Fasig-Tipton Launching Digital Platform

Fasig-Tipton will unveil a new stand-alone digital platform–Fasig-Tipton Digital–with the March Digital Selected Sale to be held Mar. 17-22.

The catalogue for the inaugural online sale will be available at digital.fasigtipton.com beginning Thursday, Mar. 17, at which time bidding will open for a window through Tuesday, Mar. 22. Consignors will have the ability to promote their horses via a variety of tools that will provide prospective buyers with the resources and information they need to make informed purchasing decisions.

“We are excited to officially launch Fasig-Tipton Digital, which will serve as a complement to our traditional live auction calendar,” said Fasig-Tipton President Boyd Browning. “The Thoroughbred business is increasingly focused on creating liquidity by selling horses at opportune times, and this platform allows us to serve the marketplace by facilitating those transactions. Our approach will be the same as it is for a live auction–establish a quality marketplace for buyers and sellers, supported by the outstanding customer service that our clients have to come expect from Fasig-Tipton.”

Nominations to the sale are open and sellers are encouraged to nominate by Mar. 8, although selected supplemental entries will be accepted after that date. The company is seeking quality horses of racing age, broodmares, racing/broodmare prospects, and broodmare prospects.

“As we launch Fasig-Tipton Digital, our initial approach will be to focus entirely on quality over quantity,” said Leif Aaron, Fasig-Tipton Director of Digital Sales. “This platform and its inaugural March sale should be especially attractive to sellers that want to take advantage of a significant update in a race record or pedigree, or the recent success of a mare's covering sire.”

Interested parties are encouraged to contact Aaron at laaron@fasigtipton.com or by calling the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky offices at (859) 255-1555.

Below is a Q&A with Aaron, who was named Fasig's Director of Digital Sales Jan. 24:

TDN: Before COVID, and even right at the beginning of COVID, there seemed to be a hesitancy toward embracing digital sales. What we have learned since then?

LA: For me it was when I found out that digital sales did $100 million last year in Australia while still conducting in-person auctions. Granted, they don't have a claiming system, but even outside of racehorses they do have a vibrant online marketplace with willing buyers and sellers. Fasig-Tipton has seen the ever-increasing growth in online bidding at its live auctions, as well. Buyers have become very comfortable with buying horses off of photos and videos, and then bidding online to purchase them. COVID forced buyers to adapt, and in turn, they have become comfortable with buying horses online when unable to attend a sale in person.

TDN: What hurdles did customers have to overcome in order to embrace the concept of buying horses online, and how do you help them with that, in terms of the types of features you will offer here?

LA: Resources for buyers are critical. With our platform, buyers are going to have all the information that they would have at an in-person sale. The site will feature photos, videos, repository, health information, pedigrees, race replays, various past performances and speed figures, and buyers can schedule a physical inspection, as well. The biggest hurdle for buyers so far has been the lack of quality offered online. If someone wants to buy a new luxury car, they are not going to shop at a BUY HERE- PAY HERE lot. Our goal is to grow and establish this market to a place where people feel comfortable on the platform and natural growth can occur.

TDN: What is different about Fasig-Tipton's approach to digital sales?

LA: In the last several years, I've seen interview after interview during in-person sales in America that repeat the same thing–quality is king. We are going to focus on quality over quantity early on. We will take a long-term approach, starting small with a quality group of horses that will have significant appeal to racehorse owners and breeders, and sell these horses successfully. We will continue to do this in our first digital auctions to really generate confidence in the marketplace and the platform, demonstrating that quality horses can be sold this way. We want to get people in the habit of checking our site to see what's available. We want to ingrain in sellers' minds that there is always going to be a viable market place at their disposal. I've heard a lot of the hardboots through the years say, “You couldn't hide a good horse on your back forty.” I think they are right, it's our job now to make sure that both buyers and sellers have confidence in the digital platform to get this off the ground successfully.

We envision Fasig Digital being a place where buyers will be excited to see what is going up for auction. Initially, we are not going to commit to having a sale every single month, but when the right opportunity presents itself, we will conduct a digital auction. For example, if a 3-year-old colt becomes a 'TDN Rising Star' and its owner wants to list him on Fasig Digital, we are going to do it and have a one-horse auction. If someone has a horse pointing toward a major Grade I race and wants to sell an ownership interest in the horse, we will offer that share or percentage in the horse. We are here to try and facilitate new and exciting ways of conducting horse sales. This is the place to come for people with ideas. But again, the theme will be quality, quality, and quality.

TDN: There are companies who just do digital sales, and others, like Fasig, that do both. Is that an advantage in helping you to know what your customers need?

LA: Absolutely, I think understanding the market, the players, and what types of offerings are commercially appealing are vital to the success of a digital platform. Fasig-Tipton has a sharp, experienced team that buyers and sellers are both comfortable with and highly confident in. Customer service has always been a core principle of Fasig-Tipton, and that same service will be put to work in the digital realm. Fasig-Tipton has also successfully launched several new live auctions in the last decade–the July Selected Horses of Race Age Sale, for example. It has become a fixture on the calendar and certainly has a role in the overall popularity of racehorse sales these days. The company has also successfully taken sales that were previously less popular with sellers for their quality offerings, and transformed them into very popular auctions for these types. Take a look at last month's Kentucky Winter Mixed Sale for example–people now feel comfortable selling a $750,000 horse there, whereas 10 years ago, they may not have. The same goes for digital sales–it's going to take a concerted effort on our part to get quality horses on the site and then the buyers lined up to look at them. We have a track record of building and growing auctions successfully.

TDN: How long has this particular platform been in development?

LA: Fasig Digital has been in development since the middle of Covid. Oddly enough, though Fasig-Tipton has been involved in “Digital” sales since the early days of Matchmaker Breeders Exchange and Stallion Access. Digital.fasigtipton.com, however, started as a way to work through the pandemic, but it never actually had to be deployed. Despite that, Fasig-Tipton continued to receive feedback from customers telling us that there is a need for a Fasig-Tipton digital platform in the United States.

TDN: In your previous roles in the industry, did you ever shop for horses online?

LA: I quarterbacked the sale of Juddmonte horses online and I also actively shopped online for horses to buy, so I have quite of a bit experience with online sales. I believe I have a good feel for what works for digital sales and what may not. I'm looking forward to getting Fasig Digital established and turning it into a platform where buyers are actively and regularly checking the site, excited to see what is coming up next for sale.

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No Slowing Down at Fasig-Tipton October Sale

LEXINGTON, KY – The Fasig-Tipton October Yearlings Sale, with a session still to come, soared past its record gross with another day of break-neck bidding Wednesday at Newtown Paddocks. By the close of business Wednesday, 856 yearlings had sold at the October sale for a total of $39,511,600, bettering the previous record gross of $38,258,900 which was set in 2019.

“Obviously, it was a continuation of the euphoria/excitement and enthusiasm throughout the day,” Fasig-Tipton President Boyd Browning said of the October sale's third session. “It's beyond what we could have hoped for. There were a couple strings throughout the day where for three hours it seemed like every horse got sold. We ended up with an RNA rate of less than 13%. And I promise you by noon tomorrow, a big chunk of that 13% will be sold because they will be in there fighting for them in the morning.”

The October sale looks set for more records as it reaches its final session Thursday. The three-day average of $46,158–up 31.7% from the corresponding 2020 figure–is ahead of the record average of $37,955 that was set in 2019. The median of $21,000 is up 40% from a year ago and well ahead of the sale record of $18,500 set in 2014.

Bloodstock agent Jacob West twice tied the highest price for an October colt, going to $750,000 for a colt by Empire Maker (hip 513) Tuesday and again for a son of Gun Runner (hip 870) early in Wednesday's session–both on behalf of Vinnie Viola's St. Elias Stable–before smashing that colt record and equaling the highest bid in October history when acquiring a son of Street Sense (hip 1107) for $925,000 for the partnership of St. Elias and

Mike Repole. The price matched the auction's record set in 1999 for a filly by Storm Cat.

The sale-topper was bred by Sam-Son Farm as the historic Canadian operation began to reach the conclusion of its ongoing dispersal.

“Honestly the sale topper is a little bittersweet,” Browning admitted. “You hate to see a 50-year operation like Sam-Son make a business decision and make changes as the family dynamic has changed. They've had a wonderful program and they brought some wonderful horses here to October and some wonderful horses to Saratoga. It was a great tribute to [Sam-Son Farm Manager] Dave Whitford and [Racing Manager] Tom Zwiesler, and to the Samuel family to set the record here in October.”

The only hiccup in the October sale came when the internet bidding went down briefly late in the afternoon, but the sales company didn't know of any missed bids, according to Browning. “We tried to be as reactive as possible,” Browning said of his team's efforts to notify bidders of the issue as quickly as possible.

The Fasig-Tipton October sale concludes with a final session Thursday beginning at 10 a.m.

“It's been a great three days so far and we hope to finish up strong tomorrow,” Browning said.

Street Sense Colt Ties October Record

Jacob West, who had already tied the sale's top price for a colt twice, tied the Fasig-Tipton October sale's overall top price when bidding $925,000 to secure a colt by Street Sense (hip 1107) on behalf of Mike Repole and Vinnie Viola's St. Elias Stable Wednesday. The colt was bred and consigned by Sam-Son Farm.

“It's that stupid saying that everybody always says, 'He checked all the boxes,' but this horse really did,” West said. “He has a stallion's pedigree and he's by a horse that can get a two-turn dirt horse. That's how we looked at it. He's bred to get the distance and he looks like a horse who will get the distance. We are lucky to get him.”

Bidding on behalf of St. Elias Stable, West bid a co-record $750,000 to acquire a colt by Empire Maker (hip 513) Tuesday and he matched that figure when securing a colt by Gun Runner (hip 870) early in Wednesday's third session of the auction.

His $925,000 bid matched the highest price ever for an October yearling, equaling the figure set by a filly by Storm Cat in 1999.

“I had a pretty good idea that he was going to be around there based on what the other horses we bought had brought earlier in the sale,” West said of the sale-topping bid. “And with the interest I saw at the barn. Every time I was over there looking at him, one of the big players had him out and was looking at him. So I had a pretty good idea that he was going to be that way. We were lucky enough that we had two incredible owners who got involved.”

West also gave credit to the team behind the partnership's selections.

“It's a team effort,” he said. “Monique Delk, Eddie Rosen, John Sparkman and Rory Babich and the two most important people on that team are Mike and Vinnie. But it's a team approach. And he jumped through a lot of hoops. Hopefully it works out.”

In partnership with Repole or alone, West has signed the ticket on nine yearlings for St. Elias Stable for a total of $3,650,000.

Hip 1107 is out of Dance With Doves (A.P. Indy) and is a half-brother to graded placed Dance Again (Awesome Again). He comes from a line of Sam-Son Farm champions. His second dam is Dancethruthedawn (Mr. Prospector) and his third dam is Dance Smartly (Danzig).

Sam-Son Farm's Tom Zwiesler admitted it was bittersweet watching as the dispersal of the historic Canadian operation started to wind down. Just two hips after the sale topper, Sam-Son sent its final yearling through the sales ring.

“It was a great sale,” Zwiesler said. “It's a little melancholy. Our last yearling just went through. But we are very happy. It's a testament to the Samuel-Balaz family that have bred these horses. And of course you have people stepping up to the plate and spending this money on these horses. That's wonderful to see. St Elias and Repole stepped up and bought two of our best. We wish them all the luck in the world.”

The Repole/St. Elias partnership purchased a filly by Uncle Mo (hip 469) from the Sam-Son consignment for $450,000 Tuesday.

Asked how hip 1107 ended up in the October catalogue, Zwiesler said, “I wanted to just take fillies to Saratoga, which we did and that plan worked out. And the logistics at Keeneland worked out that we would have probably been in a later book. Fasig was very good and Peter Penny has been wonderful to us and a big help. So we chose this one and it certainly paid off. I just feel like if you bring the horse, they are going to find you. It's nothing we do. It's how the horse is brought up. And this sale is turning into a much nicer sale and I think a lot of people like to keep their babies a little bit longer. Which I did in this case. I thought he'd be a standout later on.”

Eight Sam-Son yearlings sold at the October sale for $2,067,000.

“We still have nine mares [to sell] in November and we also have 25 still in the racing stable that they are going to see through and race,” Zwiesler said.

One of those Sam-Son mares slated to sell at the upcoming Keeneland November sale is Dance with Doves, who is catalogued as hip 818 and will sell in foal to Lookin at Lucky.

Gun Runner Colt Another Score for Stokes

Beryl “Sonny” Stokes, Jr., who has steadily racked up an impressive list of pinhooking successes over the last few years, scored another home run Wednesday at Fasig-Tipton when a son of Gun Runner, purchased for $80,000 at last year's Keeneland November sale, sold for $750,000 to Vinnie Viola's St Elias Stables.

“He had my shape–I am an athlete guy, I want that shape,” Hoby Kight, who selected the colt last fall for Stokes, said. “And then it was a bubble year for Gun Runner–there was the bargain. If it wasn't the bubble year, I don't think we would have gotten him for that. Everybody bought them as weanlings and everybody wanted them as yearlings, but until they race, you don't know. And then they turned out like they did and you've got one and you've got a really shapely one.”

Stokes, who led his family's seafood company for 55 years, started pinhooking as a hobby after he retired almost a decade ago. His first big success came with a colt by Goldencents who was purchased for $115,000 and resold for $400,000 at the 2018 OBS March sale. A Pioneerof the Nile colt purchased by Kight on Stokes's behalf for $175,000 at the 2018 Keeneland September sale returned the following spring to sell for

$1.2 million at the OBS March sale.

Kight, in the back walking ring at Newtown Paddocks, had Stokes on the phone during the bidding Wednesday.

“I had him on the phone because his computer went down right before he went in,” Kight explained. “So he was listening. He got real quiet after he got to $500,000 and he's an older guy, so I got a little worried. I said, 'Sonny are you ok?' And he said, 'Yeh. I'm here. I'm here. I'm all right.'”

Hip 870 is out of Archstone (Arch) and is a half-brother to multiple graded stakes winner Proctor's Ledge (Ghostzapper). He was consigned by Reiley McDonald's Eaton Sales, which had success for Stokes with another Gun Runner colt at last year's October sale when selling a $170,000 weanling purchase for $235,000.

“Our reason for putting him in this sale was simplistic,” McDonald said. “We held one over by Gun Runner last year for the same guy and we thought, well it worked last year, so let's give it a go again this year. Also, it's kind of getting to a point that we thought it would be good to separate a Gun Runner out. It worked to a T.”

Of Wednesday's result, McDonald said, “We knew he was going to sell well, but you never know, at this sale, past $300,000 where you are going to land. He is a beautiful colt, the best mover I saw of the entire sale.”

Fahey Strikes for Justify Colt

John Fahey, bidding on behalf of an undisclosed client, went to $450,000 to acquire a colt by Justify (hip 893) from the Hunter Valley Farm consignment Wednesday at Fasig-Tipton.

“He's been in the game awhile,” Fahey said of the client. “He's going to go to Florida to be broke and the plan is to race.”

The bay colt is out of Back to Love (Street Cry {Ire}), a half-sister to graded winner Necessary Evil (Harlan's Holiday).

“He's by Justify, a Triple Crown winner, he's a Canadian-bred, and he looks like a nice horse,” Fahey said of the yearling's appeal.

Of the Justifys Fahey has seen, he said, “They are strong, athletic, good-looking horses.”

The result was a pinhooking score for partners Colt Pike and Craig Wheeler, who purchased the colt for $150,000 after he RNA'd at this year's Keeneland January sale.

“I had good notes on him and I thought he looked very racey and balanced and he was put together well,” Pike said of his early impressions of the yearling. “He was a little bit of a later foal, so I was thinking maybe he'd fly under the radar. But I didn't vet him because all of the Justifys, if they looked good, they were bringing a lot of money. I saw he RNA'd, so I hustled back there. They wanted $150,000 for him, I thought that was fair and it just went from there.”

Pike admitted he was surprised he was able to purchase the youngster.

“I walked back to the barn and was thinking, 'What am I missing here? This horse is pretty nice and $150,000 is the stud fee.' But they said he was good to go, so I said, 'Deal, I'll take him.'”

The yearling continued to improve heading into the October sale.

“He's gotten real racey. Some of the other Justifys colts have been bigger horses and I think he was a little bit more refined and racey, so I think some people kind of hopped on him because of that,” Pike said. “I'm very happy with that result, he exceeded expectations. I couldn't be more happy with the job that the people that prepped him did and Hunter Valley did a wonderful job. I've had a couple of horses with them before and they just knocked it out of the park.”

Pike is already looking forward to next year's yearling sales.

“I've actually already bought a few [weanlings] in New York, so we are getting loaded up and ready,” he said.

A Bolt for Petersen

Michael Lund Petersen added a colt by Bolt d'Oro to his racing stable when bloodstock agent Donato Lanni went to $300,000 to acquire a yearling by the first-crop sire from Wayne and Cathy Sweezey's Timber Town consignment Wednesday.

“He was a cool dude,” Lanni said after signing the ticket on hip 1063. “I loved him. They came out and they just had a chain over his nose. He was just so cool. I sent Bob [Baffert] a video of the horse last night and he just loved him. So I got the green light.”

The yearling is out of Colby Cakes (Scat Daddy), a half-sister to stakes winner and graded placed Lucky Copy (Unbridled's Song). He was bred by Timber Town Stable and Wood Duck Stable.

Bradshaw on the Board With Justify Colt

Randy Bradshaw made his first purchase of the Fasig-Tipton October sale early in Wednesday's third session when going to $250,000 to acquire a son of Justify (hip 810) from the Baccari Bloodstock consignment.

“He is a May foal, but he's quite well-developed,” Bradshaw said of the yearling. “I liked that part of it. And I knew a little bit about the family, the Bernardini half-sister [the unraced Believein] doesn't show in there because she got hurt, but she was a terrifically fast filly. He looks like a speedy colt and, if everything goes well, we'll probably try to get him to Miami or maybe the OBS sale in March.”

Hip 810 is out of Aguilera (Unbridled's Song), a half-sister to Japanese Group 1 winner Mr Melody (Scat Daddy). He is a half-brother to stakes winner and graded placed Bluegrass Singer (Bluegrass Cat).

Chris Baccari's Baccari Bloodstock purchased Aguilera for $240,000 at the 2015 Keeneland November sale. The yearling was bred by Seclusive Farm and Chester and Anne Prince.

Bradshaw said he felt this colt from the first crop of Triple Crown winner Justify would be well-suited to his pinhooking program.

“Some of [the Justifys] are very big,” he explained. “Some of them are almost 17 hands, a lot of them are huge with the Scat Daddy sire. But I thought he looked a little more typey and, for what we do, trying to sell one early, he looked like the type. He looks quick.”

Bradshaw doubled up on Baccari Bloodstock offerings later in the session when going once again to $250,000 to acquire a colt by Into Mischief (hip 925). The bay, out of the unraced Bella Gattino (Tapit), was bred by Jumping Jack Racing and Seclusive Farm and RNA'd for $195,000 at the Fasig-Tipton July sale.

Of his October shopping, Bradshaw said, “We tried on a couple yesterday and we have a couple more coming up today that we're going to try to buy. It's always competitive for a nice horse. That's always the hard part. If a good horse comes in here and vets clean, you're going to have to pay for them.”

Mattmiller Looking for More Black Type

Maddie Mattmiller has been an active bidder at the yearling sales this fall, shopping on behalf of husband Jake Ballis's Black Type Thoroughbreds partnership and the agent made a pair of quick purchases Wednesday at Fasig-Tipton. She went to $150,000 to acquire a colt by Goldencents (hip 816) from Bill Murphy's consignment and came right back to secure a filly by Uncle Mo (hip 825) for $170,000 from the Taylor Made Sales Agency consignment.

“We are really just focused on a good physical,” Mattmiller said of her approach to buying for Black Type. “Pedigree helps. We bought a colt who has a pedigree that, were he to be a Grade I winner, he would be a stallion. That always helps when spending six figures on a colt. You kind of have to do that. Fillies on the other hand, we aren't as hard on them as far as pedigree, as long as we get the athlete. We have had success with fillies with pedigrees and without. So we focus on the athlete and physical.”

Mattmiller signed for four yearlings at the Keeneland September sale last month, going to $255,000 for a filly by

Mo Town (hip 1014) and $250,000 for a daughter of Army Mule (hip 3158).

“Keeneland was tough, very tough,” Mattmiller admitted. “I don't think we could have afforded these [October] horses at Keeneland. This sale has been a little easier–in our price range–to come in and pick exactly what we wanted. At Keeneland we struck out a few times.”

She continued, “It's hard for us to come in and spend $300,000 or $400,000 on a yearling when we can find value at the 2-year-old sales. For yearlings, we like to stay in that $100,000-$200,000 budget. Obviously we spent a little more in September, but the market told us that we had to.”

In just three years, Black Type Thoroughbreds has been represented by Up in Smoke (The Big Beast), third in last year's GI Test S., as well as this year's GI Ashland S. runner-up Pass the Champagne (Flatter).

“Black Type started about two years ago when my husband Jake had a bunch of buddies that had had horses in the past and he kind of revisited them and they showed some interest to get back into horses,” Mattmiller said of the origins of the partnership. “So he put his buddies together and they bought the filly Up in Smoke and had success with her. And these guys told all their friends. And it just seems to have built from there. Jake has a good group together now which we are having a ton of fun with.”

There could be much more fun in the group's future as they head to Del Mar with GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies contender Hidden Connection (Connect). Black Type bought into the filly following her 7 1/2-length debut win for Hidden Brook Farm at Colonial Downs in August. She returned to take the

GIII Pocahontas S. by 9 1/4 lengths, which earned her an automatic berth on championship weekend.

“To have been able to buy into a filly who had just broken her maiden and sell these people on the idea that we are pointing to this race that gets us points to go to the Breeders' Cup and then, not only to win that race, but to do it the way she did it,” Mattmiller said with a huge smile. “They are all over the moon–the Breeders' Cup, Del Mar, I mean it's worked like it was written, which is rare. Every time I come home, Jake is pulling his hair out trying to figure out how he's going to find all of these tickets.”

Asked if she was done shopping for yearlings this year, Mattmiller said, “I am going to say we are done. Jake is going to kill me if I don't.”

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Mendelssohn On Top In Competitive Midlantic Opener

TIMONIUM, MD – Buyers had every right to expect competitive bidding during Monday's first session of the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Fall Yearlings Sale–with normal Maryland shoppers joined by bidders shut out at previous sales–and the arena did not disappoint.

By the close of business Monday, 149 yearlings grossed $4,577,300. The average was $30,720 and the median was $20,000.

During the sale's first session in 2020, 122 yearlings sold for a total of $2,983,600. The session average was $24,456, the median was $15,000, and the buy-back rate was 24.7%.

“It was a great opening session,” Fasig-Tipton president Boyd Browning said Monday evening. “The gross is up 53%, the average is up 26%, median is up 33%, and the RNA rate is a very low 16.2% today.”

While the 2020 auction was held during the uncertainty of the pre-vaccination pandemic, its figures remained fairly steady with the 2019 opening session when 102 yearlings sold for $2,680,000, an average of $26,275 and a median of $15,000.

“[Monday's results] are really more impressive when you consider this was one of the sales that, when you compare 2020 to 2019, it really didn't have a COVID drop,” Browning said. “So '20 and '19 were very similiar in terms of statistical results for this sale. Some other sales have had a little bit of an anti-COVID bump throughout the United States this year in 2021 compared to 2020. Well, this is a pretty genuine increase in terms of statistical performance. Results in '19 and '20 were basically flat, so this increase in 2021 is even more impressive than it has been for some of the other sales.”

Eight yearlings sold for six figures Monday, up from just two a year ago.

A colt by Mendelssohn (hip 189) brought the day's top price when selling for $230,000 to Oracle Bloodstock. Also topping the $200,000 mark was a colt by Union Rags (hip 113) who sold for $220,000 to trainer Mac Robertson. Both were consigned by locally based sellers, with Dreamtime Stables offering hip 189 and consignor/breeder Dark Hollow offering hip 113.

“One of the nice things we saw today was the support of the local breeders,” Browning said. “It was nice to see the sale topped by Dreamtime, which is Mike Palmer and his wife and their longtime association with Candyland Farm's Herb and Ellen Moelis, who have been long-time supporters of this sale and this region. And the second highest-priced horse was from David Hayden and his Dark Hollow Farm. They were both really legitimate pedigrees with Mendelssohn and Union Rags. It is really rewarding to see regional breeders who have quality product support this marketplace, which helps lure more buyers and more successful buyers to the sale this year and in future years as well.”

The day's top-priced filly was also a daughter of Mendelssohn with Donato Lanni bidding $160,000 to acquire hip 159.

Cary Frommer, traditionally an active buyer at the Midlantic Fall sale, signed for three yearlings Monday, including a Twirling Candy colt (hip 78) for $115,000. But Frommer agreed it was tough sledding.

“I feel like I am paying more than I thought I would have to,” she said. “For a nice horse, it's still very strong and I've been outbid on a bunch of very nice horses. I think the market is fair, but it's just that it's a trickle down effect from the other sale. People haven't been able to buy what they wanted. So it's strong here.”

Pinhookers, some of whom are not traditional bidders at the auction, were a dominant presence at the sale Monday.

“I knew they were coming,” Frommer said of the pinhooking buying bench. “I knew everybody was having trouble at the previous sale. So I knew they would be here and I was not happy about it.”

One of those pinhookers making an unusual appearance in Timonium was Susan Montayne, who purchased a filly by Tiznow (hip 76) for $150,000.

“We've never actually done this sale before,” Montayne, who is a regular presence as a consignor at the Midlantic May 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale, said. “I have never come up here to buy horses. We usually focus on the Kentucky sales and sales at home in Ocala, but here we are. It was very hard to buy at Keeneland. Luckily, we have clients that send us horses to go to the races, but with the pinhook side, it was a little tough.”

The Midlantic sale continues Tuesday with bidding at the Maryland State Fairgrounds beginning at 10 a.m.

Mendelssohn Colt to Handal

Conor Foley of Oracle Bloodstock struck late in Monday's first day of the Midlantic Fall Yearling Sale to secure a colt by Mendelssohn (hip 189) for a session-topping $230,000 on behalf of a partnership.

“He's going to go to [trainer] Ray Handal,” Foley said. “I bought him for a group of people.”

Of the yearling, Foley said, “He just looks a lot like Mendelssohn. He just looked like an athlete that should run next year; what surface he can run on, I don't know. I think horses like him were few and far between here and he really stood out.”

The colt was bred by Classic Thoroughbred XXIX and was consigned by Dreamtime Stables. He is out of Tasha's Moon (Malibu Moon) and is a half-brother to stakes-placed Juror Number Four (Into Mischief) and from the family of multiple graded winner Tasha's Miracle.

Hip 189 was one of two yearlings from the first crop of Grade I winner Mendelssohn to bring six figures Monday in Timonium. Earlier in the session, bloodstock agent Donato Lanni, bidding on behalf of Caroline and Greg Bentley, acquired the day's top-priced filly when going to $160,000 for a daughter of the Coolmore stallion (hip 159).

Union Rags Colt to Novogratz

Trainer Mac Robertson, bidding on behalf of owner Joe Novogratz, purchased a colt by Union Rags for $220,000 Monday in Timonium. The bay colt was bred and consigned by Dark Hollow Farm and is out of Safe Journey (Flatter), who is also the dam of multiple stakes winners O Dionysus (Bodemeister) and Joy (Pure Prize). The yearling's second dam is Safe at the Plate (Double Zeus), a half-sister to champion sprinter Safely Kept.

“Safe Journey is an awful good mare for this sale,” Robertson said after signing the ticket on hip 113. “She has four or five really good horses that can win where we want to go. And I thought, for a Union Rags, he has enough length to be a really good horse.”

Several times a leading owner at Canterbury Park, Novogratz was a linebacker for the Pitt Panthers and was drafted by the Pittsburgh Steelers before being traded to the Minnesota Vikings. He is the founder of IDI Distributors Inc., an insulation distribution company.

Robertson trained the multiple stakes winner Amy's Challenge (Artie Schiller) for Novogratz. The mare, second in the GI Madison S. and third in the GI Humana Distaff S. in 2019, was purchased for $20,000 at the Fasig Midlantic Yearling sale in 2016.

“I thought he'd bring between $200,000 and $250,000 when he vetted well and scoped well,” Robertson said of the yearling's final price. “Until you get your guy to vet him, you don't really know.”

Also on behalf of Novogratz Monday, Robertson purchased a filly by Malibu Moon (hip 158) for $95,000.

The competitive market was no surprise to Robertson.

“It's really strong,” he said with a rueful smile. “But I'm not surprised. I was at Keeneland–I've never seen an 80% clearance rate in my life. There are people who didn't get what they wanted at Keeneland, so of course they came here.

Tiznow Filly Likely for 2-Year-Old Sales

A filly by Tiznow (hip 76) is likely destined for a return to the sales ring next spring after selling for $150,000 to the bid of Ocala horsewoman Susan Montanye.

“She looks like a classy, two-turn filly,” Montanye, who signed for the pinhooking partnership in the name of her SBM Training and Sales, said of the yearling's appeal. “She is a little bit of a later foal, but she had all the right angles and parts. She vetted great for me. I watched her and I loved her walk, big overreach on her. What's not to like about her?”

Of the filly's final price, Montanye said, “Listen, if you want them right now, it looks like you're going to have to pay for them. She's a Tiznow filly and she's got some pedigree, so $150,000, I feel comfortable with that.”

The yearling was consigned by Sabrina Moore's GreenMount Farm and was bred by Moore in partnership with Tiznow Syndicate. She is out of Pinkprint (Not For Love), a half-sister to GI Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile winner and likely GI Breeders' Cup Classic favorite Knicks Go (Paynter).

Filly Adds Up for Newtownanner

Ron Blake liked a filly by Cloud Computing when he purchased her as a short yearling for $40,000 at the Keeneland January sale earlier this year and he still liked the bay yearling (hip 11) when he sent her through the sales ring in Timonium Monday. He  advised his clients, Samantha and Maurice Regan's Newtown Anner Stud, to purchase the bay for $145,000.

“We always loved her,” Blake said. “We bought her as a weanling and from the day we bought her I thought she was gorgeous. She's grown into a very pretty filly. She is a late foal and I think when you take that into account, you can see what she could become. She's by a first-year stallion and she was a late foal so she looked maybe a little small to some people. But because she is a May 20 foal, we thought she'd be a real beautiful filly. We advised our client to buy her.”

The yearling is out of Martini and is a three-quarter sister to stakes winner Dirty (Maclean's Music).

“I just think she has so much quality,” Blake said. “We think she'll be a good racehorse. She'll go back to the farm and be able to grow up a little bit. We will give her some time off before we break her and then go forward with her and see what she can do.”

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Fasig-Tipton Releases New York-Bred Catalog

A total of 308 horses have been cataloged for the Fasig-Tipton New York-Bred Yearling Sale, to be held Sunday and Monday, Aug. 15 and 16 in the Humphrey S. Finney Sales Pavilion on the sales grounds in Saratoga Springs, New York. The New York-bred sale returns to its normal spot on the sales calendar after COVID-19 caused the New York-bred yearlings to be sold at the Selected Yearling Showcase in Lexington last September.

“We are thrilled to be conducting this sale back in Saratoga Springs–where it belongs–following last year's cancellation due to the pandemic,” said Fasig-Tipton President Boyd Browning.  “We annually offer the cream of the New York-bred yearling crop at this auction, and the quality of sire power and conformation on offer this year is most impressive.”

As the New York-bred program has continued to thrive–state-bred maidens are running for $85,000, not to mention a robust state-bred stakes program at all of the New York tracks–the aforementioned sire power looks nothing like your typical regional sale.

A plethora of Kentucky stallions have youngsters cataloged for the sale, headlined by the 11 entered by Practical Joke, whose 'TDN Rising Star' Wit was so impressive in winning the GIII Sanford S. July 17. Constitution, whose son Tiz the Law fetched $110,000 from Sackatoga Stables' Jack Knowlton at this sale in 2018 and went on to win last summer's GI Runhappy Travers S., has eight in the catalog, while others include Candy Ride (Arg)– sire of impressive July 18 maiden winner Senbei–Distorted Humor, Hard Spun, Into Mischief, Liam's Map, Maclean's Music, Munnings, Nyquist, Street Sense, Uncle Mo and Violence. New York-based stallions include the reliable Central Banker, Freud and a dozen by the sadly departed Laoban.

Freshmen sires are also strongly represented in the catalog, including nine each for GI Kentucky Derby winner Always Dreaming (Bodemeister); Army Mule (Friesan Fire), whose first yearlings were coveted at Fasig-Tipton July last week; Good Samaritan (Harlan's Holiday); and Into Mischief's half-brother Mendelssohn (Scat Daddy).

Owing to the day's scheduled racing program at the nearby racetrack, Sunday's session is set to begin at 7 p.m., while Monday's round of bidding will begin at 12 noon.

The online catalog may be viewed by clicking here and will also be available in the Equineline sales catalog app. Print catalogs are also available.

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