Barton All In as Baldwin Bloodstock Makes its Third January Appearance

When Amy Bunt and John Barton teamed up to present their first consignment as Baldwin Bloodstock at the 2021 Keeneland January Horses of All Ages Sale, Barton was still based in Southern California and making a living underwriting auto loans. Two years on, Barton has made the transition full-time to the Bluegrass and Baldwin Bloodstock is set to present six horses in its third January consignment. While earning a living in the industry might have been a new experience when he joined forces with Bunt two years ago, Barton was anything but a novice to the sport.

“I grew up in San Gabriel, which is a stone throw from Santa Anita, about 10 minutes south of Santa Anita,” Barton said. “My dad, Neil Barton, owned horses back in the early '70s. And he went to a high school called Mark Keppel in Ahambra. He and Wayne Hughes of Spendthrift used to take bets out for their teachers during class. This was in the late '40s and early '50s. They would drive up to Santa Anita, make the bets and come back. My dad and Wayne were best friends forever, he was kind of like an uncle to me. So that's kind of how it got started.”

Barton's cousins Bob and Jude Feld have been involved in all facets of the game and, early on, Barton had dreams of following Jude into the Southern California training ranks.

“In the summer of 1996, when I thought I wanted to be a trainer, Jude said, 'Well, I have a string of horses at Fairplex.' I said, 'I want to give it a shot.' So that summer, I would walk hots for him. I did it for a full summer, seven days a week getting up at 4 a.m. Bob was the supervisor for that string at Pomona while Jude was at Del Mar during the summer. So Bob was running the show and I was a hotwalker. After three months of that, I said, 'I don't want to be a trainer anymore.' I went back to school that September and got my degree in finance in 1997 and went straight into auto financing.”

But Barton never lost his love of racing.

“I still had my eye on horse racing and the business,” he said. “I would go to Santa Anita whenever Wayne had a horse running–he still lived in Southern California at the time and hadn't purchased Spendthrift yet. So every time he ran a horse, my dad and I would go and I was able to pick his brain and talk about the business.”

It wasn't until 2020 that Barton finally made his first trip to Kentucky.

“My mom and dad used to come out a lot and visit Wayne and his wife Patty,” Barton recalled. “They would come home and tell me how great it is. But I never got to. Then in March of 2020, right as the pandemic hit, I kind of invited myself to Spendthrift. Wayne and his wife said, 'Yeah, come out and stay with us, you can see the farm and you can see if you like it out here.' So I got to Kentucky and I fell in love with it. I walked around Spendthrift, saw all the stallions and all the babies–it was March, so babies were being born as we were out there. My sisters and husbands were with me and they said, 'You know so much about the farm and everything,'–because I was rattling off statistics and numbers and history, they said, 'You should get a job here.' And we kind of laughed it off.”

He continued, “I went back home to California, to my auto finance, but I was kind of tired of it. I came out again to Kentucky in September of 2020 for the yearling sales. I stayed with Wayne and Patty. Spendthrift was very involved with the yearling sales, so I walked around with Ned Toffey, the general manager of Spendthrift, and their crew just learning about everything. One thing led to another and Wayne said, 'Why don't you move out here?'”

As he was contemplating the jump to Kentucky, Bob Feld introduced his cousin to Bunt, who was just launching her Baldwin Bloodstock. Bunt had been a partner in the Select Sales Agency, but was looking to pick up the slack when that consignment disbanded.

“I thought it sounded interesting,” Barton said of the opportunity to partner on the consignment, but Hughes had other ideas.

“I got on the phone with Wayne and he said, 'I don't know much about consignments. But I want you to come out here and be the tour guide for Spendthrift. You are a hard working, you like to talk, you know your history, you'd be perfect for it.'”

So Barton decided to do both. He sold his home in Southern California in February of 2021 and moved to Lexington the following month. He lived in a cabin at Spendthrift while giving tours to MyRacehorse owners.

Living on the farm gave Barton the opportunity to spend time with, and learn from, Hughes in the final months of the entrepreneur's life.

“I think he saw a little bit of my dad in me,” Barton said. “That's why we got along so well. He loved telling stories from way back when. And we talked horses and the business. And he was always worried about me. He told me, 'I think you'll do well as long as you work as hard as your dad did.'”

Baldwin Bloodstock had its biggest results at the November sales of 2021, selling C J's Gal (Awesome Again), dam of GIII Pocahontas S. winner Hidden Connection (Connect), for $450,000 at Fasig-Tipton and Jazz Tune (Johannesburg), dam of GI Breeders' Futurity winner Rattle N Roll (Connect) for $585,000 at Keeneland.

By 2022, the Baldwin consignment to the Keeneland November sale included 24 horses and was led by a son of Tiz the Law who sold for $105,000.

After that success with a first-crop sire, Baldwin returns to the Keeneland January sale with six horses, four of whom are short yearlings by first-crop sires. The group includes a filly by Global Campaign (hip 111), a daughter of Gift Box (hip 181), a filly by Higher Power (hip 1128), and a colt by Thousand Words (hip 1166).

“I know those first-crop sires, those babies sold well for all of them pretty much, we just hope it keeps going,” Barton said.

The Baldwin consignment also includes a short yearling filly by GI Belmont S. winner Tapwrit (hip 1175), whose unbeaten 3-year-old son Victory Formation just acquired GI Kentucky Derby points with a win in the Smarty Jones S. Sunday at Oaklawn. The gray filly is the first foal out of stakes-placed Duchess of Sussex.

“We are excited about her,” Barton said. “Duchess of Sussex was a black-type placed filly owned by Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners. She has Eclipse written all over her because they owned Tapwrit and they owned Duchess of Sussex. And the timing is perfect with Victory Formation winning Sunday.”

The Baldwin consignment is rounded out by the 6-year-old broodmare Mopolka (Uncle Mo) (hip 962), who is offered in foal to Improbable.

“These days everybody is looking for young broodmare prospects, so we like her a lot,” Barton said.

The business partnership between Barton, with his financial background, and Bunt would seem to be a match made in heaven. Bunt's vast experience in the racing industry includes stints with Coolmore in Australia, Van Meter Sales, Niall Brennan Stables and Eaton Sales, as well as time as a veterinary technician at Hagyard Davison McGee.

“Together, we make a great team,” Barton said. “It's absolutely perfect that I handle the financial stuff and she does the horse stuff. I am learning more about the horse stuff, about conformation. I knew a little bit about the breeding, but I am learning more. And you can't help but learn when you are around Amy because she just knows so much. If anyone was born to be in this business, it's her. She lives and breathes it. And I am starting to do that myself.”

As for the future of Baldwin Bloodstock, Barton said, “Hopefully someday we would like to get into the yearling sales, but right now we are still focused on the weanlings and mixed sales. I'd like to go Maryland and maybe Saratoga, we will see how it goes. We would love to expand, but still keep it small enough to where we can provide the attention that the horse and the client deserve.”

The Keeneland January sale will be held next Monday through Thursday with bidding commencing each day at 10 a.m.

The post Barton All In as Baldwin Bloodstock Makes its Third January Appearance appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Baldwin Bloodstock Debuts at Keeneland January

The Keeneland January Horses of All Ages Sale will mark the inaugural consignment of Amy Bunt and John Barton’s Baldwin Bloodstock, which will offer 21 horses during the four-day auction next week. Bunt, who was a partner in the now-disbanded Select Sales Agency and a principal in Machmer Hall Sales which debuted at the yearling sales last fall, brings a wealth of international experience to the new endeavor.

“When we sat down earlier in the spring and talked about Machmer Hall Sales and the direction they wanted to go in, Carrie [Brogden] just wanted to concentrate on the yearlings, so she could buy more mares and be more proactive with helping her clients purchase horses, rather than selling horses at the mixed sales,” Bunt said of her decision to launch the new consignment. “And it just kind of popped into my head. ‘What about me? In January the sales are kind of small, would you mind if I did my own consignment?’ And graciously, she and her mother [Sandy Fubini] said yes and they are supporting me, as well as some of our clients. It was just a happy accident.”

Bunt traces her love of horses to a trip to the park when she was just a toddler.

“I am literally the only horse person in my family,” Bunt said with a laugh. “My dad took me to a park when I was a little kid, I think I was about three years old, and these people had pulled up to go trail riding with their horses. I probably had never even seen a horse before and I just had a temper tantrum until he let me go over and they kindly let me sit on one of their horses. So somehow I was just born with a desire to be around them.”

Bunt grew up riding horses and graduated from Virginia Tech with a degree in Animal Sciences before finding her way to the Bluegrass as part of the Kentucky Equine Management Internship.

“I really just wanted to learn how to breed horses,” Bunt said. “I thought I might breed riding horses. But when you get to Central Kentucky and it’s so beautiful, you just kind of get the bug.”

Bunt spent a year working for Coolmore in Australia and returned to Kentucky where she initially worked as a veterinary technician at Hagyard Davison McGee. She also served as sales coordinator for Van Meter Sales, Niall Brennan Stables and Eaton Sales and served international stints in Ireland and in England with Ted Voute before joining Select Sales in 2013. She became a partner in that operation in 2016.

“When Select disbanded last year, Carrie maintained a small number of clients,” Bunt said. “She has worked really hard and was trying to take a step back and enjoy life a little bit more and enjoy their success. She downsized and focused on quality over quantity. So a lot of the clients that stayed with Machmer Hall Sales are selling with us [at Baldwin Bloodstock] and then I have acquired a couple new clients.”

She also acquired a partner for the new venture in John Barton, who is a cousin of bloodstock agent Bob Feld.

“John knows Mr. [B. Wayne] Hughes from Spendthrift really well–I think it goes back to his uncle and Mr. Hughes who were best friends growing up in Temple City, California. And he is close with our family as well. I met him through the Felds. He came to the sales spending some time with Spendthrift and he was part of the MyRacehorse team that had Authentic. He was interested in shadowing me around the sales, so he came and hung out with me at the sales for a little bit. And as it turned out, he was looking to make a career change.

Bunt continued, “He got the bug coming here and it just kind of happened. I said, ‘I am starting my own small consignment, I’m looking for someone to help me out with it because I pretty much have a full-time job with Machmer Hall. It would be nice to have someone there to take over some of the duties, so I’m not doing it all myself.’ He kind of jumped at the chance and it’s been a really happy partnership so far. He is super enthusiastic and super positive. I don’t ever see him being in a bad mood and that’s the kind of personality that you want to bring in.”

The name Baldwin Bloodstock is a nod, both to the entrepreneurial spirit of Santa Anita founder E J “Lucky” Baldwin, and a personal tribute to a spunky horse near and dear to Bunt’s heart.

“I have an old retired Thoroughbred named after [Baldwin],” Bunt explained. “The horse has been–he’s just a brat, to be honest with you. He is the coolest horse and I think his attitude is what made him a successful racehorse and he was a successful show horse for me. He raced over 70 times and earned almost $300,000 the hard way. When I got him, I didn’t even know if he was going to be sound enough to do anything. He’s just one of those really awesome hard-knocking horses. I showed him up through the preliminary level eventing, which is a more extensive level than I thought I would personally ever do and definitely more than I thought he was going to be able to do.”

The now 23-year-old Lucky Baldwin (Crafty Prospector) won 10 times in 74 starts and earned $255,468 before embarking on his show career with Bunt.

“He’s still terrorizing the farrier and everyone and he still goes foxhunting and I ride him a couple times a week just to keep his joints limber,” Bunt said. “I thought it would be nice to honor him [with the consignment’s name] because he’s kind of what we are all here for and what we are all working for. Just to have happy endings for horses like that that provide a living for us.”

She added, “And then the story of Lucky Baldwin himself, he was a famous prospector in California and obviously started Santa Anita and had a lot of entrepreneurial success. I just thought it would bring some luck to us.”

Bunt is excited about Baldwin Bloodstock’s first consignment at the Keeneland January sale.

“Physically, I think we have a really, really super group,” she said. “And we have some great sire power.”

The Baldwin Bloodstock consignment features a pair of yearling fillies by Union Rags (hip 324 and hip 376), as well as a yearling filly by Brody’s Cause (hip 984)–both stallions who have been in the news lately.

“Union Rags has been on fire lately,” Bunt said. “He’s had [Jan. 1 Cash Run S. winner] Gulf Coast, [GII Los Alamitos Futurity winner] Spielberg and [Fair Grounds maiden winner] Defeater, who won so impressively they already think he’s a Derby-type horse. And Brody’s Cause has Kalypso, who just won the GII Santa Ynez and was second in a Grade I.”

Bunt continued, “We also have a mare in foal to Outwork (hip 882) and he’s number four on the freshman sire list and second by number of winners. And our Tapiture colt (hip 1079) is really nice–Tapiture is third on the second crop sire list and first by number of winners.”

Bunt will bring a vast array of knowledge to the new consignment, but her philosophy is simple and straightforward.

“I just really want to focus on accurately representing my clients and the horses and being really forthcoming with buyers,” she said. “There is so much information and it’s such a close-knit network, I just want everyone who sells with me to be as happy as they can be and everyone who buys off me to be as happy as they can. And just hopefully do the best job for everyone. Some people are more focused on the selling part, some people are more focused on the buyers. I want to accommodate everyone as well as I can and just present a product that people can trust.”

Baldwin Bloodstock will also have consignments at the upcoming Ocala Breeders’ Sales Company’s Winter Mixed Sale, Jan. 26 and 27, and the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Winter Mixed Sale, Feb. 8 and 9.

“I really want to focus on the winter sales,” Bunt said. “I think January and February are great times to sell horses who have good conformation. A lot of times in November they can get overlooked.”

Looking ahead to the fall, Bunt said, “In November, I still help Machmer Hall, short-listing for them, and I really enjoy that. So I don’t know if we’ll have a November consignment going forward. But Carrie and I have spoken and she was all for me doing the Fasig-Tipton November consignment. She didn’t particularly want to sell at that one anymore and if I wanted to do it, she said she would filter horses my way. So right now, I have a consignment at Keeneland January, OBS January and Fasig-Tipton February. And we’ll look at doing the November sale this fall at Fasig-Tipton.”

With the ongoing global pandemic and political uncertainty, this might be a daunting time to start a new endeavor, but Bunt sees reasons to be optimistic.

“You always worry about the economy and politics can seem to play a part,” she said. “But today I read handle was only down 1% in 2020, so I think that’s super optimistic for our sport. We need all the good news we can get. I thought that was great to know that people are still gambling and still interested even when they couldn’t attend live racing. And the numbers in the economy and the stock market have remained pretty steady compared to what could have happened. So, I am cautiously optimistic. It’s not an ideal time to start this, but if you can get through this, then you should be able to make it through anything.”

The Keeneland January sale begins Monday with bidding commencing at 10 a.m.

The post Baldwin Bloodstock Debuts at Keeneland January appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Machmer Hall Sales Launch Yearling Consignment

Machmer Hall Farm, the breeder of champion Tepin and Grade I-winners Gift Box, Vyjack, Money Multiplier, So Perfect, have launched a sales consignment operation to focus specifically on yearling sales in North America. Machmer Hall owners, Sandy Fubini and Craig and Carrie Brogden, along with Amy Bunt and Mullikin Thoroughbreds, are the principals of the new company, named Machmer Hall Sales. The group has enjoyed success pinhooking Mind Your Biscuits and Flat Out.

Among services available, the new organization will advise on matings, sale placements and pinhooking. The operation will offer 20 Thoroughbred yearlings at the upcoming Fasig-Tipton Showcase, scheduled for Sept. 9-10 in addition to a larger consignment for the following Keeneland September. Yearlings by Into Mischief, American Pharoah, Constitution, Malibu Moon and Street Sense are among the initial offerings.

“I am glad that with Machmer Hall Sales, I can focus on my passion for selling yearlings,” Carrie Brogden said.

Added Amu Bunt, “I’m grateful for my continued relationship with Machmer Hall. Their outstanding broodmare band and well-prepared individuals makes my job easier and more pleasurable. Carrie and I have worked together for a long time and I look forward to giving our clients even more personalized service.”

For more information, visit www.machmerhallsales.com

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Machmer Hall Sales To Debut Consignment At September Yearling Sales

Machmer Hall Farm, one of Kentucky's leading Thoroughbred nurseries and breeders of champion Tepin and Grade 1-winner Gift Box, Vyjack, Money Multiplier, So Perfect, etc. announced Saturday they have developed a sales consignment operation to focus specifically on yearling sales in North America.

Machmer Hall owners, Sandy Fubini and Craig and Carrie Brogden, along with Amy Bunt and Mullikin Thoroughbreds are the principals of the new company, named Machmer Hall Sales. The group has enjoyed success pinhooking international star Mind Your Biscuits and ultra-talented Flat Out.

The new organization will focus on attention to detail and also concentrate on the yearling market and long-term relationships with established clients. Advice on matings, sale placements and pinhooking are among the full range of services available. They are scheduled to offer 20 Thoroughbred yearlings at the upcoming Fasig-Tipton Yearling Showcase, scheduled for Sept. 9 and 10 as well as a larger consignment for the following Keeneland September Sale in Lexington, Ky. 

Yearlings by noted stallions Into Mischief, American Pharoah, Constitution, Malibu Moon and Street Sense are among the initial offerings.

“I am glad that with Machmer Hall Sales, I can focus on my passion for selling yearlings,” Carrie Brogden said.

“I'm grateful for my continued relationship with Machmer Hall,” Amy Bunt said. “Their outstanding broodmare band and well-prepared individuals makes my job easier and more pleasurable. Carrie and I have worked together for a long time and I look forward to giving our clients even more personalized service.”

The post Machmer Hall Sales To Debut Consignment At September Yearling Sales appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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