The 2023-24 All-Value Sire Team Presented By Pedigrees360: The Rookie And The All-Weather Sire

The future is now, even if the future is several years away.

So much of Thoroughbred breeding is based on factors that can only be left up to speculation when a mating decision is made. We can't know if a rookie sire is going to be a star or a dud when they enter the breeding shed for the first time. We can't know what the industry will look like three to four years down the road; which tracks and circuits might rise and fall, and which ones might make drastic changes to their footprint that could change what kind of pedigrees work best on them.

For the rookie sires at least, that leap of faith also brings with it the biggest spoils. If a breeder can't afford to go to a pantheon-level commercial sire – the Into Mischiefs of the world – the next best way to ensure that potential buyers call your horse's number is to breed to a first-year stallion. Blue sky can't be disproven, and the only thing the market loves as much as a sure thing is a mystery box.

This week, let's take a look at two divisions that are perhaps the most fluid on this list. The potential fluctuation of a rookie sire is obvious, but standing out as a good sire of all-weather surface runners is the kind of skill where the payoff is to some degree at the mercy of the direction of the industry.

The drumbeat for synthetic tracks has gotten louder in recent years as a way to address safety concerns, and horses are running for great money over the Tapeta at Woodbine, Turfway Park, and Gulfstream Park, among other spots. Plans call for Belmont Park to add a Tapeta surface as part of its big remodel, which will open up even greater opportunities for a horse that can get a synthetic runner. If a few other significant tracks either flip to a synthetic main track or add it as an alternative surface, it'll be impossible to ignore breeding for intent.

Conventional wisdom suggests a horse bred for turf will be the most likely to carry their skill set over to a synthetic surface. When Keeneland and the California circuits were at the peak of their all-weather periods, turf stalwart Kitten's Joy earned his first leading general sire title. We'll see if that holds true in 2023 and beyond once I crunch the numbers.

To get a look back at the first installment of this season's All-Value Sire Team, and to see the ground rules for how selections are made, click here.

The Rookie: A stallion standing his first season in 2024.

First Team: Two Phil's

Ch. c., 2020, Hard Spun x Mia Torri, by General Quarters
Standing at WinStar Farm, KY, $12,500

Two Phil's wins the G3 Jeff Ruby Steaks at Turfway Park

We only got a glimpse of where the ceiling could have been for Two Phil's before an injury ended his career, but if you believed he had more ladder to climb (like I obviously did, given his placement here), then betting on his talent at a $12,500 stud fee could end up being something of a gift.

Leaving his race record out of it for a moment, I was so impressed by Two Phil's coming out of his stall. When I look at him, I see Hard Spun, but I also see his paternal grandsire Danzig. All three (and the great Danzig son War Front) have a way of tying in from their long necks to their shoulders that seems to be unique to their particular sire line – long neck, lower tie-in that gives them the appearance of stretching forward – and Two Phil's is one of the clearest examples I've seen of that particular stamp.

Furthermore, Danzig maintained a lot of muscle into his later years, and Two Phil's is on to a great start of following in his footsteps. He'd had some time to let down between retiring in June and my visit with him in November, but he didn't look like a horse going through an awkward stage between racetrack life and stallion life. Two Phil's still looked like the guy you want stepping off the team bus first. We know Two Phil's had two-turn chops, but it wouldn't surprise me if he can get a sprinter, given the amount of strength he has in his shoulder and bringing up the rear.

Then, of course, there is what he did on the track.

Two Phil's was a three-time Grade 3 winner at 1 1/16 miles or longer, taking the Grade 3 Street Sense Stakes as a juvenile, and the G3 Jeff Ruby Steaks and G3 Ohio Derby the following season. He also looked clear in the stretch of the Kentucky Derby, and was bested by just a length. I, like many others, went into the Derby thinking Two Phil's was going to be best suited scaling back to a mile in the second half of his sophomore campaign and beyond, but he suddenly became a serious threat for the major 3-year-old route races after the Churchill Downs tilt.

I still hold onto that notion that Two Phil's could have been a heck of a miler if routing didn't work out for him, and we could see that play out with his foals, who will surely be bred for a variety of purposes. Given he was a graded winner at two with a ferocious turn of foot, paired with a very reasonable stud fee, I could see him being a popular target for 2-year-old pinhookers during the yearling sales of 2025.

Two Phil's showed a fair bit of versatility during his on-track career, winning impressively at multiple distances, and over both dirt and synthetic. His dam, the General Quarters mare Mia Torri, also won over both dirt and synthetic, and she was a multiple Grade 3-placed stakes winner over the main track. Both sire Hard Spun and broodmare sire General Quarters were versatile with how they could succeed on the racetrack, and their ensuing foals have largely done the same.

We don't know much what will work best with Two Phil's beyond what we can speculate from what's in front of us, but it sure seems like he's not limited by much in terms of what kind mares would pair well with him. At that price point, he stands to attract a diverse first book of mares.

Second Team: Pappacap

B. h., 2019, Gun Runner x Pappascat, by Scat Daddy
Standing at Walmac Farm, KY, $12,500

Pappacap at Walmac 11.13.23

There are few names in the stud book that are hotter right now than Gun Runner, but not everyone can afford that heat bill.

Gun Runner's highly-coveted first sons have begun populating farms around Kentucky, among them Cyberknife, Gunite, Taiba, and Early Voting (for part of his first book, at least), and though they're all standing for less than papa, only one son is standing for $20,000 or less. This is, in fact, your most affordable ticket to the Gun show.

However, “affordable” is not the same as “low quality.” Pappacap was a Grade 2 winner around one turn as a 2-year-old, and he finished second in that season's Breeders' Cup Juvenile. He also earned graded placings as a sprinter, a miler, and a router at three.

The female family has a bit of heft to it, as well, with the Scat Daddy mare Pappascat also producing Grade 3 winner Bobby O. Al Qasr, a Peruvian Horse of the Year and U.S. stakes winner, can also be found on his page.

Walmac Farm staff told me in September that Pappacap's book was already filling up nicely, so I expect he will have a solid pipeline of foals to get him off the mark in his first crop.

Pappacap is a well-balanced individual who I expect will develop quite a bit after his first year at stud. He cuts an athletic frame, much like his sire Gun Runner, and both measure at 16.1 hands, though I wouldn't classify either as particularly leggy. Pappacap's silhouette is remarkably faithful to his sire's, and with a decent sample size of what works with Gun Runner, that could inform shrewd breeders on what kind of mares might best populate the rookie's book.

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The All-Weather Sire: A stallion with proven success getting runners over all-weather surfaces, or a young stallion whose pedigree and on-track performance suggests he could succeed as a sire of synthetic runners.

First Team: Bucchero

Ch. h., 2012, Kantharos x Meetmeontime, by General Meeting
Standing at McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds, NY, $7,500

Bucchero

Talk about a stat boost: Bucchero's runners have hit the board in 52.9 percent of their races over all-weather surfaces, which is an improvement of 5.9 percentages over their 47 percent in the money rate over all surfaces.

Bucchero's percentage of wins from total starts over synthetic of 19.9 percent is better than all significant active Kentucky stallions besides Bolt d'Oro (22.7 percent), Ghostzapper (20.4 percent), and Twirling Candy (20.3 percent).

His in-the-money percentage improvement on synthetic versus his total in-the-money percentage trails only Oscar Performance (whose ITM percentage goes up a whopping 23.3 percent on all-weather surfaces), Flameaway (19.3 percent from a small sample size), West Coast (7.7 percent), and Bucchero's own sire Kantharos (6.2 percent).

One might easily point out that as a former Florida sire, Bucchero has had the benefit of racing state-breds on Gulfstream's Tapeta surface year-round, but the cumulative opportunities over tracks where Tapeta is the primary surface – Turfway, Woodbine, and the not-long-for-this-world Golden Gate Fields – are comparable, if not greater. Other sires have had opportunities to put up similar numbers and the vast majority haven't.

Bucchero moves to New York at an opportune time to continue this run of synthetic success. By the time his first New York-sired foals hit the track in 2027, Belmont Park should have its one-mile Tapeta surface in operation, meaning the opportunities for his state-breds to make a difference on the surface should carry through from his final Florida crops to the Empire State.

As a Florida sire, the goal for many of Bucchero's breeders has been the 2-year-olds in training sales, and his status as the highest-positioned sire in the 2023 2-Year-Old Sale Sire Power Rankings standing outside of Kentucky has proven he can get them out fast. Bucchero sired one of just seven juveniles to breeze an eighth of a mile in :9 3/5 seconds this year, and he finished 14th among qualifying sires by average breeze time.

However, Bucchero's median yearling price has managed to remain steady as his lull-year crops begin to hit the auction scene, remaining at $16,000 from 2022 to 2023. If his New York-sired yearlings can maintain that median, it would make him competitive with his new contemporaries in that state.

Bucchero sports a masculine build, fitting of both his on-track career as a graded stakes-winning turf sprinter, and the Storm Cat/Tale of the Cat/Lion Heart/Kantharos family tree. He's solid throughout with plenty of bone, but he's not just a cannonball. There's a raciness to him that the right mare could capitalize on to create a potential two-turn athlete.

I keep coming up with different ways to slice and dice the stallion ranks, and Bucchero keeps outkicking his status as a regional sire. I think he'll be just fine in New York, especially as it transitions to a state where Tapeta will soon be a significant part of the picture.

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Second Team: Flameaway

Ch. h., 2015, Scat Daddy x Vulcan Rose, by Fusaichi Pegasus
Standing at Darby Dan Farm, KY, $20,000

Flameaway

Once again, we look toward the future. We only have 29 all-weather starts for Flameaway's progeny from his debut class of 2-year-olds, but those youngsters are making it count.

Flameaway is hitting at 55.2 percent in the money on the synthetic from his freshman crop, and he's already getting stars. Freedom Principle broke his maiden over Gulfstream Park's all-weather track, then followed up with a win in the Armed Forces Stakes. Further north, She's Fire finished second on debut on the Tapeta track at Presque Isle Downs, then she came back later this year to win the Fitz Dixon Jr. Memorial Juvenile Stakes by 3 1/4 lengths.

Flameaway himself only had one go on an all-weather track, winning his debut at Woodbine as a juvenile. From there, he proved himself to be a versatile runner, winning stakes races over both dirt and turf. His own sire, Scat Daddy, proved himself able to get an elite horse over any surface during his truncated career.

Flameaway is another stallion whose median sale price has remained consistent between his first and second crops at $25,000, which suggests both buyers and breeders are keeping the faith with him as his first runners play out. We'll need a lot more evidence before Flameaway can be labeled as “proven” for anything, even as a sire of synthetic runners, but if you're going to be good at something early on, it doesn't hurt to be especially good at it.

Check in for future installments to see who made the All-Value Sire Team among stallions of various ages and specialties, including, freshman sires of 2024, sires of sprinters, regional sires, and more.

The post The 2023-24 All-Value Sire Team Presented By Pedigrees360: The Rookie And The All-Weather Sire appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Nicholson To Retire From Insurance Agency

Lexington firm Nicholson Insurance Agency, which has served clients with equine and farm insurance, announces the upcoming retirement of Joe Browne Nicholson, effective Dec. 31.

“After 46 years in the business, it seems like now is a good time to slow down,” said Nicholson, who joined his father-in-law John A. Bell III's Cromwell Bloodstock Agency in 1977.

“Working alongside Mr. Bell and his family was a tremendous experience for me,” Nicholson said “The lessons learned on the importance of maintaining high standards of work ethic and performance were invaluable. I have tried to practice these principles throughout my career.”

Nicholson Insurance Agency was established in 1993 and also has provided other general lines of property and casualty coverage for individuals and businesses. The agency has been acquired by Acrisure, the sixth-largest brokerage firm in the world. John David Christman, an experienced equine insurance professional, will lead that division. Romesh Sinclair and Sarah Harrison will continue to provide quality individualized client services.

“It has been my privilege and pleasure to associate with the world of the horse. Being able to combine my career avocation with my horse affection has been a blessing,” said Nicholson. “I have met many wonderful people over the years at sales, racetracks, and show rings who possess that exceptional quality of love and care for the horse. Special indeed.”

The post Nicholson To Retire From Insurance Agency appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Nicholson to Retire from Agency After 46 Years

Joe Browne Nicholson will retire from Nicholson Insurance Agency effective Dec. 31 after 46 years, according to a press release issued Sunday. The agency was established in 1993 and served clientele with equine and farm insurance since then. It was also announced that the group has been acquired by the sixth-largest brokerage firm in the world, Acrisure.

“It has been my privilege and pleasure to associate with the world of the horse. Being able to combine my career avocation with my horse affection has been a blessing,” said Nicholson. “I have met many wonderful people over the years at sales, racetracks and show rings who possess that exceptional quality of love and care for the horse. Special indeed.”

The post Nicholson to Retire from Agency After 46 Years appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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‘Stubborn’ Buyer Wins Out At Arqana As Buskop Bags 190k Zarak Foal 

By Brian Sheerin and Katie Petrunyak

Danish buyer Morten Buskop was left thanking his lucky stars on Sunday that his unnamed but long-standing client was more stubborn than him as he came out on top for the €190,000 Zarak (Fr) foal who led the way at the second session of the Arqana breeding stock sale. 

There's nothing quite like seeing the sales house back up when a highly regarded horse walks into the ring and it became evident pretty quickly that the Haras de Montaigu-drafted colt had plenty of suitors with many of the top judges playing on lot 400. 

A daughter of one of the best stallions in France and out of the well-bred Sea The Stars (Ire) mare Brodie (GB), the Sunday sale-topper could be offered for resale or put into training by Buskop's client, with the agent keen not to tie up plans at this early stage. 

He said, “My client is a very stubborn man when he decides he likes the horse or the foal. He likes the Zaraks, of course, and we thought there is a lot of Dubawi (Ire) in this horse.”

Buskop added, “The page is nice. He's out of a Sea The Stars mare so that should do the job. We also like the fact that the granddam is by Linamix (Fr). Very happy with the purchase.”

The main takeaway from Sunday's action was the clearance rate climbing 4% to 83% compared to last year's figures. The average was virtually the same at €36,592 while the median climbed €2,500 to €30,000. The aggregate was also up by almost 2% to €7,757,500.

Howdy Partner – Ballylinch Form Strong Partnerships

Two years ago, Meridian International and Ballylinch Stud teamed up at Arqana to bid on a colt by New Bay (GB), however, they came in as underbidder when the youngster sold for €180,000. Flash forward to this September and the juvenile named Alcantor (Fr), who was a TDN Rising Star on debut, claimed the G3 Prix Thomas Bryon Jockey Club de Turquie for Baron Edouard De Rothschild. 

Meridian International's Ghislain Bozo and John O'Connor of Ballylinch Stud were keen to try for the same family again as Alcantor's half-sister by another Ballylinch sire took to the ring at Arqana. After a lively round of bidding, the partners came out on top with a winning €115,000 bid for the daughter of first-crop sire Waldgeist (GB).

“We think we're going to either pinhook her or race her,” said Bozo of lot 396. “She's a very good mover and Alcantor is obviously a very good horse. We're going to try to get the best out of her.”

“We like doing partnerships,” O'Connor added. “We think we are good partners for people and it's been very successful for us. It allows us to spread the risk over a larger number of horses and we're always happy to do it mostly on our own stallions. We like that best. She's by Waldgeist and the trainers have been very positive about him, so he has to get some more winners next year but the trainers tell me that they're very nice horses.” 

Consigned by Haras du Hoguenet, the April-foaled weanling is out of Bianca de Medici (GB) (Medicean {GB}), who hails from the family of dual Arc heroine Treve (Fr) (Motivator {GB}) and whose six foals from six to race also include Group 2 winner Boscaccio (Ger) (Mount Nelson {GB}).

“We know that the mare is a proven mare so she's bred some good ones,” O'Connor said. “She's a very nice filly. We might end up racing her. If we do, at least we have one that looks like a racehorse.” 

Ballylinch Stud went on to team up with an unnamed partner to secure Royal Grey (GB) (Havana Grey {GB}) (lot 477), a listed winner in Italy, for €135,000. She was purchased once again by Bozo of Meridian International and will join trainer Nicolas Clement after a short break. 

Bozo explained, “She is going to be trained by Nicolas Clement and is a very nice filly with good form. The stallion needs no introduction and she is just a lovely filly with a very good page. We will give her a break for a month and then she will go back into training where she can hopefully take in a listed win in France.”

Royal Grey, a daughter of G2 Lowther S. runner-up Infamous Angel (GB) (Exceed And Excel {Aus}), was sold for £45,000 at the Goffs UK Premier Yearling Sale last year. She has amassed three wins in Italy for Endo Botti. 

Bozo continued, “It's a partnership between a client of Nicolas Clement's and also Ballylinch Stud. Havana Grey is a lovely stallion and he could be the next Wootton Bassett (GB) maybe. He stands out so much and his stock have a good temperament and are very keen to go. I'm very impressed by them.”

 

 

Top Jockey Ronan Whelan Gets In On The Arqana Action

Some jockeys jet off to exotic places on their holidays over the winter but top Irish rider Ronan Whelan swapped topping up his tan for adding to his bloodstock portfolio alongside his father Tom, a renowned breeder in his own right. 

This year marks Whelan's best, with 46 winners ridden domestically in Ireland, while Tom, who operates under Church View Stables, has enjoyed a good time in the ring.

The father-and-son team were involved in the purchasing of lot 315, a St Mark's Basilica (Fr) colt out of a half-sister to Muhaarar (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB}), for €110,000 to MAB Agency.

The sale comes just a week after a filly by the Coolmore-based stallion and out of the Oaks winner Talent (GB) (New Approach {Ire}) topped the foal sale at Tattersalls at 575,000gns to Jill Lamb on behalf of Newsells Park Stud. 

“We fell in love with the colt,” Ronan Whelan said. “We can't wait to bring him back to Ireland. St Mark's Basilica is a promising stallion and he's from a great family.”

Marc Antoine Berghgracht's MAB Agency went on to sign for Tevara (GB) (Compton Place {GB}) (lot 331), offered in foal to Victor Ludorum (GB), from Haras du Logis at €100,000. MAB Agency spent almost €400,000 on six lots on Sunday alone.

Irish Buyers Going Ga-Ga For Galiway

Irish buyers have been going ga-ga crazy for the progeny of Galiway (GB) in recent times, largely down to the success Willie Mullins has enjoyed with the Haras de Colleville-based stallion.

Ireland's dominant National Hunt handler has done his bit to spread the good Galiway word through hurdlers Vauban (Fr) and Gala Marceau (Fr) and Mullins's fingerprints were all over one of the more expensive lots sold on Sunday. 

Less than a month after Paul Byrne, Harold Kirk and Mullins snapped up Zillow (GB) (Zoffany {Ire}) for €300,000 at the Autumn Sale here at Arqana, the three-year-old's dam Petunia (Ire) was sold in foal to Galiway to Irish buyers Seamus Murphy and Mark McStay standing alongside Timmy Hyde jnr. 

By Pivotal (GB) herself, Petunia hails from a good Wertheimer family and there was clearly no shortage of people willing to take the chance on Zillow turning out to be a fine dual-purpose type for Mullins with the hammer falling at €93,000.

To be fair to Murphy and McStay, there are worse people to be placing your faith in than messrs Byrne, Kirk and Mullins. Lot 438 could turn out to be a good buy. 

Buy of the Day

Mags O'Toole has a habit of turning water into the wine and nobody would be surprised if lot 303, a Sioux Nation colt out of winning Camelot (GB) mare Shalya (Fr), could double or even treble the €55,000 outlay if he rocks up to any of the major yearling sales next year.

Shalya, herself a winner at four, hails from the family of G1 Yorkshire Oaks and G1 Prix Vermeille victress Shareta (Ire) (Sinndar {Ire}), plus a second Prix Vermeille winner in Shawanda (Ire) (Sinndar {Ire}), who also claimed the G1 Irish Oaks. 

Sioux Nation, one of the top second-crop sires this year, celebrated a bumper sale at Tattersalls last week, with foals selling for 210,000gns, 155,000gns and 135,000gns.

All told, 10 foals by Sioux Nation sold for an average of 71,200gns. Given O'Toole's purchase came significantly under that average price from Tattersalls, one can assume that she is in a good position to turn a profit next year. 

Thought for the Day

The French way of auctioneering seems to be about building suspense and leaving no stone unturned to secure the best possible price for the vendors. Put it this way, there's nobody nipping off to the car parks early at Arqana. 

However, surely an argument can be made for the long, drawn out approach to auctioneering, where horses in the millions are climbing up in a series of  €25,000 bids, is counterproductive. Surely a more lively approach to auctioneering, in America for example, is best served for getting people's blood up and ultimately driving the highest price in the ring. 

Whether such a practice would ever catch on in France remains to be seen but there was no escaping that the ring felt flat for long periods of time on Saturday and Sunday at Arqana.

The post ‘Stubborn’ Buyer Wins Out At Arqana As Buskop Bags 190k Zarak Foal  appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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