Five Share Furlong Bullet at Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Tuesday

TIMONIUM, MD – The three-day under-tack show for the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale began shortly after 8 a.m. Tuesday morning under cloudless blue skies and temperatures hovering around 60 degrees and by the conclusion of the day's seventh and final set shortly before 3 p.m., with temperatures approaching 80 degrees, five horses had turned in the co-fastest furlong time of :10 flat. A filly by Collected had the day's fastest quarter-mile work of :21 1/5.

A filly by Nyquist (hip 150) was the first to hit the :10 flat mark while working during the second set for consignor Randy Miles. The chestnut is out of Westside Tapstress (Lookin at Lucky), a half-sister to graded stakes winner Discreet Hero (Honour and Glory).

“We knew she could do it, but your nerves take over as you're leading her up there, hoping that nothing happens,” Miles said after the work. “She performed the way she was supposed to and I'm glad she represented herself well.”

Miles is consigning the filly on behalf of her breeders, Todd and Chad Frederick and Carl Thomas Potter.

“We've had some horses for them in the past and they entrusted us with two really nice horses this year,” Miles said of the breeders. “The first one sold well in April and this is the second one.”

Miles admitted he is a big fan of the Midlantic May sale.

“We love this track and when you get a week like this of great weather, it's so fun to come here,” he said. “This filly got over the track great all week and she loved the weather, the low humidity and cool weather. When Mother Nature cooperates, it's a wonderful place.”

Miles sent out four horses to work throughout Tuesday's session and said he had found the track to be consistent from start to finish.

“The track was beautiful,” he said. “They did a great job with the 25 horses and then a break. They kept it so consistent. It doesn't matter whether you go early or late.”

Juveniles from the first crop of Bolt d'Oro have been in demand at the auctions all spring and a son of the Spendthrift stallion (hip 30) was the second to work in :10 flat during the session's fourth set. Consigned by Pike Racing, the bay is out of stakes-placed Shine Softly (Aldebaran), a daughter of champion Soaring Softly (Kris S.) and also the dam of stakes winner The Grass is Blue (Broken Vow). Al Pike purchased the youngster from Peter O'Callaghan's Woods Edge Farm for $90,000 at last year's Keeneland September sale. O'Callaghan had acquired the colt for $65,000 at the 2020 Fasig-Tipton November sale.

“He was beautiful,” Pike recalled of the colt as a yearling. “He was in Book 2 with Woods Edge and he was a little immature at the time, because he's young, and Peter had a stunning group of Book 2 horses. So I think he got a little bit overlooked. I was very fortunate to get him. We've liked him all winter. He's done nothing wrong. We came here thinking he was capable and hoping that he would perform and we were pleased with him.”

Pike's consignment topped the 2020 Midlantic sale with a $1.1-million son of Uncle Mo.

“This is one of our favorite spots,” Pike said of the Maryland auction. “We always try to bring a good horse here because you'll get rewarded.”

Grassroots Training and Sales sent out a filly by Neolithic (hip 9) to work one of three :10 flat works during the day's fifth set. Out of multiple stakes placed Sarahline (Northern Afleet), the chestnut was purchased for $8,500 at last year's OBS Winter sale.

Hip 20, a son of More Than Ready, turned in his :10 flat work for Keiber Rengifo's Golden Rock Thoroughbreds. A $12,000 Keeneland September purchase by Jose Silva, the bay is out of Seeking Sheba (Seeking the Gold) and from the family of champion Perfect Soul (Ire).

Completing the :10 flat works was hip 36, a New York-bred gelding by Practical Joke consigned by Scanlon Training and Sales. The bay is out of the unraced Silken Lily (Grand Slam), a half-sister to multiple graded-stakes winning sire Upstart (Flatter). He sold for $30,000 at the Fasig-Tipton New York-bred Yearling sale last August.

“He is a horse we took a little bit of time with,” Dave Scanlon said. “I don't know that they announced it during the breeze, but he is a gelding now. We bought him privately after the New York sale and he always looked fast. He had a great hip and body, but he was just a little bit tough through the breaking. So around December, we just decided, let's make life easier on me and you and everybody else. So he became a gelding. And then we took our time with him. He's always had a great hip, he just needed to level out. My assistant and I were just talking about how he is just looking better and better. Every work, he's just been getting better.”

The Scanlon team comes into the Midlantic sale off a strong OBS Spring sale, which included a $1.3-million Mendelssohn colt.

“It's been great,” Scanlon said of his 2021 results so far. “We've had a really good year. We were pretty excited last year when we bought these horses. We thought we had done a good job picking them out and it's been a great group all year. We were excited for OBS, but we've been excited about coming here. I love to bring my New York-breds here. Horses that we find quick and precocious–horses like Army Mule–we've always done really well with here.”

A filly by Collected (hip 202), the first horse to work during the second set, turned in the fastest quarter-mile work of :21 1/5 for Jesse Hoppel's Coastal Equine. Out of Aurore (Arch), the dark bay is a half to stakes-placed Orageuse (Broken Vow) and Boreale (Makfi). Her dam is a half-sister to multiple graded stakes winner Interactif (Broken Vow). She was purchased by Larry Zap, Hoppel and Amanda Murphy for $47,000 at last year's Fasig-Tipton October sale.

The Midlantic under-tack show continues through Thursday with sessions beginning daily at 8 a.m. at the Maryland State Fairgrounds in Timonium. The auction will be held next Monday and Tuesday with bidding commencing both days at 11 a.m.

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Seven-Figure Mendelssohn Colt Heads to Japan

Japanese trainer Mitsu Nakauchida went to $1.3 million to secure a colt from the first crop of Mendelssohn (hip 490) from the Scanlon Training and Sales consignment Wednesday at the OBS Spring sale. Out of Grace is Gone (Malibu Moon), the colt was purchased by Dave Scanlon for $235,000 at last year's Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Fall Sale.
Nakauchida, who had been shut out of previous attempts to buy in Ocala this week, had broken through just before the seven-figure purchase when he acquired a colt by Mendelssohn's half-brother Into Mischief (hip 466) for $825,000.

 

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Midlantic Sale Strong to the End

TIMONIUM, MD – The Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Fall Yearlings Sale streamrolled to its conclusion Tuesday, ending its two-day run in Timonium with figures up across the board and six-figure transactions right through the very last horses through the ring.

Through the sale's two sessions, 381 yearlings sold for $11,269,400 for an average of $29,578 and a median of $20,000. With 75 horses reported not sold, the buy-back rate was 16.4%.

In 2020, 379 yearlings grossed $9,120,700 for an average of $24,065 and a median of $14,000. The buy-back rate was 21.7%.

“Based on what everybody else was experiencing at previous sales, we were confident it would continue on, but to have the gross up 24%, the average up 23% and the median up 43% was great,” said Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Sales Director Paget Bennett.

In its pre-COVID renewal in 2019, 300 yearlings sold for $7,275,900 for an average of $24,253 and a median of $14,000.

“I always hope that we can stay even with last year,” Bennett said. “Even with COVID last year, we were still right in line with the previous year's results. And we exceeded that this year. So that was huge.”

Of the auction's stellar buy-back rate, Bennett added, “People want horses at all levels, which is good for us and good for the breeders.”

First-crop sire Mendelssohn, who was represented by the session topper Monday, secured the sale-topper Tuesday when David Scanlon paid $235,000 for a colt from the Northview Stallion Station consignment. The yearling was one of 16 to bring six figures at the auction, up from 11 in 2020.

Local breeders and consignors supported the sale and were rewarded, according to Bennett.

“We are only as good as what people send to us,” Bennett said. “We've been supported by out-of-town consignors, but we had a lot of the Midlantic breeders and consignors who did well here as well. The top seven prices were sold by local connections. They all brought good horses and they were well-received and they were rewarded.”

The massive increase in median and the sparkling buy-back rate were indicative of a stronger middle market.

“I think the market is strong,” said Northview's David Wade. “It's redundant–it's the same thing everyone says–the market is strong for the right horse. But I think it was stronger for the right horses and there was a middle market that hasn't been here for the last few years. I think that's encouraging.”

Scanlon Gets His Mendelssohn

Dave Scanlon was underbidder on Monday's session-topping son of Mendelssohn, but the Ocala-based pinhooker would not be denied Tuesday when going to a sale-topping $235,000 for another son of Coolmore's first-season sire (hip 415).

“We loved the sire,” Scanlon said after signing the ticket on the youngster. “We think he's going to be a big hit this year. Obviously, he's already been a big sales horse.”

Consigned by Northview Stallion Station, the chestnut colt is out of the unraced Grace is Gone (Malibu Moon), a daughter of Grade I-placed Grace Anatomy (Aldebaran).

“He was just very athletic with a big beautiful walk on him,” Scanlon said of the yearling. “I thought he'd be a nice horse for the 2-year-old sales. We will train him and get him started and see how he fits. He is such a nice, big mature horse, it could be Miami [Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream sale] or it could be back here [Fasig-Tipton Midlantic May sale].”

In addition to the $230,000 session topper, Mendelssohn was also represented by Monday's $160,000 top-priced filly. The stallion, winner of the 2013 GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf and a half-brother to leading sire Into Mischief, was also represented by fillies who sold for $900,000 and $750,000 at Keeneland September. Through Monday, he had 83 yearlings sell for an average of $163,095.

“They just look like athletes,” Scanlon said of the yearlings by Mendelssohn that he has seen. “They have really good bone, good hip and great angles on them.”

Scanlon was making his second purchase of the Midlantic sale. He went to $30,000 to acquire a filly by Uncle Lino (hip 17) Monday.

“The market has been tough,” Scanlon said. “For the right horse, it's been very good. There are a lot of good judges here and if they lead the right one up here, you've got to pay for them. Hopefully, it carries over to the 2-year-old market.”

Monday's session topper was purchased by Conor Foley of Oracle Bloodstock.Scanlon agreed he found himself bidding against more end-users while trying to maintain the discipline necessary for a pinhook prospect.

“Especially with a horse like that, you get your hopes up and you follow them up there and then you go to your limit,” Scanlon said. “It happened to me yesterday when I was underbidder on the other Mendelssohn and an end-user kind of jumps over top of you. You have to set your bar, though. We lost the one yesterday, but we were looking to get this one and stepped our game up here.”

Northview Stallion Station's David Wade purchased hip 415 on behalf of Sycamore Hall Thoroughbreds for $100,000 at last year's Keeneland November sale.

“I love Mendelssohn and this was a very well-balanced horse and a very good walker and he seemed like a good bet,” Wade said of last fall's purchase. “We actually went down there and bought two. We bought an Empire Maker and a Mendelssohn and brought them both home and the owner looked at them and said, 'Let's pinhook the Mendelssohn and race the Empire Maker.'”

Filly Makes Sense for Zacney

Chuck Zacney of Cash is King, who purchased Cathryn Sophia (Street Boss) for $30,000 out of the Fasig Midlantic sales ring in 2014, was back in action in Timonium Tuesday, going to $200,000 to acquire a filly by Street Sense (hip 295) out of the same family as that 2016 GI Kentucky Oaks winner.

The dark bay yearling, bred by the late Robert Manfuso and consigned by Chanceland Farm, is out of graded stakes winner Belterra (Unbridled). The mare is also the dam of Sheave (Mineshaft), who produced Cathryn Sophia.

“Obviously, I loved the page, with Cathryn Sophia,” Zacney said after acquiring the yearling. “I've always been a fan of Street Sense. I can't tell you if I've ever had one. But once I laid eyes on this filly yesterday, she was one that I really wanted. She just stood out. She's an absolutely beautiful filly.”

The Cash is King team had another attachment to the filly.

“Most of my horses have a story,” Zacney said. “My son Alex was with me and he said, 'Dad, did you notice her date of birth?' And I hadn't. It's Mar. 5, which is Alex's birthday, too. So anything like that, we always take a second look.”

Zacney was on the grounds during Monday's first session of the Midlantic sale, acquiring three yearlings, including a filly by Tonalist (hip 90) for $110,000. But he did his bidding on the phone Tuesday and watched on his computer as the filly's price momentarily stalled.

“After $150,000 there was a lull and [Fasig-Tipton's] Peter [Penny] said, 'You may have her.' And then it went up a little bit, but I was done with that. I think it went to $165,000 or $170,000 and I said, 'Peter, let's go to $200,000.' He is yelling and they aren't recognizing the bid until finally they did and I got her for the $200,000. I loved her and I was going to go much higher. I'm thrilled to have her.”

The yearling filly is already a winner, having been named grand champion of the Maryland Horse Breeders Association's Yearling Show in Timonium in August.

“She is a lovely filly, which was why she was champion at the show,” said Chanceland Farm's Katherine Voss. “But the pedigree had nothing to do with that. She has a gorgeous pedigree–they are hard to come by with a Kentucky Oaks winner in the family and by Street Sense as well.”

Manfuso, who passed away last March, and Voss have a long association with the yearling's family. Manfuso bred and campaigned Belterra to a win in the 2001 GII Golden Rod S. and a third-place effort in the following year's GI Ashland S. Manfuso also bred Belterra's dam Cruising Haven (Shelter Half).

“She was one of the last ones that Bob bred,” Voss said of hip 295. “We bred her grandmother. And this is Belterra's last foal. I would have loved to have kept her because she's the kind that you want to keep.”

While Voss acknowledged the Midlantic sale has gained in strength, she still sees a ceiling on the top of the market.

“I think it's better than this sale has been for the last few years–it's definitely better than the last couple of years,” Voss said. “I think the market in general is stronger this year. Keeneland was really strong. But it still feels like there is a little lid on Maryland. They are not going bonkers. We are bringing some nice, solid useful horses and they can go for $75,000 or $80,000 and you get $50,000.”

Nyquist Filly Tops Eventful Sale for Davis

Cary Frommer stayed busy throughout the two-day Midlantic sale, but saved her biggest purchase of the auction for last when going to $200,000 to acquire a filly by GI Kentucky Derby winner Nyquist (hip 441) from the consignment of Becky Davis.

The yearling is out of How My Heart Works (Not For Love), whose first foal is stakes winner and graded placed Monday Morning QB (Imagining). She was bred by Davis's father Tom Bowman and Milton Higgins, III.

“I have liked her since the day she was born,” Davis said of the yearling. “She was always super spunky and had grit. She is super classy to deal with. She has always been an outstanding filly–just a little different than the rest of the fillies at the farm. I thought she was pretty special.”

How My Heart Works, who has a weanling colt by Arrogate and was bred back to Nyquist this year, was also bred by Tom and Chris Bowman and Higgins. She won first-out at Laurel in 2015, but failed to hit the board in three subsequent starts.

“We've had the whole family,” Davis said. “Her mom was a super impressive yearling, but had an injury and didn't race to her full potential, I don't believe. We kept her as a broodmare and her first foal has shown he has talent.”

The filly, one of three to hit the $200,000 mark Tuesday, marked a sweet ending to an eventful sale for Davis, who was forced into an unexpected trip to the hospital Sunday.

“At the end of the day Sunday, we were closing up and I was told one of the horses had banged his head,” Davis explained. “He had a scrape and I had some silver spray and I went in with one of my best handlers because I could tell he was agitated. I put a little bit of spray on the cut and I could tell from the look in his eye he was not ok with it. I wasn't going to spray him again, but his forelock was stuck to the cut, so I put my hand up to move his forelock over and he came at me. I was able to turn around, but he struck me about four or five times in the back of my head. I don't remember if someone opened the door or if I climbed over the door, but I got out. It was pretty scary.”

Davis watched the Nyquist filly sell from the back of the sales pavilion.

“Yes and no,” she said with a laugh when asked if the sale made up for the injuries she suffered Sunday. “The best thing for me is if that filly gets into a good racing home and I get to see her race. I think she can be a superstar. She is all that everybody wants to have in a racehorse. And even beyond that, she has such a great personality, she's going to have a great second career as a broodmare or something else. So I am excited to see her.”

Frommer left Timonium after purchasing seven yearlings. In addition to hip 441, she purchased a colt by Twirling Candy (hip 78) for $115,000 and a Union Rags colt (hip 461).

Lawley-Wakelin Gets His Fairytale Ending

Patrick Lawley-Wakelin got outbid on a filly by Lemon Drop Kid when bidding on behalf of Liz and Michael Burns at last year's Midlantic sale, but the bloodstock agent came back in 2021 to buy that filly's half-sister by Hard Spun (hip 378) for $125,000 Tuesday in Timonium on behalf of the Burnses' Cambus-Kenneth Farm.

“Liz and Michael love Lemon Drop Kid and so they said, 'Why don't you look at her and see if we can buy her,'” Lawley-Wakelin said. “We tried to buy her, but we ended up underbidders. The filly went for $92,000.”

Bred and consigned by Audley Farm Equine, hip 378 is out of Fairytale Ending (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), a daughter of Airwave (GB) (Air Express) and a full-sister to group winner Aloof (Ire) and a half to the dam of multiple Group 1 winner Churchill (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}).

“When I saw Audley was selling the half-sister by Hard Spun, I picked up the phone and said, 'Listen guys we are back at it again.' They said, 'OK, let's look at it,” Lawley-Wakelin said. “The filly vetted great for us. She is a two-turn filly, like the Lemon Drop Kid filly. She's going to need a little bit of time to mature, which falls right into their program.”

Of the Burnses, who are based in Danville, Kentucky, Lawley-Wakelin said, “They are generally looking for a Classic-type of filly. They were introduced to the game by John R. S. Fisher and he introduced me to them. So I've known them for about 25 years. They are a wonderful couple. So I am truly excited we were able to get this filly.”

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Wicked Strong Colt Swiftest at Midlantic Under-Tack Finale

TIMONIUM, MD – The three-day under-tack preview ahead of next week’s Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale concluded Friday under glorious blue skies and temperatures in rising steadily into the 80s through seven sets of workers.

“It was a terrific under-tack show. All of the credit goes to [Maryland State Fairgrounds maintenance director Don] Chief Denmeyer,” said Fasig-Tipton President Boyd Browning, Jr. “We had challenging weather at the beginning of the week and this racetrack was as good, from beginning to end, as any under-tack show we’ve ever conducted. The first horse worked very, very well on Wednesday and the last horse worked very, very well on Friday. The consignors brought quality horses to the grounds and we are very pleased with what we saw on the racetrack.”

A colt by Wicked Strong (hip 512) turned in the fastest quarter-mile work Friday when covering the distance in :21 1/5. The juvenile, purchased for $9,000 at Keeneland last September, sold for $20,000 to D and B Racing following a furlong work in :10 2/5 at this year’s OBS March sale.

“He was bought in March by a group from California who bought him to pinhook back here,” explained Ciaran Dunne, whose Wavertree Stables consigns the chestnut colt. “They were buying horses that they thought the sale had come maybe too early for or they didn’t fit, but had shown them something on the racetrack. They took him back to California and he was a horse they were very high on all of the time they had him out there.”

Dunne continued, “The plan was originally to sell him out there [at Fasig-Tipton Santa Anita Sale], but obviously that sale didn’t happen, so they rerouted to here. This is not the first time they’ve done this, but it’s the first time they brought a horse here.”

The colt worked four times in May and June at San Luis Rey Training Center, most recently going three furlongs in :37.20 June 12. He worked two furlongs June 2 in :21.60.

“He is a big, two-turn looking horse,” Dunne said. “He doesn’t look like he’d be that fast.”

The colt is out of E Classic (E Dubai) and is a half-brother to stakes placed E Rated (Special Rate).

Also from the Wavertree consignment, hip 443, a colt by Candy Ride (Arg) out of Causara (Giant’s Causeway) worked a furlong in :10 1/5 Friday. Purchased by Ron Fein’s Superfine Farms for $175,000 at last year’s Fasig-Tipton October Sale, the bay colt had originally been targeted at the OBS March sale.

“He had a little setback through the winter,” Dunne said. “He was originally targeted for OBS March and we could have carried on, but we thought he was such a nice horse that we waited and gave him the time. He’s a great big, two-turn type of horse and maybe wasn’t suited to this track, but I think at the end of the day, he’s got a lot of quality and will be a really good horse down the road.”

Numbers were down at the recent OBS Spring Sale and Dunne said that, while the top of the market remained strong in Ocala, the absence of the usually prolific Korean buyers contributed to much of the declines at the auction which had set records for average and gross the last three years.

“We had a very good sale at OBS,” Dunne said. “The market was down, but a large degree of that was the Koreans. They buy a lot of horses–they will buy 100 2-year-olds a year in that $30,000-$50,000 range, which makes all of the $20,000 horses bring $30,000 to $40,000. And then it makes all of the $50,000 horses bring $60,000-$70,000. It just creates a little bit of demand in that sector that we’re always the weakest in. So they are very important for us in the clearance rate and to give the guys in the lower-to-middle level a bit of a push. When you take them out of there, I think that was probably the biggest factor in OBS’s numbers being off. I think, from our perspective, the top end was as strong this year as it was last year.”

Consignor Clovis Crane, who sent out a daughter of Fed Biz (hip 505) to share the under-tack show’s bullet time of :10 flat Friday, agreed the absence of Korean buyers due to the ongoing pandemic would likely have an impact on his bottom line.

“I always think that this sale has the truest middle market of any sale that there is,” Crane said of the Midlantic auction. “I really don’t have upper-end horses. I buy in the lower end, so this sale suits me the best. I hope that, as normal, the Penn [National], the Parx, the Charles Town, the Delaware Park and the Marylands–all of those trainers show up. And they will because it’s home for them. There are five or six tracks within two or three hours, so all of those guys are there. So to me it makes this the truest middle market that there is.

He continued, “But we are going to sorely miss the Korean buyers. I have reached out to them and said, ‘If you need any help, I am here to help.’ I do think that those folks have some lookers around, so hopefully they can get into the action. I saw that they bought a few horses at OBS, so I am hoping that they found somebody to help them out here. And if they haven’t, I’m applying for the job.”

Working in Friday’s fourth set, hip 505 was the last of five on the day–and 12th overall at the show–to turn in the :10 flat bullet. Bred by Blackstone Farm, the filly RNA’d for $47,000 at last year’s Keeneland September sale and is being sold by Crane in partnership with her breeder.

“We knew she was going to go fast and she showed up today,” Crane said of the chestnut out of the unraced Dream Realized (Awesome Again).

Crane compared the bullet breezer to her look-alike paddock-mate, a daughter of Palace (hip 170) who worked in :10 1/5 Wednesday.

“They are almost identical. The Palace filly has a little white spot on her butt and [hip 505] has a little white on her right hind leg. That’s the only way you can tell them apart,” he said.

Crane said the extra time between sales caused by the reshuffled schedule had helped his horses this spring.

“The extra time gave us plenty of time to get everything exactly right and have everything lined up and the horses all showed up,” Crane said. “And they are coming back good. It gave us a little extra time where we got a few breezes into them, we gave them a little break and then we got a few more breezes in. And our shins are solid and overall, it’s been good for us. And I think the horses have shown it, they have breezed so well and come back well.”

Crane had nothing but praise for the track condition at the Maryland State Fairgrounds this week.

“The track has a little more clay in it than it normally does,” he said. “Which is helpful, it has a little more bounce to it and it feels really nice. And it’s been really consistent. Obviously, my Palace worked in :10 1/5 on the first day, the very last set. And this filly was in the fourth set [Friday] and she worked in :10 flat. Normally, you see the really fast ones early in the day, but it’s been really consistent. I didn’t put my horses in any order, I just threw them in in hip number order and when they went, they went. That’s how we did it. All of my horses were going to show up and do what they were going to do whether they worked in the morning or the afternoon.”

Susan Montanye’s SBM Training and Sales had two bullet furlong workers Friday. During the first set, the operation sent out a daughter of Frosted (hip 518) to work in :10 flat. Out of multiple stakes placed Enchante (Bluegrass Cat), the dark bay filly was purchased privately by Bill and Corrine Heiligbrodt after RNA’ing for $185,000 at the Fasig-Tipton July Sale last summer.

“She was slated to go to the Gulfstream sale and unfortunately that was cancelled,” Montanye said. “She has always been a super nice filly, always fast, always says yes. I brought her up here because I knew she loved the dirt.”

In Friday’s second set, SBM sent out a filly by Dialed In (hip 552) to work in :10 flat. Out of Fall Fantasy (Menifee), the filly was supplemented to the Midlantic auction after scratching from the OBS Spring sale.

“The Dialed In is a ship-in for me that belongs to Kevin McKathan,” Montanye said. “The filly was in the OBS sale and had a good work down there, but they opted to bring her up here and put her in the supplement. They said she was a better dirt filly than she was on the Poly and she obviously proved that today.”

A filly by Maclean’s Music (hip 400), consigned by Scanlon Training and Sales, also turned in a furlong work in :10 flat Friday. Out of Ava G (Afternoon Deelites), the dark bay filly is a half-sister to stakes winner Miss My Rose (Magician {Ire}).

“We’ve liked her all year and we’ve just been giving her time to develop,” said Dave Scanlon. “We had her sister before, Miss My Rose and we really liked her. So we pursued this filly with the breeder, Alex Venneri, and we are partners on her here.”

Rounding out Friday’s :10 flat bullet furlong workers was hip 389, a daughter of Twirling Candy. The dark bay was consigned by David McKathan and Jody Mihalic’s Grassroots Training and Sales which purchased her for $30,000 at last year’s Fasig-Tipton Midlantic October sale. She is out of Apple Cider (More Than Ready), a daughter of multiple graded stakes winner Who Did It and Run (Polish Numbers).

The Fasig-Tipton Midlantic sale will be held next Monday and Tuesday with bidding beginning each day at 11 a.m.

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