NYRA Releases Jockey Protocols For Aqueduct’s Fall Meet

The New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) announced Saturday COVID-19 health and safety protocols for jockeys during the 18-day Aqueduct fall meet, which will open on Friday, Nov. 6 and run through Sunday, Dec. 6. The Aqueduct fall meet will be highlighted by 29 stakes, including 11 graded events, worth $3.41 million in purse money.

Opening weekend of the Aqueduct fall meet, which coincides with the Breeders' Cup set for Nov. 6-7 at Keeneland Race Course, begins with the $100,000 Tempted for juvenile fillies and $80,000 Atlantic Beach for juvenile turf sprinters on Nov. 6. Following opening weekend, live racing will be conducted Thursday through Sunday with the exception of Thanksgiving Week, when live racing will not be offered on Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 26.

Members of the Aqueduct jockey colony who travel to ride at any other racetrack during the Aqueduct fall meet will be required to provide two negative COVID-19 tests taken within a 5-day window in order to return to ride at Aqueduct. Jockeys traveling out of state who have completed the required testing will then be physically isolated in the jockey quarters for three additional calendar days.

Jockeys not currently riding at NYRA who wish to join the Aqueduct jockey colony for the beginning of the Aqueduct fall meet must contact NYRA's Senior Vice President of Racing Operations Martin Panza or Aqueduct Racing Secretary Keith Doleshel by Wednesday, Nov. 11. Newcomers to the NYRA jockey colony will be required to provide two negative COVID-19 tests taken within the 5-day window preceding that jockey's first mount at Aqueduct.

In order to mitigate risk and reduce the spread of COVID-19, Aqueduct will be closed to out-of-town jockeys not considered members of the regular NYRA jockey colony.

All testing must be performed in New York state.

In addition to race day safety protocols which include standard health screening and temperature checks, the jockey quarters at Aqueduct have been substantially altered to provide maximum social distancing and reduce density. All areas accessed by jockeys during the regular course of a race day are closed to outside personnel, including credentialed media, and are cleaned and disinfected throughout the day.

Jockeys are not permitted access to the barn area at Belmont Park. In order to work a horse in the morning, the jockey must meet the horse in the paddock and may then proceed to the main track for as long as the main track remains open.

Jockey agents arriving from outside of New York must produce a negative COVID-19 test in order to gain access to the barn area at Belmont Park. Races will continue to be drawn via Zoom.

All valets must provide a negative COVID-19 test taken any time after Nov. 2 in order to access the jockey quarters on opening day, Nov. 6. Valets who choose to only saddle horses in the paddock and not enter the jockey quarters will be allowed in the Belmont Park barn area.

America's Day at the Races will present daily television coverage of the Aqueduct fall meet on FOX Sports and MSG Networks.

For the complete stakes schedule for the Aqueduct fall meet, please visit https://www.nyra.com/aqueduct/racing/stakes-schedule

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Keeneland Announces COVID-19 Protocols For November Sale

Keeneland's COVID-19 protocols for the November Sale will remain consistent with the September Yearling Sale with a few adjustments as a result of the Breeders' Cup. Please make note of these key items:

  • Access to the Keeneland grounds will be limited to credentialed sales participants. Credentials may be requested through the Virtual Badge app as you did in September. Please re-apply for your credential for the November Sale from Oct. 28 onward, and note that credentials from the September Sale will not carry over to November.
  • COVID-19 testing will again be required for all consignors, veterinarians, farriers, media, Keeneland employees and essential staff within 10 days of your first entry to the grounds. Keeneland will provide testing at various dates for your convenience. Buyers are not required to receive a COVID-19 test but will pass through a daily health screening at the gates. Testing dates are as follows:
    • Oct. 28-29 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
    • November 2-3 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.
  • On Breeders' Cup event days (Nov. 6-7), a parking credential will be required to access the grounds in addition to your November Sale Virtual Badge credential. Keeneland will be in contact with buyers and sellers in the coming days to provide instructions on how to request these parking credentials.
Should you have any questions on this front, please reach out to credentialing@keeneland.com.
To read Keeneland's full COVID-19 policy, click here.

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This Side Up: Fee Cuts Can Reboot the System

As we have come to expect, in a trading environment that nowadays owes so much to their boss, it was the guys at Spendthrift who first put their heads over the parapet.

This week, anyway. To be fair, the original lead actually came from Chuck Fipke–a match for the unorthodoxy and initiative even of B. Wayne Hughes, and prepared way back in the spring to waive his 2020 stallion fees altogether.

Fipke reasoned that his entire pitch was to small breeders, who were already looking down the barrel as the pandemic took hold; and also that he owned his stallions outright, duly having no responsibilities to shareholders. This week, however, Spendthrift became the first in a rapid series of big farms to grasp the nettle with some extremely purposeful fee cuts, at every level, for 2021.

It’s a fascinating situation, because you could argue that stallion fees have in recent years ceased to make sense from either side. For those breeders who must retrieve costs in the sales ring, the commercial imperative to use only new sires tends to require them to spend far too much on unproven potential. For farm accountants, equally, the window of opportunity is so narrow that corralling adequate books even into years two and three is becoming harder and harder; so much so, that even exorbitant opening fees may not square the ledger.

But now they have no alternative but to lead their stallions out to the crossroads and help the breeder save on gas. Our business operates in unalterable cycles, initiated by the choice of a stallion. His fee sets the bar of viability for every project. Add keep and labor–which, in contrast, scarcely vary whatever the value of your mare–and you’ll have your break-even number.

That’s how organically everyone is connected. And that’s why the guy setting the fee must read the marketplace for young stock, and give all parties the chance to come out ahead. Because he or she will need them to retain the funds and morale to do it all again. That’s why John Sikura, who views the big picture as dynamically as anyone in the business, was at such pains in pricing the Hill ‘n’ Dale roster to stress that “we are all in this together.”

And let’s not forget how slowly the wheel turns. At a time like this, that’s actually a comfort. Following a bereavement, I haven’t been ringside at the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale until the past couple of days, but the staggering resilience of the market there has been most instructive. Everyone, pending the promised land of vaccines and cures, shares the same misery over COVID and its indefinite span. But the breeding and trading of Thoroughbreds tends to develop in our insular, eccentric community–even in the pinhooker, fluttering from flower to flower–a patience and perspective that could, for once, be usefully emulated out there in the “real” world.

The reality is that plenty of horsemen made good money out of a bull run extending a decade since the last big market shock. If they can now tough out a couple of lean years, they will surely keep faith in a system that has served them so well. After all, they can’t just leave those horses chewing grass out there. And they have been broadsided, out of nowhere, by something completely unaccountable and extraneous. As and when they get back on an even keel, they know they have the maps and compasses to chart a sustainable course.

And that’s without admitting to ourselves that our business is exceptionally well positioned, should economic recovery be neither V- nor U-shaped but, as we increasingly hear, K-shaped. Trading in luxury goods, horsemen rely on “trickledown” from the most affluent in society. Among that class, even so, perhaps at least the old-school paternalists–a type of conservative often drawn to the Turf–will seek nothing more precious from the next four years, tax breaks included, than a little more political and social stability. Because we are, indeed, all in this together.

At every level of the industry, these fee cuts can trigger a communal reset. It boils down to a single word: opportunity. As I keep saying, the great harvests of capitalism are often sown in the thinnest soil. This winter, once again, we’ll be running a value check across all Kentucky stallions–and already we’re salivating over some of the fees announced this week.

Some prospectors may even resolve to invest in mares to take advantage. No sector of the market demands more patience, of course, than breeding stock. But you can guarantee that we’ll look back, a few years hence, and discover that many a top-class racehorse was bred from mares more or less “stolen” from the forthcoming sales.

Ah, racehorses! Remember them? There could be no more wholesome corrective, out of this crisis, than restoring our focus to the racetrack; than renouncing this addiction to the self-fulfilling, artificial values that begin and end on a sales rostrum.

In fact, whisper it, but it might be no bad thing for the commercial market to falter long enough for breeders to abandon these fast-buck stallions, scarcely any of which will ever again command so high a fee, for the kind of yeoman achievers that might build up a family with a few rosettes on the track instead. We will all have our different favorites, but already know that many will be priced to make that a very far-sighted strategy.

Hindsight may also show us, of course, that one or two weanling colts selling this November will eventually figure among the first stallions confined to 140 mares. That will certainly set a new puzzle to those careworn farm accountants. On the other hand, perhaps by then people will have grasped that breeding animals that can actually run ultimately makes more sense than wiping out families in pursuit of fleeting commercial gain.

It’s an ill wind, as they say, that blows no good–and that applies even to the tempests of 2020.

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Market Rally Extends into Book 3

NEWMARKET, UK–Like a cyclist who has been struggling into a bitter headwind, only to find himself suddenly towed along by the slipstream of a juggernaut, Book 3 of the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale opened with all the startling momentum achieved, against every temperate expectation, in Book 2.

Once again, the masks around the ring concealed gapes of incredulity as a brisk trade maintained all indices almost precisely in step with the returns last year, when the wider world was so very different a place.

Aggregate turnover of 5,092,700gns, through the first of two sessions, was marginally down from 5,211,500gns; but with slightly fewer lots into the ring, that translated to an average of 21,488gns, virtually pegged against 21,805gns last year. And the median held static at 16,000gns.

The clearance rate was predictably strong. Even at tougher auctions, the “fire sale” mentality has driven strong traffic; here, no fewer than 88% of lots found a new home (up from what was already a very strong 86%).

By one gauge, moreover, this session took a step forward year-on-year-mustering a fourth six-figure sale, up from three. Coincidentally, all four weighed in at 130,000gns.

It remains to be seen whether the distribution of quality in this catalogue mirrors 2019, when the second day was decidedly thinner. Either way, however, it could only be heartening for those foal pinhookers–who had arrived desperately anxious about how (or even whether) to restock in a market hitherto broadsided by the pandemic–to see that its unsuspected resilience extended into a lower tier.

After all, Books II and III are all about those “middle-market” horses that are routinely said–even during the boom that had extended through most of the previous decade–to fall between the stools of polarisation. Obviously not every vendor will be going home happy from Park Paddocks this week. That has never happened in the history of the breed, and there were 270 packages offered to the market in sundry shapes and sizes.

But everyone and anyone could share in a general exhalation of relief; could gain courage, if not confidence, for the challenges still ahead.

Mehmas Filly Starts the Ball Rolling

It took just half an hour to register a transaction only surpassed once in the equivalent catalogue last year, Tom Goff of Blandford Bloodstock signing a 130,000gns docket for lot 1367.

A filly by the runaway rookie Mehmas (Ire), she was picked out for just €11,000 at Goffs last November in partnership by Manister House Stud and Loughmore Stables, who presented her here.

“She was a lovely filly with strength and a big walk and we’ve liked her from the day we bought her,” explained a delighted Kitty Fitzpatrick of Loughmore. “Obviously Mehmas has gone on and had a very successful year, which was a huge help. Actually I have a mare in foal to Mehmas because I liked this filly so much.

“I was always confident that there’d be a ‘twist’ in her. I didn’t think she was going to make that sort of money, but I liked her a lot and I’m not gobsmacked that she made it.

“She’s come here and behaved like a queen and all the right lads were on her. Book 2 has been very strong, which is amazing when you see what else is going on in the world. We have to be grateful we’re here trading at all. Long may it last.”

“I saw her in the pouring rain yesterday,” said Goff, pointing to his smudged notes on the page. “And I saw her again this morning, and she’s an absolute star. Ed Dunlop rang me at 9:50 a.m. from Warren Hill and asked if there was anything early, and I said yes there was. Things happen fast in Book 3! She’s a lovely mover and I bought one by the same sire on Monday. He’s just a revelation, isn’t he?”

Beneath those smudges, the print was all very promising. A half-sister to a listed-placed filly in France, the filly is out of a half-sister to G2 Duke of York S. winner Invincible Army (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}); while the next two dams are respectively a Group 1 winner (Rajeem (GB) (Diktat {GB}), Falmouth S.) and a sister to another in Hoh Magic (GB) (Cadeaux Genereux {GB}), Prix Morny).

Churchill Filly an Object of Desire

The first yearlings by Churchill (Ire) have been in unsurprising demand, given his fine build, Classic ability and the sheer balance of his pedigree. And Joe Foley has high expectations of his match with Purple Glow (Ire) (Orientate), giving 130,000gns for the resulting filly (lot 1564) on behalf of Clipper Logistics.

Foley has long been an ardent admirer of the mare, having bought her daughter Main Desire (Ire) (High Chaparral {Ire}) for the same patron before she won two listed races at York.

“The mare was very fast and Churchill would be the fastest stallion she’s been bred to,” Foley reasoned. “She has bred fast horses by High Chaparral (Ire), New Approach (Ire), Rip Van Winkle (Ire) and Mastercraftsman (Ire): we’ve followed her all the way through, and they’ve all been big, gangly horses that she has put a lot of speed into.

“Main Desire was second favourite for the [G2] Queen Mary S. when she broke a cannon bone. We love Main Desire, she’s one of our favourites: she has a Frankel (GB) foal and is in foal to Churchill. This too is a lovely filly: she looks a speedball, with a lot of Churchill quality about her as well.”

Churchill, lest we forget, was bred from an extremely fast maternal line and the combination could indeed be dynamite. But there is class, too, Purple Glow’s dam being a half-sister to three Grade I winners including Easy Goer (Alydar) himself, out of the champion and blue hen Relaxing (Buckpasser).

The filly was prepared for the sale by Keith Harte, whose efforts were duly praised by breeder Max Ervine. Harte has been selling for the Ulsterman for “at least 15 years” but was celebrating a first big dividend from his new base in North Essex.

But Ervine himself must himself accept much credit, having raised her on his farm near Downpatrick. He only had four yearlings to sell but his record speaks for itself, notably as breeder of Wichita (No Nay Never), a Classic runner-up this spring and more recently winner of the G2 Park S.

“So we’ve had the excitement at the races,” Ervine said. “And now we’ve had excitement at the sales. The mare’s in foal to Magna Grecia (Ire) (Invincible Spirit {Ire}). She’s been quite difficult to get in foal, but I think we have her measure now.”

He bought Purple Glow here in the 2011 December Sale, for 160,000gns–an outlay he promptly retrieved when selling the New Approach (Ire) colt she was carrying for 180,000gns as a yearling.

Main Desire, for her part, made €40,000 at Fairyhouse. Not enough, admitted Foley with a grin. “It’s good to give Max a proper price for a change,” he said.

Crowded Page Still Has Farhh to Travel

The catalogue entry for the colt offered as lot 1447 was another with a distinct look of Book I. Being a first foal, he could only support a single line for his unraced dam Fair Daughter (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}). Nonetheless the rest of the page was over-run with the black-type credits of the second dam, Wiener Wald (Woodman), ranging from her son Crowded House (GB) (Rainbow Quest {GB}), winner of the G1 Racing Post Trophy; to her daughter Argent Du Bois (Silver Hawk), dam of two elite scorers in Brando (GB) (Pivotal {GB}) and Ticker Tape (GB) (Royal Applause {GB}) and second dam of another in Reckless Abandon (GB) (Exchange Rate).

This has all been the work of Car Colston Hall Stud, as appreciated by Matt Coleman in giving 130,000gns for this colt by Farhh (GB).

“Obviously it’s a wonderful family and a fantastic farm,” the agent said. “It seems like a stakes horse pops up somewhere every year. This horse will go to France for a client of Anthony [Stroud] and I. He looks like he’ll have plenty of improvement in him as he matures: he’ll be more of a 3-year-old than a 2-year-old, but looks a big, lovely middle-distance prospect; he has a lot of [grandsire] Pivotal in him, as a big strong chestnut, and obviously the sire’s stats are fantastic.”

The latest embellishment to the page came only last week, when the juvenile Erasmo (GB) (Oasis Dream {GB})–recruited out of Book 2 for a similar sum last year–won a listed race at Chantilly for Andre Fabre in the silks of Godolphin.

“The mare was Wiener Wald’s penultimate foal and this is a fantastic first foal to get her off and running,” said stud manager Jonathon Smithers. “We had a difficult Book I and II but this was a big, strong colt who was showing himself really well.”

Celebrations for Thunderstruck Pinhooker

The same sum of 130,000gns was realized by lot 1428, rounding off an excellent pinhook. A son of Night Of Thunder, he had been found for 20,000gns here last December by Troy Steve. Presented by Hazelwood Bloodstock, he will now have to advance his value again for Brendan Holland of Grove Stud.

Holland is one of those judges who can fearlessly call value as he sees it on the day, and felt that this colt would not have been out of place earlier in proceedings. “This is a lovely, clean-limbed horse with plenty of scope by a leading sire,” he said. “He would definitely have matched up against the horses from Books 1 and 2. I have been lucky with the sire and fingers crossed he’ll be lucky too.”

Holland had himself been processing foal pinhooks on satisfactory terms and stressed the importance to morale of this week’s rather startling trade. “It’s great to see,” he said. “It was unbelievably strong trade at Book 2, noone could have predicted how strong it was. It gives everyone a bit of confidence, especially ahead of the foal sales as there was definitely concern. Hopefully it carries through to the spring, too. I’ve bought 19 for the breeze-ups, so we’re at our normal level.”

This colt’s family has done well in Italy, not least a second dam who won three listed prizes there. But Adrian O’Ryan of Hazelwood accepted that much of the interest had been driven by the sire.

“It’s all about Night Of Thunder,” he said. “He has been sensational on the track this season. We brought this horse here as we thought he might stand out a bit, he was on the periphery of Book 2. We were very happy to do that, it’s a good sale and you get well paid if you bring the right horse.”

Breeze Carrying Glint of Gold

Other breeze-up pinhookers, equally relieved to see the weathervane begin to turn, were active at all levels. A typical instance of those destined for such a preparation is lot 1389, a Havana Gold (Ire) colt out of a half-sister to two black-type winners from the family of Inchinor (GB) (Ahonoora {GB}). He is on his way to Co Clare, Johnny Hassett of the Bloodstock Connection having given 55,000gns to complete a solid pinhook through Hegarty Bloodstock: he was picked up in the same ring last December for 19,000gns by Stroud/Coleman.

“People say ‘well done’ when you buy these horses, but come back in seven months and I’ll tell you if it was well done,” Hassett said with a smile. “But I’m delighted: he’s from the sire’s first ‘good crop’, if you know what I mean, and I loved him.”

Hassett was another taken aback by the resilience of the market. “I don’t understand it, this business doesn’t seem related to the economy at all,” he said. “I’ve found it hard to get horses of this quality over the last three weeks. Not because they’re not there, but just because of the market. I came here betting that people would run out of orders halfway through, but it didn’t happen and 55,000gns was not buying you much in Book 2.”

His own operation held its ground well in what had been a rather more trying market in the spring.

“Our year exceeded expectations,” he said. “We made a bunch of private sales during the lockdown. Okay, they’d have made more at the breeze-ups, but all in all it was a good year. This whole thing will end, the bet is when. [Another] lockdown would make no difference to me now: I never leave the farm all winter anyway.”

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