Keeneland Digital Platform Continues to Grow

Keeneland, which debuted its first digital sale in June, will take perhaps its biggest swing at the on-line platform Tuesday with a December Digital Sale catalogue featuring some 70 offerings of weanlings, yearlings, broodmares and broodmare prospects and racing and stallion prospects.

“We are very happy with what we came up with,” Keeneland’s Director of Sales Development Mark Maronde said of the strength of the catalogue. “It was kind of a surprise in that we just finished the November sales and leading into this time of year, we really didn’t know what we would get.”

In addition to a French-based group of offerings led by Group 1 producer Fancy Green (Fr) (Muhtathir {GB}), the December catalogue includes mares who come into the on-line auction with major updates. Stakes-winning Surrender Now (Morning Line) (hip 44) is a half-sister to recent GIII Bob Hope S. winner Red Flag (Tamarkuz) and the 5-year-old is booked to Tamarkuz’s sire Speightstown for 2021. Felicita (More Than Ready) (hip 22), who is offered in foal to Not This Time, is a half-sister to this year’s GI Frizette S. winner and GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies runner-up Dayoutoftheoffice (Into Mischief).

“I think the November sales were maybe stronger than people thought they would be under the circumstances and they saw this [digital sale] as another opportunity,” Maronde said. “And then, with a horse like Surrender Now, she’s a 5-year-old mare, they were probably go to breed her and the half-brother jumped up and won impressively in California. I think it gave them the option to test the market and see where it takes them. They always have the option to buy her back and breed her, but it was an opportunity that was probably too good to pass up.”

Maronde continued, “There is a half-sister to Dayoutoftheoffice in foal to Not This Time. I think Not This Time earlier in the fall wouldn’t have been as hot. And then that filly jumped up and won in New York and then came back and ran second in the Breeders’ Cup, probably it gave them a similar opportunity to see if they could cash in. This would seem to be the place to do it.”

The December catalogue also includes Westside Singer (Gone West) (hip 47), dam of multiple graded stakes winner Secret Message (Hat Trick {Jpn}); Meow (Gio Ponti) (hip 32), a half-sister to multiple graded winner Engage (Into Mischief); and Frankly J’Ray (Frankel {GB}) (hip 23).

As the digital sales continue to gain in popularity, Maronde expects more buyers and sellers to take advantage of the timeliness of auctions outside the traditional sales calendar.

“I don’t think we are there yet, but I think the pandemic moved this format along a lot quicker than we thought it would,” Maronde said. “We thought this was going to be something that people would have to be exposed to and it would be slow going. So this being the third sale and to come up with 70+ entries did kind of shock us a little bit. I think that’s related to the pandemic and also an awareness that there is an opportunity that doesn’t always have to follow the sales calendar when you have a sale like this pop up.”

Nudged along by the travel restrictions caused by the global pandemic, Keeneland unveiled its digital sales platform in June with a pair of offerings bringing six figures, but with 18 of 31 horses failing to sell. The October sale was topped by a $200,000 racing or broodmare prospect and only seven head finding new homes.

“The first [digital sale] we had to see where we were,” Maronde said. “The second one, we didn’t really know how  September [Yearling Sale] was going to play out and we wanted to give sellers every opportunity to move product. So we had that second sale taking horses who were RNAs out of the yearling sales. More so than anything, that was the purpose of the second sale. For this third one, we knew we needed to have another sale. There was a consignment that approached us and said they would like to try to have a digital sale focused around the November sale time frame, so people could go to the farm and look at horses and then be prepared to buy them on this platform.”

From its initial season of three auctions, Maronde said he expects the digital platform to only grow in 2021.

“We will be making a bigger commitment to this in 2021,” he said. “We will probably have seven or eight sales in the months that we don’t have a live sale. And we will throw more resources at it. This has been a learning exercise for us for all three sales. We haven’t had the opportunity to focus on it as much as we’d like. But this sale and the one in October were basically us trying to be reactive to what we thought maybe was going to be a need in the marketplace with the travel restrictions and a perceived tough market to sell into. I think we learned that the industry is pretty resilient and flexible. The online bidding at the sales everywhere has been a lot stronger than anybody would have thought. Videos are more in demand and more people will be doing videos and there does seem to be less of a negative on selling without being present on site. The big takeaway for all of us in this is that we thought it would be a little bit harder to get people to adjust to than it’s been.”

Bidding on the December sale offerings begins Tuesday morning at 10 a.m. and bidding closes on lots every two minutes beginning at 2 p.m.

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Stakes Winner Divine Park Brings $270,000 To Top Friday’s Keeneland November Sale Session

Steady trade continued during Friday's fifth session of the Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale in Lexington, Ky., led by the sale of stakes winner Divine Queen for $270,000 to Avout Bloodstock.

A 5-year-old daughter of Divine Park out of stakes winner Town Queen, by Williamstown, Divine Queen is a half-sister to Buffalo Trace Franklin County winner Queen's Award and to Hour Queen, dam of Hagyard Fayette (G2) winner The Player. She was consigned as a racing or broodmare prospect by Trackside Farm, agent.

On Friday, the final day of the Book 3 catalog, Keeneland sold 235 horses for $13,032,000, an average of $55,455 and a median of $42,000.

Through five sessions of the 10-day auction, 982 horses have sold for $128,701,000, for an average of $131,060 and a median of $75,000.

Gottahaveaholiday, a 6-year-old broodmare prospect by Harlan's Holiday whose Grade 1-winning half-sister, Dayoutoftheoffice, was second in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies (G1) Saturday at Keeneland, brought the day's second-highest price of $240,000 from Coteau Grove Farms/Cary Bloodstock, agent. Out of the winning Indian Charlie mare Gottahaveadream, Gottahaveaholiday is from the family of Grade 1 winners Here Comes Ben, Race the Wild Wind, Albertus Maximus and Daredevil. She was consigned by Taylor Made Sales Agency, agent.

Taylor Made was the session's leading consignor, selling 23 horses for $1.52 million.

The day's highest-priced weanling was a colt by Nyquist purchased by Sycamore for $225,000. Consigned by Mulholland Springs, agent, he is out of the El Corredor mare Senorita Corredora and is from the family of Grade 3 winners Dark Nile, Thatlookonyerface and Lou Brissie.

Sycamore acquired a total of five horses – all weanlings  – Friday for $640,000 to lead buyers.

Morris Bloodstock Services, agent for Waldorf Farm, paid $200,000 for Storm Crossing, a 10-year-old daughter of Tiznow offered in foal to Munnings. She is the dam of stakes-placed Kansas Kis. Out of stakes winner Storm Alert, by Storm Cat, Storm Crossing is a half-sister to Grade 3 winner Utopian. She was consigned by Hunter Valley Farm, agent.

A weanling colt by Practical Joke out of the Rahy mare Miss Utada sold for $185,000 to Fish Stables. Consigned by Eaton Sales, agent, he is a half-brother to multiple Grade 2 winner Secret Gypsy and from the family of Group 1 winner Possessive Dancer and Group 3 winner Colmore Row.

Two horses sold for $180,000 each.

The first was a weanling colt by Speightstown sold to Rascal Bloodstock. Blue Heaven Farm consigned the colt, who is out of the winning Tapit mare Wild Ridge and from the family of Grade 3 winners Wild Gams and Cazadero.

Bluewater, agent, paid $180,000 for the Distorted Humor mare Acting Class, who is in foal to Bolt d'Oro. Out of the A.P. Indy mare Classicism, Acting Class is the dam of graded stakes-placed Classy Act. Hill 'n' Dales Sales Agency, agent, consigned the mare, who is from the family of champion Tempera, Canadian champion Rainbows for Life, Group 2 winner Colour Chart and Group 3 winner Equerry.

The November Sale continues Saturday and runs through Wednesday, Nov. 18 with all sessions beginning at 10 a.m. ET.

The entire sale is streamed live on Keeneland.com.

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Book Three Concludes at Keeneland

LEXINGTON, KY – The Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale’s two-session Book 3 section concluded with another day of steady trade Friday in Lexington. Bill Betz made the day’s highest bid, going to $270,000 late in the day to acquire the racing/ broodmare prospect Divine Queen (Divine Park) from the Trackside Farm consignment. The mare was one of four to bring $200,000 or more during the session. While only 292 of the 401 catalogued head went through the ring Friday, 235 sold for a buy-back rate of just 19.52%.

Through the two Book 3 sessions, Keeneland sold 462 head for $26,185,000. The average was $56,677–down just slightly from last year’s figure of $57,032–and the median of $42,000 dipped 6.7% from $45,000 a year ago. Fifteen horses sold for $200,000 or more during Book 3.

During last year’s Book 3 section, 499 head sold for $28,459,200. The book’s top price was $325,000 and there were nine offerings who sold for $200,000 or more.

“It was a lot better than I anticipated,” Summerfield’s Francis Vanlangendonck said of the November market. “For the babies, it’s been really, really good. The weanlings sold much better today than earlier in the week. Yesterday we averaged about 80 showings per weanling for horses we were selling today. The buyers were pretty aggressive. It seems like for these lower-valued weanlings there is a world of people wanting to buy. With people worried about what the markets were going to be like, there were a lot of scratches. Those well-conformed weanlings that vetted good sold really well. Even some that had issues are starting to sell. I looked at the outs, so by the time we got to the sales ring, I knew where we were. I knew there would be a market, but thought it would be a little timid… when the supply started lowering, I felt we might do OK. Even with the mares I thought they did well. We sold every horse we put through the ring. We had gotten beaten up pretty good in September and October and we were having to sell to make sure we had money for stud fees and to keep going.”

Reiley McDonald of Eaton Sales said there was still demand for the right type of mares and weanlings.

“The mares that are legitimate, there are buyers here for them and Book 3 has still been good,” McDonald said. “There are horses that just have holes in them, they are a little old or the foals don’t vet right, there is no market for those. The weanling buyers are not putting up with any veterinary flaws. That always happens in a tight market. If you jump through the hoops–you’re a nice physical and you’re clean–then you will get as much here as you will for a yearling. There is money out there and people get hungry. Everybody gets shuffled back by the earlier higher-priced horses and get hungry in Books 3 and 4 because the pinhookers make their living reselling the foals.”

The Keeneland November sale continues through Wednesday with sessions beginning daily at 10 a.m.

Divine Score for Bradley

Bill Betz struck late to secure Divine Queen (Divine Park) (hip 1764) for a session-topping $270,000 Friday at Keeneland, signing for the mare in the name of Avout Bloodstock. Tom Evans’s Trackside Farm consigned the 5-year-old racing or broodmare prospect on behalf of co-owner/breeder and trainer Buff Bradley.

“We bred her, foaled her, raised her and raced her and we just sold her,” said Bradley. “Pretty much like we did [two-time sprint champion] Groupie Doll. We were very excited to race this filly and then sell her as a mare and know she was going to go somewhere good.”

Racing for Bradley and co-breeder Carl Hurst, Divine Queen won the 2019 Open Mind S. and 2018 Dogwood S. She won six of 23 starts for earnings of $339,344.

“She had a lot of class,” Bradley said. “She showed it in the ring, walking up here, she’s just all class. And a very sound race mare. Never once did she have a problem. I think we are very proud of that. We bred a nice, sound racehorse.”

From the same family, Bradley and Hurst bred stakes winner and graded placed Queen’s Award (Medaglia d’Oro), a half-sister to Divine Queen, and also bred and campaigned multiple graded winner The Player (Street Hero), who is out of a half-sister to both mares.

“We have a lot of the family and we have to keep the cash flow going and get ready for the young ones coming along,” Bradley said of the decision to sell the mare.

Of the mare’s session-topping final price, Bradley said, “It was a bit more than what we were thinking, but we’re very happy with it.”

Gottahaveaholiday to Coteau Grove

Bloodstock agent Andrew Cary remained busy buying mares for the account of Keith and Ginger Myers’s Coteau Grove Friday at Keeneland, going to $240,000 to acquire the broodmare prospect Gottahaveaholiday (Harlan’s Holiday). The 6-year-old got a big update when her juvenile half-sister Dayoutoftheoffice (Into Mischief) won the GI Frizette S. and finished second in the GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies last week.

“The update is just huge,” Cary said after signing the ticket on the mare, who was consigned by Taylor Made Sales Agency. “That filly ran such an amazing race in the Breeders’ Cup and winning the Frizette. It gives us a nice filly to root for next year.”

Gottahaveaholiday was purchased by Samantha Siegel’s Jay Em Ess Stable for $230,000 at the 2015 Keeneland September Yearling Sale. She finished second six times in 10 starts.

“The mare was gorgeous,” Cary continued. “She was an expensive yearling herself. We will breed her to a really nice stallion and have options moving forward.”

As the November sale continued through Book 3, Cary said there was still plenty of competition.

“There are still a lot of top agents and buyers here,” he said. “It’s been that way throughout the sale. You just have to follow them up and some you get and some you don’t. You just hope you land on the right number on some of them. We got outbid on probably 10 horses yesterday. It’s very competitive for these kind of long-term mares. There is a lot of competition for those and it bodes well for the bloodstock industry down the road.”

Cary has signed for 11 mares on behalf of the Lousiana-based Coteau Grove Farms for a total of $3,195,000. His purchases are led by a pair of $500,000 acquisitions: Miss Hot Legs (Verrazano) (hip 66) and Contributing (hip 958).

Nyquist Colt Joins Pinhooking Partnership

Headley Bell purchased a colt by Nyquist for $225,000 and the weanling (hip 1586) is part of a pinhooking partnership he has been busy buying for at the Keeneland November sale.

“I liked that he was an athlete and I liked the family,” Bell said. “And obviously we like Nyquist. It’s hard to ignore the start he has made. We put together a partnership and we are just trying to put some athletes in the bucket and see if we can get lucky.”

The chestnut is out of the unraced Senorita Corredora (El Corredor)–a $150,000 Keeneland September yearling purchase in 2010–and he is a half-brother to multiple stakes-placed Holiday’s Angel (Harlan’s Holiday). Bred by Gary and Anne Smith’s Elm Racing and Mulholland Springs, the weanling was consigned by Mulholland Springs.

“The sire is obviously doing well with the Breeders’ Cup winner [Vequist],” said John Mulholland. “It all fell into place. The colt vetted well and presented himself well, and we had all the right buyers on him. We bred him in partnership with some clients of ours, Gary and Ann Smith of Elm Racing. I actually bought the mare for the Smiths as a yearling and she got a tendon injury and never made it to the races. She was a breeze or two away from running. They have raced all the foals and want to do more racing, perhaps claim some horses or buy some 2-year-olds, and that is why we went ahead and sold the mare and the foal. Happily, I found another client to buy the mare and keep her on the farm, which makes me happy.”

Bell has purchased six weanlings at the Keeneland November sale for the partnership under the name Sycamore. In addition to hip 1586, he purchased a filly by Constitution (hip 1688) for $140,000; a filly by Distorted Humor (hip 1663) for $105,000; a filly by Mendelssohn (hip 1545) for $100,000; a colt by Malibu Moon (hip 408) for $90,000; and a filly by First Samurai (hip 1511) for $70,000.

“We feel like there is potential opportunity,” he said. “We’ll see. Coming into the sale, we thought it might be somewhat depressed, but I don’t feel that it is at all, to be honest with you.”

Weanling-to-yearling pinhookers have come up against plenty of competition from end-users at this week’s Keeneland November sale, particularly from Larry Best’s OXO Equine, which has purchased eight foals.

“For Larry Best to come into the weanling market as strong as he is, he is obviously very competitive and makes it tough,” Bell said. “But listen, we are all trying to do the same thing.”

Practical Joke Weanlings Prove Popular

A pair of weanlings by young Coolmore sire Practical Joke set the pace for foal prices early in Friday’s session of the Keeneland November sale. Brian Graves of Gainesway went to $185,000 to acquire a colt by the Grade I winner (hip 1512) from the Eaton Sales consignment. Bred by Forging Oaks, the pinhooking prospect is a half-brother to multiple graded winner Secret Gypsy (Sea of Secrets).

“I bought Practical Joke as a yearling, so if anybody was going to be inspired to stretch for them a little bit, it’s me,” Graves said. “They’ve all been well-balanced, good movers and athletic. You’ve got to believe in Into Mischief and Practical Joke has a good chance. Hopefully, he will come out with some early runners and we’ll be in good shape.”

Graves purchased Practical Joke for $135,000 at the 2015 Keeneland January sale and resold him for $240,000 at that year’s Keeneland September sale. The stallion, whose first foals are yearlings, won the GI Champagne S., GI H. Allen Jerkens S. and GI Hopeful S.

“I was happy with the price,” Eaton Sales’ Reiley McDonald said of the transaction. “He is a really nice physical horse and those can go for anything above what you’re expecting when they are that good. His sire has been doing well, with one a couple hips before him that also sold well. He was the best horse we had physically.”

Just a few hips before Graves made his purchase, Larry Best’s OXO Equine went to $150,000 to acquire a filly by Practical Joke (hip 1510) from the Brookdale Sales consignment. The chestnut filly is out of the unraced Miss Prytania (Eskendereya), a half-sister to graded winners Medal Count (Dynaformer) and Garden District (Dixie Union). She was bred by J.R. Ward Stables.

Graves agreed the weanling market has been very competitive this week in Lexington.

“I am not shocked,” he said of the strong weanling market. “Everybody saw there were fewer on offer and maybe the nice ones that have come through have been fewer and farther between. The laws of supply and demand take over.”

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Vequist To Get Time Off After ‘Spectacular’ Breeders’ Cup Win, Then Aim For 2021 Kentucky Oaks

There were good vibes all around the far end of Barn 66 at Keeneland Saturday morning as the connections of Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies winner Vequist basked in the achievements of the dark bay daughter of Nyquist.

Trainer Butch Reid reported that all was well with his charge in the aftermath of her 2-length triumph over budding rival Dayoutoftheoffice in the Juvenile Fillies, an effort that now puts Vequist in position to take home an Eclipse Award for divisional honors. While horses can sometimes fool their caretakers by flaunting one kind of form in the morning only to give off an entirely different impression in the afternoons, Vequist more than backed up the serious tout she had made for herself this week as one of the best looking horses during training hours.

“When I saw her in the morning jogging and stuff, I thought she looked really good but then when she got over there into the paddock in the afternoon, I thought she looked spectacular,” said Reid, who previously won the 2011 Breeders' Cup Marathon with Afleet Again. “In my mind, I thought she won the paddock show. She looked good, calm, relaxed. We felt pretty good.”

Vequist now has two wins from four career starts with both of her triumphs coming in top-level races. She broke her maiden by a jaw-dropping 9 ½ lengths in the Grade 1 Spinaway Stakes at Saratoga on Sept. 6 but was beaten in the Grade 1 Frizette by Dayoutoftheoffice.

Under heady handling from Joel Rosario Friday, Vequist used an inside trip to turn the tables on her rival and make her sire Nyquist one of now 24 stallions to win a Breeders' Cup race and sire a Breeders' Cup winner.

“We figured she would be laying close and it seemed like the inside was good all day,” Reid said. “And we had Joel in the irons. We had full confidence in the horse and the rider. This is my second Breeders' Cup win but this was really a special one because she's a homebred and I was able to do it for Tom McGrath and Gary Barber and Adam Wachtel. It makes it extra special.”

Vequist was bred by McGrath's Swilcan Stables with McGrath selling an interest in the filly to Barber and Wachtel after she finished second in her career debut at Parx on July 29. To Reid's delight, the new addition to the ownership had no intention of taking the filly out of his care.

“That's something rare in this business that something like that happens. Normally that's it and the horse is gone,” Reid said. “I didn't know them (Barber and Wachtel) until I talked to them on the phone. In fact I met Gary Barber for the first time yesterday.”

Reid added that Vequist will now head to Barry Eisman's farm in Florida for a freshening to prepare for what he hopes is a successful trip down the Kentucky Oaks trail in 2021.

“Four starts as a 2-year-old is plenty for me and we got her stretched around two turns, which is what I wanted,” Reid said. “She'll soak up some sun and pick on some grass.”

Trainer and co-owner Tim Hamm reported all was good with Dayoutoftheoffice the morning after her gutsy runner-up finish in the Juvenile Fillies.

Dayoutoftheoffice set a quick pace in the 1 1/16m Juvenile Fillies, throwing down the first quarter in 23.30 and an opening half mile in 47.12 before being caught by race-winner Vequist in the late stages. That loss marked the first defeat in four starts for Dayoutoftheoffice, but the daughter of Into Mischief figures to be in play for Eclipse Award honors with her prior wins in the Grade 1 Frizette — in which she bested Vequist — and Grade 3 Schuylerville Stakes.

“She'll take a little break and get ready for a 3-year-old campaign,” Hamm said.

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