MyRacehorse to Offer Shares in Yearlings with $2M Bonus

MyRacehorse will offer ownership in six yearlings that were purchased at the recent Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale of selected yearlings. The yearlings, referred to as the “Fasig Select Six, each come with a $2-million bonus designed specifically for horses purchased by MyRacehorse at the 2021 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale. For colts, the bonus would be paid if any were to win the GI Kentucky Derby and for the fillies, the bonus would be paid for a GI Kentucky Oaks victory. Unlike past MyRacehorse offerings, where bonuses were split in partnership with co-owners, these bonuses would be paid out exclusively to MyRacehorse shareholders.

“Our goal is to provide fans access to horses that have the opportunity to become classic horses; elite horses, racing on the biggest days for the biggest prizes,” said Michael Behrens, CEO & Founder of MyRacehorse. “The Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale provided us the opportunity to navigate through a select set of impeccably bred, well-conformed horses that are sure to have several champions amongst the crop. We walked away with many of our favorites and are excited so many fans will have the opportunity to participate in this level of quality.”

The Fasig Select Six is comprised of:

  • Who Runs the World, a Quality Road filly out of Lucy N Ethel for $104/share
  • Tufnel, a colt by Into Mischief out of Count to Eleven for $62/share
  • A first-crop Justify filly out of Essential Rose for $105/share
  • Classic Cut, an Empire Maker colt out of Bluejeans for $51/share
  • Balletic, an Into Mischief filly out of RicketyRacketyRuss for $80/share
  • A Quality Road colt out of Song of Bernadette for $97/share

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Notable US-Bred Runners in Japan: Oct. 23-24, 2021

In this continuing series, we take a look ahead at US-bred and/or conceived runners entered for the upcoming weekend at the tracks on the Japan Racing Association circuit, with a focus on pedigree and/or performance in the sales ring. Here are the horses of interest for this weekend running at Tokyo and Hanshin Racecourses. The 3-year-old fillies' Classics concluded with last weekend's G1 Shuka Sho and 3-year-old males get their final chance at Classics glory in Sunday's G1 Kikuka Sho (Japanese St Leger) at Hanshin. A full field of 17 colts and one filly includes the progressive US-bred Air Sage (Point of Entry), winner of three of his four starts to date:

Saturday, October 23, 2021
2nd-TOK, ¥9,680,000 ($85k), Maiden, 2yo, 1400m
SPEED GLAMOUR (f, 2, Into Mischief–Island Escape, by Petionville) debuted with a solid fourth behind the highly promising $4.7-million juvenile colt Dobune (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn} x Premier Stars {Ire}) at Sapporo Sept. 4 and just missed over this course and distance Oct. 10. A $250K Keeneland September buyback turned $500K OBS March breezer (under-tack video), the bay filly is out of a dual stakes winner whose daughter Tricky Escape (Hat Trick {Jpn}) was successful three times at the graded level on the turf. B-Machmer Hall (KY)

4th-HSN, ¥13,400,000 ($118k), Newcomers, 2yo, 1400m
ADVANCE DREAM (c, 2, Speightstown–Jolene, by Malibu Moon) was acquired for $220K in utero by David Fennelly's Mountmellick Farm and was the last of four KEENOV purchases ($970K gross) in 2018 for the native of County Cork, Ireland. Advance Dream was sold on for $150K as a weanling at the 2019 Fasig-Tipton November Sale and was retained on a bid of $190K at KEESEP last fall a few months before his half-brother Arabian Prince (Mshawish) finished third in the GII Kentucky Jockey Club S. Advance Dream's stakes-placed dam is out of MSW Velvet Snow (Subordination). B-Mountmellick Farm (KY)

PER AA (f, 2, American Pharoah–Nomee, by City Zip), a $210K graduate of the 2019 KEENOV sale, is out of an unraced half-sister to MGSW Secret Gypsy (Sea of Secrets), whose three other graded placings include a runner-up effort in the 2008 GII Lexus Raven Run S. Secret Gypsy was sold to Shadai Farm for $540K at KEEJAN in 2011 and has produced six winners from as many to start. Her final foal is the unraced 2-year-old colt Herrenchiemsee (Jpn) (Isla Bonita {Jpn}), who fetched the equivalent of $230K at the 2019 JRHA Select Foal Sale. B-Zayat Stables LLC (KY)

Sunday, October 24, 2021
8th-HSN, ¥19,110,000 ($168k), Allowance, 2yo, 1400m
CONCH PEARL (f, 2, American Pharoah–A Z Warrior, by Bernardini) finished runner-up on debut behind 'TDN Rising Star' Command Line (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) on the turf at Tokyo June 5 and the form was flattered when the latter resumed from a four-month absence to scoop the G3 Saudi Arabia Royal Cup two weekends ago. Third in a local grass maiden June 26, Conch Pearl most recently broke the track record when graduating by eight lengths over 1700 meters in her first spin on the dirt Sept. 4 (see below, gate 7). The daughter of the 2010 GI Frizette S. heroine, a $340K KEESEP yearling acquisition, cuts back to seven furlongs for this test. B-Triemore Stud (KY)

 

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Graded Stakes Winner La Dragontea Supplemented To Fasig-Tipton November Sale

Fasig-Tipton has added another graded stakes winner to its upcoming November Sale. La Dragontea, second in Woodbine's Grade 1 E.P. Taylor Stakes this past Sunday, has been cataloged as Hip 267. She will be consigned as a racing/broodmare prospect by Hunter Valley Farm, agent.

Owned by Reeves Thoroughbred Racing and Rebecca Hillen, La Dragontea has had an outstanding 4-year-old season since arriving from Europe and entering the barn of trainer Christophe Clement.  Her three wins this year include Woodbine's G2 Canadian Stakes, where she stalked the pace going 1 1/8 miles to win in hand. She followed that victory up with her second-place finish in the E.P. Taylor – where she changed tactics and sat well off the pace – closing strongly to lose by just a neck going 1 1/4 miles.

La Dragontea is a daughter of multiple classic winner and top European sire Lope de Vega. One of the hottest young sires in the world, he is already the sire of 49 group or graded stakes winners, 13 of which are Group or Grade 1.

La Dragontea's dam La Concorde, a winning daughter of Sadler's Wells, is closely related to European champion and champion sire Montjeu. Her immediate family includes Group 1 winners Galileo Gold, Goldream, Again, and Aclaim.

“La Dragontea should appeal to a wide variety of racing and breeding operations,” said Fasig-Tipton president Boyd Browning. “She is beautifully bred, has current Grade 1 form, and at just four years old she has a lot of racing still ahead of her.”

The Fasig-Tipton November Sale will be held on Tuesday, Nov. 9, in Lexington, Ky. The sale will begin at 2 p.m.

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Arnold Puts Tennessee Back on the Map at Fasig October Sale

Despite a rich history of Thoroughbreds breeding in Tennessee, without a racing program, the state only reported 22 mares bred in 2019. Three of those resulting foals are catalogued for next week's Fasig-Tipton Kentucky October Yearlings Sale. The trio were bred by Van and Karla Arnold out of their fledgling Thoroughbred broodmare band at the family's Cold Springs Farm in Mountain City as foal shares with Taylor Made stallions Mshawish and Midnight Storm.

Van Arnold's parents purchased Cold Springs Farm, which sits in the northeast corner of Tennessee, in 1970 and the farm is primarily used to raise cattle. The Arnolds, who have a broodmare band of some 45 Quarter Horses, decided to start a Thoroughbred band just five years ago.

“Right now we have around 10 Thoroughbreds in the broodmare band,” Arnold said. “We are fairly new at it. Our goal is to produce some that we can race, but right now, we are producing them to sell.”

The Arnolds' initial investment in Thoroughbred mares started out as a purely practical endeavor for the farm.

“We have a cow-calf operation, we have about 400 mama cows and it's a commercial operation,” Arnold explained. “We use the horses to help us with the cattle and the Thoroughbreds are as handy as the Quarter Horses. Quarter Horses have a lot of Thoroughbreds back in there, [AQHA Hall of Famers] Doc Bar was by Lightning Bar, who was by the Thoroughbred Three Bars. The reason we wanted to cross them was to make ranch horses that could cover ground quicker and be a more versatile horse, rather than having a certain discipline of cutting or whatever and just have ranch type horses that would be able to do all the jobs that we need to do with them. And it adds speed and stamina to them to get the Thoroughbred to them.”

The original intention of crossing the two breeds soon morphed into a desire to be involved in breeding racehorses.

“It was probably just growing up and watching the races and seeing what kind of animals they were–they are just majestic and beautiful,” Arnold said of the transition. “It was just intriguing and we thought we wanted to try it.”

Arnold continued, “My wife Karla and I are just passionate about horses. We just like raising foals and we had the help of Taylor Made–their motto is 'With us, you're family' and it's true. They really helped us and encouraged us and helped us get to the next step.”

The Arnolds teamed up with Taylor Made to breed their three Fasig-Tipton October offerings. Hip 573 is a daughter of Mshawish out of Sweet Maxine (Value Plus), while hip 1448 is a colt by Midnight Storm out of J Be K's Sonnet (J Be K), and hip 1531 is a filly by Mshawish out of Lemon Drop Pop (Lemon Drop Kid).

“All of our mares have won money,” Arnold said. “We are pretty proud to have these bloodlines here. We have a daughter of Value Plus and a Lemon Drop Kid and J Be K daughter and we also have an Uncle Mo daughter that we are going to try to breed next spring. It's just a dream, I guess, to have these pedigrees here.”

Of the Kentucky-based sires his mares have been bred to, Arnold said, “Taylor Made have helped us cross these mares with their stallions. It's just amazing that an animal like that could be born here on the farm. I watched Midnight Storm when he was running. And Taylor Made got him and stood him and I was like, 'Wow.'”

The farm is also home to a daughter of the sire of GI Kentucky Derby winner Medina Spirit.

“When we first started, we got a daughter of Protonico. We still have her on the farm. And when Medina Spirit won the Derby–it was just amazing–to have a filly related to the Kentucky Derby winner. It's just so rewarding. And we are so proud.”

Cold Springs Farm was represented by its first starter as a breeder when Sweet Tootsie Lu (Tale of Ekati), purchased for $4,500 at last year's October sale, opened her career at Indiana Grand in August. Out of Sweet Maxine, the 2-year-old came up just a head short of breaking her maiden at Mountaineer Oct. 18.

“She is making me proud,” Arnold said.

Without a racing program or breeding incentives, Thoroughbred breeding in Tennessee obviously remains limited.

“Being from Tennessee, it's a little more difficult because we don't have incentives,” Arnold agreed. “But the Belle Meade Plantation was one of the greatest Thoroughbred farms in the world in it's time and that  was in Tennessee. So, it gives us hope and something to strive for, with the help of Taylor Made. They have helped me tremendously and I am thankful for that.”

John Harding began breeding Thoroughbreds on his Belle Meade Plantation in Nashville in the early 1800s and by the later years of that century, the plantation was considered one of the leading Thoroughbred farms in the country. Eleven Triple Crown winners trace back to the Belle Meade stallion Bonnie Scotland and the farm was also home to English Derby winner Iroquois.

Looking ahead, Arnold added, “Maybe we are the pioneers of something to come to the state. To get racing here, the laws of gambling and stuff are probably hindering it. But maybe that could change with the times. It's does make [breeding in Tennessee] more difficult, but I think if we produce an animal who crosses the wire first, that's what counts.”

The Fasig-Tipton October sale begins next Monday and continues through Thursday with sessions commencing daily at 10 a.m.

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