Life After The Kill Pen: Retired Broodmare On Her Third Career As A Nanny

This is the story of one Thoroughbred broodmare retiree. To many in the racing and breeding industry, hers is a typical tale that varies only in a few details from the mundane life narrative of thousands of other mares. Like so many Thoroughbreds, Grisham started as a pinhook, waged a racing campaign, served a long broodmare career, and eventually reached an uncertain retirement.

But, only weeks away from turning a quarter-century, and only a year removed from an ambiguous fate while relegated to an auction kill pen, Grisham has a story with a few surprises.

Born in 1999, when the U.S. foal crop numbered 33,844—almost precisely twice the expected foal count in 2023—Grisham never broke into the upper echelons of the sport. Nevertheless, she has lived a life of beating the odds, if only slightly.

–She sold for a fair price. Bred commercially, Grisham was a $60,000 weanling auction purchase at 5 months old and immediately became a pinhook prospect. When she went through the sales ring 11 months later as a 2000 yearling, she brought a winning bid of $72,000—well above that year's $13,000 median and $59,360 average prices for sold yearlings.

–She ran and won. Somewhere between half and three-quarters of Thoroughbred foals ever make it to the starting gate, and only 40 percent to 70 percent of runners ever win a race. Fewer still are able to score beyond the claiming ranks, or to make a repeat appearance in the winner's circle. Grisham accomplished all of those feats.

–She had one owner. Almost all Thoroughbred racemares are sold before their new broodmare career, and most broodmares change hands several times during their productive years—either sold for a profit after producing well, or culled when their foals are underperforming expectations. Atypically, for her entire racing and breeding career, Grisham had only one owner.

–She has produced more foals than average. Because of their own age and health, or because of diminishing class or value of offspring, most broodmares stop after producing five to nine foals. With her 14 colts and fillies, Grisham exceeded the average considerably.

–Her foals have raced and won. If somewhere less than half of Thoroughbred foals end up winning a race in their lifetimes, it might be reasonable to expect six of Grisham's offspring would be winners. Instead, nine already have won and two more—her unstarted foals of 2021 and 2022—are still in the racing pipeline.

–Her foals are showing more than average class. Grisham has never had a true star offspring, but one colt placed in a Grade I contest, and five of her foals already have earned more than $100,000.

–She was rescued. When the odds broke against her in late 2022 and she found herself abandoned to the doom of the kill pen, Grisham again beat the odds: She was rescued. Unfortunately, “kill pen” is an apt name, as most horses discarded to these low-level auctions end up bound for slaughter.

Grisham's background

​Bred in Kentucky by Lantern Hill Farm, Grisham was the 11th of 14 foals out of the stakes-producing Sham mare Sham Street and came from the second crop of Kentucky Derby-winning Grindstone. Her name — a portmanteau pulling the first three letters from the name of her sire and the remaining four letters from her dam — may have been inspired also by the author John Grisham, whose legal thrillers were among the hottest bestsellers in the decade of Grisham's birth.

Grisham was foaled May 25, 1999, and almost immediately began her first “career” as a racing and pinhook prospect. (Often weaned earlier than non-sale-bound foals, fillies and colts bred for the sales ring tend to have a less carefree upbringing than their homebred racing counterparts. Those foals purchased as weanling-to-yearling or yearling-to-juvenile pinhooks typically spend extended stretches of time in the barn to avoid injuries and sun bleaching; they receive considerable extra handling for sales prep; and they often undergo a regimen of muscle-building supplements and exercises intended to improve their appearance in the auction ring. For some foals, this early “career” as a sales prospect can start as early as their third month and can extend beyond their second birthday.)

Grisham had not yet reached six months when she first went through the ring at Keeneland. Picked up for $60,000 by York Bloodstock as a pinhook prospect, Grisham was shipped to Florida, where she was next offered at the 2000 OBS August yearling sale and RNA'd after a final bid of $47,000. Whether she subsequently exited a gawky stage or buyers were just more receptive in Kentucky, Grisham's walk through the ring at Fasig-Tipton's October sale only two months later was more successful, achieving a sale price of $72,000. Her buyer, New Farm, would be her owner throughout her years on the track and in the broodmare barn.

Grisham's racing and breeding careers

​The dark bay Grisham saw modest success as a racehorse, winning two of 11 starts, all at age 3 while running under the colors of New Farm for trainer Benjamin Perkins Jr. As a late foal of 1999, she began race training shortly after her true second birthday, and was ready for her first start in mid-January 2002. After she placed twice in her first four starts, her first win came in a maiden special weight at Delaware Park about a week and a half shy of her actual third birthday in May 2002. Six races and seven months later, she went out a winner again, scoring in a mid-December allowance at Aqueduct. Both of Grisham's wins were over 8.5 furlongs on the dirt. She ended her racing career with earnings just shy of $75,000 from two wins and five shows.

Retired from her career as a racemare, Grisham immediately transitioned into her new role as a broodmare. First bred as a 4-year-old in 2003, Grisham would go on to produce 13 registered foals (plus another that died) between 2004 and 2022. So far, nine of her offspring are winners—all of them have annexed multiple races, in fact—and two others are still young foals whose race careers are ahead of them. Of her remaining two offspring, one started but did not win, and another was registered but never named. Five of Grisham's 10 runners have surpassed six figures in earnings, a remarkable rate of success. Her top performer, the 2006 Forest Wildcat son Wildcat Brief, was a stakes winner and placed in the grade I Vosburgh Stakes at Belmont in 2010.

Herself a Kentucky-bred, Grisham's racing and breeding careers saw her traveling frequently. Within an 11-month period as a weanling and yearling, she went through auction rings in Kentucky, Florida, and back in Kentucky. At 3, she raced in Delaware, Maryland, and New York. As a broodmare, she was shuttled between Kentucky, Florida, Maryland, and New Jersey as she followed New Farm-owned stallions when they moved between those locations. And her darkest moment came at age 23 in Pennsylvania, when she was herded into a feed lot pen with bleak prospects.

Grisham's fast fall and surprising rescue

Owned for nearly 22 years by New Farm—from autumn 2000 when she was purchased as a yearling to age 23 when she weaned her 2022 filly—Grisham was retired from the broodmare herd in mid-2022. New Farm manager and trainer Gene Moore, who had started Grisham as a weanling and oversaw her long broodmare career, says she was placed with an individual who promised her a loving permanent home. Lamentably, within months, the then-23-year-old mare descended into the dark side of the Thoroughbred breeding game. Seven months after foaling a chestnut filly by Rainbow Heir, Grisham was hip 288 in a feedlot sale. Inmates of Pennsylvania's notorious “kill pens” are often destined to be considered by slaughter buyers for their meat value.

Occasionally, one of several equine charities is able to rescue a Thoroughbred from this wretched fate. On November 14, 2022, a social media follower of Mareworthy alerted the Thoroughbred broodmare rescue facility of Grisham's predicament. Kyle Rothfus's newly-established program was still seeking 501(c)(3) certification at the time and was focused on rehoming broodmares directly from farms in Central Kentucky, so a feedlot rescue in Pennsylvania, with only 24 hours' notice to make logistical and financial arrangements from afar, required extraordinary efforts to pull off. On November 15, Mareworthy was able to post Grisham's “bail” or “ransom” and arrange for her to begin a six-week quarantine at a farm in Pennsylvania before she would be well enough to travel to the Mareworthy sanctuary.

​On January 2, 2023, at age 24, Grisham returned home to Central Kentucky. Caregivers at Mareworthy continued the Pennsylvania quarantine facility's work of restoring the senior mare to a healthy weight—and also faced the larger challenge of reestablishing the retiree's confidence after her harrowing experiences of the prior year.

With calm, consistent, and gentle handling, Grisham blossomed. As her ribs disappeared and her dull coat became glossy and dappled, her spirit returned as well. Soon, Grisham was galloping across the paddock at a speed belying her age, often outpacing mares many years her junior as she soaked up the sun and green grass and—finally—got a chance to just be a horse.

Grisham's newest career as a nanny

When Kyle Rothfus made the decision to rescue Grisham from the feed lot, he was certain the old bay mare would become a permanent fixture at Mareworthy. While the facility specializes in rehoming retired broodmares, he knew the typical adoptee was a decade younger than Grisham. Most adoptors ask for mares as riding prospects—and, with more than two decades elapsed since Grisham last had a rider on her back, she was not a likely candidate for reschooling.

But carrying a rider isn't the only job for a horse, and Grisham's 14 foals gave her a lifetime of experience for a new role: nanny.

This past summer, I found myself in need of a companion horse who could provide comfort to newly-weaned foals. We had lost my previous ex-broodmare adoptee—the 29-year-old mare Since Time Began—in the spring, and with her passing I no longer had a prospective companion for my 2023 filly, who was due to be weaned in early autumn.

While researching possible fits for the nanny role, I learned about Mareworthy. And I was impressed! Here were two dedicated horsemen with a newly-established local rescue devoted to broodmare retirees—a soft spot in my own horse-loving heart. And on the Mareworthy website, I saw a profile of this 24-year-old who had raised so many foals of her own that she would be a natural with youngsters needing guidance. It seemed like a potential match, so my wife and I arranged to visit Mareworthy. I think Kyle was surprised when he showed us several younger mares that could serve as nannies and we kept steering the conversation back to Grisham.

Grisham arrived at our small farm, Mare Croft, on August 21. After a quarantine period, she met our little herd, including the suckling filly who would become her charge when weaned a couple of months later. Grisham was deferential to the other mares, and immediately formed a relationship with our filly, Tempo, that carried over to weaning. Today, the two are close companions, and Grisham is helping to teach the filly about all the important things in life: Finding the best flakes of hay, putting butts to the wind during the first cold snap of the year, racing to the gate at feeding time, and occasionally tearing up and down the hill just for the fun of it.

With only months until her quarter-century, Grisham knows what she likes in life. She wants extra attention paid to her chest and withers during her daily grooming, and then enjoys a good roll in the dust or mud after being brushed. She'll take as many carrots as she's offered, but wants only one mint at a time and turns up her nose entirely at bananas and apples. She's okay with being separated for meals but will complain if she's left alone too long in the paddock or in her stall. She enjoys having her udder cleaned except when she's in heat and especially sensitive—and then beware: All bets are off on her kind and gentle nature!

​We're so grateful to Grisham for the wonderful nanny she's been and expect her to be the companion of weanlings for years to come. We are also incredibly indebted to Mareworthy for sharing Grisham with us. We plan to be her final soft landing spot in life, but Kyle assures us she will always have a home at Mareworthy so she has an extra safety net for her golden years.

The post Life After The Kill Pen: Retired Broodmare On Her Third Career As A Nanny appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

$610,000 Act Now, Dam Of Recent Winner Coach Prime, Tops Monday At Keeneland November Sale

Act Now, whose 2-year-old colt, Coach Prime, captured a maiden special weight race at Del Mar by 7 1/4 lengths three days ago, sold to Avenue Bloodstock for $610,000 to be the most expensive purchase of Monday's sixth session of the Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale.

Consigned by Nardelli Sales, agent, the 8-year-old Act Now is a daughter of Street Sense who is in foal to City of Light. She also is the dam of multiple stakes-placed Dr Oseran. Out of the Bernardini mare Always Trouble, Act Now is from the family of Grade 1 winners Minardi and Joking and Grade 2 winners Tale of the Cat, Fed Biz and Red Carpet Ready.

Coach Prime sold for $1.7 million at Keeneland's 2022 September Yearling Sale.

With the purchase of Act Now, Avenue Bloodstock was the session's leading buyer.

On Monday, Keeneland sold 285 horses through the ring for $9,044,100, which dipped 5.76 percent from the sixth session last year when 246 horses brought $9,596,900. The average decreased 18.66 percent from $39,012 to $31,734, and the median of $23,000 is 23.33 percent lower than $30,000 last year.

Through six sessions of the nine-day auction, a total of 1,343 horses have sold through the ring for $163,792,100, for an average of $121,960 and a median of $65,000. The gross decreased 14.71 percent from $192,033,900 through the corresponding period last year, while the average is 18.26 percent below $149,210 in 2022 and the median is 15.58 percent lower than $77,000.

NAJD Stud acquired the session's highest-priced weanling by spending $155,000 for a colt by Vino Rosso consigned by Greenfield Farms, agent. Out of the winning Distorted Humor mare Celia's Song, he is from the family of Grade 2 winners Warbling and Mrs McDougal.

Dreams of You, a 3-year-old daughter of More Than Ready in foal to Maxfield, sold to Titletown Racing Stables for $130,000. Consigned by Godolphin, she is out of the winning Bernardini mare Dreamup and is from the family of Eclipse Award winners Folklore and Essential Quality and Japanese champion Contrail.

BT Stables paid $120,000 for Corey and Quinn, a 3-year-old daughter of Uncle Mo out of Canadian champion Youcan'tcatchme, by The Daddy. Consigned by Highgate Sales, agent, and cataloged as a racing or broodmare prospect, she is from the family of multiple Grade 1 winner Princess of Sylmar.

A weanling filly by Midshipman sold to Clay Scherer, agent, for $110,000. Consigned by Legacy Bloodstock, agent for Hermitage Farm Foaled & Raised, she is the first foal out of Heartful, by Bandbox, and from the family of Grade 3 winners Majestic Reason and Hattiesburg.

Taylor Made Sales Agency was Monday's leading consignor with sales of $987,500 for 33 horses.

The November Breeding Stock Sale resumes Tuesday and runs through Thursday, with every session beginning at 10 a.m. ET.

On Friday, Keeneland will present the November Horses of Racing Age Sale. The auction starts at noon.

The post $610,000 Act Now, Dam Of Recent Winner Coach Prime, Tops Monday At Keeneland November Sale appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Trainer Lynch Plans Appeal After HIWU Arbitrator Imposes 4-Year Banned Substances Suspension

Natalia Lynch, a Belmont Park-based trainer who has been licensed since 2020, has been penalized with a four-year suspension and a $50,000 fine after a Nov. 9 Horseracing Integrity and Welfare Unit (HIWU) arbitration judgment found her to be in violation of two separate anti-doping rules, one for the presence of a banned substance (Altrenogest) in a horse, and another for possession of a different prohibited drug (Thyro-L).

Lynch's attorney, John Mac Hayes, told TDN Monday that the trainer plans to appeal the arbitration result to a Federal Trade Commission administrative law judge.

A post-race drug screening revealed Altrenogest in Motion to Strike (Competitive Edge) after Lynch shipped the gelding to Monmouth Park for a June 24 race.

Motion to Strike ran fourth as the 7-10 favorite, and a $5,000 claim was subsequently voided after the HIWU test results came back positive.

Altrenogest is sold under the several brand names, including Regu-Mate. It is used in veterinary medicine to suppress or synchronize estrus in female horses and pigs.

The website of the National Library of Medicine states that Altrenogest is “a commonly used progestogen for the suppression of oestrus and associated distracting behaviors that interfere with training and performance of female racehorses.”

The website also notes that Altrenogest is “structurally similar to the anabolic androgenic steroid.”

However, Matt Hegarty of DRF.com, who was first to report on Lynch's penalties, pointed out a notable coincidence regarding Lynch's Nov. 9 arbitration judgment and a separate document released by the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) Nov. 13 regarding proposed changes to the Anti-Doping and Medication Control (ADMC) program: The HISA Authority, Hegarty wrote, wants to reclassify Altrenogest as a controlled substance instead of its more severe “banned” status, “with recommended penalties starting at a fine of $500.” (The status change for Altrenogest was just one among numerous proposed rules changes outlined here.)

According to the decision written by arbitrator Bernetta Bush, a retired judge, when a HIWU investigator met Lynch at Belmont on July 20 to notify her of the Altrenogest adverse analytical finding, a search of the vehicle Lynch was driving revealed a container of Thyro-L, which is also banned under the ADMC rules.

Lynch had argued that the Altrenogest positive was cross-contamination as a result of Regu-Mate lawfully being administered to a filly that was supposedly housed in the stall next to Motion to Strike.

As for the Thyro-L, Lynch stated that earlier in the spring, she attempted to discard that newly banned substance by giving it to her mother. Yet she did not realize the drug had remained in her mother's vehicle instead of being thrown away. According to the arbitrator's report, Lynch said she was only driving her mother's vehicle on July 20 because she had lost the keys to her own car.

The arbitrator didn't buy the reasoning in either argument.

“Taken as a whole, Trainer Lynch has presented mere speculation, rather than competent evidence, regarding the source of the Altrenogest,” Bush wrote.

“[T]he uncontested evidence provided by Gregory Pennock, an investigator for the Agency whose testimony the Arbitrator credits as consistent with the record and not disputed with competent evidence, establishes that [the filly] was several–five to seven–stalls away from the Covered Horse, and that [the filly] had not been administered Altrenogest for five days before the day the sample was collected from [Motion to Strike],” Bush wrote.

“The record establishes that Altrenogest is administered orally and would have to be administered directly into the horse's mouth for contamination to occur, and that the amount detected in the sample is consistent with ingestion within 24 hours.”

Bush's ruling continued: “In connection with attempting to skirt liability, Trainer Lynch appears to have made many misrepresentations or inconsistent statements of fact which detract from the overall credibility of her testimony…. More specifically, regarding the Rules, the Arbitrator finds that Trainer Lynch bears significant fault for the presence of Altrenogest. This is not a case of simple negligence.

“Not only has Trainer Lynch failed to show any benign manner in which the substance entered the Covered Horse (a critical failure), but even if she had, Trainer Lynch had (and breached) a clear and unmistakable duty to protect the Covered Horse from any cross-contamination and otherwise comply with the Rules. No evidence presented mitigates the responsibility placed on Trainer Lynch by the Rules she is charged with disobeying.”

Taking up the charge of the Thyro-L, the arbitrator noted that Lynch had argued that her possession was not intentional, that she “wasn't trying to cheat,” and that none of the horses under her care had ever tested positive for that substance.

“Trainer Lynch offers many arguments to escape liability or mitigate the consequences of her unlawful possession, but none are persuasive such that she can carry her burden,” Bush wrote.

Hayes, Lynch's lawyer, classified the arbitrator's penalties as “unreasonably harsh.”

In a series of emailed bullet points, Hayes told TDN that the arbitrator “improperly discounted” expert testimony that was presented in Lynch's defense.

Hayes wrote that the arbitrator allegedly also “ignored the Federal Rules of Evidence and Civil Procedure” that have been established by the U.S. Supreme Court and instead “relied on International Law wholly inapplicable in federal court proceedings.”

Hayes also wrote that Regu-Mate is “not a doping agent” and that “no evidence of doping exists.”

Hayes added that the arbitrator allegedly “completely ignored” a different Regu-Mate positive “in a different horse who resided in the same barn where Natalia's horse had stood before racing.”

Hayes further claimed that “HIWU's own expert testified HIWU should have investigated the two positives coming from the same barn to determine if they might be related.”

According to a 2020 profile written by the Monmouth Park press office, Lynch, a Maryland native, had been enrolled in nursing school at Towson University when she started galloping horses a few years ago.

Lynch originally wanted to become a jockey, but switched her aspirations to training, the profile stated. She worked as an assistant to Brittany Russell, Jeremiah Englehart, and Ray Handal prior to getting licensed as a trainer, going out on her own three years ago when owner Al Gold offered to let her train nine horses from his Gold Square, LLC, stable.

The post Trainer Lynch Plans Appeal After HIWU Arbitrator Imposes 4-Year Banned Substances Suspension appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Dam of TDN Rising Star Coach Prime Brings $610K at KEENOV

Breaking out of the pack to kick off Monday's opening session of  Book 4 at the Keeneland November sale in Lexington, Act Now (Street Sense) (Hip 2184), dam of recent runaway winner at Del Mar and TDN Rising Star Coach Prime (Quality Road), brought $610,000 from Mark McStay's Avenue Bloodstock. The 8-year-old mare was consigned by Nardelli Sales, acting agent to dissolve a partnership with Bill Werner.

“We thought she could make that much, because Coach Prime was a such a lovely horse,” said Kim Nardelli. “We did know all the major players we on her, so we were suspicious she was going to go out of our price range.”

She continued, “Oddly enough, we were disappointed. When you sell a mare that well, it's a shame to be disappointed. Hey, that's part of the business, right? It's hard to find mares like that and it's hard to replace them but it's also nice to make some money.”

Giving legs to Nardelli's earlier suspicions, McStay explained that the mare's recent winner factored into the decision to buy her.

“She's a quality mare, I loved [Coach Prime] with Bob Baffert as a yearling,” he said. “She's been purchased for a commercial breeder who's being trying to buy a mare good enough to visit Justify over the past week. Let's hope she's lucky–the 2-year-old looks exciting.”

Act Now, who sold in foal to City of Light, was bred by Colts Neck Stables. Nardelli and her brother Rodney, in partnership with Werner, purchased Act Now in foal to Kitten's Joy for $150,000 at Keeneland January in 2020.

“Since our partner needed to tie some things up now, we had to run her through the ring,” said Nardelli, explaining the decision to part with the 8-year-old mare. “We were going to try and buy her back, but Coach Prime ran way to well for us to do that.”

Act Now's first foal, Dr Oseran (Kitten's Joy), finished third in this season's Texas Glitter S. at Gulfstream. Her subsequent foal, a colt by Quality Road, brought $1.7 million from agent Donato Lanni at Keeneland September in 2022.

Named Coach Prime, the bay finished third for Zedan Racing at Santa Anita last month before becoming a TDN Rising Star with an impressive 7 1/4-length win at Del Mar Nov. 10. Her most recent offspring, a colt by Union Rags, sold for $80,000 this past September.

A half-sister to stakes placed The Right Path (Quality Road), Act Now is out of unraced Always Trouble (Bernardini), herself a daughter of a half-sister to Group 1 winner and English and Irish Highweight Minardi and GSW Tale of the Cat. Granddam Spunoutofcontrol (Wild Again) is also responsible for Grade II winner Fed Biz (Giant's Causeway) and SW Spun Silk, dam of GI Vosburgh S. scorer Joking (Distorted Humor).

Clearly a standout in Book 4, Nardelli explained that at the time the catalog was printed, the picture was still unclear.

“We requested to be in Book 3 or 4, mainly because, at the time, Coach Prime had not started and City of Light was still a little quiet,” she said. “It worked out for us from that point of view. We knew if she hit, people would find her and they certainly knew where she was.”

In addition to Monday's session topper, the Nardelli's sold four other mares, including a pair that were re-purchased by the Nardelli's Springwood LLC–Afleeting Lisa (Afleet Alex) (Hip 2186 i/f to Liam's Map)  and Now Now (Tiznow) (Hip 2024 i/f to Mandaloun).

They also sold a pair of weanlings, a filly by Bolt d'Oro (Hip 2027) for $87,000 and a colt by McKinzie (Hip 2145) for $72,000.

“We had another group that we were selling to dissolve the same partnership and they were more suited for the later books rather than the earlier ones,” she explained. “We are small consignors so we needed a 'one and done' group sale. We didn't want them all spread out through the sale.”

Nardelli Sales was the second leading consignor of the session, amassing a gross of $891,000 with an average of $127,286.

She concluded, “We are happy with how things went. We had two mares we bought back ourselves out of the partnership. But they were not the same quality as Act Now.  We had weanlings that sold well, so we are happy with the way things went.”

 

Looking for Another Forte?

At this sale three years ago, a weanling colt by Violence out of Queen Caroline (Blame) was purchased for an unassuming $80,000 before going on to become the 2022 GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile champion and Eclipse Award winning juvenile for that season. Hoping the sale's Gods might smile on them again, Monday's buyers continued to show interest in the day's weanling selection, led by Najd Stud who paid $155,000 for a colt by Vino Rosso (Hip 2258). Out of Celia's Song (Distorted Humor), the May 1 foal was consigned by Greenfield Farms. The chestnut is a granddson of GSW and MGISP Warbling (Unbridled's Song), a half-sister to SW Arianna's Passion, who in turn is responsible for MSW and MGSP Distorted Passion, dam of MGSW Mrs McDougal.

Clay Scherer paid top price of $110,000 for the highest priced weanling filly of the session. By Midshipman (Hip 1925), the Feb. 8 foal was offered by Legacy Bloodstock, acting on behalf of Hermitage Farm. The chestnut filly is the first foal out of Heartful (Bandbox), who is a daughter of stakes winner Love's Reason (Not For Love). The 5-year-old mare is a half-sister to Grade III winner Majestic Reason (Majestic Warrior) and the stake-placed duo of Jump for Love (Jump Start) and Good Reasoning (Scat Daddy).

At the conclusion of Monday's session, a total of 285 horses through the ring sold for $9,044,100, decreasing 5.76% from the sixth session last year when 246 horses brought $9,596,900. The average decreased 18.66% from $39,012 to $31,734, and the median of $23,000 is 23.33% lower than $30,000 last year. There RNA rate for Monday's sixth session was 25.47%.

Through six sessions, a total of 1,343 horses have sold for $163,792,100, for an average of $121,960 and a median of $65,000. The gross decreased 14.71% from $192,033,900 through the corresponding period last year, while the average is 18.26% below $149,210 in 2022 and the median is 15.58% lower than $77,000.

The Keeneland November Sale continues through Thursday, with sessions beginning at 10 a.m. It will be followed by a single-session Horses of Racing Age Sale Friday.

The post Dam of TDN Rising Star Coach Prime Brings $610K at KEENOV appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights