Treasure Hunting Presented By Keeneland: Colonel Liam Seemed Too Good To Be True For Dunne

Value can be found at every level of the Keeneland September Yearling Sale, and in the “Treasure Hunting” series, we'll be examining successful graduates of the bellwether auction who sold below the median price of their particular session.

We'll start at Book 1 and go all the way to Book 6, talking to buyers who found horses that slipped under the commercial radar in their given segment of the marketplace. 

For a moment after the fall of the hammer, Ciaran Dunne thought he'd bought the wrong horse.

It was Book 2 of the 2018 Keeneland September Yearling Sale, and Dunne had just signed the ticket on Hip 1272, a Liam's Map colt, for $50,000 under his Waves Bloodstock banner. Before the horse went through the ring, he'd valued him at several times more than that.

For the 2018 September sale's fifth session – the first day of trade for Book 2 for that year's renewal – the median sale price was $135,000. The colt that would become multiple Grade 1 winner Colonel Liam wasn't the least expensive horse of the day, but he was certainly closer to the bottom of the list than the top.

“Liam's Map had been selling really well, and obviously, when you get that deep in the sale, it's kind of a pull the trigger or go home situation,” Dunne said.

Dunne had the horse, but he also had plenty of questions about that horse, and whether his own eye had somehow failed him.

“When the hammer dropped, my first instinct was that I bought the wrong horse, and somehow or other I'd messed up and gone on ahead and bid on the wrong one,” he said. “Then, my second thought was maybe I read the vet report wrong. We were just shocked we got him for what we got him for. We had appraised him for something around $150,000 to $200,000.

“Very rarely when I buy one at Keeneland September do I go back to the barn and see them afterwards,” he continued. “Usually, you just don't have time. There's so much going on, and you're kind of just moving on. I actually made the trip down to the barn to try and see how I'd screwed up, and what we missed. I honestly thought that we'd really stepped in it.

Dunne ventured down to the Darby Dan Sales consignment in Barn 10 on the Keeneland property to look at his new colt and figure out why the expectation and the hammer price were so far out of sync.

“I went back down to the Darby Dan barn and pulled him out, and Renee [Logan, Darby Dan's sales director] was there, and when I got there, she goes, 'I'm glad you came. I just wanted to tell you…' and I'm thinking, 'Oh, here it comes.'” Dunne said. “He had some little skin infection in his mane, and that's what she wanted to tell me about, and I was standing there going, 'Is that it?'”

Dunne looked the leggy colt over, and watched him walk back and forth trying to find any glaring flaws he surely must have missed to get the colt at that price. He didn't find any.

Whatever caused the entire buying bench to sleep on Colonel Liam as a yearling fell to the wayside when Dunne offered him for sale the following year at the 2019 Ocala Breeders' Sales Co. Spring 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale. After the colt breezed a quarter-mile in :20 4/5 seconds for Dunne's Wavertree Stables consignment, he sold to Robert and Lawana Low for $1.2 million; the second-highest price of that year's auction.

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“It was one of those that we all talk about that just slips through the cracks,” Dunne said. “He was a beautiful 2-year-old. It wasn't that we raised him up and turned him into a beautiful horse. He was a beautiful horse when we bought him.”

Colonel Liam lived up to the seven-figure price on the racetrack, winning seven of 12 starts and earning $1,812,565.

Trained by Todd Pletcher, Colonel Liam is a two-time winner of the Grade 1 Pegasus World Cup Turf, to go along with victories in the G1 Turf Classic Stakes and G2 Muniz Memorial Classic Stakes.

Colonel Liam retired to Ocala Stud in Florida for the 2023 breeding season, where he stood his debut season for an advertised fee of $6,500.

Bred in Kentucky by Phillips Racing Partnership, Colonel Liam is out of the unraced Bernardini mare Amazement. His second dam is the multiple Grade 1 winner Wonder Again.

Colonel Liam_Sep 18_Hip 1272 from Lauren Warren on Vimeo.

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Ontario Racing’s Mare Purchase Program Foals Strengthen Canadian Premier Yearling Sale

The 2023 Canadian Premier Yearling Sale took place this week and the foals of dams purchased through Ontario Racing's Mare Purchase Program (MPP) outpaced the sale average and median.

Eleven foals from the 2022 MPP were cataloged, and the six that sold went for an average of $27,333 and a median of $26,500, 14 and 12 per cent higher than the overall sale number, respectively.

Hip 43 led the way among MPP graduates with Gary Barber going to $60,000 to purchase the son of War of Will out of the Pulpit mare Cost. The dark bay or brown colt was consigned by Bernard McCormack's Cara Bloodstock, Agent for Saintsbury Farms.

Also, among the MPP foals to bring a sale price above the average was Hip 121 bred by Tall Oaks Farm.

The bay colt by Oscar Performance out of the English Channel mare La Malaguena was purchased by Canuck Racing Club 2LP for $35,000. Tall Oaks Farm bought La Malaguena at the 2021 Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale

“We were specifically looking for an English Channel mare,” said Tall Oaks Farm Director Colleen Dalos. “English Channels are strong turf runners which is great for Woodbine racing, and this is a bloodline that we did not currently have in our broodmare band.”

Through the MPP, Ontario residents can apply for an incentive totaling half the purchase price when purchasing in-foal mares at ecognized public auctions outside of the province, up to a maximum of $25,000 per mare and $75,000 annually per person or partnership.

In 2022 Tall Oaks Farm bred La Malaguena back to their Registered Ontario Sire Amis Gizmo who stands at T.C. Westmeath Stud Farm Inc., taking advantage of the $2,500 bonus available to breeders who breed back to an Ontario Sire after bringing a mare to Ontario through the MPP.

“Tall Oaks Farm has leveraged the MPP two years in a row,” said Dalos. “First with La Malaguena for Amis Gizmo, and last year we purchased five new mares for our newest stallion Avie's Flatter. We would never have afforded the quantity nor quality of mares purchased without the assistance of the MPP.”

In addition to the foals of 2022 MPP mares, thirteen foals of mares brought to Ontario in 2020 and 2021 were entered in the sale, putting the total number of recent MPP related yearlings at 24.

Sixteen of those 24 MPP yearlings sold for an average of $28,438, which was 19 percent higher than the overall sale average.

“The program allows breeders to expand their broodmare bands with new bloodlines and helps Ontario get more broodmares into the province for breeding,” said Dalos. “Horse population is critical, so all these incentive programs are paramount to helping Ontario Breeders.”

Hip 113 out of Kin's Ghost, who was brought to Ontario in 2021 through the MPP by Phoenix Rising Farms and bred back to Ontario Sire Souper Speedy, was the highest selling foal of an MPP mare.

The bay filly went for $115,000 to Canuck Racing Club 2LP and Terra Racing Stable

Click here to learn more about the Mare Purchase Program in advance of the 2023 fall breeding sales.

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‘I Didn’t Sleep Most Of The Summer’: Team Flightline Reflects On ‘Greatest Racehorse Of Our Time’

These days Flightline lives in quiet surroundings at Lane's End Farm in Versailles, Ky., away from all of the hustle and bustle of the racetrack, enjoying retirement like any other accomplished professional, with a few exceptions.

No more training, no more airplane flights, no more early wake-up calls, no more humans climbing on his back. Just a stroll in the pasture and some regular trips to the breeding shed.

Meanwhile, 2,100 miles away, his human connections are hard at work preparing for another day of racing, working to keep their horses happy and missing their star Thoroughbred every day.

It was one year ago when the son of Tapit came to Del Mar and left an impression with the fans and on the entire sport. It started with his workouts leading up to the race and finished with a record-setting performance that solidified his standing as the best horse running. He followed up with another dominating showing in the Breeders' Cup Classic that clinched Horse of the Year honors and put a cap on an undefeated career.

He was a horse of lifetime for trainer John Sadler, his assistant Juan Leyva, jockey Flavien Prat, and an ownership group led by Kosta Hronis. There was no Kentucky Derby or Triple Crown. Just six races that left those who witnessed them in awe at what they just saw.

“I know there were a lot of questions going in about the distance and this and that,” Hronis says. “But I think anybody who knew Flightline and was around him knew this was the greatest racehorse of our time and he was going to handle that with the grace and elegance that he did.”

One year later, Sadler sits in his office at the end of Barn K on the Del Mar backside, remembering fondly the run Flightline took him on last summer.

“I didn't sleep most of the summer,” Sadler says. “I was so on edge because I knew he adores this track. He trained so great down here for two years and when he won here as a 3-year-old he was so impressive and ran such a great number.”

That first race at Del Mar was an entry level allowance race on closing weekend in 2021. It was six furlongs and was over by the time they hit the top of the lane. Flightline would go on to win by 12 ¾ lengths.

It was the second straight rout by the son of Tapit. He broke his maiden at Santa Anita four months earlier by 13 ¼ lengths. So he had won his first two races by a combined 26 lengths and the masses started clamoring for a run at the Breeders' Cup. But the connections and Sadler held their ground.

“We just felt that it was in his best interest not to put him in the Breeders' Cup on his third start,” Sadler says. “We had a great race, a very historic race, the G1 Malibu on opening day at Santa Anita. So we thought for his 4-year-old campaign we'd start him off in the Malibu.

“It's debatable whether or not he would have won the Breeders' Cup as a 3-year-old,” Sadler continues. “You never know, he probably could of. But that was one of the decisions we made along the road and we were happy with it and obviously it worked out.”

Flightline would win the Malibu in typical dominating fashion, this time by 11 ½ lengths. Then he suffered the first setback in his racing career. In early 2022 he suffered a strained hock that caused him to miss a race at Santa Anita. He would recover in time to make the G1 Met Mile at Belmont Park in June and he picked up where he left off. He destroyed them.

While the margin of victory might say otherwise, a mere six lengths, anyone who watched the race knew it was over turning for home. Afterwards, Sadler announced they would be running next in the Pacific Classic at Del Mar September 3.

“The thing that always gave us such confidence is that he trained so well,” Sadler says. “A lot of people asked if we were going to run him in the San Diego to prep him for the Pacific Classic. But he trained so well that sometimes it's a risk reward. Do you put your best race forward in the prep? He didn't need preps, he needed to show up on the biggest days and the biggest stage and he'd be ready to go.”

When Sadler brought his string of horses down from Santa Anita to Del Mar last summer, he parked Flightline in the stall closest to his office but he'll tell you it was more of a coincidence than by design.

“He was there both years,” Sadler says. “Every year since we've been here, the last 30, 40 years, the grooms who have been with us a long time have the same numbered stalls.

“He was in there the first year,” Sadler says with a superstitious chuckle, “and then from year one to year two we weren't about to change it.

“Personally, I loved having him right there,” Sadler continues. “Right where I can stick my head out and look at him. Many mornings I would just be watching him and observing him.”

The build up to the race was fueled by Flightline's works. Sadler put six workouts into the big fella. Each one more impressive than the last. At his final workout on August 27, fans were showing up to Del Mar to watch Flightline glide over the track.

Juan Leyva knows firsthand what it was like to ride Flightline. He was the one in the saddle for all those morning exercises and works.

“It was extremely different,” Leyva says about riding Flightline. “There's no other horse that I've ever been on that felt the way he felt. He had a special way of moving. He moved with ease but power at the same time and he did things so much easier than any other horse I've ever been around. I could feel that the first day I sat on him.

“Obviously you feel the difference between a Lexus and a Nissan,” Leyva continues. “But with him I don't even think you can compare him to a sports car. He was just much more than that. He was a jet.”

“The training was similar to what we do for all the horses,” Sadler notes. “But the way he did it; every work was sensational. He trained beautifully here last summer. You'd see some other 1:12's on the paper or other fast works but the way he did it. When he was having a bullet work, he was still way within himself. It was exceptional, fun to watch and fun to be a part of.”

Sadler's objective was simple. Control everything he had control over. Things like the weather or a horse getting loose on the track at the same time Flightline was out on his early morning routine, two days before the race, were things that were not in Sadler's control.

After Flightline's penultimate work on Aug. 20, Sadler was heard to blurt out, 'Gorgeous' as his horse passed by the grandstand. But always the consummate professional and sportsman, Sadler never went grandiose with descriptions of Flightline.

“As the thing was going on with Flightline, I never wanted to be the guy jumping up with the super huge statements,” Sadler remembers, “because I feel like it's almost bad luck. If I had gone out and said he was going to dominate in the Pacific Classic that's the minute your horse falls down coming out of the gate.

“I didn't want to jinx anything along the way,” Sadler continues. “I let the horse speak for himself, which he did.”

Loud and clear.

Flightline put on a record performance in the Pacific Classic, winning by 19 ¼ lengths, one that had veteran turf writers running out of superlatives as they tried to describe the Secretariat-like performance. But while the run might have made some noise in the racing world, Hronis remembers the crowd's reaction being quite different.

“I've never been at Del Mar and the Pacific Classic and had such a hush as he was coming to the finish line,” Hronis says. “I think everybody was in awe but it got really quiet, which I found was a tribute to him and his greatness that everybody just took it in and started to clap and applaud. It was just amazing.”

Sadler would say later that not even Secretariat could have beaten Flightline on this day, a story he sticks by even today.

“Absolutely,” Sadler says with a smile. “I don't think there was a horse who would have beat him in that race last year.”

“It was just a great day,” Hronis says. “I was so happy for John Sadler and the barn because I know the pressure they felt handling Flightline. I guess the only bad thing is he broke Accelerate's record for lengths to win the race by. From one Hronis horse to another.”

“It was like a dream come true,” Leyva says, “because I saw him doing that and when he did it in real life I was like 'That's what I knew he would do.'”

Flightline would go on to the Breeders' Cup Classic and complete his undefeated career. Once again, Sadler was saddled with not only keeping his horse happy and in form, but dealing with the hordes of media and dignitaries who wanted a close up look at the superstar.

“I think as a veteran trainer,” Sadler says, “having been through some Derbies and previous Breeders' Cups, Accelerate winning one, I was prepared. We were ready for the way it went in Kentucky. We put up some barriers and didn't let the press under the shed row. We kept them at bay not because it's best for the press but it was best for the horse to be quiet and resting. I didn't feel, at any time, that it was too much.”

Flightline's last work before the Breeders' Cup Classic drew and estimated three thousand people to Keeneland to watch him go.

“The level of detail that went into it,” Sadler recalls. “His feed was shipped from California to Kentucky before the Breeders' Cup so everything was duplicated from his home base.

“We went two weeks early which is a little abnormal for us to go that early,” Sadler continues, “Just to give us more cushion so the surroundings couldn't offset him. We did everything we could to keep the barn routine mundane and his training under control. We knew if he got over there in good shape…Katie bar the door.”

He won, of course, in style. This time by 8 ¼ lengths. Just toyed with the best horses in the handicap division. Afterward the connections announced they would be retiring him to stud emitting a collective groan of disappointment from the racing world. Even Sadler would have liked to seen Flightline stay in training.

“Oh, absolutely, but it wasn't meant to be,” Sadler says. “A lot of factors went into it. One, the insurance market wasn't there. You couldn't insure him for the full value he was worth. Two, what was there to prove? He'd beaten everything. There wasn't a good rival for him. If we brought him back this year who was he going to face. The other horses that were considered the top horses in the country, like Epicenter and Cyberknife, went to stud. It just was the right decision.”

So now he's off making babies with the likes of two-time G3 Rancho Bernardo winner Edgeway, and 2022 Clement Hirsch winner and Breeders' Cup Distaff runner-up, Blue Stripe.

One might assume Sadler doesn't miss the commotion and constant attention that came with training the Horse of the Year, but you'd be wrong.

“Oh, I miss all of it,” Sadler notes. “To have the best horse in the country, I miss that. Everybody thinks it's more relaxed, it's more chill, but racing is racing. You want to do well and you're on edge over how you're going to do it but I would never shy away from pressure.”

Even now, Sadler and his staff are dealing with the huge void left by Flightline.

“I miss him dearly,” Leyva says. “We had him for two years. He was entrusted to us and I feel like we were good ambassadors for him. We took care of him, did the best by him and I was really glad that he was able to retire undefeated.”

“Picture it like you're down at the beach and you're trying to fill in the ocean,” Sadler says of filling the void at the barn. “I've got the toughest job in horseracing. Replacing Flightline. Good luck with that.”

Hronis adds: “I have always said and will say for the rest of my life that as blessed as we were to have Flightline in our barn, Flightline was blessed to have John Sadler because he handled him so well. Never pushed him. He knew what a brilliant athlete he was. John's patience with him really paid off.”

There's a new horse in the stall next to Sadler's office. A good-looking 2-year-old named Concord Bridge, by Medaglia d'Oro. Sadler's thinking of running him in a maiden race at Del Mar before the end of the meet.

“As a professional horse trainer, you keep going,” Sadler says. “I don't really get into the thing that 'You'll never have one as good as him again.' I don't really think that. I enjoy training horses. You have new horses and it's fun to see the process continue.”

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Full-Brother To Canadian Legend Pink Lloyd Leads CTHS Ontario Canadian Premier Yearling Sale

The Canadian Thoroughbred Horse Society (Ontario Division) Canadian Premier Yearling Sale finished on Wednesday with an increase in gross, led by a $150,000 full-brother to Canadian Horse of the Year Pink Lloyd.

Wednesday's auction saw 167 yearlings change hands for revenues of $3,982,790 (Canadian), up 3 percent from last year's renewal when 150 horses brought $3,837,700.

The average sale price dipped 6 percent to $23,849 from $25,584, while the median fell 23 percent to $15,000 from $19,500.

Nancy Guest purchased the sale-topper, Hip 82, an Old Forester colt, for $150,000.

The gray or roan colt is out of the stakes-placed Great Gladiator mare Gladiator Queen, whose produce is highlighted by Pink Lloyd, Canada's 2017 Horse of the Year and an eight-time Sovereign Award winner. Canadian champion sprinter Fatal Bullet can also be found in the colt's extended family.

John Carey consigned the Ontario-bred sale topper as agent for his T.C. Westmeath Stud Farm.

“This year's catalog was one of the largest in recent years attracting over 250 entries,” said CTHS Ontario president and sales chair Peter Berringer. “It's been a great few days with our four CTHS Sales Stakes run on Aug. 27 where we witnessed My Boy Prince (last year's sale topper) winning the CTHS Simcoe Stakes by an impressive 14 lengths. My Boy Prince is now one of the leading 2-year-olds in training across North America, with a 95 Beyer figure.”

The next CTHS Ontario Sale will be held on Oct. 18 with entries closing on Sept. 8.

The sale will provide Ontario Breeders and Consignors the last opportunity to sell Ontario bred yearlings in Ontario in 2023 – as well as horses of racing age, broodmares and weanlings.

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

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