Britain’s Animal Health Trust To Close; Equine Research Affected

Britain's Animal Health Trust (AHT) is set to shutter its doors forever. A nonprofit organization dedicated to veterinary and scientific research, the AHT has undertaken extensive disease surveillance work around the world. The Trust has virus and bacteria isolates that date back 50 years and it holds DNA samples for every registered Thoroughbred in Britain. The Trust has also completed cutting-edge research on equine sarcoid treatment and the use of HDR brachytherapy to address equine cancer.

The AHT board of trustees reported that they were unable to secure funding to make the organization viable long term and that additional announcements would be forthcoming. The AHT was established by Dr. Reginald Wooldridge in 1942 and has offered veterinary services to cats, dogs and horses since its inception. The staff included scientists, veterinarians, nurses and support staff.

The board began indicating in March that the organization was facing financial struggles and began exploring reorganization options, including closing its small animal and equine practices.

Though financial donations were offered, the board noted that it needed longer-term, substantial funding options to remain functioning. They reported that they would feel dishonest if they accepted the donations and were still forced to close.

Read the AHT full statement here.

Read more at HorseTalk.

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Not This Time Back On Top at OBS

by Christie DeBernardis & Jessica Martini

A filly by freshman sire Not This Time topped the last auction in Ocala, the Ocala Breeders’ Sales Company’s Spring Sale, last month and the young stallion was back on top again at OBS Wednesday with one of his daughters (Hip 640) topping the day’s trade at $270,000. Consigned by de Meric Sales, Hip 640 was purchased by Mike Mulligan’s Emerald Sales on behalf of owner Tobey Morton.

A total of 155 juveniles changed hands Wednesday for a gross of $3,869,800 with an average of $24,966 and median of $13,000. The RNA increased from 17.3% to 27.2%. During last year’s equivalent session, 225 horses brought $7,719,700 with an average of $34,310 and median of $17,000.

Throughout the first two days of selling, 309 Thoroughbreds summoned $8,834,600 with an average of $28,591 and median of $13,000. The cumulative RNA rate also rose from 20% last year to 28.3%. At this point last term, 429 2-year-olds grossed $133,89,200 with an average of $32,259 and a median of $17,000.

“It’s a bizarre market,” said Dennis O’Neill, who picked up the day’s top colt, a $185,000 son of Half Ours (Hip 383). “When I got here, I was the only one here and I was joking when I was looking at horses, I said, ‘Guys, I can’t buy every horse in the sale.’ It was really bizarre how few people were here Monday and then by Tuesday it had picked up.”

He continued, “It was really hit or miss. If you didn’t have anybody on the horse you liked, it was very, very easy to buy. But, I got shut out on two horses which I couldn’t believe because there weren’t many people there. At this sale, I haven’t seen any New York people or California people, so there aren’t a lot of people who traveled out here, which I can understand with the quarantine and everything going on.”

Mulligan said he also felt the lack of representation from certain regions impacted the marketplace.

“There is virtually no demand for the lower or middle market horses,” Mulligan said. “Without influences from people taking horses out of the country–the Korean buyers have not been here–so the lower market is really getting hit hard. The top 5% or 10% of the horses here are fine. If the horse is worth $75,000 to $150,000, that horse is fine. Horses that are $150,000 and up to whatever the sale topper will be here, I think those horses are in really good order. But underneath that, it’s tough. There is pretty solid demand. I got outrun on a couple of horses today. And so it’s not like we are coming in here and buying everything.”

Horseman Randy Bradshaw is typically a seller at OBS, but this week he adapted to the unconventional times by trying his hand at buying to help those unable to make it to Ocala due to COVID-19 related travel restrictions. That meant the horseman was able to provide a market perspective from both sides of the fence.

“At this sale, it is definitely a buyers’ market,” Bradshaw said. “You can definitely buy a nice horse for 50 cents on the dollar. Everyone is thinking about going back to the yearling market pretty soon. If you were buying, I think it was good, but if you were selling, I think it was not very good at all. It is tough to see people struggling, but hopefully the world will get back to normal and we can get back to work and do what we do.”

Filly Proves Right on Time for Avila

Silvestre Avila and his brother-in-law Chalino Lopez had tried to enter their Not This Time filly (hip 640), purchased for $19,000 at last year’s OBS October Yearling Sale, at previous juvenile auctions this season, but the chestnut didn’t make it into any catalogue until the July sale. She made the most of the opportunity with a bullet :9 4/5 furlong work last week and rewarded the two men when selling for $270,000 through the de Meric Sales consignment in Ocala Wednesday. Mike Mulligan’s Emerald Sales made the winning bid on behalf of owner Tobey Morton.

“We had entered her in some earlier OBS sales and unfortunately she couldn’t get in,” Avila said through an interpreter Wednesday. “I was thinking of going to Maryland, but with the COVID scare, I didn’t know if the sale would go on. This was the last chance to sell her. She got in and did her thing.”

Avila, who has been a vital member of the de Meric team for the past eight years, purchased the filly before Not This Time’s hot start on the track and in the sales ring this spring.

“In my mind, I am always trying to double or triple the purchase price. I do this to make a profit and that’s what I am hoping for,” he said.

The only yearling Avila purchased last year, the filly impressed him right from the start.

“When I started getting her ready, she was very smart and super sound and never did one thing wrong,” Avila said. “I started noticing that she was doing everything really well and then, as God would have it, Not This Time started getting hotter and hotter. Fortune and good luck was on our side with that. Those are the things you can’t control, but it favored us this time.”

Avila and Lopez had success pinhooking last year, selling a filly by Daredevil purchased for $5,000 at OBS October for $155,000 at OBS March, but Wednesday’s result was their biggest sale to date.

“It is the biggest pinhook score that I’ve ever made,” Avila confirmed. “I am just humbled and grateful for the opportunity to do this.”

As for his plans for the upcoming yearling sales, Avila said, “If everything goes all right, with the way things are in the world, if there is a way for us to buy yearlings this coming fall, we will.”

A New York-bred filly, hip 640 is out of Exotic Design (A.P. Indy), a daughter of multiple Grade I winner Exotic Wood (Rahy).

She will be joining the New York stable of John Kimmel, Mulligan confirmed Wednesday.

“She is going to Saratoga to John Kimmel tomorrow or the next day,” Mulligan said.

Of the filly’s appeal, Mulligan said, “When we watched the breeze show and after being in Maryland [for the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic sale] and seeing the top of the market being so strong, we felt like the top 30 or 40 horses here would be hard to obtain because quality horses are still in demand. That’s the bottom line. We elected to go after that filly because she checked all of the boxes. She has amazing physical ability. She worked awesome, galloped out awesome. We thought she was one of the best fillies in the sale and the New York-bred was just a bonus for us.”

Mulligan has now made three purchases on behalf of Morton at OBS, going to $85,000 for a filly by Anchor Down (hip 199) and to $70,000 for a colt by Uncaptured (hip 582).

Bradshaw Gets New Perspective at OBS

Randy Bradshaw is usually selling at the OBS sales, but, in keeping with the unconventional nature of 2020, the horseman found himself on the buying side at this week’s July Sale.

“I told some of my clients this is a great opportunity because horses are really going to be discounted,” Bradshaw said. “We knew New York people couldn’t come down because of the quarantine situation. We are all in this together. Hopefully, I can help people out a little and get them through tough times, so when we can do that, that is what we need to do. We are probably going to put a partnership together.”

Bradshaw’s first purchase of the sale was a colt from the first crop of Air Force Blue, who he secured for $100,000 Tuesday. The :21 flat breezer was purchased by consignor Brick City Thoroughbreds for $30,000 at Keeneland September. Hip 120 was bred in Louisiana at Summerhill Farm, which purchased her unraced dam Savviest (El Corredor) for $43,000 with this colt in utero at the 2017 KEENOV sale. Savviest is also the dam of SP Take Ten (Uncle Mo) and is a half-sister to GISW Tactical Cat (Storm Cat).

“I’ve liked the Air Force Blues all year,” Bradshaw said. “I have been a big fan from what I’ve seen. We were looking to buy a horse for Dallas Stewart and one of his clients and one of my clients. We do partner together. This colt is a May foal, so he looks like he is still growing, though he is plenty big enough now. He worked well, went out well and I decided to take a shot. Luckily we got him bought.”

During Wednesday’s second session, Bradshaw picked up a daughter of Uncle Mo for $150,000 from the Gayle Woods consignment. Bred by Carhue Investments, Chelsea Bloodstock and Paget Bloodstock, the $45,000 KEESEP RNA is out of a half-sister to GISW Funny Moon (Malibu Moon). Hip 427 was clocked in :34 2/5 after bolting during her breeze.

“I loved her breeze,” Bradshaw said. “Turning for home, she bolted. She saw something on the inside and bolted to the outside. I counted the seconds and she lost two or three seconds before the rider got her straightened out and leveled off. We probably would have had to pay a lot more money for her if she worked straight. She had a nice pedigree and I am an Uncle Mo fan also. We got lucky and got her bought at the right price.” –@CDeBernardisTDN

Half Ours Colt to Reddam

Dennis O’Neill has had success prioritizing individual over pedigree when buying such standouts as GI Kentucky Derby winner I’ll Have Another (Flower Alley) on behalf of California owner Paul Reddam and the bloodstock agent will be hoping the formula works again after purchasing a colt by Louisiana stallion Half Ours (hip 383) for $185,000 Wednesday in Ocala. Consigned by Sergio Centeno’s Blue River Bloodstock, the bay colt blazed a quarter-mile in a bullet :20 1/5 during last week’s under-tack show.

“This was a horse who fits our M.O.,” O’Neill said. “His breeding was a little sketchy to say the least, but we just loved his breeze. Usually you see these horses who breeze pretty fast and then you look at them and they are Quarter Horse-looking, really fast-looking horses. When I saw this horse, I called Paul and said, ‘Man, he’s really, really nice looking.’ He has some length to him and some size. He just doesn’t look like a horse that would go in :20 1/5. I told Paul, ‘He is just the perfect horse for us. He’s not going to be a million dollars because of his pedigree, but he looks like a running son of a gun.”

In addition to 2012 Derby winner I’ll Have Another, Reddam has had graded-stakes success with other horses with less-than-fashionable pedigrees like Mistical Plan (Game Plan) and Great Hunter (Aptitude).

“We’ve had success in the past buying horses who had ability and looked good, vetted good, breezed good and weren’t necessarily the best-bred horses in the world,” O’Neill said. “And Paul is a gambler. It didn’t take a lot of convincing. When I called him, I thought I was going to have a heck of a time convincing him to do this. But as soon as I finished my sales pitch, he said, ‘Get it done.'”

Hip 383, purchased by Jaime Centeno for $8,000 at last year’s OBS October Yearling Sale, was the second horse of the sales season to work in :20 1/5. A filly by Not This Time (hip 1254) put in her :20 1/5 work before selling for a sale-topping $1.35 million at the OBS Spring sale last month.

“I know they payed $1.35 million for a horse in that last sale that worked in :20 1/5,” O’Neill said. “To me, I thought this horse’s breeze was just as good as that one. And this horse looked as good as that one. It was just obviously pedigree-wise a little bit different. I try to find individuals and the last thing I look at is the page. If you can get over that, we’ve been really successful buying the best horses of a certain sire. I think Half Ours is due to have a really good horse. Hopefully, we got the best Half Ours. That’s our plan.” @JessMartiniTDN

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Not This Time Filly Tops OBS July Sale’s Second Session

Hip No. 640, a daughter of Not This Time consigned by de Meric Sales, Agent, went to Emerald Sales, Agent for Tobey L. Morton, for $270,000 to top the second session of the Ocala Breeders' Sales Company's 2020 July Sale of 2-Year-Olds and Horses of Racing Age.

The chestnut filly, whose eighth in :9 4/5 was the fastest at the distance at Thursday's under tack session, is out of Exotic Design, by A.P. Indy, a daughter of grade one stakes winner Exotic Wood and a full sister to stakes winner Key to Power.

  • Dennis O'Neill paid $185,000 for Hip No. 383, a son of Half Ours consigned by Blue River Bloodstock, Inc., Agent, whose quarter in :20 1/5 on Wednesday was the sale's fastest at the distance. The bay colt is out of All About Ju Ju, by Into Mischief, a half-sister to stakes placed Gregorian Bay.
  • Hip No. 473, a daughter of Palace Malice consigned by Hoppel's Horse & Cattle Co., Inc, was sold to Clay Scherer, Agent for Al & Bill Ulwelling, for $175,000. The bay filly, whose eighth in :10 flat was co-fastest at the distance on Wednesday, is a half-sister to stakes placed Merveilleux out of Breech Inlet, by Holy Bull, a half-sister to graded stakes winner Bauble Queen.
  • Hip No. 427, a daughter of Uncle Mo consigned by Gayle Woods, Agent, who breezed three-eighths in :34 2/5 on Wednesday, was purchased by Randy Bradshaw, Agent, for $150,000. The bay filly is out of Bama Belle, by Giant's Causeway, a half-sister to Grade 1 winner Funny Moon.
  • West Bloodstock, Agent for Repole Stables, paid $110,000 for Hip No. 643, Amount, a son of Curlin who breezed an eighth in :10 2/5 on Thursday. Consigned by Harris Training Center LLC, Agent, the chestnut colt is a half brother to graded stakes winner Size out of Extent, by Pulpit.

For the session, 155 horses sold for a total of $3,869,800, compared with 225 grossing $7,719,700 at last year's second session. The average was $24,966 compared with $34,310 a year ago, while the median price was $13,000, compared to $17,500 in 2019. The buyback percentage was 25.7 percent; it was 17.3 percent last year.

The July Sale continues Thursday at 10 a.m. Hip No.'s 721 – 1114 will be offered.

To view the full results from Wednesday's session, click here.

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Blue Grass-Winning Trainer Drury Tells His Story On TDN Writers’ Room

It took a long journey for trainer Tom Drury to get to where he is now, with a GII Toyota Blue Grass S. winner and major GI Kentucky Derby contender in his barn. There were years when Drury didn’t win any races, which had him questioning whether he was made out for the training business. But life is good now for Drury, largely thanks to a Bruce Lunsford homebred named Art Collector (Bernardini), and he joined the TDN Writers’ Room presented by Keeneland Wednesday to talk about his prized pupil and his bumpy ride to success.

Calling in as the Green Group Guest of the Week, Drury was asked how he came to train Art Collector, who ran the first five races in his career for Joe Sharp. The colt was transferred to Drury by owner/breeder Bruce Lunsford following his disqualification from an allowance victory for a levamisole positive under Sharp.

“I’ve been working for Bruce for a long time. We had Madcap Escapade for him as a 2-year old,” Drury said of his time assisting longtime Lunsford trainer Frankie Brothers. “I’ve always done more behind the scenes kind of work, legging up young horses and taking horses when they needed a break and things of that nature. Along that path, he’s always left a few horses with me to race and given me some opportunities to win some really nice races. He contacted me and just said he was going to be shuffling the deck a little bit and wasn’t exactly sure which horses were going where, and just asked if I could help him out, which we were obviously happy to do. Art Collector was one of those horses.”

As for Art Collector’s temperament and development, Drury commented, “He’s really been easy. He’s just a very kind, classy individual, nothing seems to rattle him. He just kind of fell right into the routine. Gosh, he’s probably been as easy of a horse to train as I’ve ever had in the barn. I would definitely tell you that the horse handled Saturday a whole lot better than the trainer did. He’s just been a pleasure to work with.”

Drury has walked a winding road to where he is now, and he recalled some of the tougher times, saying, “It took me a while to figure out what my niche was going to be in the business. I kind of had to do the same thing my dad did. I had a few horses, but I had to gallop on the side to cover the expenses. It’s just been slow coming. There were some years that we didn’t win a race and the opportunities weren’t happening. You think to yourself, ‘Man, what did I do here?’ At one point, I wasn’t sure that I was going to make it as a trainer, but fortunately things turned around and here I am. It’s been good stuff. We never gave up. Finally things just started to kind of go the right way.”

Elsewhere on the show, in the West Point Thoroughbreds news segment, the writers discussed the outbreak of COVID-19 among the jockey community and looked forward to the Saratoga meet. Click here to listen to the podcast and click here to watch it on Vimeo.

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