Zayat Stables Equine Liquidation Approaches Finish Line After Keeneland November Sale

One of the overarching storylines throughout this year's detour-laden auction calendar has been the liquidation of the once-mighty Zayat Stables operation to settle debts from a defaulted eight-figure loan and an ensuing bankruptcy.

Beginning with the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Winter Mixed Sale in February, the equine holdings of Ahmed Zayat have been steadily pieced off through the auction ring, private sales, the claim box, and giveaways. According to a court document filed in early November by Elizabeth Woodward, the receiver responsible for handling the liquidation, there were still 10 horses publicly on the books for the stable. After the recently-completed Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale, where all 10 were cataloged, only two remain, and they will likely be sold privately by Thanksgiving.

This, of course, is not a clear-cut indicator that all of the liquidation resources have been exhausted. The document implies that Zayat Stables still holds some stallion interests, and other holdings might still be in the process of being determined. Regardless, it is clear that the sun is almost over the horizon on the operation that bred and raced Triple Crown winner American Pharoah, won Eclipse Awards as outstanding owner and breeder, and was recognized by the Turf Publicists of America with the Big Sport of Turfdom Award and by the National Turf Writers and Broadcasters Association with the Mr. Fitz Award for “typifying the spirit of racing.”

The November sale saw nine of the 10 remaining Zayat horses go through the ring, with eight selling for a total of $491,000.

Starting with the two that didn't sell, Amandrea is owned in a 45 percent minority with partner Myracehorse.com, and she was scratched from the sale. The next filing from the receiver will indicate if a private deal was brokered or pending for Zayat's share before the sale. A weanling Kitten's Joy filly finished under her reserve with a final bid of $80,000, but liquidation horses that did not meet their reserve at previous auctions this year have typically been sold privately or re-entered in another auction.

The remaining eight followed the pattern set by their predecessors, hammering well below their lofty assessed values set by Zayat's representatives in mid-December 2019. That assessment came about when the owner submitted a liquidation plan to creditor MGG Investments to pay off a $23-million loan and stave off a lawsuit. MGG ultimately filed suit in late January.

The group cataloged in the November sale (minus the weanling, who wasn't born at the time of the valuation) was valued at a combined $5.9 million in December 2019, meaning they ultimately brought about 8 percent of what they were projected to when they went through the ring nearly a year later.

The six horses sold at this year's Fasig-Tipton July Horses of Racing Age Sale brought 9.62 percent of their December assessed value, while the six horses sold in February brought about 19 percent of their assessed worth.

It's well established that assessing value to a Thoroughbred is not a concrete science, and Thoroughbred value can be so fluid that the 2019 projection is practically obsolete at this point. The receiver's November report also makes sure to note how COVID-19 has affected the marketplace for public and private trade.

What makes it worth pointing out at this juncture is the assessment's use as a milepost – first, to show just how fluid those valuations can be, and second, to display how short of the mark the Zayat dispersal will come to paying off its creditors.

One of the primary methods of assigning valuation is based on income projection – what a horse could potentially earn in his or her lifetime at that point in the road. This would explain the widest discrepancy in the Keeneland November group, Gozilla, who sold for $60,000 after being valued at $2.25 million a year earlier.

In December, Gozilla was a 2-year-old looking down the Triple Crown trail with a third in the Grade 1 Hopeful Stakes and a fourth in the G1 Champagne Stakes. The Flatter colt had a a full buffet of spring graded stakes races to bolster his resume, and a strong performance in the Triple Crown races themselves could have made him a legitimate stallion prospect, easily worth seven or eight figures. The opportunity to reach that level, paired with the past performance to imply he was capable of doing it, justified a higher valuation, even if it was one staring at his ceiling.

To put that valuation in perspective, Max Player was appraised at a “fair market value” of $1.75 million after winning the G3 Withers Stakes in early February. The Kentucky Derby qualifying points the son of Honor Code earned in that race were arguably worth more than the graded stakes win itself. The fact that he was firmly on the path to the Triple Crown, and proved he was capable of defeating other horses with the same intentions, increased his earning potential.

Now, in November, Gozilla's Triple Crown opportunity has been exhausted, along with a potentially lucrative Breeders' Cup try. He has raced just once in 2020, finishing eighth in a Keeneland allowance in July.

Gozilla remains intact, and horses have recovered from greater downturns in form to become high-level runners and stallions, but his window is much smaller to achieve it, and the public auction market is as risk averse as it's ever been. It's highly unlikely he'd have ever commanded a price anywhere close to the Zayat assessment, but his open market value is also a fair assessment of his earnings potential at this point in his career.

A similar trajectory can be seen in Alex Joon, a 3-year-old Flatter colt who shortly before had broken his maiden at Churchill Downs when assigned a $1-million valuation last year. He has since run twice, most recently finishing second in a Churchill allowance, before selling for $120,000 at the November sale.

Alex Joon's allowance runner-up effort came on Oct. 29, shortly before the November sale, and recent form can be appealing for a racing prospect. This was also the case for the most expensive Zayat offering, Bob and Jackie, who sold for $190,000.

The 4-year-old Twirling Candy colt has been one of the highlights among the Zayat runners in 2020. He kicked off his campaign with a victory in the Wickerr Stakes at Del Mar, then he finished fourth in the G2 Del Mar Handicap later in the meet. He entered the November sale off a G2 City of Hope Mile Stakes at Santa Anita on Oct. 3, giving potential buyers recent proof that he can compete at a graded stakes level.

Bob and Jackie was a two-time stakes winner at the time of the December valuation, which placed him at $750,000. Using the same methodology for his higher-priced stablemates, his Triple Crown chances had passed at that point and he'd only run once in 2019 by mid-December. However, his recent stakes success and the fact that he plausibly still had a few prime racing years left in him to make a stallion resume boosted his value above the rank and file. As it turns out, he would become one of the most valuable Zayat horses to change hands at auction during the liquidation.

One last horse to examine from the November group is the Eskendereya mare Fateer, the dam of Bob and Jackie who was offered at this year's Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Winter Mixed Sale in February but finished under her reserve at $95,000. She was offered in-foal to top sire Kitten's Joy during the sale, and the ensuing filly was an $80,000 RNA at the November sale.

Nine months later, Fateer went through the ring again, not pregnant for the 2021 foaling season, and she sold for $57,000 – a steep drop from her $450,000 valuation in December.

Like many bankruptcies, the assets of the Zayat Stables dispersal will likely put only pennies on the dollar toward paying back the outstanding debt.

Thoroughbreds are a volatile commodity, and the fortunes of a public or private sale can swing wildly over one or two big performances by a runner or their foals, as well as the overall health of the marketplace. The valuations placed on the Zayat horses in December were unrealistic – they always were – but an unspectacular year from the stable in the middle of a pandemic also created a wider gap between projection and reality.

One of the most celebrated stables of the past decade went out quietly on the racetrack, which led to it going out quietly in the auction ring.

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Indiana Thoroughbred Alliance To Present Free Pedigree Seminar

The Indiana Thoroughbred Alliance (ITA), a newly-founded group dedicated to helping educate, inspire and support those interested in the Indiana horse racing industry, is proud to announce their first educational event. On Saturday, December 5, the ITA will present “Pedigree Research and Purposeful Pedigrees” with guest speaker, Robert Keck, bloodstock consultant at Kentucky's Crestwood Farm.

The event is free and open to anyone interested in breeding Thoroughbreds.

The event is the first in a series of activities the ITA will host in the coming months, all aimed at helping to educate breeders and those looking to get into breeding. Susan Burger, a longtime broodmare manager and now owner of Indiana's Ledgerwood Farm, is the co-vice president of the ITA, and organizer of the seminar.

“The ITA wanted to open up the avenue of continuing education for the breeders of Indiana,” Burger explains. “We want to help breeders, and those interested in getting into breeding, to learn what they need to look for when it comes to booking a stallion to their mare, or even purchasing a broodmare.”

The group is excited to welcome Keck to Indiana for the seminar so he can share his many years of experience as a bloodstock agent and pedigree analyst.

“The knowledge that Robert has is just incredible,” says Burger. “Even breeders who have been active for many years can still learn a great deal from Robert.”

Keck has business degrees from both the University of Louisville Equine Business Administration Program and the University of Southern California. He has completed both the Irish National Stud Course and the Taylor Made Intern Program. A hands-on horseman, Keck has worked for Crestwood Farm since 1994. His recent achievements include planning the matings of two 2019 multiple Grade 1 winning millionaires: Got Stormy and Bowies Hero.

Keck will be discussing what he looks for in researching a mare's pedigree, how to do that research yourself and finding the best fit for mares and stallions.

The seminar will be held at the Painted Hills Clubhouse in Martinsville, Ind., starting at 1 p.m. EST on Dec. 5. Registration is free and refreshments will be provided. Attendees are asked to adhere to COVID-19 regulations by wearing facial coverings and practicing social distancing where available.

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Peace And Justice Relocates To Blackstone Farm In Pennsylvania For 2021

Peace And Justice, a three-time winning miler and the fastest son of top international stallion and emerging sire of sires, War Front, standing in Pennsylvania, will relocate to Blackstone Farm in Pine Grove, Pa., for the 2021 breeding season.

Peace And Justice is represented by first-crop 2-year-olds this year. His top runners include Like a Saltshaker, winner of the Fitz Dixon, Jr. Memorial Juvenile Stakes and runner-up in the Awad Stakes at Belmont, who is now pointing towards the Pennsylvania Nursery Stakes.

In the sales ring, a juvenile filly by Peace And Justice sold for $70,000 at OBS April, a multiple equaling 20 times his stud fee.

On the racetrack, Peace and Justice ran three 95+ Beyer Speed Figures, including a Santa Anita allowance contest in dominant fashion by 5 1/4 lengths. Throughout his career, Peace and Justice defeated multiple graded stakes winners, including Grade 1 winner Drill. He earned “TDN Rising Star” status and ran 3/5 seconds off Horse of the Year Wise Dan's course record at Santa Anita with a wire-to-wire mile victory in 1:32.36 (22.47, 44.55, 1:08.05, 1:20.20) and just shy of the record set by Tourist in the Breeders' Cup Mile.

Out of the winning Smart Strike mare Strike the Sky, Peace and Justice is a half-brother to Grade 2 winner Hudson Steele. He is also half-brother to Lauren Byrd, the dam of graded stakes winner Hakam and Grade 1-placed dirt runner My Man Sam.

This family also includes champion What a Treat and legendary foundation Coolmore sire Be My Guest.

Peace and Justice will stand for $3,500 LFSN at Blackstone Farm.

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Gemologist Leads Louisiana’s Acadiana Equine At Copper Crowne 2021 Roster

Stallion manager, David Tillson released the 2021 fees for Astrology, Court Vision and Gemologist today, all standing at Acadiana Equine @ Copper Crowne.

“For obvious reasons we want to provide Louisiana breeders some relief and give them a better opportunity for profitability in the future,” explained Tillson.

Standing three of the top six sires in Louisiana offers proven commodities to breeders and with the new ability for out-of-state mares to join the lucrative Louisiana Bred program.

Gemologist is the leading Louisiana stallion in 2019 and 2020 will stand for $4,000, the son of pensioned Tiznow appears to be the heir as the closest link to the Man o' War line.

Storm the Court, the champion 2-year-old colt of 2019, is by Court Vision, the first stallion Acadiana Equine placed at Copper Crowne. Court Vision, a son of Gulch, will stand for $2,500 in 2021 and currently ranks second in the state by 2020 earnings.

Astrology at $2,500, offers breeders an accomplished young son of A.P. Indy with tremendous value.

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