New York-Bred Cupid Colt Tops Opening Session Of Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Fall Yearlings Sale

The first session of the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Fall Yearlings Sale concluded Monday evening in Timonium, Md., with figures comparable to the last year's edition.

In 2020, the sale opened with a dedicated New York-bred section to accommodate yearlings displaced by the cancellation of the Saratoga sales due to COVID-19.

The session's top hip came early when Hip 4, a New York-bred colt from the first crop of Cupid out of multiple stakes producer Gottah Penny, sold for $160,000 (video). Xtreme Racing Stables LLC purchased the chestnut colt from the consignment of Eaton Sales, agent.

Hip 4 is a half-brother to stakes-placed winners Brokered and Copper Gem, out of a winning Stravinsky half-sister to Grade 1 winner Run Man Run. The session-topper was purchased for $52,000 as a weanling at last year's Saratoga Fall Sale by Alan Quartucci, and was bred in New York by Christopher Shelli and Caliburn Farm LLC.

A daughter of Overanalyze accounted for the top price for a filly during Monday's session. Offered as Hip 6 by Hibiscus Sales, the leading filly was purchased for $120,000 by Cutair Racing (video).

Out of the multiple stakes winning Distorted Humor mare Heavenly Humor, the bay filly is a half-sister to eight winners from as many to race. Those include multiple stakes winner and recent Grade 2 Vosburgh Stakes runner-up Funny Guy and stakes winner Super Humor. Hip 6 was bred in New York by Hibiscus Stables.

During the first session, 112 yearlings sold for $2,983,000, for an average of $24,456. The median was $15,000.

The Midlantic Fall Yearlings sale continues Tuesday at 10 AM. Results are available online.

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Ky October Yearlings Catalog Online

Fasig-Tipton has catalogued 1,553 yearlings for its Kentucky October Yearlings Sale, to be held Oct. 26-29, in Lexington, Kentucky. The catalog may be viewed online, and will also be available via the equineline sales catalogue app. Four continuous sessions, conducted Monday through Thursday, will begin each day at 10 a.m.

“This is the strongest group of yearlings we have ever offered at Kentucky October,” said Fasig-Tipton President Boyd Browning. “This spring, a significant number of sellers decided that they would target October with many of their top yearlings.  Buyers will find tremendous quality here, no matter what their budget.”

This year’s catalog cover features recent sale graduates champion juvenile filly British Idiom (Flashback) and Grade I winning Gretzky the Great (Nyquist).

Print catalogs will be available on-site in Lexington approximately one week before the sale, as well as from Fasig-Tipton’s regional offices and national representatives at that time. Online bidding and phone bidding services will be available to buyers. For more information, visit www.fasigtipton.com.

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Fasig-Tipton Kentucky October Yearlings Sale Catalog Now Online

Fasig-Tipton has cataloged 1,553 yearlings for its Kentucky October Yearlings Sale, to be held on Oct. 26-29, in Lexington, Ky.

The four continuous sessions, conducted on Monday-Thursday, will begin each day at 10 a.m.

“This is the strongest group of yearlings we have ever offered at Kentucky October,” said Fasig-Tipton president Boyd Browning. “This spring, a significant number of sellers decided that they would target October with many of their top yearlings. Buyers will find tremendous quality here, no matter what their budget.”

This year's catalog cover features recent sale graduates British Idiom and Gretzky the Great, both Grade 1 winning 2-year-olds. British Idiom captured the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies and Grade 1 Alcibiades Stakes on her way to being named Eclipse champion 2-year-old filly of 2019. Gretzky the Great recently won the G1 Summer Stakes on Sept. 20 — his second consecutive stakes win this year – to establish himself as one of the top 2-year-olds in the country.

The catalog may now be viewed online, and will also be available via the equineline sales catalogue app. Print catalogs will be available on-site in Lexington approximately one week before the sale, as well as from Fasig-Tipton's regional offices and national representatives at that time.

Online bidding and phone bidding services will be available to buyers.

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Sabrina Moore Plants Budding Operation in Maryland

For up-and-coming horsewoman Sabrina Moore, co-owner and operator of GreenMount Farm in Glyndon, Maryland, two of her greatest accomplishments revolve around Maryland breeding and racing.

Last year Knicks Go (Paynter), a colt she co-bred with her mother Angie Moore, was named Maryland-bred Horse of the Year after winning the 2018 edition of the GI Claiborne Breeders’ Futurity and running second in the GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile behind Eclipse Award winner Game Winner (Candy Ride {Arg}).

“When Knicks Go got Horse of the Year for the Maryland-bred awards, that was really special to me,” Moore recalled. “I’m a little biased, but I love Maryland. I love all the history. To know his name is always going to be there was really cool. We claimed his dam off the track and she was very near and dear to my heart. I thought once in my lifetime I might get a graded stakes horse when I was 50 or something, but for it to happen so soon and out of a mare that was so special to me, it was really surreal.”

This summer, a Bernardini yearling that GreenMount Farm co-bred was named Champion at the annual Maryland Horse Breeders Association’s Yearling Show.

“I’ve been attending the yearling show for years, so to come out on top was something that was so special to me,” Moore said. “The filly had a rough start. Her mom actually had colic surgery when she was by her side. I typically sell as weanlings, but I held onto her because I didn’t feel like she was at her full potential, and I’m really glad I kept her.”

The filly out of stakes winner Mystic Love (Not For Love) went on to bring $100,000 at the Fasig-Tipton Selected Yearlings Showcase, selling to Frank Brothers as agent for StarLadies and Mathis.

Moore’s interest in the industry was piqued early in her childhood when her family moved to Glyndon, Maryland- a community less than 20 miles from Pimlico Race Course.

“As a kid, I loved horses,” Moore said. “My mom went to the Preakness every year and that’s kind of what got the ball rolling. I loved watching the Preakness. I wanted to work with horses, but I didn’t know how. Little did I know how involved everything was to get into it.”

After graduating high school, Moore took a job at a breaking farm, and then worked a stint at the track.

At the same time, her mother was involved in several broodmare partnerships. Eventually, the mother-daughter duo decided to go out on their own.

“We picked up a free broodmare, which was probably the most expensive thing we ever invested in,” Moore said with a laugh.

As their small broodmare band grew, Moore’s local veterinarian encouraged her to foal out the mares herself at their family’s GreenMount Farm.

“She taught me everything,” Moore recalled. “At first it was just our own horses, but there was a need in the neighborhood to outsource and I started picking up clients.”

Now just a few years later, Moore foals out up to 30 mares a year, but she’s discovered her real niche in working with yearlings.

“When I first started, I would take babies out of fields and just start handling them,” Moore said. “It was so rewarding to take these horses that were not so thrifty and sometimes badly behaved, and turn them into professional animals that could do their jobs.”

Moore grew increasingly fascinated with the sales aspect of the business, so she started working with agent and consignor Bill Reightler.

She recalled her first time attending the Keeneland November Sale, “When I got there, my jaw dropped. I was so impressed with the quality of horses. I wanted every bit of it. So I made a five-year plan and I told Mr. Bill, ‘Eventually I want to consign on my own.'”

After working with Reightler for the appointed five years, she took the plunge.

“It was really scary to go out on my own and try to find my own clients,” Moore admitted. “You have to get confident really quickly and be bold. It took a lot of courage, it was a lot of learning and it really pushed me out of my comfort zone.”

The GreenMount Farm banner was first on display at the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Fall Yearling Sale in 2017 and has been a fixture at the auction since.

“I love Timonium,” Moore said of taking her consignment to the annual Midlantic yearling sale. “Primarily I have Maryland-breds, so selling them here makes more sense. I try to bring nice horses so they stick out more as bigger fish in a smaller pond, as I like to say. But it’s getting tough over the years. There’s some really nice horses here and people are picking up on it. I don’t feel like it’s a disadvantage here instead of going to Kentucky because for a regional market, it’s fantastic. I think if you have the right horse that fits the sale, you’ll sell just fine here.”

In just a few days, Moore’s self-run consignment will have its largest group at the fall auction to date with 10 yearlings cataloged under the GreenMount Farm banner for the two-day sale starting on October 5.

“This year, I feel like I have a really nice, diverse group going in,” Moore said. “I have some higher-end horses and some regional horses that may not have the fanciest pedigrees, but are useful, correct horses that anybody will be able to benefit from.”

Of the current market going into the auction, Moore said, “I was expecting it to be a lot worse, and I think the sales companies have done a really good job in getting horses sold. I’m pretty optimistic. I think everyone is still going to be showing up with their checkbooks.”

Moore has been dipping her toes in the pinhooking game for several years, but she has hopes that one yearling in this upcoming sale could be her breakout find.

Yearling Klimt colt out of Cabo Time | Sara Gordon

At last year’s Keeneland November Sale, the first crop of weanlings by Klimt (Quality Road) stuck out to her.

“I didn’t go down specifically looking for them, but I just kept seeing them in the book. They were so nice physically, but they were selling well and I thought, ‘Man, I should probably move on.'”

When she saw the last Klimt weanling on her short list go through the ring, a colt out of the stakes-placed mare Cabo Time (Grand Slam), she couldn’t leave him behind and purchased the youngster for $36,000.

“After I saw him, I wasn’t really high on anything else. So I went over my budget a little bit,” she admitted. “I hope it will pay off. He’s matured into a really nice horse and I think he’ll suit anybody. He’s really attractive, correct and athletic. I’m hoping he’ll turn some heads.”

Catalogued as Hip 484 for the upcoming Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Fall Yearling Sale, the colt will go through the ring during the second session of the auction.

Moore said she hopes that this sale will serve as a gateway to continue to build her consignment and grow her pinhooking program. While she plans to take her consignment to Lexington someday, her home base will continue to be in Maryland.

“I think when you have a Maryland-bred, it’s a pretty lucrative deal. Our breeder incentives are really nice, and Fasig-Tipton [Timonium] is right up the street. We have a lot of really talented trainers and year-round racing. We have some really nice local stallions for people that want to breed regionally. In the long run, [the Maryland program] helps the breeder out a lot. I think you’re well off here.”

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