Dressing (GB) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) is the dam of this season's G3 Hampton Court S. winner Mohaafeth (Ire) (Frankel {GB}). 

O'Grady says, “We really wanted to give the mare a chance and we thought to ourselves 'what do we do with an Exceed And Excel yearling standing in the field?'” 

They turned to their neighbour Jeremy Maxwell, breeder of Grand National winner Rhyme 'N' Reason (GB), for help in the early stages of the filly's pre-training.

“Jeremy  broke her for us because he's local to where the horses are in County Down. He got her started and then Ross Crawford, who wouldn't normally take in a lot of Flat horses, got her riding,” she continues. “I wanted her to go in to Dave's yard knowing everything she had to do, and all they had to do was teach her to run faster. Dave worked away with her and managed to find a buyer for us privately. He and Emma have both been fantastic, and so has Richard, who is a gentleman and has been a huge help and support. For Choux even to become a winner was a great success in itself, but for her to become a listed winner on Sunday was just beyond our expectations altogether.”

The duo sold Puff Pastry's current yearling, a daughter of Ribchester (Ire) at last year's foal sale through Richard Kent's Mickley Stud for 18,000gns, but they now have a wait for the next offspring following yet another reversal.

“Two days before Choux came out at Thirsk we lost Puff's Sioux Nation foal at the foaling,” O'Grady explains. “So that was unfortunate but thankfully the mare was okay. Because she was late we were already going to give her a year off so that's what we've done. She's in great form and is out in the field looking fantastic but sadly we have two years with nothing to sell from her.”

She continues, “It's a family which has had quite a lot of nice fillies which means there are a lot of nice broodmares on the page and a lot of good things are happening. It's great for us to be able to contribute a little bit of black-type to that page now, especially when it didn't come easy. It was a tortuous journey to bounce back from a voided sale to get a listed win in Deauville on Sunday.”

O'Grady and McMullan have three mares “for a bit of fun”, with the other two both being in foal this year.

She says, “Adrian and I worked together in a veterinary practice in the north for a couple of years and that's where I kind of got introduced to horses. It's a hobby and up to now it's paid for itself. It's never made anyone hugely rich but it's fantastic and we do it all ourselves. It teaches you an awful lot.”

The post Choux Flies In Face Of Adversity appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Stakes Winners Front Run The Fed, Stilleto Boy Top Vibrant Renewal Of Fasig-Tipton July Selected Horses Of Racing Age Sale

Fasig-Tipton held two sales Monday at Newtown Paddocks in Lexington, Ky.: the inaugural July Breeding Stock sale, featuring the Far From Over/Fountain of Youth Dispersal, and a successful renewal of the July Selected Horses of Racing Age sale.

“I don't think there were any surprises today,” Fasig-Tipton president Boyd Browning said of the July Selected Horses of Racing Age sale. “It was a very active market with very competitive bidding throughout the day. [It had a] really vibrant feel to it.”

Front Run the Fed (Hip 647), a 5-year-old stakes winning son of Fed Biz, topped the sale when sold for $440,000 to George Sharp (video).

“I got tired of being outbid, and decided I was going to go to half a million on this one, because I want to go to the Breeders' Cup this year,” Sharp said. “I've got some nice 2-year-old fillies that I think I'll get there with, but this one is hopefully certainly going to get me there.

“We might race him once in Del Mar, almost certainly Kentucky Downs, and then the Breeders' Cup,” he continued.

ELiTE, agent consigned the five-year-old son of Fed Biz, who is a multiple graded stakes placed stakes winner with earnings of $392,150 to date. Front Run the Fed's current record stands at 4-4-2 in 13 career starts, including a win in the Better Talk Now Stakes at three and placings in the 2020 Grade 3 Runhappy Turf Sprint Stakes and 2021 G3 Poker Stakes behind Grade 1 winners Oleksandra (AUS) and Raging Bull (FR).

Recent Iowa Derby winner Stilleto Boy (Hip 557)  was the second-highest priced offering of the day, selling for $420,000 to Steve Moger (video).

Paramount Sales, agent consigned the 3-year-old Shackleford gelding, who has earned $249,675. Stilleto Boy has been in the money in all of his seven career starts, with a record of 2-2-2. Stilleto Boy is a half-brother to eight other winners out of 100-percent winner-producer Rosie's Ransom, including stakes winner Rosie My Rosie (Purge).

The top-priced filly was Josie (Hip 501) who got the sale off to a spectacular start when sold for $300,000 to KatieRich Farms as the first horse through the ring (video).

ELiTE, agent consigned the 4-year-old Race Day filly, who won the Iowa Distaff Stakes at Prairie Meadows on July 3 to increase earnings to $266,867. Josie has a record of 4-4-2 in 14 career starts, and is having a an excellent 2021, with three wins in four starts to date. Josie is one of seven winners out of the stakes winning Awesome Again mare Spirited Away, who has also produced Grade 2 winner/multiple graded stakes winner Prospective (Malibu Moon) and Malibu Cove (Malibu Moon), dam of Grade 2 winner/Grade 1 placed Kalypso.

In total, 79 horses of racing age sold for $5,905,500, up 16.4 percent from when 81 horses sold for $5,072,000 last year. The average rose 19.4 percent to $74,753 from $62,617 in 2020, while the median rose 66.7 percent to $50,000 from $30,000 last year. Fifteen horses sold for $100,000 or more, compared to 11 in 2020. The RNA rate fell to 24.8 percent. Full results are available online.

Jeweled Princess tops inaugural July Breeding Stock sale

Hip 448, Jeweled Princess, brought $225,000 at the 2021 Fasig-Tipton July Breeding Stock Sale.

Jeweled Princess (Hip 448), a stakes winning daughter of Cairo Prince, topped the July Breeding Stock sale when sold for $225,000 to Stoneriggs Farm (video).

Gainesway consigned the 4-year-old filly, who was offered carrying her first foal, by Horse of the Year and current leading first-crop sire Gun Runner. Jeweled Princess is out of a Scat Daddy half-sister to current stakes winner Miss Brazil, from the immediate family of Horse of the Year Military Attack, two-time champion Gladiatorus, and Grade/Group 1 winners Al Bahathri, Haafhd, The Hangman.

Colonial Creed (Hip 434), a multiple graded stakes placed daughter of Jimmy Creed, took the top broodmare prospect spot when sold for $175,000 to Andre Lynch, agent. South Point Sales Agency consigned the 5-year-old mare, who is a twice graded stakes placed winner who earned $223,881. Colonial Creed is half-sister to multiple graded stakes placed stakes winner Mo d'Amour (Uncle Mo), from the immediate family of Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf victor Line of Duty (IRE).

The most expensive broodmare with a foal-at-foot was multiple stakes winner Too Much Prada (Hip 421), who sold for $150,000 to The Elkstone Group with her 2021 Violence filly. Stuart Morris, agent for Far From Over/Fountain of Youth Dispersal consigned the 8-year-old Too Much Bling mare, who is a full sister to stakes winner Prada's Bling. Too Much Prada has a 2-year-old filly by Violence, which has not started, and a yearling colt by Violence. Her 2021 Violence filly was bred in Kentucky by BTSK Breeding and Racing.

“In the grand scheme of things, it was encouraging,” Browning said of the inaugural July Breeding Stock sale, which was a late addition to the sales calendar. “People (sellers) that tried it with an open mind were pretty well rewarded.”

During the breeding stock session, 44 fillies and mares changed hands for $2,012,000, good for an average of $45,727 and a median of $31,000. The RNA rate was 13.7 percent. Full results are available online.

Selling resumes tomorrow at 10 a.m. with the return of The July Sale.

The post Stakes Winners Front Run The Fed, Stilleto Boy Top Vibrant Renewal Of Fasig-Tipton July Selected Horses Of Racing Age Sale appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Letter To The Editor: Let Baffert Race While Due Process Plays Out

I would respectfully disagree with Arthur Gray's assumption (in his letter to the editor concerning the New York Racing Association's right of exclusion of trainer Bob Baffert) that it is up to the racing gods to set the court on the right path.

Most racing jurisdictions have a state appointed racing commission which is authorized to issue a license to participate to all individuals, tracks and other entities that are involved with legalized racing. As long as a trainer holds a valid license in a particular jurisdiction, I find it unfair for a track to deny a racing entry of a qualified horse.

I may be mistaken, but I believe that in Louisiana (a jurisdiction in which I have been involved in racing for some 50+ years) an entry must be accepted if a trainer is licensed and a horse fits the conditions of the race. I also see this as a policy that can be easy abused by racing secretaries as they not only write the conditions of the race but could select the entries.

Until Mr. Baffert is issued a ruling (concerning Medina Spirit's positive test from the Kentucky Derby), he should be allowed to race in any jurisdiction where he holds a license that was issued by that jurisdiction. If and when he is issued a ruling, then the individual jurisdictions can decide if they will honor that ruling.

I do acknowledge a track's right to select those trainers that are granted stalls for a particular meet.

I am not an “integrity consultant” nor have I ever worked with one, but I did  practice veterinary medicine on various racetracks for some 30+ years and am past Equine Medical Director for the Louisiana State Racing Commission.

I do believe in due process and until that is granted to Mr Baffert (or any other trainer), let them race.

– Tom V David, DVM

If you would like to submit a letter to the editor, please write to info at paulickreport.com and include contact information where you may be reached if editorial staff have any questions.

Additional stories about Baffert's Kentucky Derby positive and ensuing legal battles can be found here.

The post Letter To The Editor: Let Baffert Race While Due Process Plays Out appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights