Fresh Team At Keeneland Building On Strong Foundations

ASCOT, UK–Racing at Ascot this Saturday may focus on the G1 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth S., but a top-class card gets underway in style with the running of the G3 Princess Margaret Keeneland S., a race now in its fifth year of sponsorship by the American sales company.

Shannon Arvin, who was appointed Keeneland's eighth president and chief executive officer last year, is the first woman to hold that position, and she arrived in the UK earlier in the week to meet some of the company's clients in this part of the world and enjoy a couple of days at the races.

As Ascot on Friday following a lunch celebrating all the winning breeders from the Royal Ascot meeting, Arvin outlined some of the key changes of personnel at Keeneland which took place during 2021. Along with her own appointment, Irishmen Tony Lacy and Cormac Breathnach were appointed vice president of sales and director of sales operations respectively, while Gatewood Bell, a familiar face to many on the European sales circuit in his days as an agent and representative of Goffs, became vice president of racing.

“We're a new team,” Arvin says.  “With Gatewood on board as head of racing, then Tony as head of sales and Cormac as director of sales operations, I think we all just share a common view that Keeneland is a special place. It's special to all of us for different reasons and I know we all see ourselves as stewards.

“And it's neat to come together and approach it from that vantage point because I know that all we are trying to do is to make Keeneland as good as it can be and do as much as we can for the industry, and as much as we can to perpetuate the best in racing. We were founded on that principle, and we all believe so fervently in it that even when we have different ideas of how to get there, we are open to those new ideas and finding new ways, so that we attract more people to the sport.”

Reflecting on a tumultuous few years of international travel disrupted by the pandemic, she adds, “I think as difficult as Covid has been it has also given us some opportunities to try new things that may have been more difficult to have done at other times. People have got more used to change and we have all had to become more flexible.”

The breeze-up pinhookers are a determined bunch, and a group that as a whole has benefited enormously from the buying and selling of American-bred yearlings sourced at Keeneland. Many of them found ways of travelling to Lexington, aided by Keeneland's tireless European representative Ed Prosser, but the planning was by no means simple. This year, happily, should be more straightforward.

“One of my most favourite aspects of this business, from the time when I was a lawyer and even more so now, is the fact that it's such an international business but it's a small world, so our European buyers are such an important part of our buying bench,” says Arvin.

“We sell horses to people from over 52 countries, but our European buyers are so important and when there was a question about whether we could get them over for last year's sales cycle we were all very anxious. Ed Prosser's hair turned whiter and we were in contact daily to work out ways to get them here.

“Last year, in September in particular, the market was so unusual, and usually when you get to the last day of the sale the back ring gets fairly empty but last year the back ring was full, and still with lots of European pinhookers.”

Potential buyers planning their trips for September can rest safe in the knowledge that this year's sale will follow the pattern of 12 months ago.

Arvin continues, “Our consignors and buyers all agree that consistency from year to year in the format would be really helpful, and we haven't been able to do that in past years for a variety of reasons. But we will have the same format this year that we did last September: two-day Book 1, two-day Book 2, one-day break, and on. We will have a Book 6 this year. Our numbers are such that we will need a Book 6 this year instead of consolidating three days for Book 5.”

But before the serious business begins there is some meeting and greeting to be done via two key European race sponsorships for Keeneland, at Ascot on Saturday and at the Curragh in Ireland on Aug. 6.

“We appreciate so much that the European breeders and buyers support our sales, and it goes both ways,” Arvin explains. “That international aspect is so important to a healthy industry. Our sponsorship of racing in Europe goes back to the Nunthorpe S. at York in the 1990s. The Princess Margaret S. we have sponsored since 2018 and of course we sponsor the G1 Keeneland Phoenix S. at the Curragh in a few weeks. That's close to home for Tony so he will be there for that, and it's just fun to see our European customers on their turf as well as at Keeneland.”

Just ahead of the breeding stock sale in November, the sales company's sister racecourse will welcome back the Breeders' Cup for the third time.

Arvin, who spent a day in Newmarket before heading to Ascot, adds, “The temporary structures are already going up and we're getting ready. Even for the few days I've been here in England I've seen lots of trainers who have talked about coming back to Keeneland for the Breeders' Cup, so we're getting very excited about that.”

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The Premier Book in Every Way: Keeneland September Book 1 by the Numbers

Here's a conundrum for you. When does your outstanding yearling become merely one that stands out?

It's something the Keeneland sales team find themselves asking a great deal right now, out on the farms, during the annual process of sieving entries into the right tier of the world's biggest yearling catalog.

Time after time, they run into the same, nearly superstitious nervousness among some consignors about September Book 1. The action is too tight at the top end. Let this guy be a big fish in a smaller pond.

Well, that kind of talk is hardly unfamiliar to Tony Lacy and Cormac Breathnach, respectively Vice President of Sales and Director of Sales Operations, in that both took up their appointments last year from positions with leading consignors. On being invited to the other side of the dais, however, Breathnach decided to test perceptions against the data.

He did so with an open mind. If there turned out to be genuine vulnerabilities, whether in the format of the sale or a horse's position within it, then Keeneland would do something about it. But where he found misapprehensions, equally, then those would be clarified.

“We wanted to look at the sale and its performance as objectively as possible,” Breathnach emphasizes. “To look at facts, not preconceptions. We know how strongly some assumptions have been propagated over the years and we need some objective analysis. Our goal is to identify where any weak spots might truly be in the sale, and how to combat those: whether by altering start times, or the numbers in a particular session, or marketing focus, anything that Keeneland might do to help offset any dead spots.”

But the headline discovery is unmistakable. There should be no cold feet about Book 1. Just best foot forward. In fact, wilfully seeking relegation to Book 2 can be downright counter- productive.

On joining Keeneland a year ago, Breathnach first ran the basic numbers on the relative performance of Books 1 and 2 over the previous decade. In that time, of course, there had been all manner of format changes–with Book 1 variously allocated one, two, three and four sessions; and Book 2 either two or three–and evidently most people now agree that it is time for some consistency. Remarkably, however, Breathnach found that the Book 1 brand had crushed Book 2 every single year, regardless of how the elite stock had been spread.

“Through all those different formats, the average from Book 1 into Book 2 dropped every year between 51 and 60%,” Breathnach says. “And the median fell between 48 and 64%. In other words, both the Book 1 average and median were at least double those achieved by Book 2 every year. [Okay, strictly 1.96x for the 2019 median!] Honestly, that shocked me–and some of the agents I shared the figures with couldn't believe it either. I really did think that there were going to be years when Book 2 at least came close. Even the blended RNA rate was lower in Book 1. Over those 10 years, it came in at 24% for Book 1 and 25% for Book 2. Book 1 is where the money is.”

Having established the power of the Book 1 brand, Breathnach set out on a deep dive through his first September Sale at Keeneland. What could be learned by comparisons made Book to Book, session to session, and even within sessions?

The real revelation came in the modelling of buyer activity, which Breathnach measured by the number of radiograph views (blue in the table below) and the number of videoscope views exceeding 30 seconds (orange). This is a most interesting and instructive graph, showing that purposeful prospecting is nowhere higher than across both sessions of Book 1.

“The repository data show convincingly that a large volume of buyers are here, and, more importantly, are active in Book 1,” suggests Breathnach. “Some sellers tend to feel that a higher RNA rate might suggest otherwise, even though the RNA rates in Books 1 and 2 over the preceding 10 years are virtually identical. But buyers are not in the habit of vetting horses without intent. This shows that they're here, and they're here to buy from the beginning.”

While some vendors are convinced of greater purchasing depth in Book 2, Breathnach argues that some bumper transactions in the opening Book would never be made about the same horse in the next one. Several important principals, if they have come at all, tend to have left town by Book 2. He points to recent Book 1 purchases for $1 million and $800,000 that were made simply because those principals were on the spot for Book 1 only.

Breathnach urges sellers (and buyers) to grasp how the complexion of Book 1 is changing: “If you compare Book 1 from September 2019 and 2021 side-by-side–skipping 2020, when international travel was so restricted–buyers who contributed close to $60 million worth of purchases from 2019's Book 1 did not participate in 2021, for various reasons. But that deficit was backfilled extremely well, primarily by domestic racing stables: people like Vinnie Viola and Mike Repole, and new entities like the BSW/Crow Colts Group and the Bernhards [Jim and Dana, of Lynnhaven Racing], among others.

“With more exposure for the sport of horse racing and the improved purses, it was refreshing to see domestic end-users so active from the very beginning of the sale. Many vendors sold horses very effectively in the $400,000-$750,000 range for example. Of the first 15 horses through the ring last September, 12 sold, to 11 different domestic buyers.”

This feels huge, in the perennial debate with nervous vendors. Breathnach believes that some people may set too high a bar when considering their stock for Book 1: that every yearling entrant has to be 'perfect.'

“What we are looking to sell in Book 1 is as many good physicals as possible,” he says. “Pedigree and sire power are important too, to a degree, but athletes are what the buyers are looking for in Book 1, and that's what they are going to pay for. They can't all be by the same six-to-eight sires because we have a deep international buying bench, as the repository data shows. If the median is $325,000, like in 2021, and you've got a $400,000 horse, Book 1 is where your market is. You're an outlier anywhere else.”

In terms of Book-to-Book trends, Breathnach focused on medians and RNA rates as the most reliable gauge of sale performance. As this next table shows, the median conformed pretty neatly to the status of each Book. The RNA line (orange in the table) also descended as the sale moved forward, but that's pretty much as you would expect given the high production costs of elite yearlings, whose breeders are often equivocal about selling at all. (Moreover at an auction that broke records for average, median and completed sales, there may never again be an RNA rate like the one achieved in the second week of last year's September Sale.)

Another nervous assumption is that there are inbuilt momentum swings even within a session. Vendors typically dislike slots at the very beginning or end of the day. Again, Breathnach investigated last September. He identified the first and last 20 hips that sold in each session, and compared them to the 20 that sold right in the middle of that session. In doing so, he compared the average and median price of each of those subgroups as well as the likelihood that a horse sold for at least 50% above its reserve, what might be termed the “pleasant surprises.”

“It's interesting to me that in the 11 sessions, those good sales (50% above reserve) were more likely to happen in the first 20 sellers in three sessions (incidentally including the first and fourth sessions); the last 20 sellers in three sessions; and right in the middle of the day in the other four,” Breathnach says. “The average sale price of those yearlings was only highest in the middle 20 sellers in two of the 11 sessions. In other words: no pattern.”

Where there can surely be virtual unanimity is that the sale finally needs a more settled format. That's certainly Keeneland's intention for 2022, with the first two Books once again expected to be spread over two sessions apiece, with Book 1 opening around 1 p.m. (as was the case last year).

“Industry-wide, almost everybody agrees that we need a consistent format, and that includes our sales team,” Breathnach concedes. “Based on the performance of last year's sale, and particularly from a stabling point of view, we feel that the format we landed on was very positive.”

Obviously there will always be a certain critical mass of yearlings eligible for the two opening Books. And Breathnach feels that there are two important differences between the format of two sessions apiece, as opposed to commingling over four days.

“You get too many peaks and valleys [with a four-day Book 1],” he explains. “There aren't 1,000 really top-end horses, so the sale gets too inconsistent, and it's hard to build momentum. And, maybe more importantly, when you use the entire barn area like that, it's very hard for buyers to patrol the whole of Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and then to do their shortlists and their second looks, when they're going from Barn 1 to 49 on every pass. Some sellers might think they would prefer that–but the horses are just too spread out that way, and several of them are going to be missed.”

So if 400 won't necessarily be the precise number of elite horses out there for Book 1, it's a number that gives everyone a chance–buyers and vendors alike.

“It's a manageable number and you can start a 200-horse session at 1 p.m.,” Breathnach says. “That allows extra time in the mornings for buyers to get their second looks and vetting done, and to get ahead with Book 2, and not be constantly falling behind. And it gives these good horses the time they deserve. They can be stabled loosely in some of our best show areas, with the time and space for people to show them to the best of their ability.”

The lunchtime start also allows atmosphere to build for the beginning of what is, after all, an occasion of great theater.

“Tony and Shannon [Arvin, president and CEO] and the entire team, we want to make sure there's a buzz to kick the sale off,” Breathnach says. “That is a priority. The September Sale is a significant event for Lexington and this area, but it's critical to our customers and it deserves to start off the right way.”

As he mentions, this is all a team effort. Besides Lacy and Breathnach, the inspections so vital to the balance of these Books are being shared by Mark Maronde, Dean Roethemeier and Kyle Wilson, with valued external perspectives from the experienced Frankie Brothers and Julie Cauthen. And of course there are also important contributions from other vital cogs in the Keeneland machine like Gatewood Bell, Buff Bradley and Ryan Mahan. While every sales company candidly strives on behalf of the vendor, once a horse is on the dais, in planning an auction these people must try to achieve an equilibrium between seller and buyers.

But obviously there's a limit to how much the hosts can assist trade.

“We do understand that there's a lot of anxiety and opinion among breeders and consignors about book placement,” Breathnach says. “Our job is to put the whole sale together, which requires taking a broad view, and factoring in the requirements and preferences of buyers and sellers alike. The kind of things we're talking about can't create a strong market, of themselves. But we can do our best to give it space to breathe.”

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Acting Out Tops Keeneland April HORA Sale

Acting Out (Blame), who most recently caused a 6-1 upset of the Carousel S. at Oaklawn Park Apr. 2 (video), was hammered down to Bill Farish, acting as agent for his parents Will and Sarah, to lead the way at Friday's Keeneland April Horses of Racing Age Sale held following the conclusion of the closing-day program at the racetrack a handful of steps up the hill.

Previously trained by Hall of Famer Jerry Hollendorfer for the ownership group of Sherman Racing Inc., Zivka Akin and Robert Hawkins, Acting Out won three of 10 starts in California and was placed in the Camila Urso S. sprinting on the turf at Golden Gate last year, but switched to the Arkansas oval this term and was a wire-to-wire allowance winner Mar. 11 before besting heavily favored 'TDN Rising Star' Frank's Rockette (Into Mischief) in the Carousel. She was consigned by Taylor Made Sales Agency as hip 23.

“She is a six-furlong specialist, so she will [continue] sprinting and hopefully be back here to [race in] the [GII] Thoroughbred Club of America S. in the fall,” said Farish. “We hope we can make some of the purchase price back [by racing her] before retiring her at the end of the year.

“When the catalog came out, she was one that just stood out in the catalog,” Farish added. “When we saw her–she looked fabulous, a beautiful mare, really correct. She looks like one who would have nice babies. [Her pedigree] goes back to a Stuart Janney III family, and we hope to breed her one day.”

Acting Out is out of a half-sister to Janney III's Grade III-winning turf mare Onus, also a daughter of Blame, and to the dam of the promising 3-year-old multiple graded-placed turf colt Limited Liability (Kitten's Joy), who flew home to win a grass allowance at Keeneland Apr. 16. The stakes-placed third dam Meghan's Joy (A.P. Indy) has left behind the likes of graded winners Ironicus (Distorted Humor), On Leave (War Front), Norumbega (Tiznow), Hunting (Coronado's Quest) and Quiet Harbor (Silver Deputy).

 

WATCH: Acting Out sells for $600,000 at Friday's Keeneland April Sale

 

The ELiTE-consigned Blue Devil (Uncle Mo) was the most coveted of the male racing prospects, selling to Rocket Ship Racing LLC, agent/William Denzik for $260,000. The 3-year-old was offered as hip 32 on behalf of his previous owners SF Racing, Starlight Racing, Madaket Stables, Siena Farm and Golconda Stable and trainer Rodolphe Brisset and made a favorable impression in his lone racetrack appearance to date, missing by a neck in a six-furlong maiden over the Turfway synthetic Apr. 2. The same connections were also represented by Blackadder (Quality Road) (hip 89), who was purchased by Claiborne Farm, agent, for $250,000. Hailing from a Stone Farm family, the colt holds an entry for the GI Preakness S. by virtue of his victory in the El Camino Real Derby Feb. 12.

Another Brisset trainee made his way down to the sales pavilion only hours after winning his maiden at the track a few hours earlier. Summer Anthem (Temple City) was offered by Gainesway, agent, as hip 104, and was snapped up by Kirk Wycoff's Three Diamonds Farm for $150,000 to continue his career. The 3-year-old gelding proved a tenacious winner of Friday's fourth race in a meet-fastest clocking for the 8 1/2-furlongs on turf.

Other offerings to have won during the meet and sold Friday were the I.C. Racing-consigned Shannon (Nyquist) (hip 100), who broke her maiden at 24-1 in an Apr. 22 turf sprint and was purchased for $240,000 by Hidden Brook, agent; and Atras (Astern {Aus}) (hip 102), a 3-year-old gelding who graduated by 2 1/2 lengths in an Apr. 23 turf sprint and fetched $150,000 from Clay Scherer.

As reported earlier, a share in Airdrie Stud's Upstart sold for $450,000 as the final hip up for bidding.

For the single-session auction, a total of 58 horses were reported as sold for $5,349,000, good for an average of $92,224 and a median price of $50,000. The 2021 event saw 37 horses sell for $2,440,000 for an average of $65,946 and a $45,000 median.

“From start to finish of the sale, the energy was strong and the enthusiasm at every level was really encouraging,” Keeneland Vice President of Sales Tony Lacy said. “Joining the race meet and sale and having them on one day really, really worked. The atmosphere was incredible with a real buzz. That's something we want to replicate and build on not just for the April Sale, but all sales moving forward.”

Added Keeneland's Director of Sales Cormac Breathnach: “It's so important to us to have the brick-and-mortar event built around the race meet and have the support we got up front from so many consignors and owners with really good horses. That first group–the 73 horses that were initially entered–really turned heads. We are incredibly grateful to them. That feeds into the race meet, and people see a chance to cash in or a chance to buy. And to be able to accommodate those horses that had run well during the meet in the sale showed our flexibility. To see it all come together is very rewarding.”

Keeneland will welcome buyers and sellers back to Lexington for its benchmark September Yearling Sale Sept. 12-23.

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Keeneland January Provides Steady Start to 2022

The Keeneland January Horses of All Ages Sale concluded its four-day run in Lexington Friday with steady figures which continued to show strength in the marketplace into the new year.

“We are very, very pleased with the sale,” said Keeneland's vice president of sales Tony Lacy. “Continued competitive trade, high clearance rate and high median price have solidified some confidence in people who were nervous before the beginning of the sales season. They feel positive about moving forward into the rest of 2022 and are investing as such. The market is very broad in all respects; you're not seeing the spikes and valleys indicative of a narrow market. Demand is strong, with multiple bidders on horses at all levels, but not overheated. Prices, even the higher ones, are fair, believable and sustainable.”

The 2021 January sale was dominated by the dispersals of Sam-Son Farm and the late Paul Pompa, Jr., which combined generated gross of $13.5 million. Despite lacking those types of high-power dispersals, this year's auction produced fairly similar results.

Through four sessions, Keeneland sold 1,013 horses for a total of $46,341,100–second highest since the 2008 sale. The auction's average dipped just 3.23% to $45,746, while the median was up 33.33% to $20,000.

In 2021, 963 head grossed $45,522,100 for an average of $47,271 and a median of $15,000.

“There are a lot of happy sellers,” Lacy said. “The buyers can be a tad frustrated in places, but still, they understand that a competitive market is good for everybody. If it's competitive to buy, it's competitive to sell, so hopefully they will reap the rewards on the other end.”

The buy-back rate, which was 25.75% during the auction's first session, fell as low as 13.09% during the third session before concluding with a cumulative 19.35%. It was 21.26% a year ago.

“The high clearance rate continued through the middle and even lower end of the market, and that is really encouraging because this isn't a barometer sale like September and November,” Keeneland Director of Sales Operations Cormac Breathnach said. “This is a new tax year and yet there's the same hunger to buy horses where there hasn't been for years. That's a really good sign.”

Four Star Sales' Kerry Cauthen agreed the low buy-back rate was a positive indicator for the market.

“Comparable horses have been selling well compared with previous years,” Cauthen said. “Generally, when you bring a horse to January, you intend to sell. The number of horses not sold on Thursday was incredibly low. That means people are buying, and that is the name of the game.”

Three Chimneys Farm, buying out partner Hill 'n' Dale Farm, purchased the auction's top-priced offering when going to $750,000 for the 2-year-old filly Princesse Lele (Quality Road). Carl and Yurie Pascarella acquired impressive maiden winner Belgrade (Hard Spun), a late addition to the catalogue, for the sale's second highest price of $700,000.

“I think the higher-priced horses were fair,” Lacy said. “They weren't extraordinary, they were I think very rational and more sustainable over the longer term. I think it gives a feeling of confidence moving forward that there is viability in breeding a nice horse, whatever level it is, that you can get a return profit and get it moved along.”

Belgrade's late entry to the January sale was the highlight of a strong supplemental catalogue.

“The quality of the catalogue was very strong when it initially came together, but the ability to add a small number of supplements, such as Belgrade, who sold so successfully for Randy and Sandy Bradshaw, was very rewarding,” Breathnach said.

A colt by Gun Runner was the January sale's top-priced short yearling when selling for $375,000 to Narvick International. The youngster was one of 492 yearlings to sell at the four-day auction for a total of $18,136,300 and an average of $36,862.

Two short yearlings topped the $400,000 mark at the 2021 January sale–both to Larry Best's OXO Equine–with a colt by Munnings bringing top price of $475,000. In all, 421 yearlings sold for $14,958,600 and an average of $35,531 in 2021.

“I think pinhookers are looking forward hopefully to another very strong year,” Breathnach said, while agreeing it seemed like some sellers were being protective of their yearlings this early into the new year. “This past September was extremely good, with a record median among other metrics, so I think there is that confidence that the market is currently in a good state of supply and demand. There's a lot of energy behind the sport in terms of new ownership and new money that showed up in September, and it's not an overheated market. It's very solid, especially for the middle. So they might want to roll the dice deeper in the year than maybe they have in the last several years. There were also quite a few yearlings who traded for $200,000 or more, especially in Book 1 and that's a sign that what was offered was very popular.”

Best was the leading buyer at the 2022 January sale, but this time his purchases were all mares as he looked to support his three young stallions. Best paid $1.49 million on six horses.

Taylor Made Sales Agency, agent, led consignors by selling 122 horses for $5,696,800.

Ron Winchell and Three Chimneys donated a 2022 no-guarantee season to Gun Runner to support relief efforts from last month's tornadoes in Western Kentucky. The season was auctioned off at the end of Tuesday's first session of the auction was brought a final bid of $130,000 from Bill Layni.

“This was such a generous gesture by Ron Winchell and Three Chimneys, and Keeneland was very pleased to have been able to facilitate the sale of the Gun Runner season,” Lacy said.

The racing or broodmare prospect Go Big Blue Nation (Animal Kingdom) (hip 1579) brought the highest bid of Friday's final day of the January sale when selling for $225,000 to R. Larry Johnson. During the session, 243 horses sold for $4,020,700, for an average of $16,546 and a median of $10,000.

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