OBS Spring Sale Storms to Record-Setting Conclusion

by Jessica Martini & Christie DeBernardis

OCALA, FL – The Ocala Breeders' Sales Company's Spring Sale of 2-Year-Olds, which had already surpassed its record gross during Thursday's penultimate session, powered straight through to the finish Friday, concluding with new highwater marks for average and median, as well as gross. At the end of four days of selling, 707 head had grossed $91,984,000. The previous record gross, set just last year, was $73,907,900. The average of $130,105 and median of $65,000 were well ahead of previous marks of $108,903 and $60,000, both set in 2019.

During the 2021 Spring sale, 724 juveniles grossed $73,874,900 for an average of $102,037 and a median of $50,000.

“It was a heck of a horse sale,” OBS Director of Sales Tod Wojciechowski said at the close of business Friday. “There were gains and records on all fronts. And, I believe, it's the first time we've ever sold at least one million-dollar horse on every day. You can't say enough about the quality of horses that the consignors brought and the buying bench that showed up, across the board–internationally and domestically. There was great participation on all fronts.”

Friday's final session of the Spring sale was topped by a filly by Munnings who became the auction's fifth seven-figure juvenile when selling for $1.6 million to Larry Best's OXO Equine. The sale's overall top price came during Tuesday's first session when a colt by Uncle Mo sold to Amr Zedan for $2.3 million. It was the first time the Spring sale had produced a sale over $2 million since 2017.

“April has become the go-to 2-year-old sale,” Wojciechowski said. “It's proven itself over and over again. Horses go win all over the world, over all different surfaces, and there is quite an array of different levels for them to shop.”

De Meric sales was the leading consignor at the Spring sale, selling 35 juveniles for $9,308,000, followed by Eddie Woods, who sold 28 head for $8,444,000, including Friday's session topper.

“I thought at the March sale, I had never sold in a market like it before,” Woods said. “Ten years ago, if you told someone there would be half a dozen seven-figure horses in the April sale, they'd lock you up. It used to be just a sale, but it's grown and grown and grown. It's the [Keeneland] September [Yearling] Sale of 2-year-old sales. It's fabulous.”

Chad Schumer was the Spring sale's leading buyer, purchasing 15 head for $3,030,000. The success of the April sale reflects a worldwide demand for horses, according to Schumer.

“I do some pinhooking in Europe at the breeze-up sales and we sold in Dubai, I think the same thing is true everywhere. People want horses,” Schumer said. “We are out of COVID now, people want to get back to life and enjoy themselves. They want to spend money. And in the U.S., the prices are justified by the purses. There are $100,000 maidens at Keeneland, Churchill and New York. California is not far behind and I understand Louisiana is going to jump up. And Kentucky Downs is $130,000. You buy a horse here for $250,000 and you win two races and you're out. It's never been like that before. So people really have a chance.”

Schumer continued, “I also think–with all due respect to some of the big buyers of the past–they are not buying as much as in the past and I think a lot of people, especially in America, feel like they have a real chance to buy what they want. If you look at the results sheets, there is a deep bench of buyers. It's not one person or one country, it's a very diverse buying bench. And they've done a wonderful job putting this catalogue together. There is something here for everyone.”

Woods and Munnings, a Winning Combination

Eddie Woods was quite successful with Munnings fillies last year. He sold now-Grade I winner Eda for $550,000 at the OBS March Sale and sold undefeated G3 UAE Oaks victress Shahama for $425,000 at last term's April sale. The horseman hit another homerun courtesy of a Munnings filly Friday when Hip 1174, a $250,000 KEESEP buy, summoned a whopping $1.6-million from OXO Equine's Larry Best. Bloodstock agent Christina Jelm acted on behalf of Best, who was not in attendance.

Munnings has obviously been very good to me over the years,” said Woods. “He is a great stallion and has been appreciated in recent years. That filly was amazing. I was shocked at what she brought to be quite honest. I thought she'd get to $1 million, but here comes Larry Best, and when he wants one, he wants one. She is the only 2-year-old he bought this year and I hope she turns out for him. He's a great client of mine anyway. He kind of snuck in under the radar. I didn't see him coming.”

Jelm preferred to remain out of the spotlight, deferring comments on the filly to Best, but did say, “She's tall, elegant, fast and eye-catching. Larry wanted her, and I was just helping him out.”

Bred by the Cantrell Family Partnership, Hip 1174 is out of hard-knocking, six-time Louisiana stakes winner Tensas Harbor (Private Vow). The flashy chestnut breezed in a swift :9 4/5 for Woods during the under-tack show.

“She's a wonderful filly,” Woods said. “She's been a class act from day one, from the first time I looked at her in Lexington at Woodford. I've been lucky buying off Woodford, too. It's been a pretty good journey.”

Hip 1174 was the second seven-figure seller for Woods this week, following Thursday's $1.7-million Tapit colt (Hip 885). —@CDeBernardisTDN

Filly Justifies Buy-Back

A filly by Justify (hip 1139), who was bought back by breeder Diamond Creek Farm for $325,000 at last year's Fasig-Tipton October sale, sold for $800,000 when returned to the ring at OBS Friday. Bloodstock agent Chad Schumer, acting on behalf of an undisclosed client, made the winning bid on the juvenile.

“Obviously, it's the first crop of a Triple Crown winner,” Schumer said. “Of course they are going to be in demand. He is the son of a sire of sires, unbeaten, there is so much excitement about his first crop. The filly was absolutely lovely. She had a great breeze (:21 1/5), a great physical, and she vetted well.”

The gray filly is out of Susie's Baby (Giant's Causeway) and her 5-year-old half-sister Family Way (Uncle Mo) recently won the GIII Orchid S. at Gulfstream Park.

Hip 1139 was consigned by Wavertree Stables on behalf of Adam Bowden's Diamond Creek Farm.

“Mike Akers bought her back for Diamond Creek Farm,” Wavertree's Ciaran Dunne explained of the yearling result. “They thought she would be a better 2-year-old than she was a yearling. Obviously they were right.”

Susie's Baby, in foal to Constitution, sold for $600,000 at this year's Keeneland January sale.

Hip 1139 is another in a line of juvenile sales success stories who had originally been targeted at the yearling sales.

“I think that breeders are getting smarter about the type of horse that they retain,” Dunne said. “For the longest time, they had the preconceived notion that small, quick horses would be perfect for the 2-year-old sales. And I think some of them have now realized that we need two-turn type horses. I think they are being more selective about what they send and I think that's why you are seeing the better results.”

Schumer, bidding on behalf of the same client, purchased a colt by Goldencents (hip 546) for $535,000 during the second session of the Spring sale. After that Wednesday purchase, Schumer said he hoped the competitive market he was buying into continued Thursday when he would be selling.

Asked Friday how the change of hats went, Schumer said, “I sold really well. I was a little shocked by how well we sold. We had a Malibu Moon (hip 924) we bought for $30,000 as a yearling [at Keeneland September] and we knew he would sell well. He was a lovely colt and a great mover and he was well-prepared by the consignor. But [the $330,000 sale] was literally about double what I expected.” @JessMartiniTDN

Desormeaux & Gase Stay Busy in Ocala

After his first racehorse Call Me Midnight (Midnight Lute) (an $80,000 OBSMAR buy) put him on the GI Kentucky Derby trail with a win in the GIII Lecomte S. earlier this year, new owner Ben Gase was eager to tackle this year's juvenile sales. His trainer Keith Desormeaux represented him in Ocala this week, securing three horses, topped by a $650,000 daughter of Bolt d'Oro (Hip 1017).

“I'm usually the guy buying the ones under the radar,” said Desormeaux. “Ben Gase is a new, very excited owner. He bought his first horse last year at the March Sale, a horse called Call Me Midnight, who was on the Derby trail. He really got excited about it, enthusiastic, and decided to open up his checkbook.”

Desormeaux is typically seen shopping more of the bargain buys. His other purchases for Gase this week were a $90,000 Cairo Prince colt (Hip 252) and a $400,000 Twirling Candy filly (Hip 641).

When asked if he had expected to spend this much on Hip 1017, Desormeaux said, “Hell no! I thought she'd bring $200,000 or $300,000. To double that, is a stretch, but Ben told me, 'Don't come home without her.' I'm usually very conservative, but she was so nice, I had to stretch for her.”

Bred by Spendthrift Farm, Hip 1017 is out of Australian MSW & MGSP Scorpio Queen (Aus) (Choisir) and hails from the family of Aussie G1SW Toledo. The bay breezed in :9 4/5 for the de Merics.

“That's the easiest buy I've ever made,” Desormeaux said. “She was awesome. I don't have one complaint about her. We come to the 2-year-old-in-training sales because we can see them at work. We can see how they handle it mentally and physically. She just passed all the grades. She blew my socks off.”

Eaton's Reiley McDonald purchased the filly for just $35,000 under the name of his farm Athens Woods at Keeneland September. —@CDeBernardisTDN

Moore Restocks at OBS

Hootie Moore had upwards of 30 horses in training a few years ago, but with the pandemic he cut his numbers back dramatically. The Arkansas-based owner was restocking this week at OBS where he purchased a filly by Connect (hip 1091) for $550,000 from the consignment of Eddie Woods Friday.

“We liked everything about her,” Moore said of the juvenile. “She's the one we've been waiting on the whole sale. Everything is costing a lot more than it should, but we went ahead and we'll see.”

The filly, who worked a furlong last week in :10 flat, is out of stakes winner Special Dream (Officer) and is a half-sister to stakes placed Momameamaria (Quality Road).

Moore also purchased a colt by Runhappy (hip 427) for $160,000. Both juveniles will be trained by John Ortiz.

“I have had up to 35 horses, but during COVID, I like to go on the backside, so I went down to almost nothing,” Moore said.

Moore did his bidding while sporting a cap promoting Barber Road (Race Day) and he owns horses in partnership with that GI Kentucky Derby contender's owners Bill and Tammy Simon's WSS Racing. The Simons and Moore campaigned 2019 GIII Winning Colors S. winner Honey Bunny (Tapizar).

Bill Harrigan's Miacomet Farm purchased the filly for $80,000 at last year's Keeneland September sale.

Later in Friday's session, Moore added a colt by Oscar Performance (hip 1210) for $120,000. @JessMartiniTDN

Grassroots Powers Through at OBS

David McKathan and Jody Mihalic's Grassroots Training and Sales served notice it was in line for a strong Spring sale with a series of bullet workers during the under-tack preview and the operation duly delivered in the sales ring this week, ultimately selling all 40 juveniles it sent through the ring.

“For us, people know that we sell our horses,” Mihalic said. “We deal in volume and we sell them and we love when people do well with the horses they buy from us. We work really hard to buy them right and they work really hard and buy them right.”

Grassroots biggest sale of the week was a $275,000 daughter of Street Boss (hip 346) who worked a furlong last week in a bullet :9 3/5. The filly had been purchased for $22,000 at last year's Keeneland September sale.

Other pinhooking scores included a colt by Freud–a $50,000 Fasig-Tipton New York-bred sale acquisition–who sold for $215,000 and a filly by Good Samaritan–purchased for $55,000 at last year's Fasig-Tipton October sale–who sold for $210,000.

During Friday's session of the four-day auction, Grassroots sold a filly by Jimmy Creed, who worked in :9 4/5 last week, for $185,000. She had been a $38,000 purchase at last year's Fasig-Tipton October sale.

Grassroots horses found plenty of buyers in the middle market in Ocala.

“I think everybody is getting shuffled up as the economy goes and the overall dollar value has marked everything up so much,” Mihalic said. “So everyone has had to step up a little bit into that middle market.”

Of the operation's perfect strike rate, Mihalic said, “It's fantastic. And now I have 40 more heading to Maryland.” @JessMartiniTDN

Into Mischief Filly Returns to Her Breeder

Breeder Robert S. Evans sold his Into Mischief filly out of Squeeze (Lemon Drop Kid) to the Recio's Lynwood Stable for $150,000 at Keeneland September. But, when she returned to the auction ring at OBS Friday, he decided he had to have her back, going to $525,000 to secure Hip 1097. Trainer Kent Sweezey bid on his owner's behalf.

“She worked really well [:9 4/5],” Sweezey said. “She's gorgeous. He loves the family and the way she moved. Gene Recio gave us the thumbs up. She's a queen, so we will see how she runs. She will probably come with me to Palm Meadows or Monmouth with a goal of running at Saratoga.”

Evans bought Squeeze for $350,000 at Keeneland September and this filly is her second foal. Squeeze is a half-sister to GSW Ocho Ocho Ocho (Street Sense) and GSP Private Ensign (A.P. Indy).

The Recios had another pinhooking score just a few hips earlier when a Java's War colt (Hip 1092) they purchased for $72,000 at the Fasig-Tipton October Sale brought $175,000 from Joseph Graffeo.

“She was just a really good individual,” Recio said. “She didn't turn a hair wrong the whole time we had her. She was as straight-forward of a 2-year-old sales horse as I've ever had. Whenever you meet the magic :9 4/5-:10 flat number for a filly with that kind of quality pedigree, you hope for a price like that, but you never expect it. We are very thankful.” —@CDeBernardisTDN

 

The post OBS Spring Sale Storms to Record-Setting Conclusion appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Munnings Filly Tops Record-Breaking OBS Spring Sale’s Final Session

Hip No. 1174, a daughter of Munnings consigned by Eddie Woods, Agent, went to OXO Equine LLC for $1.6-million to top the fourth and final session of the Ocala Breeders' Sales Company's record breaking 2022 Spring Sale of 2-Year-Olds in Training.

The chestnut filly, whose eighth in :9 4/5 was co-fastest at the distance at Saturday's Under Tack session, is out of stakes winner Tensas Harbor, by Private Vow, a half sister to stakes placed OBS graduate Harbor Pilot.

Hip No. 1139, a daughter of Justify consigned by Wavertree Stables, Inc. (Ciaran Dunne), Agent, was sold for $800,000 to Chad Schumer, Agent. The gray or roan filly, who breezed an Under Tack quarter in :21 1/5 at Saturday's Under Tack session, is a half sister to graded stakes winner Family Way, winner of Gulfstream's recent Grade 3 Orchid Stakes, out of Susie's Baby, by Giant's Causeway.

Hip No. 1017, a daughter of Bolt d'Oro consigned by de Meric Sales, Agent, went to Ben Gase for $650,000. The bay filly, whose eighth on Friday in :9 4/5 was the session's co-fastest at the distance, is out of graded stakes placed stakes winner Scorpio Queen (AUS), by Choisir, from the family of Grade 1 winner Toledo.

Hip No. 1091, a daughter of Connect consigned by Eddie Woods, Agent, was sold to Hooties Racing LLC for $550,000. The dark bay or brown filly, who breezed an Under Tack eighth in :10 flat on Saturday, is a half sister to stakes placed OBS graduate Momameamaria out of graded stakes placed stakes winner Special Dream, by Officer.

Hip No. 1097, a daughter of Into Mischief consigned by Gene Recio, Agent, was sold to Kent Sweezey, Agent for R. S. Evans, for $525,000. The bay filly, whose Under Tack eighth in :9 4/5 was co-fastest on Saturday, is out of Squeeze, by Lemon Drop Kid, a half sister to graded stakes winning OBS Spring Sale graduate Ocho Ocho Ocho.

For the day, 159 horses brought a total of $18,775,000 compared with 167 selling for a total of $19,063,000 last year. The average price was $118,082, compared to $114,150 in 2021, while the median price was $60,000 compared to $65,000 a year ago. The buyback percentage was 20.5 percent; it was 14.4 percent in 2021.

For the entire sale, 710 horses sold for a Spring Sale record total of $92,070,000 compared with the previous record 724 horses bringing $73,874,900 in 2021. The average price was a sale record $129,676, (surpassing 2019's record $108,227) compared with $102,037 a year ago. The median was $65,000, compared to last year's $50,000 and surpassing 2019's previous $60,000 record. The buyback percentage was 15.2 percent; it was 13.1 percent last year.

Five horses, including today's Hip No. 1174 sold for $1-million or more at the 2022 Spring Sale.

The overall sale topper was Hip No. 206, a son of Uncle Mo consigned by Top Line Sales LLC, Agent, sold to Gary Young, Agent for Zedan Racing Stables, Inc., for $2.3-million at Tuesday's opening session. The bay colt, who breezed an eighth in :9 4/5 at Monday's Under Tack session, is out of Borealis Night, by Astrology, a half sister to graded stakes placed Kinsley Kisses.

To view the auction's full results, click here.

The post Munnings Filly Tops Record-Breaking OBS Spring Sale’s Final Session appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Returning Champion Malathaat Defeats Bonny South In Doubledogdare

Making her first start since a third-place finish in the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Distaff, Shadwell Stable's Malathaat, the 3-year-old filly champion of 2021, was victorious in Friday's Grade 3 Doubledogdare Stakes at Keeneland in Lexington, Ky.

Ridden by John Velazquez, the Curlin filly trained by Todd Pletcher covered 1 1/16 miles in 1:44.58, holding off another comebacker, Juddmonte's Bonny South (winner of the 2021 Doubledogdare), by three-quarters of a length. Super Quick and Lady Mystify finished another length back in a dead-heat for third. They were followed by Audrey's Time and Crazy Beautiful.

Winning for the seventh time in nine career starts, Malathaat paid $2.60 as the 1-5 favorite.

Bred in Kentucky By Stonestreet Thoroughbred Holdings LLC and sold by consignor Denali Stud for $1,050,000 as a yearling, Malathaat was produced from the G1-winning A.P. Indy mare Dreaming of Julia. Malathaat won three G1 races – the Ashland Stakes at Keeneland, the Kentucky Oaks at Churchill Downs and the Alabama Stakes at Saratoga – en route to her Eclipse Award last year. Her only defeats came when second, beaten a head by Maracuja in the G1 Coaching Club America Oaks, and when third, beaten a half-length by Marche Lorraine in the Distaff.

Pletcher said Malathaat had a good freshening at Shadwell Farm after the Breeders' Cup and resumed training earlier this year at Palm Beach Downs in Florida. While he had the G1 La Troienne Stakes at Churchill Downs on May 6 as a backup plan for the filly's return, Pletcher said he hoped to race Malthaat over the Keeneland surface, not only because of her win in the Ashland but because this year's Breeders' Cup will be conducted there.

In the Doubledogdare, Malathaat broke from the inside post position, but Velazquez allowed her to drift well off the rail and four wide into the first turn as Super Quick and Lady Mystify battled on the front end for the opening quarter mile in :23.74. Lady Mystify and Flavien Prat opened up a sizable lead down the backstretch, clicking off a half-mile fraction in :46.89 and six furlongs in 1:11.75.

Malthaat was in fourth position, about nine lengths behind the leader, midway down the backstretch until Velazquez asked her for some run. She gained on the leader around the far turn and was on even terms with Lady Mystify at the top of the stretch. Malathaat took the advantage while racing on her left lead, covering the mile in 1:37.83, then switched to her right lead and easily held sway over Bonny South. The latter was last early, swung widest into the stretch and finished well in her first start since a second-place finish in the G2 Fall City Stakes at Churchill Downs last Nov. 25.

After breaking from the rail, Malathaat (left) was widest of all into the first turn of the Doubledogdare

“We got to the backstretch and I kind of let her do her thing, getting her mind on her business,” Velazquez said of Malathaat, “but by the time we got to the three-eighths pole, I'm like, 'Man, now I'm too soon.' I got her out a little too quick. Down the lane I went to make her switch her lead and she got lost looking for the field. Then the other horse (Bonny South) got to her and she went on again, so it was very nice. We know when she gets to the lead she starts waiting, so it was a good comeback for her.”

“She was all class in the end,” said Pletcher.

Brad Cox, trainer of Bonny South, was not disappointed with the effort by the 5-year-old daughter of Munnings.

“That was a big effort; she ran well,” Cox said. “Very happy with her effort. This will set her up for, hopefully, a big year. And, hopefully, a Grade 1 because she has knocked on the door so many times that we feel like we have to win one. This was a good run off the (five-month) layoff and something we can build off of.”

Malathaat, a 4-year filly by Curlin, has now won seven of her nine lifetime starts

The post Returning Champion Malathaat Defeats Bonny South In Doubledogdare appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

In Arizona, Fatality Rates Continue To Outpace National Average

Equine fatality rates in Arizona aren't getting better.

That was one takeaway from the track safety report provided by state veterinarian Dr. Sue Gale at this week's meeting of the Arizona Racing Commission.

Gale revealed that the statewide average catastrophic injury rate was 3.34 per 1,000 starts for the past fiscal year — well more than twice the national average from 2021 of 1.39. When split by track, Gale indicated that Arizona Downs had a comparatively safe meet last summer with a rate of 1.37 per 1,000 starts, while the Turf Paradise meeting that started in November was 2.99 per 1,000 starts through the end of March.

Gale did not provide a rate for Rillito Park's recent meet because “if they had one fatality, their rate would have been 4.00 [per 1,000 starts] and of course they had more than that. So the rate is somewhat limited in its value.”

One “start” is the event of one horse leaving the gate in one race; a field of seven horses leaving the gate in a race therefore translates to seven starts. Expressing fatal injuries as events per 1,000 starts when looking at a race meet, state, or nationally is intended to account for variation in the number of horses per race or number of races in a given location or time period.

Gale said that she did speak with the track veterinarian at Rillito after its opening card was marred by two horse deaths, and after the veterinarian began walking the track surface with the superintendent, pointing out areas of surface inconsistency, the meet concluded with two weekends of safe racing.

For a portion of the Turf Paradise meet, Gale had said she was the only veterinarian conducting pre-race examinations on horses, and has admitted in previous meetings she was unable to see every horse before they ran. She had also said the veterinary staffing shortage also interfered with her ability to review entries for high risk horses whose condition may merit further scrutiny. Over the past month, Gale said she had assistance from a veterinarian based in Texas who proved a “great resource.”

“As the meet goes towards the latter end of it, horses are starting to show some wear and tear and we're having to scratch several horses each day,” she said. “I think that's been a positive contributor to reducing fatalities.”

Gale pointed out that the fatality total in Arizona has been similar year over year for some time now. The 2019-20 fiscal year for the Arizona commission was shortened by the outbreak of COVID-19, but in that year there were 22 racing fatalities across all three racetracks. In the previous full fiscal year, the number was 20. This fiscal year, it's once again 22.

“We haven't really done much on an annual basis to change these rates, however I will make a note that the last Thoroughbred breakdown we had at Turf Paradise was March 4,” said Gale.

Another Thoroughbred collapsed after coming off the track on March 11.

Gale also noted that the Horseracing Safety and Integrity Authority's safety regulations will go into effect July 1, and some of them could force some positive change in the state. HISA will require the adoption of a voided claim rule, which Gale said “would make a huge difference in this state preventing some of these breakdowns that we have.”

Voided claim rules invalidate claims if the claimed horse is determined by a regulatory veterinarian to be injured in the running of the race, as a way to disincentivize trainers from entering sore horses in hopes of sending them to another barn.

HISA will also require the reinstitution of an equine safety committee to review fatalities and try to create prevention strategies. Gale said there had been such a committee in Arizona in the past, but it is no longer operational.

The post In Arizona, Fatality Rates Continue To Outpace National Average appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights