Japan Racing Horse Association 2022 Select Sale Catalog Now Online

The Japanese Racing Horse Association (JRHA) announced the release of the catalog for the 2022 JRHA Select Sale, found at https://www.jrha-selectsale.com/ which will run July 11-12 at Northern Horse Park near New Chitose Airport. The yearling session will be on the first day with the foal session on the second day.

Japanese-bred Thoroughbreds have excelled in recent international competitions, including 14 wins in six months spread across five different countries.

At the 2021 World Championships held at Del Mar, Japan was well represented by 2017 JHRA graduate Loves Only You  who won the Maker's Mark Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Turf. The 6-year-old mare did not disappoint in her next start, winning the 2021 Group 1 Hong Kong Cup in December at Sha Tin. The filly by Deep Impact (JPN) sold for $1,404,800 to DMM.com from consignor/breeder Northern Farm.

Adding to Japan's growing number of international Grade 1 successes was 2016 JHRA graduate Glory Vase, who won the 2021 G1 Longines Hong Kong Vase. The mare by Deep Impact was bred and consigned by Lake Villa Farm, selling for $517,400 to Silk Horse Club who campaigned the 7-year-old to earnings of over $6.5 Million.

Japan was also dominant in Saudi Arabia, taking home four graded stakes wins on Saudi Cup night at King Abdulaziz. At Meydan in Dubai, Japanese horses won five races on Dubai World Cup night including the G1 Dubai Turf Sponsored by DP World won by Panthalassa , and the G1 Longines Dubai Sheema Classic won by Shahryar . There was also Japanese success in Australia with Glint of Hope, who won the G1 Grand Syndicates Australasian Oaks at Morphettville.

It is evident that Japanese-bred runners are competitive on an international scale.

Top-quality Japanese-bred yearlings and foals are offered at the JHRA Sale. Don't miss the opportunity to acquire one of these talented youngsters.

Last year at the select sale, two offerings commanded top honors, the first a yearling colt by Deep Impact, consigned as Hip 1 took top honors after selling for $2,723,280 to Hasegawa Yuji from the Northern Farm draft.

The second, a yearling colt by Lord Kanaloa  sold for the same price tag of $2,723,280 to Fujita Susumu from the Northern Farm offering.

The JHRA plans to organize this year's select sale as a “Live Sale” with strict COVID protocols on the show grounds in order to prevent the spread of the virus. Online bids will be accepted.

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First-Crop Girvin Filly Tops Opening Session Of Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-Year-Old Sale

The 2022 Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-Year-Olds in Training sale opened Monday in Timonium, Md., with strong trade and enthusiastic support for first-crop sires.

Five of the top 10 sold during the opening session were from their sire's first crop of 2-year-olds. The gross and average were comparable to last year's first session, while the median rose more than 11 percent over the same period.

Donato Lanni, agent for Michael Lund Petersen, went to $725,000 to secure the session topper, a filly from the first crop of Grade 1 Haskell Invitational Stakes winner Girvin (video).

Consigned as Hip 88 by Paul Sharp, agent, the bay filly worked an eighth in :10 1/5 during the Tuesday session of the under tack show (video). Dam Sweet Pistol (Smart Strike) has already produced a winning filly in Kirtan (Cairo Prince). Sweet Pistol is out of multiple Grade 2 winner Pomeroys Pistol, making her a half-sister to G2 Los Alamitos Futurity winner Thousand Words.

Hip 88 was bred in Kentucky by Brereton C. Jones. Bet Racing purchased the filly for $90,000 at last year's Fasig-Tipton July Sale, where she was consigned by her breeder as Airdrie Stud.

Popular first-crop sire Bolt d'Oro was responsible for the session's top colt, which sold for $675,000 to Spendthrift Farm and Frank Fletcher Racing (video).

Offered as Hip 30 by Pike Racing, agent, the bay colt worked an eighth in 10.0 during the Tuesday session of the under tack show (video). Hip 30 is out of the stakes placed Aldebaran mare Shine Softly, making him a half-brother to six winners from as many to race, including stakes winner The Grass Is Blue (Broken Vow). The second dam is Breeders' Cup winner and multiple Grade 1 winning millionaire Soaring Softly.

Rounding out the top five prices of the session were:

  • Hip 70, a colt by three-time leading sire Into Mischief, sold for $600,000 to Maverick Racing, Siena Farm and Commonwealth from the consignment of De Meric Sales, agent. The colt is out of the graded stakes-placed Stormy Regatta (Midshipman), making him a half-brother to stakes winner Bay Storm (Kantharos). Hip 70 worked an eighth in :10 1/5 during the Tuesday session of the under tack show (video).
  • Hip 11, a colt from the first crop of Kentucky Derby winner Always Dreaming, sold for $550,000 to West Bloodstock, agent for Robert and Lawana Low, from the consignment of Top Line Sales, agent. This is second foal out of stakes winner Saritta (Indygo Shiner), who has also produced his winning three-parts brother Mandrew (Bodemeister). Hip 11 worked a quarter in :21 2/5 during the Tuesday session of the under tack show (video).
  • Hip 287, a colt from the third crop of last year's champion freshman sire and current leading second-crop sire Gun Runner, which sold for $525,000 to Speedway Stable from the consignment of De Meric Sales, agent. Out of the stakes producing Unbridled's Song mare Coppermine, Hip 287 hails from the immediate family of Grade 1 winner and multiple graded and group stakes winner producer Lovlier Lina. Bred in Pennsylvania by Blackstone Farm, the colt worked an eighth in :10 1/5 during Wednesday's session of the under tack show (video).

During the opening session, 172 juveniles sold for $15,755,700. The average was $91,603. The session median rose 11 percent to $50,000 from $45,000 in 2021.The session RNA rate was 25.5 percent.

The sale continues tomorrow at 11 a.m. Results are available online.

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Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Sale Continues Season Of Change For Mason Springs Consignment

It might not be obvious to someone walking outside the Mason Springs shedrow in Barn I at the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale, but it is a consignment in the midst of a sea change.

For Marcus and Crystal Ryan, the past two years have brought with them a new son, a new farm in Aiken S.C., built from the ground up, and new clients. It also brought so many horses.

Mason Springs has 11 horses cataloged for this year's Midlantic sale – by far their biggest consignment to date, and more than double what they brought to the sale in 2021. Once again, it meant change and adjustment, but it also meant reaching new heights personally and professionally.

“It is a totally different thing,” Marcus Ryan said. “We have so many other [employees] to get, and we have been blessed with so many good staff coming in. Everything has worked out right at the right time. To grow sometimes is scary, but it really has been a blessing.”

The 11 horses in the Mason Springs consignment line up perfectly with the company's 11th year in business. The Ryans met in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., in 2010, both working for different wings of Godolphin's training operation, and when they were both offered the opportunity to gallop horses at Godolphin's Greentree training center in Saratoga, it was an easy “yes” for both. They bought their first horse to pinhook together in 2011.

They later based themselves at Godolphin's Aiken division, and remained in South Carolina after that branch was dissolved. The Ryans decided to stay behind, and try their hand at training and pinhooking young horses.

That foundation of horsemanship picked up under the tutelage of the Godolphin system built the platform of what the Mason Springs training operation hoped to be.

“We pride ourselves in taking it slow and putting a good foundation under a horse,” Ryan said. “We're always putting the horse first, above any sales or any agenda. We do a lot of round pen work, natural horsemanship, desensitizing of horses, and just really making them our friends and getting the best out of them that we can.”

Aiken is arguably North America's second-biggest hub for the breaking and training of young horses, which meant Mason Springs had proven ground and plenty of resources to bring up their charges. However, Marcus said the decision to put roots down in South Carolina came down to something much simpler.

“The appeal of South Carolina was that I met my wife, and she lived in South Carolina, so I moved to South Carolina,” he said. “We love it there. There's good water there, good air. It's a nice lifestyle. That's what appeals about Aiken. There might not be a lot of Thoroughbreds here, but it's a good lifestyle.”

Mason Springs has had roughly 25 horses in training in 2022, between sale horses and ones for clients destined for the racetrack.

Part of the reason for the large consignment in Maryland came down to timing and logistics. The birth of their son Keenan in 2021 made staying closer to home a priority, as was continued work on the new farm, so they decided to focus their entire slate of sale horses on one auction.

The other major factor was an increased investment by Chip Montgomery of Haymarket Farm, boosting the quantity and quality of the stock entering the Ryans' hands.

“He's been instrumental in giving us good advice, and leading us,” Marcus said. “The consignors that we bought these horses from, Bret Jones, put us on to a few of these horses, and Brian DiDonato did some work for us, too. We just have a lot more people around us that are leading us in the right way. It's a big team effort.”

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The Ryans condition their horses at the Aiken Training Track, which hosts the annual Aiken Trials; a series of scrimmage-like trial races, consisting primarily of quarter-mile sprints for young 2-year-olds.

The Aiken Trials draw a sizable local audience, and are almost certainly the closest thing to a live-racing scenario the young horses will see prior to their actual on-track career. The Ryans accounted for three of the four horses in this year's Gaver Trophy trial, two of which were cataloged in this year's Midlantic sale.

Hip 178, a Protonico filly out of the stakes-placed Colonel John mare Addibel Lightning, won the practice race with Crystal in the irons, stopping the clock for the quarter-mile in 23 2/5 seconds. Two months later, the filly would breeze one furlong in 10 4/5 seconds at the Midlantic sale, and she sold on Monday to RT Racing for $50,000.

Also in that trial was Hip 406, a Creative Cause colt out of the Grade 3-placed Proud Citizen mare Hold Her Tight who finished fourth at Aiken. The filly worked an eighth in :10 3/5 seconds during the Midlantic sale's under-tack show, and she will go through the ring Tuesday.

Marcus said the Aiken Trials can be useful to “battle-test” an especially precocious horse that might be an early enough type to race in April during Keeneland's spring meet. Where other horses might be used to compete in relative isolation, the graduates of the Aiken Trials will have already run in front of a crowd of thousands.

“We handpicked those two (for the sale) because the owner races, and has them in his partnership, and it was a selling point,” he said. “It was a bit of marketing to present them as fully ready, and if he doesn't get what he wants, the horses are going to have a lot of experience to take to the races. These horses have done what a lot of horses haven't done, and they'll be pretty fit off this.”

This year's Midlantic sale has already seen Mason Springs hit on a strong pinhook with Hip 52, a Jimmy Creed colt the Ryans purchased as a yearling for $45,000 and sold on Monday to Mike McCarty for $155,000.

Though Mason Springs is in a growing phase, Ryan said he was happy with where the consignment sat at the moment in terms of headcount. Change can be a good thing, but staying in place for a while can sometimes be just as positive.

“Last year, we had six horses, and we built it up from four,” he said. “It would be nice to be here and keep it boutique.”

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Bidding Open For ‘Ready Made Racing Flash Sale’ On Fasig-Tipton Digital

Bidding is now open on Fasig-Tipton Digital for the “Ready Made Racing Flash Sale,” a one-horse online auction for Ready Made Racing-owned Dazzlingdominika.  Dazzlingdominika, a 2-year-old filly by Ghostzapper, impressively won a maiden special weight on May 13 at Churchill Down for trainer William Walden. She is consigned by Taylor Made Sales Agency, agent.

Bidding will close this Thursday, May 26, at 2 p.m. EDT.

A 2-year-old daughter of champion-siring Ghostzapper, Dazzlingsominika is out of a half-sister to Grade 1 winner Heir Kitty. Her immediate family includes last year's Grade 1 Arkansas Derby winner Super Stock.

“Dazzlingdominkia is a talented, well-bred 2-year-old filly with a bright future ahead of her,” said Leif Aaron, Fasig-Tipton Director of Digital Sales. “She can be purchased and immediately pointed for stakes company at any number of racetracks for a spring and summer campaign.”

To create an account or register to bid, prospective buyers should visit digital.fasigtipton.com.

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