Filly By Collected Leads Tuesday At Keeneland September Sale

Three Ontario-bred fillies from families of Canadian champions – led by a $320,000 filly from the first crop of Grade 1 winner Collected – commanded the highest prices of Tuesday's eighth session of the Keeneland September Yearling Sale.

Anderson Farms, agent, consigned the session topper, who sold to Speedway Stables. She is out of the Medaglia d'Oro mare Bezzera, a full-sister to Canadian Horse of the Year Wonder Gadot and a half-sister to Grade 1 winner Hard Not to Love.

On Tuesday, Keeneland sold 313 horses for $20,569,000, for an average of $65,716 and a median of $45,000. Cumulative sales are $326,782,000 for 1,801 yearlings sold through the ring, for an average of $181,445 and a median of $120,000.

Two closely related fillies consigned by Canada's Sam-Son Farm brought $300,000 and $295,000.

Ben McElroy, agent, purchased the $300,000 filly, a daughter of Bernardini out of the Unbridled's Song mare Siren's Song. She is from the family of Canadian champions Comet Shine and Irish Mission.

The filly's second dam is stakes winner Misty Mission, by Miswaki, also the second dam of the $295,000 filly, a daughter of Pioneerof the Nile, sold to CJ Thoroughbreds. She is the first foal of stakes winner Mythical Mission, by Giant's Causeway, a full sister to Irish Mission.

A daughter of Shaman Ghost whose half-brother is multiple Grade 1 winner Dortmund sold for $270,000 to White Birch Farm. Consigned by Bona Terra Stud, agent, the filly is out of stakes winner Our Josephina, by Tale of the Cat, and from the family of champion Lakeville Miss, Grade 1 winner Mogambo and Grade 3 winner I'm a Looker.

Quarter Pole Enterprises paid $250,000 for a filly by Munnings out of stakes winner Tensas Harbor, by Private Vow. Consigned by Woodford Thoroughbreds, agent, she is from the family of Grade 3 winner Storm On the Loose.

The session's leading buyer was Gentry Farms, which paid $497,000 for four yearlings.

Taylor Made Sales Agency, agency, led consignors, selling 31 yearlings for $2,168,000.

The September Sale continues tomorrow and runs through Friday. All sessions begin at 10 a.m. ET.

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Collected Filly on Top as Book 4 Concludes

Demand remained high as the Book 4 section of the Keeneland September Yearling Sale concluded with a daughter of first-crop sire Collected leading home a top one-two-three finish for Ontario-breds when selling for a session-topping $320,000 to Speedway Stables. Bloodstock agent Marette Farrell made the winning bid on behalf of Peter Fluor and K.C. Weiner's operation and the yearling was bred and consigned by Dave Anderson's Anderson Farms.

“It's the greatest market I've ever seen in my lifetime,” Anderson said of the September sale. “I have never been so busy in Books 3 and 4 as I was in the last few days. And to see the people in the back ring, it's unreal. It's like Book 1 and 2. I've never seen anything like it. I think there is a lot of money out there and there are a lot of good opportunities. But people are breeding better horses. We've weeded out a lot of the riff-raff and people are realizing they have to have quality to play at the top and I think it's been pretty evident in the prices.”

A total of 643 yearlings sold in the two-session Book 4 for a gross of $48,361,500. The book average was $75,212 and the median was $52,000.

During the 2020 Book 4 section, conducted during the pre-vaccine pandemic, 509 yearlings sold for $23,882,500 for an average of $46,920 and a median of $30,000. The section's top-priced yearling was $320,000–one of 11 to sell for $200,000 or more during the two sessions. Thirty-nine reached that threshold this year.

For pre-pandemic comparisons, the 2019 Book 4 section saw 583 head gross $29,058,200 for an average of $49,843 and a median of $36,000.

Farrell agreed it's been pretty competitive through eight sessions of the 11-day auction.

“I haven't seen this kind of energy in a long, long time,” she said. “It's wonderful for the people in the business, but it's absolutely wild in the streets.”

The Keeneland September sale continues through Friday with sessions beginning daily at 10 a.m.

Collected Filly to Speedway

Collected carried the colors of Peter Fluor and K.C. Weiner's Speedway Stables to victory in the 2017 GI TVG Pacific Classic and, with his first foals now yearlings, the partners were keen to support the stallion. Through bloodstock agent Marette Farrell, Speedway purchased a filly (hip 2622) by the Airdrie Stud stallion for a session-topping $320,000 Tuesday at Keeneland.

“We were thrilled to get her,” Farrell said. “I thought she was an absolute princess and an amazing mover. Peter Fluor and K.C. Weiner wanted me to go out and find what I thought–and I hope I'm right–was the best Collected. And this is the one that I picked.”

The Ontario-bred yearling, bred and consigned by Anderson Farms, is out of the unraced Bezzera (Medaglia d'Oro). The mare is a full-sister to Canadian Horse of the Year Wonder Gadot and a half-sister to Grade I winner Hard Not To Love (Hard Spun).

Farrell acquired another daughter of Collected (hip 437) for $50,000 at the Fasig-Tipton New York-bred Yearling Sale last month.

“We really do believe in Collected,” Farrell said. “We looked at every single one of them on the grounds. And I am excited about what he may do next year. He was a Grade I winner on the dirt, but he's from the Blushing Groom family that was all grass. Every one that I've seen is so powerful. They are all really beautiful movers. And I really think they are going to come out running as 2-year-olds next year.”

Farrell added that buying from regional programs with strong purse structures is an added bonus.

“When we bought the Collected filly, a New York-bred, we wanted to support some of the state-bred horses,” she said. “And the purses in Canada are amazing. It's nice to have the advantage of utilizing that.”

Dave Anderson purchased Loving Vindication (Vindication) for $180,000 at the 2011 Keeneland January sale and bred Wonder Gadot and Hard Not to Love out of her, in addition to the session-topping yearling's dam Bezzera.

“She comes from a wonderful family and I've been fortunate enough to breed some of them,” Anderson said. “I know what the good ones look like in that family. And she really emulated what those other ones looked like. I think Collected added a whole new dimension to the pedigree and brought a lot of great traits. She is just an unbelievable athlete.”

Also Tuesday, Anderson sold another daughter of Collected (hip 2501) for $150,000 to the bid of Matthew Dohman.

“They are athletes. Every single one of them,” Anderson said of Collected's offspring. “They are just such fluid, gifted movers. I am really excited about what he's going to do. They look like they might like some turf, they'll probably like the synthetic. And of course, he ran on the dirt. So, you can go anywhere with these.”

Through eight sessions, 35 yearlings by Collected have sold for $3,852,000. The stallion, who stands for $17,500, has had 16 sell for six figures.

Tuesday's three top-selling yearlings were all Ontario-bred fillies. Following hip 2622 was a pair of fillies from the Sam-Son Farm dispersal. Hip 2517, a daughter of Bernardini out of Siren's Song (Unbridled's Song), sold for $300,000 to bloodstock agent Ben McElroy and hip 2434, a daughter of Pioneerof the Nile out of Mythical Mission (Giant's Causeway), sold for $295,000 to CJ Thoroughbreds.

“I adored that Bernardini filly from Sam-Son,” Farrell admitted. “I thought she was lovely and quality. She deserved it. I hope they will all compete against each other down the line and we'll all remember this day.”

As a longtime Canadian breeder, Anderson took special pride in the trio of Ontario-breds who led Tuesday's session.

“At the end of the day, we worked very hard to rebuild this program in Ontario,” he said. “This shows you can raise a good horse North of the Border and play in the international market. But it's also a great fallback option to have all the added money in Ontario with the bonuses on purses and the breeders rewards.”

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Chicago Mayor Bears Down On Keeping NFL Team From Moving To Arlington Park

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said she is willing to work with Chicago Bears management to seek improvements to Soldier Field, home to the NFL team since 1971, in order to avert a move to a new stadium at Arlington Park racetrack in the city's northwest suburbs.

The Bears are among several entities bidding to purchase Arlington Park from publicly traded  Churchill Downs Inc., which is majority owner of the Rivers Casino about 11 miles away. One of the other bidders, a group led by former Arlington Park president Roy Arnold, hopes to keep racing alive at Arlington while developing some of the property. No other bidders have expressed an interest in continuing racing at the historic track.

The 2021 Arlington Park meet closes this Saturday, Sept. 25. The track did not seek racing dates in 2022.

When the Bears confirmed in June they made an offer to buy Arlington to pursue a new stadium, Lightfoot downplayed the possibility of the Bears leaving Soldier Field, where they have a lease that runs through 2033. The 62,000-seat lakefront stadium, the smallest in the NFL, is owned by the Chicago Park District. It was renovated nearly 20 years ago at a cost of over $600 million to the city but is no match for some of the NFL's new stadiums, including So-Fi – home of the Los Angeles Rams and Chargers – built at a cost of $5.5 billion on the old Hollywood Park racetrack property in Inglewood, Calif.

When the Bears said they were looking to move to Arlington Park, Lightfoot chided them to focus more on “putting a winning team on the field, beating the Packers finally and being relevant past October. Everything else is noise.”

In comments to the editorial board of the Chicago Sun-Times on Monday, Lightfoot said she is willing to work with the team on expansion and improvements to Soldier Field in a “fiscally-prudent way.”

Lightfoot wants the stadium to generate year-round revenue for Chicago outside of Bears games and would like to improve the experience for fans.

“I am a Bears fan. I want the Bears to stay in the city of Chicago,” she said. “”And we are willing to work with them to try to address their concerns. … We are evaluating ways in which we can enhance the fan experience at Soldier Field. … I know that it can be better.”

Read more at Chicago Sun-Times

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Celebration of Life for Recio at Keeneland Oct. 1

In lieu of a funeral, a Celebration of Life for Mike Recio will be held at the Thoroughbred Club of America next to Keeneland on Friday, Oct. 1, from 6:30-9:00pm. Everyone who was a friend, family, business associate, etc., is invited to come tell some stories, and celebrate his life. Food and drinks will be served. Bloodstock agent and consignor Mike Recio passed away Sept. 16, at the age of 46 after battling sepsis.

The son of respected Ocala horseman Bill Recio, he had been involved in the Thoroughbred racing and breeding industry for the majority of his life. He leaves behind his wife Nancy, his twins Wesley and Addison, whom he adored, his mother Lynn and father Bill, as well as his brother Gene, sister Katie Cauthen, brother-in-law Doug Cauthen, and niece Campbell Cauthen.

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