Jackie’s Warrior Retired To Spendthrift Farm, Cyberknife Aims To Run Again

Jackie's Warrior, the five-time Grade 1 winner and reigning champion sprinter; and Cyberknife, the multiple Grade 1-winning 3-year-old by Gun Runner, are both at Spendthrift Farm and are available for inspection to breeders Nov. 9-15 from 1:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. daily.

Both set to stand at stud in 2023, Jackie's Warrior has been retired from racing and has taken up residency at the Lexington-based farm, while Cyberknife will return to training with Brad Cox after Nov. 15 to finish out the season.

“Jackie's Warrior has settled in nicely at the farm and is such an impressive specimen, especially for a horse coming off a pretty hard campaign. It's special to be able to add another great champion to our stallion ranks and we're excited to be able to show him off to breeders,” said Ned Toffey, Spendthrift general manager. “Cyberknife ran great to finish a head behind older horse Cody's Wish in the Dirt Mile, and he came to the farm looking well and with good energy. He is set to run again before retiring, however, it was important for us to be able to show him to breeders over the course of the next week before he goes back to Brad Cox.”

Jackie's Warrior will stand his first season for a fee of $50,000 S&N. The supremely talented son of Maclean's Music retires as the first champion sprinter in 34 years to win five Grade 1s. Earlier this year, he became the only horse in the storied history of Saratoga to win a Grade 1 stakes in three consecutive years when he captured the Grade 1Vanderbilt in dominant fashion.

Trained by Steve Asmussen, Jackie's Warrior also became the first 2-year-old since champion Dehere in 1993 to win all three of New York's premier races for juveniles, including the G1 Hopeful – breaking a 28-year-old stakes record – and G2 Saratoga Special at Saratoga followed by the G1 Champagne at Belmont. At three, he outdueled multiple Grade 1 winner Life Is Good to win the G1 Allen Jerkens, along with knocking down fast victories in the G2 Amsterdam and G2 Gallant Bob, on his way to winning the 2021 Eclipse Award for champion male sprinter. This year, Jackie's Warrior won the G1 Churchill Downs Stakes, G2 True North and G3 Count Fleet on top of his Vanderbilt score.

Jackie's Warrior won 12 of 18 starts and earned $2,959,164 for owners Kirk and Judy Robison.

Cyberknife takes a quick break at Spendthrift fresh off a narrow runner-up performance to Cody's Wish in Saturday's Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile at Keeneland. The talented son of Gun Runner became his sire's first multiple Grade 1-winning colt after winning two of the biggest races for 3-year-olds in 2022 – the G1 Arkansas Derby and G1 Haskell Invitational. In the latter, he out-finished multiple Grade 1 winners Taiba and Jack Christopher in track-record time of 1:46.24, breaking a 37-year-old mark for 1 1/8 miles previously held by Spend a Buck.

Cyberknife also won the G3 Matt Winn this summer and was runner-up in the prestigious G1 Travers. He's the most accomplished son of Gun Runner to date, with earnings of $2,087,520 for Al Gold's Gold Square LLC.

Upon retirement, Cyberknife will stand his debut season in 2023 for a fee of $30,000 S&N.

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Star International Runner Baaeed To Stand At £80,000 In Debut Breeding Season

Baaeed, the highest turf-rated horse for a decade, will command a fee of £80,000 (Oct. 1, Special Live Foal) for his first season at stud.

The outstanding son of Sea The Stars, winner of 10 races – including six consecutive Group 1 victories – will stand in 2023 at Shadwell's Nunnery Stud in Norfolk, England. 

Stephen Collins, European bloodstock manager for Shadwell, said: “Baaeed's fee reflects his current status as the champion turf horse in the world for 2022 and also his impeccable race record and superb pedigree, being a direct descendant of Height Of Fashion, the dam of top-class performers Nashwan, Nayef and Unfuwain.

“The 135-rated Baaeed is a wonderful addition to the Shadwell stallion roster and we have been inundated with enquiries for nominations. We have been overwhelmed with the response from breeders from all over Europe and further a-field.”

Derrinstown Stud are also preparing for the arrival of Minzaal for his first season at stud and he will be introduced at €15,000 (Jan. 1, Special Live Foal). The son of Mehmas is currently this year's top-rated six-furlong performer in Europe, having earned an official figure of 121 for his dazzling display in landing the Group 1 Sprint Cup at Haydock. Minzaal will stand at Shadwell's Irish base at Derrinstown Stud in Co.Kildare.

Collins said: “At a fee of €15,000, we have no doubt that Minzaal will prove very popular with breeders. He's a strong, good-looking individual who was a very high-class 2-year-old and developed into an exceptional older sprinter, winning the Sprint Cup in devastating style. His immense talent combined with his superb attitude will stand him in very good stead for what we firmly believe will be an equally successful stallion career.”

Star miler Mohaather's fee for 2023 remains unchanged (£15,000, Jan. 1, Special Live Foal), while Tasleet will stand at £6,000 (Jan. 1, Special Live Foal), rising from £5,000. This follows a season of high promise from his first crop to race, the highlight being his son Bradsell's blistering display in winning the Group 2 Coventry Stakes by a length and a half at Royal Ascot. Indeed, Bradsell was one of four runners at the Royal meeting that Tasleet had in 2022 as his offspring hit the ground running.

Mohaather and Tasleet both stand at Nunnery Stud as does Eqtidaar, whose fee for next season will once again be £5,000 (Jan. 1, Special Live Foal).

Collins added: “The forthcoming sales will see Mohaather's first foals sell at public auction, which will be exciting for us all. We have a number of very nice foals by him on the farm and very much look forward to seeing how his other progeny are received in the sales ring over the coming weeks.

“Tasleet's yearlings sold well at public auctions throughout the autumn, which is no surprise given Bradsell's success in the Coventry Stakes and other eye-catching performances from the sire's progeny in 2022. Eqtidaar's first yearlings through the ring have also been making their mark with his progeny realising up to 12 times his stud fee.”

Collins further added that  “Standing along-side Minzaal at Derrinstown, Awtaad's fee remains at €5,000 (Jan. 1, Special Live Foal) after another solid year in which his sons Al Qareem and Anmaat recorded Group 2 victories on the Saturday of the Arc weekend.”

He also confirmed Tamayuz's retirement from stallion duties after 14 years of commendable service at Derrinstown.

Finally, King of Change, who has stood for the last two seasons at Derrinstown, has been relocated to Micheál Orlandi's Starfield Stud in Co.Westmeath for the 2023 breeding season.

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Three Chimneys Farm Reveals 2023 Stallion Roster, Fees

Three Chimneys announced its fees for the 2023 breeding season.

Topping the roster is sire sensation Gun Runner who ranks #1 by percent Grade 1 winners, Grade 1 stakes horses, graded stakes winners, graded stakes horses, black type winners, and black type horses.

In 2022, he is the sire of 11 stakes winners, 25 stakes horses, 10 Grade 1 stakes horses, and 8 graded stakes winners, of which six are first-crop Grade 1 winners. Included among them are Preakness Stakes winner Early Voting; Taiba, winner of the Grade 1 Santa Anita Derby and the G1 Pennsylvania Derby; Cyberknife, winner of the G1 Arkansas Derby and the G1 Haskell Invitational Stakes; Society, winner of the G1 Cotillion Stakes; Gunite, winner of the G1 Hopeful Stakes, and champion Echo Zulu, winner of the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies, G1 Frizette Stakes and G1 Spinaway Stakes.

Of merit as well was the performance of Sharp Azteca who is currently the leading freshman sire by winners with 30. He has sired three stakes winners and six stakes performers, including the standout Tyler's Tribe who won his first five races by a combined 60 lengths.

The 2023 fees are as follows:

Gun Runner – Private

Sharp Azteca – $15,000 Live Foal Stands and Nurses

Volatile – $12,500 Live Foal Stands and Nurses

Sky Mesa – $10,000 Live Foal Stands and Nurses

Palace Malice – $7,500 Live Foal Stands and Nurses

Funtastic – $5,000 Live Foal Stands and Nurses

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Champion Midnight Bisou Sells For $5.5 Million On Opening Day Of Keeneland November Sale

Champion Midnight Bisou, who is in foal to Tapit, sold for $5.5 million to Katsumi Yoshida of Japan to lead today's Book 1 opening session of the Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale and continue the excitement at Keeneland, which hosted the Breeders' Cup World Championships Friday and Saturday.

A half-hour prior to the 1 p.m. start of the session, spectators packed the Keeneland Sales Pavilion for the offering of a 2.5 percent ownership interest in Flightline, a colt by Tapit and the undefeated winner of Saturday's Breeders' Cup Classic. Brookdale Farm's Freddie Seitz, bidding on behalf of an undisclosed farm client, signed the ticket for $4.6 million.

For the session, Keeneland sold 136 lots for $66,980,000, for an average of $492,500 and a median of $290,000, The gross was 32.28 percent above the $50,634,000 from the first session last year, while the median rose 14.77 percent from $429,102 and the median dipped 12.12 percent from $330,000.

Ten lots sold for $1 million or more, compared to seven during the first session of the 2021 sale.

“We're seeing a focus on quality,” Keeneland Vice President of Sales Tony Lacy said. “And there's a broadness in the marketplace. The top 15 horses that went through the ring were bought by 11 different buyers. It's always good to see a mix of domestic and international buyers. Six horses brought more than $2 million plus with the Flightline fractional interest the number at that amount was seven. These are the increases we're looking for.

“We're coming off a very successful Breeders' Cup,” Lacy added. “Our team put in a huge effort to turn this around from putting on the largest racing event in North America to switching to having the second-largest horse sale in the world within a few hours. I have to commend everybody.”

Midnight Bisou, a 7-year-old daughter of Midnight Lute out of Grade 3 winner Diva Delite, by Repent, won 13 races and earned $7.47 million. Consigned by Hill 'n' Dale at Xalapa, she was supplemented to today's auction.

“This mare has been so good to us in so many different ways,” co-owner Jeff Bloom said. “I'm so happy about the home she is going to. She will forever hold an incredible place in my heart, my family's heart, my partner's heart. It's impossible to describe the journey she has taken us on. These horses afford us the opportunity to have these life experiences we wouldn't be able to have. It's been a great run.”

“We'll take her back to Japan most likely – I'm kind of speechless,” translator Shingo Hashimoto said on behalf of Yoshida. “(He said) the first time I saw her was in Saudi when she was running for the Saudi Cup. I already knew of her race record, and she was really gorgeous. It was very lucky for us to purchase her. We were very excited when we saw her on the catalog. We are very satisfied. We are very happy with the result.”

Yoshida was the leading buyer with three purchases for $9.7 million. He acquired three seven-figure horses, including multiple French Group 1 winner Dreamloper, a 5-year-old mare by Lope de Vega who ran in Saturday's FanDuel Breeders' Cup Mile Presented by PDJF, for $2.7 million and Grade 2 winner Jouster, a 4-year-old daughter of Noble Mission from the family of Racing Hall of Famer Personal Ensign, for $1.5 million.

Dreamloper was consigned by her trainer, Ed Walker. Jouster was consigned by Hill 'n' Dale at Xalapa, agent.

Lane's End, agent, consigned the fractional interest in Flightline, who has been retired to stud at the farm in Versailles, Kentucky, and was the session's leading consignor with 10 lots bringing $13,125,000.

Lane's End, agent, also consigned the day's third highest-priced offering, champion Shamrock Rose, who is in foal to Curlin and sold for $3 million to Japan's KI Farm. A half-sister to stakes winner Loyalty, the 7-year-old mare is out of the Elusive Quality mare Slew's Quality.

“The physical and race record are what stood out,” said Sean Toriumi, interpreter for buyer Tomoyuki Nakamura. “(Curlin is) a top sire and that is something that stood out as well. (The price) was in the rough range of what he was expecting. Right now, he is deciding whether to take her to Japan or leave her in the States. There are a lot of options for us.”

Lane's End Director of Sales Allaire Ryan said the purchase price for Shamrock Rose “certainly surpassed our expectations, which just goes to show you how strong this market is when something ticks all the boxes for two people.”

M.V. Magnier went to $2.6 million to acquire Marion Ravenwood, a stakes-winning daughter of A.P. Indy who is in foal to Curlin and carrying a full sibling to Grade 1 winners Nest and Idol. Also the dam of stakes winner Lost Ark, the 14-year-old mare was consigned by Ashview Farm (Bryan Lyster and Gray Lyster), agent.

“Nest is just an incredible filly,” Magnier said. “She's (Marion Ravenwood) produced very good animals, and she continues to do so. She'll most likely go to Justify.”

Multiple Grade 3 winner Four Graces, a 5-year-old daughter of Majesticperfection who is a half-sister to Grade 2 winner and sire McCraken, sold to Mandy Pope's Whisper Hill Farm for $2.3 million. Consigned by Denali Stud, agent, she is out of Ivory Empress, by Seeking the Gold.

“We certainly never expected her to bring more than $2 million,” Denali's Conrad Bandoroff said. “It went well beyond our expectations. She's from a great family that the Whithams (Janis Whitham and family) have cultivated for 30 years. She was an unbelievable physical. People really respected this was a special offering from a family that rarely comes on to the market. Every time she came out for a show, she just had so much class. She would stand there and pose and was very regal in a lot of ways.”

“She was a hell of a racehorse,” Pope said. “Not only is she a graded stakes horse, but the numbers that she ran were legit. And this family – all of the family – they all ran very legitimate speed numbers, so the quality is absolutely there. I'm very excited.”

Determined Stud and Gage Hill paid $2 million for Salty as Can Be, a winning, stakes-placed daughter of Into Mischief in foal to Quality Road. Baccari Bloodstock, agent, consigned the 4-year-old mare, who is a half-sister to Grade 1 winner Salty. She is out of the Dixie Union mare Theycallmeladyluck.

“It was a partnership, a breeding partnership that we've put together,” Terry Finley said about the buyers. “She'll go to Flightline, and we're buying a couple others. I think the idea just came internally. Our partners just said let's do some things with Flightline if and when he retires, so that's what we're doing. Determined Stud is taking a piece of the deal. They're trying to make a mark on the breeding side of things, so it's a great partnership. Lane's End will be part of it, so the power of the partnership is going to Flightline.”

Multiple Grade 3 winner and Grade 1-placed Edgeway, who competed in Saturday's Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Sprint, sold to Jane Lyon's Summer Wind Equine for $1.7 million. Cataloged as a broodmare prospect, the 5-year-old Edgeway was consigned by Lane's End, agent.

Summer Wind bred Flightline, and Lyon remains a co-owner in the horse. She said she was looking for mares to breed to him.

“She's a beautiful mare. She's fast,” said Jane Lyon about Edgeway, adding about the price: “Unfortunately, I get a little carried away now and then. We'll see what happens. We're still doing research on pedigrees to see which bloodlines will or will not suit (Flightline), and we thought she would.”

Magnier also acquired the day's top-priced weanling, a daughter of Medaglia d'Oro who is a half-sister to champion Honor Code, for $1.5 million, the highest price paid for a weanling at the November Sale since 2015 and the highest amount for a weanling filly at the auction since 2001. Hill 'n' Dale at Xalapa, agent, consigned the filly, whose dam is stakes winner Serena's Cat, by Storm Cat. Also a half-sister to Grade 2 winner Noble Tune and stakes winner Declarationofpeace, she is from the family of Racing Hall of Famer Serena's Song.

The November Sale continues Tuesday at 10 a.m. with the first session of the two-day Book 2. FanDuel Racing will have live coverage from noon to 5 p.m. The auction continues through Wednesday, Nov. 16, with all sessions beginning at 10 a.m.

On Thursday, Nov. 17, Keeneland will present the November Horses of Racing Age Sale. The auction begins at noon.

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