Catalog For Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Fall Mixed Sale Now Online

Fasig-Tipton has cataloged 337 entries for its Saratoga Fall Mixed Sale, to be held on Tuesday, Oct. 17 in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.

The sale will be conducted in the Humphrey S. Finney Pavilion and begin at 10 a.m.

“Following a strong sale last year, this year's catalog has grown remarkably by 44 percent,” said Fasig-Tipton President Boyd Browning.  “There is good quality and diversity among the covering sires in the broodmare offerings, and we have 244 weanlings catalogued – nearly all of which are New York-bred.  There is plenty for buyers to choose from at Saratoga Fall this year.”

The catalog may now be viewed online and will also be available via the equineline sales catalogue app. Print catalogs will be available by Sept. 18.

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$2.3 Million Into Mischief Filly Tops Opening Session Of Keeneland September Sale

Keeneland's 80th September Yearling Sale began Monday with robust trade that produced healthy results and the sale of eight horses for $1 million or more headlined by an Into Mischief filly sold for $2.3 million to Shadwell Racing and an Uncle Mo colt for $2 million, purchased by Donato Lanni, agent for Zedan Racing.

Total sales for 110 horses reached $55,330,000, down slightly from last year's first session gross of $57,095,000 when 114 horses, including nine seven-figure horses, sold. The average of $503,000 was up from last year's $500,833, while the median dipped 11.11% from $450,000 to $400,000.

“There was a lot of energy in the sales pavilion today; it was so fun to see so many people here,” Keeneland President and CEO Shannon Arvin said. “Many of them were buyers and were participating, and you also had a lot of people that were just interested in seeing the sales process. We work really hard to make sure the community understands the importance of the sales and the Thoroughbred industry.”

“The results today were very comparable to last year's first session, and last year was a sensational sale,” Keeneland Vice President of Sales Tony Lacy said. “Over the last couple of days people have been energized by the quality of horses cataloged. They said it's the best group of horses they've seen in the first two sessions probably in 10-15 years, which is really encouraging. I think it's a testament to the breeders and the quality of horses they are breeding.”

The diversity of buyers participating in today's session was borne out by the fact that the top 10 highest-priced horses were purchased by 10 different interests.

“It's really encouraging when you have a stat like that,” Lacy said. “It's unhealthy when you get one or two entities controlling the market. It's important when people come here that they feel like they have a chance of buying something. They are spending quite a bit of real money in order to get some of the best bloodstock in the world.”

The session-topping filly, who was consigned by Gainesway, agent, is out of Grade 3 winner Delightful Joy, by Tapit, and is a half-sister to Grade 2 winner Window Shopping. She is from the family of Grade 3 winners Graeme Six and Cali Star.

“I honestly thought she would bring every bit of $1.5 (million),” Gainesway General Manager Brian Graves said. “She's a top physical, out of a Grade 3-winning Tapit mare who's already produced a Grade 2 winner, who is still performing on the track. She was one of the best-looking yearlings I saw this year. We thought that (high price) could happen. From the first time you looked at that filly, you thought that could happen. It's a pleasant surprise but not shocking.”

A colt by Uncle Mo who is a half-brother to Grade 1 winner and sire Collected sold to Zedan Racing, for $2 million. Runnymede Farm, agent, consigned the colt, who is out of the winning Johannesburg mare Helena Bay (GB) and from the family of Group 2 winner Royal Kingdom (IRE) and stakes winners Koala Princess, Artilena and Woodwin W.

“Imagine selling your horse for two million dollars – there's no words for that,” Runnymede's Romain Malhouitre said. “The horse has been awesome since he arrived on Thursday. Showed very well. We knew we had plenty of interest, but you never know. So we are delighted that everybody believed in the horse and the breeders and the land.”

Jersey City Destroyers Stable paid $1.7 million for a colt by Into Mischief who is a half-brother to 2023 Suburban (G2) winner Charge It. Consigned by Gainesway, agent, he is out of the Indian Charlie mare I'll Take Charge, a daughter of Kentucky Broodmare of the Year Take Charge Lady, and from the family of champions Will Take Charge and Take Charge Brandi and Grade 1 winner and sire Omaha Beach.

The colt was bred by Mandy Pope, who sold horses for the first time with Gainesway. The group included another seven-figure horse, a colt by Into Mischief purchased by Grandview Equine for $1.1 million.

“It's been a wonderful day,” Pope said. “We've been selling, and we have not been able to buy anything. We've been selling well, and we're ecstatic about that. It takes a long time to get (a first-class broodmare band) off the ground and going. Fingers crossed, we will continue with a lot of racing success in the future, and breeding and selling success. We had high expectations coming in, and you always panic at the last minute. Gainesway has done a wonderful job selling yearlings for me.”

Gainesway led all consignors Monday by selling 12 yearlings for $9,610,000.

Winchell Thoroughbreds went to $1.4 million for a colt by Into Mischief who is the first foal out of multiple Grade 1 winner Guarana, by Ghostzapper. Consigned by Hill 'n' Dale at Xalapa, agent, he is from the family of Grade 1 winner Pleasant Home and stakes winners Beatbox and Magic Dance.

“Obviously the first foal out of an amazing racemare,” Ron Winchell said. “We're the lucky or unlucky ones to be the last ones with our hand up. Dr. (David) Lambert with Equine Analysis (Systems) loved him, and that's all I needed to hear. Do I need to say anything about Into Mischief?”

“It's a great result for a great mare,” said John G. Sikura of Hill 'n' Dale at Xalapa. “Into Mischiefs are obviously magical horses. No matter the sire, you have to meet the scrutiny of the buyers at the upper end. The horse moved very well. Has a lot of bone, looks sound. One of the astute guys in the business who has had great success bought him. I hope this is his next big horse. We're excited and happy.”

Two colts by Uncle Mo sold for $1.35 million apiece.

The partnership of Sonson, Woodford, West Point, LEB, agent, acquired the first, a half-brother to champion Midnight Bisou, 2023 Indiana Derby (G3) winner Verifying and stakes winner Stage Left. He was consigned by Hunter Valley Farm, agent.

“I think this colt is going to be a big winner,” said Chuck Sonson, who owns an aviation company and is becoming involved in racing. “We are very excited. We researched him a lot. We are happy to be close to the sale topper. We will get more. This is just the beginning, we hope. I love Lexington. This is my first time in Lexington.”

“We knew he was a lovely horse,” Fergus Galvin of Hunter Valley said. “He had the right pedigree. Deep down we were hoping he would get into the seven-figure range. We're thrilled. We bought the mare, Diva Delite, several years ago carrying Verifying. We gave a good number for her, but she's paid us back.”

Also selling for $1.35 million was a son of Uncle Mo purchased by M.V. Magnier. Consigned by Penn Sales, agent for Bar C Racing Stables, the colt is out of the War Front mare Forever for Now and from the family of leading sire Galileo (IRE) and other European standouts such as Black Sam Bellamy and Sea the Stars along with Grade 1 winner My Typhoon (IRE).

“He is a very nice horse,” Magnier said. “(Longtime Coolmore adviser) Paul Shanahan really liked him when he saw him the other day. He is a nice athletic horse. He will stay here for the time being.”

“Wow,” John Penn said in celebrating the first seven-figure horse sold by Penn Sales. “He is a very pretty, nice-moving horse. If he can run, he'll make a stallion. (Breeders Pam and Neal Christopherson) had sold an Uncle Mo previously for a lot of money and needed to buy a mare, and they bought this mare (Forever for Now) in foal to him (at Keeneland's 2021 November Breeding Stock Sale). Obviously they hit a home run.”

Purchased by Grandview Equine was a colt by Into Mischief out of multiple Grade 1 winner American Gal, by Concord Point, and from the family of Grade/Group 1 winners Seventh Street and Reynaldothewizard. He was the first seller of the day for breeder Mandy Pope.

“Really nice colt out of a great mare, great family,” Robert N. Clay of Grandview Equine said. “He went for plenty of money, but he really checks all the boxes for us.”

“The horse was drop-dead gorgeous and by the right sire and out of a Grade 1 winner, a young mare who was precocious,” Gainesway's Brian Graves said. “There were a lot of top people on the horse, and we thought something like that might happen. It's good to see Mandy Pope selling million-dollar horses. When your first horse in the ring brings a million dollars, I hope it bodes well.”

Selling for $1 million to John Stewart was a colt by Into Mischief who is a full brother to multiple Grade 1 winner and sire Practical Joke. Consigned by Eaton Sales, agent, he is out of Halo Humor, by Distorted Humor.

The session's leading buyer was West Bloodstock, agent for Repole Stable, who spent $3,345,000 for 10 horses.

The second session of Book 1 of the September Sale starts Tuesday at 1 p.m. ET. The entire sale is streamed live at Keeneland.com.

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Into Mischief, Ghostzapper Cross Shines On Keeneland September’s Opening Day

The commercial Thoroughbred marketplace is constantly on the hunt for crosses that are most likely to produce windfalls in the sales ring and runners on the track.

On the auction side, buyers gravitated toward the cross between perennial leading sire Into Mischief and daughters of Ghostzapper during Monday's opening session of the Keeneland September Yearling Sale, with the cross accounting for two of the top 12 prices on the day and three of the top 30. No other cross got more than two yearlings in the top 30 during Monday's session.

That charge was led by Hip 145, the first foal out of multiple Grade 1 winner Guarana, who sold to Winchell Thoroughbreds for $1.4 million. Hill 'n' Dale at Xalapa, agent, consigned the colt, who hails from the family of Breeders' Cup Distaff winner Pleasant Home.

Not far behind was Hip 110, a colt out of stakes winner Enchanted Ghost who hammered to the group of Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners, Walmac Farm, Bridlewood Farm, and Robert LaPenta for $850,000. Taylor Made Sales Agency consigned the colt as agent for Aaron and Marie Jones.

Rounding out the trio was Hip 19, a filly out of Grade 2-placed American Story who went to Nice Guys Stables for $575,000. Hill 'n' Dale also consigned this half-sister to Grade 1 winner American Gal.

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Into Mischief is firmly North America's leading sire on both the racing and commercial fronts. He safely leads the North American general sire list by progeny earnings in his bid for a fifth straight year on top in 2023, and five of the eight horses that sold for seven figures on Monday were sired by the cornerstone of the Spendthrift Farm roster.

Ghostzapper's bona fides as a broodmare sire are rock-solid, best displayed as the sire of Triple Crown winner Justify's dam, Stage Magic. Other notable runners on Ghostzapper's broodmare sire record include champion sprinter Drefong, and Grade 1 winners including American Gal, Up to the Mark, and Silent Poet.

Despite the high-level success in their respective fields, the cross between Into Mischief and Ghostzapper has yet to produce a black type-earning runner.

However, the cross hasn't had many opportunities to prove itself. Eight foals of racing age have been produced from the Into Mischief/Ghostzapper cross, with two winners from four starters. With both sires becoming more and more prolific in those columns, one would expect the chances to race and win to grow.

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‘All-American’ Female Line Continues Commercial Prominence At Keeneland September Sale

On April 3, 2014, and for the months that immediately followed, American Story and her newborn filly American Gal occupied the same space at Hill 'n' Dale Farms in Kentucky.

They eventually went their separate ways, as mares and weaned foals do, but the two horses' paths seemed to keep intersecting as American Gal made her way through life.

American Gal followed in her mother's footsteps as a first-start winner at Del Mar, both for owner Kaleem Shah, and then she went a step further winning a pair of Grade 1 races. When American Story sold to Don Alberto Corp. for $2.2 million at the 2017 Fasig-Tipton November Sale, American Gal followed her through the Fasig-Tipton November sale a year later, going to Mandy Pope's Whisper Hill Farm for $3 million.

They were on separate farms, but the mares' new owners were clearly on the same wavelength in managing their careers. In 2020, both mares were bred to Hall of Famer Curlin, with each producing fillies. A year later, they both joined the book of perennial leading sire Into Mischief, this time with American Gal producing a colt and American Story having a filly.

American Story and American Gal's stories continued to intersect when the next generation went to auction.

The two Curlin fillies went through the ring at last year's Keeneland September Yearling Sale as Hips 132 and 133. American Story's filly brought $450,000, and American Gal's sold for $500,000, both with Mike Repole's name on the ticket as a partner or sole buyer.

On Monday, their Into Mischief yearlings went through the ring one after the other as Hips 18 and 19.

American Gal's colt went first, hammering to Grandview Equine for $1.1 million to become the first horse of this year's September sale to eclipse the seven-figure mark. American Story's filly followed, going to Nice Guys Stables for $575,000.

Highly commercial families can be found all over the place during the high-level Book 1 of the Keenealnd September Sale, but few mothers and daughters are linked in so many ways, both tangibly and intangibly – especially for being owned by completely separate entities.

American Story, a daughter of Ghostzapper, joined the broodmare band of Don Alberto Corp. after the 2017 Fasig-Tipton November sale. Crossing with Shah's stallion Concord Point had proven fruitful for the mare, who produced American Gal and Grade 2-placed Americanize prior to her time in the sale ring.

Shah had purchased American Story as a 2-year-old for $400,000, and she earned runner-up finishes in the Grade 2 Milady Handicap at Hollywood Park and the listed Remington Park Oaks and Harry Henson Handicap in the Southwest. Americanize was her first foal, and American Gal followed the next year.

Don Alberto COO Reed Ringler joined the operation well after the farm acquired American Story, but he was well aware how important the mare and the bloodline were to the program. Keeping the yearling filly to one day join the broodmare band was discussed.

“We love the mare,” he said. “She's got a fantastic 3-year-old with Steve Asmussen named Magic Tap that we think is going to the Pennsylvania Derby, so it was really hard to let go of this filly, but Carlos (Heller of Don Alberto) will bring the horses to market and let them bring what they'll bring.

“She was a little small, but she was a May 6 foal,” Ringler continued. “She looks really fast, a typical Into Mischief, and we were satisfied with the price. We're happy, but it's hard to let go of those girls.”

Hill 'n' Dale Sales Agency consigned American Story's filly, as agent.

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Ringler also arrived after the mating was planned for American Story's 2022 filly, but the benefits of breeding to Spendthrift Farm's Into Mischief are well-documented.

“I think they were trying to put a little bit of speed into her,” he said. “Carlos wants to try the best with the best. This was a Grade 1-producing mare, so I think it was natural to try her with Into Mischief, so we got this speedy-looking filly, and I'm glad she was appreciated when she got here.”

American Gal raced as a homebred for Shah, winning her first two starts before finishing third in the 2016 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies at Santa Anita Park. Her 3-year-old season kicked off with a win in the G3 Victory Ride Stakes, and she added a win in the Grade 1 Test Stakes later that season. At four, she won the Grade 1 Humana Distaff Stakes at Churchill Downs before retiring with five wins in nine starts for earnings of $912,480.

Unlike American Story, who remained in Shah's broodmare band for a few years, American Gal entered the auction ring the same year she was retired, going home with Pope as a broodmare prospect.

“She had a really nice race record,” Pope said about American Gal. “She's got some Grade 1s in her pedigree, which obviously helped. That was the main thing. She was a nice racehorse and good looking.”

Gainesway consigned American Gal's colt, as agent.

After so much time riding similar waves, American Story and American Gal's produce and sale records won't by synching up anytime soon. American Story was bred to Essential Quality for the 2023 foaling season, but she didn't produce a foal. She was sent back to Curlin for next year's foaling season.

Meanwhile, American Gal was sent to Curlin last year without producing a foal, and she was bred to Not This Time earlier this year.

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