The Sizzle Is Back at Saratoga

by Jessica Martini & Christie DeBernardis

SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY – Following a bidless 2020, the sizzle was back at the Humphrey S. Finney Pavilion with a vibrant concluding session of the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Selected Yearlings Sale Tuesday in upstate New York. The session was punctuated by three seven-figure transactions, led by a colt by Into Mischief who sold for $2.6 million to Coolmore's M.V. Magnier.

“Whatever adjectives you want to use to describe it: fantastic, vibrant, energetic, dramatic,” Fasig-Tipton President Boyd Browning said Tuesday night. “You've heard me say it before and I will say it again. It begins with the quality of horses that were on the sales grounds. We were lucky to have an exceptional group of horses on the grounds this week. You could feel the buzz on the sale grounds. We had a few more breakout horses today just purely by the alphabet. All in all, it was a near-record sale. To accomplish that coming off a disruption in 2020 was remarkable.”

Through two sessions, Fasig-Tipton sold 135 horses for a total of $55,155,000. The average was $408,556 and the median was $350,000. Records of $411,459 (average) and $350,000 (median), respectively, were set in 2019. With 45 horses reported not sold, the buy-back rate was 25%.

“We were fortunate to have a very, very strong catalogue,” Browning said. “I could hardly be happier right now. It wasn't the sale of the century, but it was awfully close to the sale of century. It lays the foundation for us to begin to work for the next century of great horse sales in Saratoga. I promise you we will do our part to make sure that happens.”

The $2.6-million sale topper–super sire Into Mischief's highest-priced yearling ever–was consigned by Gainesway on behalf of his breeder Don Alberto Corporation. He was one of four lots to reach seven figures. That matches the number of million-dollar yearlings sold at the 2019 sale.

A colt from the first crop of Bolt d'Oro sold to Larry Best's OXO Equine for $1.4 million early in Tuesday's session and was followed some thirty hips later by a $1-million son of Quality Road purchased by Kindred Stables. Lane's End's Quality Road had five of the top 16 offerings Tuesday, while his first-crop stallion son City of Light occupied another two spots at that level.

The domestic buying bench continued to be deep at the boutique auction, with the top 15 lots purchased by 12 individual buyers.

While top lots were in high demand, consignors did see some weakening at the lower levels of the market.

“The right horse brings triple and the others are tough,” Hill 'n' Dale Sale Agency's John Sikura said. “I assume everyone is having the same experience. You have to have enough good individuals to make up for the others.”

Gainesway consigned two of Tuesday's top four yearlings and the operation's Brian Graves said he saw a noticeable uptick in activity during the auction's second session.

“It was a little spotty in here on the first night and you do get to wondering as a consignor sometimes if things are going to be fair or if you're just going to be in a buyer's market,” Graves said. “I was wondering that the first night, but when the quality came here tonight, they seemed to open up. I think there were better horses today and I think the market really opened up this evening.”

Bloodstock agent David Ingordo was busy buying at the auction and said he found plenty of activity throughout the market.

“It can be spotty if you don't have the right horse,” Ingordo said. “But if you do, you better get tied on. The middle market is still good. There are people buying horses, a buddy of mine, Tom McCrocklin, is buying horses in that middle-price range. I see him buying them in the $100,000 to $250,000 range and we bought a few, what I call value for here, and you just have to get lucky. But if the horse is nice, forget about it, they are throwing the reins at it.”

The 100th Saratoga sale also made history when the first-ever cryptocurrency purchase of a Thoroughbred at public auction. After Spendthrift Farm's Eric Gustavson made the historic purchase, he told Fasig-Tipton's Acacia Courtney, “It was really exciting. Hopefully, this will continue to happen. It will be like a snowball effect and other sales companies may be open to it.”

Another Sale Topper for Coolmore

The Coolmore team was relatively quiet during Monday's first session of the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga sale, but the Irish operation jumped in with both feet Tuesday, securing a colt by Into Mischief (hip 168) for a sale-topping $2.6 million. The yearling was consigned by Antony Beck's Gainesway on behalf of his breeder, Don Alberto Corporation.

“He was a very nice horse. He is one that we've been talking about for the last couple of days,” Coolmore's M.V. Magnier said. “He was a very nice horse and he's by a very good sire out of a very good race mare. The way Practical Joke is going at the moment, it looks like Into Mischief is a sire of sires. He's a very nice horse and let's hope he's as good as Practical Joke.”

Magnier, flanked by members of the Coolmore team, did his bidding while standing at the back row of seats in the pavilion. The group stopped several times to discuss the progression of the bidding while battling with a determined bidder out back.

Asked what the conversation in the scrum sounded like, Magnier said with a laugh, “We just wanted to know what was going on.”

Magnier signed the ticket on four yearlings during the two-day Saratoga sale. He purchased a colt by Curlin (hip 166) for $500,000; a Practical Joke colt (hip 152) for $425,000; and an American Pharoah colt (hip 47) for $300,000.

Tuesday's sale-topping purchase was the second time this year Coolmore had purchased a $2.6-million colt from a Fasig-Tipton auction. The operation made that top bid at the Gulfstream sale in March to acquire a 2-year-old colt by Nyquist.

Hip 168 is out of 2016 GI Test S. winner Paola Queen (Flatter).  The Heller-Solari family's Don Alberto purchased the mare for $1.7 million at the 2017 Keeneland November sale.

“It is a tremendous opportunity for the mare and a tremendous success for Don Alberto,” the operation's executive director Chance Timm said of Tuesday's result. “Carlos Heller and the whole family have been so dedicated to this. It is very exciting. The commitment this family has made to the industry, with the investment in land and investment in mares, this is what we hope to achieve.”

Of the yearling's final price, Timm said, “It is hard to expect anything in that kind of range, but with the kind of interest we had, we knew he would sell well. He is a very rare type of horse. With that sire and that mare, those kind are very rare.”

Paola Queen produced a filly by Into Mischief this year and she was bred back to Tapit. Buyers can expect to see more of the 8-year-old mare's in the sales ring in the coming years.

“For the most part, everything goes to the market,” Timm said. “Mr. Heller is interested in partnerships every once in a while.”

Gainesway's Brian Graves said he was always high on the sale-topping yearling.

“We are just grateful for Don Alberto to send us such a nice horse,” Graves said. “He was a physical standout when we saw him on the farm. He was a horse that you got down on your hands and knees and said please let it be me and we were just lucky that they let us lead him around here.”

Graves continued, “He has a beautiful neck and shoulder, it ties in just beautifully, and a big square ass and just a walk that you see 2% of the horses you sell in a year walk that way and that will continue to walk like that. They walk that way on the last walk, the same as they did on the first walk. He was cool and calm the whole sale. And when horses do that and you are out of a Grade I winner and you're by the world's best stallion, you're supposed to have a chance to top the sale.”

Of the underbidder out back, Graves said, “I believe Fabricio Buffolo was the underbidder.” Buffolo, Don Alberto's former executive director, was reportedly bidding on behalf of Ben Leon's Besilu Stable. —@JessMartiniTDN

Half to Rachel Alexandra 'Bolts' Clear Early

A half-brother to Hall of Famer Rachel Alexandra (Medaglia d'Oro) gave his first-crop sire Bolt d'Oro a major boost Tuesday when becoming the first yearling to reach the seven-figure mark during an electric second session. After a fast and furious round of bidding, hip 132 hammered for $1.4 million to Larry Best, who did his bidding quietly near the main entrance to the pavilion. John Sikura, whose Hill 'n' Dale Sales consigned the colt on behalf of breeder Dr. Dede McGehee's Heaven Trees Farm, was first on hand to congratulate the Oxo Equine principal.

“This is a special horse and a special opportunity,” said Best, who sold hip 114, a Quality Road colt, for $800,000 earlier in the evening and struck late for a $725,000 City of Light half-brother to his MGSW 'TDN Rising Star' Travel Column (Frosted) (hip 209). “Obviously there are no guarantees. The horse is just beautiful. Then you look at the page and it has Rachel Alexandra on it, which helps. It is 90% physical. However, I love Medaglia d'Oros and Bolt d'Oro is close. He is clearly the standout of the sale. Some people may pay more for a horse and they already have. He didn't vet totally clean, so I can't send him to Eddie Woods tomorrow. It will take three or four months, but he is worth the bet.”

Hip 132's dam Lotta Kim (Roar) was a stakes winner and GSP for owner/breeder Dolphus Morrison and was retired to McGehee's Heaven Trees Farm for her broodmare career. She sustained a life-threatening injury in a racetrack accident which made the foaling process and the recovery difficult, but was carefully managed by McGehee, who is a veterinarian and longtime friend to the late Morrison. Her first foal was two-time Eclipse winner Rachel Alexandra, who romped in the GI Kentucky Oaks for Morrison before being sold privately to Stonestreet Stables and Harold McCormick. She of course went on to win four more Grade Is, including the GI Preakness S., and produced a Grade I winner of her own in Rachel's Valentina (Bernardini). Rachel Alexandra's first foal was 'TDN Rising Star' and young sire Jess's Dream and she has since been retired from the breeding shed due to a post-foaling medical scare in 2013.

Morrison dispersed his breeding stock in 2012, except for Lotta Kim, who was transferred to McGehee's ownership. Stonestreet purchased Lotta Kim's daughter Samantha Nicole (Medaglia d'Oro) for $700,000 at that dispersal.

Lotta Kim's first foal for McGehee was the sentimentally named Dolphus (Lookin at Lucky), who was Grade III-placed. Her next foal Fayeq (Malibu Moon) summoned $800,000 from Shadwell Stable at Keeneland September and he was followed by SP Wooderson (Awesome Again), who was a $400,000 KEESEP buy for Let's Go Stable. Her 2017 colt Airstream (Tapit) RNA'd for $375,000 at that auction and McGehee retained her 3-year-old filly Gladys (Medaglia d'Oro), who has won one of four starts for trainer Kelsey Danner. Lotta Kim did not have a foal in 2019, making hip 132 her first foal to be offered at auction in three years and first to sell at Saratoga, where Rachel Alexandra famously beat older males as a sophomore filly in the 2009 GI Woodward S.. The 20-year-old Lotta Kim had a Bernardini filly this spring named Brilliance.

“I was not expecting it,” said an emotional overwhelmed McGehee after thanking Best. “You always hope for great things. He looked good and they did a great job prepping him. He is probably the best thing that I have ever owned. Thank you to Dolphus Morrison.”

This was the first time Hill 'n' Dale prepped and sold a horse for McGehee's operation.

“This is a beautiful classy, long, smooth gorgeous animal,” said SIkura. “This colt was high class and very popular. We had high expectations and you can say he exceeded them, but I thought he would hit $1 million. Anything after that you can't expect. Larry Best puts a lot of money in the game and I hope he bought a champion. Dede is a lovely lady and this is the first horse we sold for her. He presented like a champion and never turned a hair all week.”

Hip 132 is the first seven-figure offspring for first-crop sire Bolt d'Oro, who brought $630,000 at the 2016 renewal of this auction and went on to win a pair of Grade I events as a juvenile. His introductory fee was $25,000 and he was one of many stallions to have his fee reduced due to the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, going to $15,000. Bolt d'Oro's offspring proved quite popular at Saratoga with 10 yearlings selling for $4.07 million at an average of $267,500. @CDeBernardisTDN

Quality Filly Marks Sentimental Sale for Ryan

It's always a wonderful moment for a breeder when one of their homebreds reaches the $1-million mark, but it was extra special and a bit bittersweet for Mike Ryan Tuesday as his longtime partner and friend, the late Gerry Dilger, was not there to share in their success. Bred under Dilger and Ryan's Santa Rosa Partners banner, hip 160, a daughter of the operation's blue hen Above Perfection (In Excess {Ire}), summoned a cool million from Jeff Drown's Kindred Stables. Drown did his bidding over the phone with Fasig-Tipton President Boyd Browning and after the sale Ryan announced he would stay in for 50% of the filly.

“I stayed in for my half and Jeff bought out the other half. He is a great friend of mine,” Ryan said. “This is a family I'd find it very hard to replace. These kind are collector's items. You don't find them very often. This was a great price for the Dilger family. Gerry's widow, Erin, is very happy. I had great confidence in the filly and I told Jeff I'd stay in if he wanted to partner.”

The bloodstock agent added, “There is very little downside to this filly. The page speaks for itself. She will always have residual value and if she happens to win a stake her value multiplies.”

Ryan and Dilger acquired GSW Above Perfection for $450,000 in foal to Dixie Union at the 2006 FTKNOV sale. She had already produced three foals, none of which had any black-type. The foal she was carrying at the time of her purchase turned out to be Grade I winner Hot Dixie Chick, herself a $340,000 graduate of this sale. Her 2009 foal Abhaath (Hard Spun) was a $400,000 KEESEP yearling and her 2012 Tapit colt Chubasco brought $725,000 at that auction.

In 2014, Above Perfection produced a colt from the first crop of Bodemeister, who sold to Steve Young for $350,000 at Keeneland September. That colt was Always Dreaming who captured the GI Kentucky Derby and GI Florida Derby under the care of Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher.

He was followed by $485,000 KEESEP buy Safwah (Medaglia d'Oro) in 2015 and Above Perfection's 2016 foal was a filly named Positive Spirit (Pioneerof the Nile), who won a Grade II for Dilger and Ryan before selling to Spendthrift for $1.5 million at FTKNOV.

“This is a mare that did so much for the Dilger family and the Ryan family,” Ryan said. “She hadn't produced any stakes winners when we bought her, but she just threw one after another for us. It is a very bittersweet moment because he is not here to celebrate it, enjoy it and see the fruits of his labor. He was the one hands on and I was on the road, so to speak. He did it all. He was a great friend and a terrific guy and partner.”

Above Perfection's recent produce includes an unraced juvenile filly named Beyond Perfection (Curlin) and a 2021 colt by Justify. Sadly, she had to be euthanized shortly after producing that foal.

“We lost the mare this year,” Ryan said. “She had her last foal by Justify and she foundered a few weeks after foaling. She had never been sick a day in her life. She was a 23-year-old mare and she looked like she was 17. But, she foundered after foaling very quickly and we ended up putting her to sleep. We were going to pension her and let her live out her days, but we didn't get to do that.”

Ryan said of all the foals he and Dilger have bred out of Above Perfection, hip 160 reminds him of Hot Dixie Chick the most. Purchased by Barbara Banke's Grace Stables for $435,000 at the FTKFEB juvenile sale, she captured the GI Spinaway S. and GIII Schuylerville S. at the Spa and has produced GSW Pauline's Pearl (Tapit) and MSW Union Jackson (Curlin).

“She actually reminds me of Hot Dixie Chick, a medium-sized, strong, quality filly,” Ryan said. “She has a great mind and Hot Dixie Chick was the same way. When Hot Dixie Chick was training, you'd think she had a temperature, but that was just her demeanor, a very low-tempered filly. This filly is the same way. She takes everything in stride. She reminds me of Hot Dixie Chick and the mare more than Quality Road.”

Hip 160 was consigned by Shack Parrish's Indian Creek. @CDeBernardisTDN

Best Sells, Too

Larry Best, who has frequently made headlines as a buyer over the last several years, is now two-for-two as a seller after a colt by Quality Road (hip 114) bred by Best's OXO Equine went for $800,000 to the online bid of WinStar Farm's Maverick Racing Tuesday evening in Saratoga. The bay colt is out of stakes winner Hung the Moon (Malibu Moon) and is a half-brother to Grade I-placed Brill (Medaglia d'Oro), who was purchased by Best for $1 million at the 2017 Fasig-Tipton July sale and is another mare in his broodmare band.

“It's my second in my homebred I've sold and to be honest with you, I didn't want to sell him,” Best said. “But when you are breeding and you're racing and you have the broodmare population, you have to support it. You can't just keep every horse. This was a beautiful colt. At $750,000, I was taking him home. But when it got to $800,000, I thought whoever owns him, I hope, will have Grade I wins and it will help my mare and Brill, who is also a mare of mine. And it will help fund the whole breeding operation.”

Best's first homebred to go through the sales ring, a colt by Candy Ride (Arg) out of Beyond Grace (Uncle Mo) (hip 111), sold for $350,000 to James Bernhard at last month's Fasig-Tipton July sale.

“I am two-for-two now,” Best said. “This is the only one I am selling today, but I have three or four at Keeneland and two with Fasig. But whoever bought this horse bought an outstanding specimen.”

It didn't take Best long to reinvest his profits, purchasing a colt by Bolt d'Oro half-brother to champion Rachel Alexandra for $1.4 million. —@JessMartiniTDN

Tapit Filly Heads West

A filly by Tapit (hip 139) will head out west to join the California-based stable of trainer John Shirreffs after selling for $800,000 to the bid of bloodstock agent David Ingordo Tuesday in Saratoga. The gray yearling was bred and consigned by Antony Beck's Gainesway, which campaigned her dam Madame Stripes (Arg) (Equal Stripes) to win the 2018 GIII Megahertz S. and a third-place effort in the GI Gamely S. Group 1 placed in her native Argentina, the 9-year-old mare hit the board in six additional graded stakes in California in 2017 and 2018.

“She is a good Tapit and we have been really lucky buying homebreds from Gainesway,” Ingordo said. “She came up here and looked awesome and she had the pedigree. She's going to end up in California and John Shirreffs will train her. The mother ran out there and I liked that. And I noticed Tapit has done well with South American mares. I think [GI Belmont S. winner] Creator was out of a similar pedigree.”

Madame Stripes has a weanling filly by Tapit and was bred back to that Gainesway stalwart.

“She was bred and raised at Gainesway out of a mare that Antony raced in partnership,” Gainesway's Brian Graves said. “We were thrilled with the result. I hear David Ingordo got her and is taking her out to California which is fitting because that was where her mother was successful. We wish them a lot of luck.” —@JessMartiniTDN

Quality Road Colt Gets Session Off to a Fast Start

The first hip through the ring during Tuesday's second session of the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale was a good indicator of what was to come. Hip 111, a Quality Road colt out of GISW Harmonize (Scat Daddy), got things off and running in a big way, selling for $700,000 to West Point Thoroughbreds and Woodford Racing. He was consigned by Brookdale Sales.

“You are always a little nervous bidding on the first horse in the ring,” said West Point racing manager Erin Birkenhauer. “It is kind of a bad post position for the consignor, but you'd think it was a good post position for the buyer. When they have that much quality, it doesn't matter. People noticed he was super athletic. He was pretty much a carbon copy of Quality Road and we loved the Scat Daddy mare. She was a very good racehorse. This colt was a handy-looking horse. You wouldn't be surprised if he was a precocious 2-year-old.”

“We knew he was a top-end colt,” said Birkenhauer. “This was a one-horse consignment, so they aren't going to bring a horse up here that isn't going to create some fireworks. We expected we would have to be pretty strong, which is why we banded together with Bill Farish and his group [Woodford Racing] to get it done.”

Larkin Armstrong purchased Harmonize for $80,000 as a KEESEP yearling and she captured the GI Del Mar Oaks, as well as a pair of Grade IIIs, including Saratoga's Glens Falls S. Armostrong retained her first foal, the now 2-year-old Vocalize (More Than Ready), who is in training with J.J. Pletcher in Ocala.

“I thought this colt would be a good prospect for the sales, so I was very excited,” said Armstrong. “A lot of good agents and trainers were on him, so that was really cool.” @CDeBernardisTDN

Rajput Makes Most of Spa Trip

Indian businessman Kuldeep Singh Rajput made the most of his first trip to Saratoga, with his fledgling Gandharvi Racing operation teaming up with China Horse Club to acquire three yearlings during the two-day boutique auction. The two operations partnered to purchase a filly by Practical Joke (hip 67) for $420,000, a colt by Street Sense (hip 206) for $350,000 and a colt by Good Magic (hip 18) for $325,000.

“While I was growing up back in India, I was really fascinated by horses, their elegance, speed and power,” Rajput said of his early interest in racing. “My great, great grandparents used to breed in India, but after that nobody took it forward. I always had a dream and a goal that one day I would own racehorses and get into the racing and the breeding scene.”

His dreams of a racing stable were put on hold as Rajput built up his digital health company Biofourmis which is focused on developing software-based therapeutics to provide better outcomes for patients, smarter engagement and tracking tools for clinicians, and cost-effective solutions for payers.

“The timing wasn't right, I was building my company, but at some point last year, I had an opportunity to buy a horse in Singapore,” Rajput said. “I bought it and since then I have built relationships and kept expanding, in Australia, in the U.K. and here in the U.S.”

“I have 24 horses, most of them are in pre-training and most of them are yearlings. In the U.S., we have a couple with Todd Pletcher. And in the U.K. we bought one 2-year-old, a Kingman (GB) colt, with China Horse Club. He is going to hopefully race this week.”

That Kingman colt, the €580,000 Arqana May Breeze-Up purchase Kingdom Come (Ire), is expected to be Rajput's first-ever starter when he goes to the post Friday at Newbury.

Rajput's partnership with China Horse Club came about after he purchased a yearling by the group's Group 1 winner Russian Revolution (Aus) (Snitzel {Aus}).

“I ended up buying a yearling in Australia by Russian Revolution and I bought the yearling for Singapore,” Rajput said. “That was the first Russian Revolution in Singapore and Teo [Ah Khing] reached out and congratulated me and he was excited. We started talking and we have built a good relationship and I think we have the same goals.”

Rajput expects his racing empire to eventually encompass breeding.

“We will probably start with the racing and hopefully get some fillies,” he said. “And hopefully have broodmares and breed our own. As you know, it all takes time, but I think we have the right partners.”

The 29-year-old Rajput, based in Boston and Singapore, was making not only his first trip to Saratoga, but also his first foray at an in-person auction.

“It's been fun. It's my first sale in person,” he said. “Most of the sales earlier this year were online. So far, in Australia and other places, I primarily deal with trainers. And trainers, of course, work with some agents. But I try to build good relationship with the trainers. We have Ciaron Maher and Chris Waller in Australia, Todd [Pletcher] here. So far we have done it that way.” —@JessMartiniTDN

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Into Mischief Colt on Top at Saratoga

A colt by leading sire Into Mischief sparked a spirited bidding war Tuesday night at Fasig-Tipton Saratoga, with Coolmore's MV Magnier eventually coming out on top with a winning bid of $2.6 million. Hip 168 was consigned by Gainesway, Agent XIX and is the second foal out of Paola Queen (Flatter), winner of the 2016 GI Test S. at the Spa. Don Alberto Corp. paid $1.7 million for Paola Queen at the 2017 Keeneland November sale.

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Into Mischief Reigns Supreme at Fasig-Tipton July

by Christie DeBernardis & Christina Bossinakis

LEXINGTON, KY – It was a very strong day of trade across the board at Fasig-Tipton's July Selected Yearlings Sale Tuesday, and, to no one's surprise, offspring of Into Mischief proved to be the auction's most coveted offerings. The Spendthrift kingpin accounted for three of the day's top four sellers, including the $800,000 sales topper (hip 123), who sold to Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners and LNJ Foxwoods.

“He is an amazing stallion,” Fasig Tipton President Boyd Browning. Jr. said of Into Mischief. “He is always at the top of the boards. He produces colts, fillies, Derby winners, Classic winners, grass, dirt, short, long. He is the consummate professional as a stallion and there is a high demand for [his offspring], as there should be because of the potential reward on the racetrack.”

The stallion that broke up the Into Mischief party with the co-second highest-priced yearling was Lane's End stalwart Candy Ride (Arg). Perennial leading sires Uncle Mo, Munnings, Hard Spun and Street Sense all accounted for yearlings in the top 10. The only younger stallion to break that barrier was Practical Joke, who has his first runners this year.

Stallions represented by their first yearlings also made a strong showing at the July Sale, which opened Tuesday with the return of the freshman sire showcase. The top sale by a first-crop sire went to MGISW City of Light, who had a $230,000 yearling, and Triple Crown hero Justify was a close second with his lone offspring in the catalogue bringing $210,000. Other freshman sires who made a noteworthy impact were Army Mule, Mor Spirit, Girvin, Mendelssohn, Good Magic, Cloud Computing, West Coast, Tapwrit and Bolt d'Oro.

“It is kind of going back to our roots,” Browning said of the freshman stallion success. “For years our reputation in July was great physicals. We may be forgiving a little bit on pedigree and sire power, but if you have a good-looking colt or filly that looks precocious, that is what we are about in July. It helps build momentum for the farms as well.”

Ned Toffey represents one of those farms trying to get its first-season stallions off to a good start in Spendthrift, which offered yearlings by new stallions Mor Spirit and Free Drop Billy.

“The market has been really good,” Toffey said. “Fasig has always done such a great job with the new sire showcase. And we were obviously very happy watching our new stallions and how they were received. We sold a Mor Spirit for $200,000 and there just seemed to be good activity on all of those.”

A total of 208 yearling summoned $21,608,500 with an average of $103,887 and a median of $80,000. Sixty-nine youngsters failed to find new homes for an RNA rate of 24.9%.

This auction was not held in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic and was instead combined with the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Select and New York-Bred Yearling Sales and held at Newtown Paddocks in September. However, at the 2019 renewal of this sale, 202 yearlings sold for a gross of $18,621,000. The average was $92,183 and the median was $75,000. There were 98 horses led from the ring unsold for an RNA rate of 32.7%.

“It was a strong start to the 2021 yearling sales season,” Browning said. “We were very encouraged when we went to the farms to inspect yearlings by the quality of horses we were seeing, and certainly the 2-year-old sales were encouraging, so we had a lot of optimism going into the sale. I don't think any of us would have been hoping to surpass 2019 numbers, 2019 was a pretty daggone good marketplace, so to be over 2019 is very, very, very encouraging. I am proud of the group of horses our inspection team put together for this sale. Everybody in the marketplace ought to sleep pretty good tonight. It should be a very good yearling market in 2021. We are pretty optimistic about the one coming up in about three weeks [the Saratoga Selected Yearling Sale].”

Justin Casse said he felt there was some trickle down into the middle market, which is often a weak spot in the marketplace.

“The groups I am involved with are generally on the top end ones and it is hard to buy them,” Casse said. “This year is no different. I think we are getting some trickle down to the middle market, which is awesome. I think it is going to be a good year to sell stuff.”

There was a very diverse buying bench on display at this year's July sale with the top 20 horses being purchased by 20 individual buyers. There was also a healthy mix of both end-users and pinhookers buying at all levels.

“There is a depth of buyers and a variety of buyers that really makes you feel good about the spread and the balance of the marketplace,” Browning said.

One of the most active end-users was trainer Ken McPeek, who was quite busy Tuesday, buying a total of 13 yearlings for $1.4 million.

“I think the market seems fair,” the conditioner said. “It seems like there are a lot of people here that are really working it. I'm also glad to get it back to normal as compared to last year when they were all lumped into September and October which was a little bit challenging.”

On the consignor end of things, Four Star Sales accounted for three of the top 10 and Taylor Made Sales Agency and Eaton Sales each had two yearlings in the top 10.

Fasig Tipton's next auction will be held at its New York location with the highly anticipated return of the Saratoga Selected Yearling Sale Aug. 9-10, which will be followed by the Fasig-Tipton New York-Bred Yearling Sale Aug. 15-16.

Into Mischief Filly Sparks Fireworks at Fasig

A daughter of super sire Into Mischief proved to be quite a standout at Newtown Paddocks Tuesday, inspiring a furious round of bidding across the pavilion from some of the industry's heavy hitters. It came down to OXO Equine's Larry Best, bloodstock agent Steve Young, and Eclipse Thoroughbreds' Aron Wellman in the final bids, but it was Wellman who came out the victor at $800,000. Hip 123 is the second-highest priced yearling to sell at the Fasig July Sale in the last 10 years, following the Medaglia d'Oro filly Brill, who brought $1 million from Best here in 2017.

Bidding upstairs alongside bloodstock agent Jacob West, Wellman announced that Eclipse would be partnering on the filly with the Roth family's LNJ Foxwoods. The Roths' bloodstock agent Alex Solis was the first to shake Wellman's hand following the sale.

“She is an absolute queen,” Wellman said. “She really stood out heads and shoulders above everything else here, with all respect to the other entrants, of course. As soon as I laid eyes on her, I picked up the phone and called Alex within seconds of seeing her. I knew we were going to need to bring out the big guns, so I am very grateful to Alex, Jason [Litt] and their team, and of course, the Roth family. They've had extreme success with [champion] Covfefe by Into Mischief. Eclipse has had some success with the sire. She has a beautiful page on the bottom side and from a physical perspective, she's a knockout.”

As for the price, Wellman said, “She was craftily placed, that's for sure. It was no surprise that we had to go to war for her. I think all the heavyweights were on her. We were right in the neighborhood of what we thought she was going to be, maybe a bump or two more. Fillies like her are hard to get your hands on and Alex and I thought this was the right one to take a swing for the fences.”

Hip 123 is out of the unraced Indian Charlie mare Cashing Tickets, a full-sister to MGSW sire Conveyance. The Into Mischief/Indian Charlie cross has already produced the likes of Grade I winner Dayoutoftheoffice and MGSW Frank's Rockette.

Jack Sims's McKenzie Bloodstock purchased Cashing Tickets for $55,000 carrying a foal by Bayern at the 2016 Keeneland November Sale. The resulting foal is a now-4-year-old filly named Leggs Galore, who has won three stakes for her breeder and most recently finished second in the GIII Wilshire S. at Santa Anita.

“She has always been a really special horse,” said Lyn Burleson whose Burleson Farms consigned the filly. “We haven't sold over here in several years, but we had a client that wanted to bring a few over here, so we tried to round out the consignment. We decided to stick her in here thinking that hopefully she was going to be one of the better individuals in here and stand out. That was our reasoning behind it and it worked out great for us.” @CDeBernardisTDN

Candy Ride Colt Brings $350K at F-T July

The buyers were warmed up by the time hip 111, a colt by Candy Ride (Arg), entered Fasig-Tipton's ring Tuesday afternoon. With bidding rising rapidly for the son of the 6-year-old mare Beyond Grace (Uncle Mo), the volleys slowly subsided, before finally ending with a final $350,000 bid from Baton Rouge, Louisiana resident James Bernhard, seated inside the pavilion during the bidding. The colt's breeder, Larry Best, came over to congratulate the successful bidder immediately following the sale.

“He's a lovely Candy Ride and Taylor Made did a lovely job with him. He was one of the best horses in the sale,” said Equine Analysis System's Matthew Weinmann, acting as agent for Bernhard. “We're going to go to Steve Asmussen and he's going to get broke at [Keith Asmussen]'s farm in Texas and see how he does.”

He continued, “We do run a system where we take physiological data. He came up on our model as one of the colts who are most likely to have success, so that's the reason we went after him.”

Explaining the exchange between Best and Bernhard, Weinmann added, “Larry came over to congratulate us after the purchase and to tell us he has the year-older [full-brother] to this colt and that he hoped he could have some success ahead of us.”

The Apr. 4 foal is out of Beyond Grace, a $1.5-million Fasig-Tipton Florida purchase for Best's OXO Equine. The yearling is the second foal out of the unplaced mare, who is also responsible for a year-older colt by the Lane's End sire.

“I told Larry Best that he would bring in the $250,000-350,000 range, so it was right where I thought,” said Taylor Made's Frank Taylor. “He is a very good representation of Candy Ride. He is just like his sire, he's well balanced with a beautiful head, neck and shoulder and good muscling. He's a little bit small footed, but that goes with the Candy Rides.

“I think the market is starting to realize that Candy Ride is becoming a sire of sires with Twirling Candy, and Mastery looks like he has a shot. I think in the back of some of these buyers' minds, if you get one of these Candy Rides in the summer, you will probably be in good shape.”

Later in the sale, Bernhard purchased hip 133, a colt by Empire Maker out of Clever Beauty (Indian Charlie) for $160,000.

Best Gets Good First Experience as a Seller

Larry Best has proven to be a force to be reckoned with among buyers at all the major North American Thoroughbred auctions, consistently purchasing some of the most coveted and expensive horses. The OXO Equine principal got a taste for what it's like on the other side of the sales industry, selling his first homebred, a Candy Ride (Arg) colt (hip 111), to James Bernhard for $350,000 Tuesday in Lexington.

“This is the first homebred I've ever sold and the first horse I've ever sold,” said a visibly pleased Best after shaking hands with the buyer. “It felt so good to go and congratulate the buyer! Everyone has always come up to congratulate me after I purchased their horse and now I know how it feels. It makes you want to come back. We got a fair value for the horse and hope he does well.”

Best added, “If you have quality fillies and quality horses, they should sell well. I have 35 mares and will probably go up to 40, so every year I will be a seller as well as a buyer.”

Best has been very active at the November sales the past two years as he began to build his broodmare band. Some of his top purchases include GI Breeders' Cup Distaff heroine Blue Prize (Arg) (Pure Prize), who topped the 2019 Fasig-Tipton November Sale at $5 million, and GISW Concrete Rose (Twirling Candy), a $1.95-million purchase at last term's Keeneland November Sale. Many of these mares were purchased to support his new stallions, GISW Instilled Regard (Arch) and GSW Instagrand (Into Mischief), both of whom stand at Taylor Made.

“I do like the breeding,” Best said. “I like breeding to sell and also breeding to race. With Instagrand and Instilled Regard, I am excited about keeping quite a few of those and racing them, but, of course, I will also have to sell some. We had a good year with Instagrand. He got 190 mares in his first year.”

Best has also retained some of his expensive race fillies for his breeding operation, like hip 111's dam Beyond Grace (Uncle Mo), who was a $1.5-million Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream Sale acquisition. She is a full-sister to MSP Mighty Mo.

“Larry bought the mare at the 2-year-old sale and then he bred her and raised the foal at Taylor Made,” said Frank Taylor. “We were a little concerned that people would question why Larry would sell a horse rather than buy. But anybody who is a buyer of horses has to become a seller at some point. Larry has a lot of horses now and we went through them and he let us pick out some horses that we thought were nice and would sell well. He has a lot of really nice pinhooks that he bought as weanlings, but they had large numbers on them, so we thought that would scare people away. So having a nice homebred that doesn't have this pricetag on it is ideal. We hope he'll become known as, not only one of the great buyers of racehorses, but also a seller like WinStar and Stonestreet.” @CDeBernardisTDN

Making Mischief Late at F-T July

The crowd had begun to thin and the action was drawing to a close Tuesday, and it appeared that the day's highlights could already be spotted in the rearview mirror. However, a filly by leading sire Into Mischief, hip 339, had yet to enter the ring, and when all was said and done, the filly garnered a final bid of $350,000. Bidding on the phone while seated inside the pavilion was Bobby Powell, general manager for Mike Rutherford's Manchester Farm. The yearling was consigned by Four Star Sales, acting as agent for her breeder, Spendthrift Farm.

“She will go to the farm tomorrow, and I'll turn her out and let her be a horse for a while,” said Powell, who confirmed that Rutherford had been on the phone throughout the proceedings. “She'll probably go to Eddie Woods some time in the fall and then we'll get her going.”

While Powell did not immediately confirm who the filly will ultimately be trained by, he mentioned that the operation currently employs several trainers, including Steve Asmussen, Bill Mott and Ken McPeek.

The Apr. 5 foal is out of MSP Anahauc (Henny Hughes), who had been purchased privately by Rutherford early on before selling to Spendthrift for $160,000 at the Fasig-Tipton November sale in 2016. Rutherford is also directly associated with the yearling's granddam Foxcaller (Beau Genius), in addition to that mare's stakes-winning offspring Gangbuster (Langfuhr) and Dreamcall (Midnight Lute) and GSP Glorified (Honour and Glory).

“[Rutherford] has four to five generations of that family,” said Powell. “And Into Mischief? What can be said about him that hasn't already been said?”

And while Manchester had previously let go of Anahauc, the farm still boards Foxcaller and Dreamcall, according to Powell.

“She was a very good individual,” he said of the purchase. “She had a lot of Into Mischief in her, but we could definitely see the family in her. We just hope she's as good to us as the rest of her family has been.”

Commenting on the amount paid for the yearling during the buoyant market, Powell added, “It was a lot of money to pay, but when you know as much as we know about the family then we thought it was fair. Spendthrift does a really good job–I stayed informed on the filly all along.”

Tuesday's yearling session highlighted yet another powerful showing by Spendthrift's marquee stallion Into Mischief, who currently leads the nation with over $13.5 million in earnings. At the conclusion of Tuesday's sale, a total of five yearlings by the sire realized $1.8 million and an average of $360,000.

“We debated a lot about what sale to take her to and we thought she would be really strong here,” explained Spendthrift General Manager New Toffey. “She is quick-looking and athletic. She's typical of the Into Mischiefs and is very good minded. She was just an overall nice individual. It's a good position to be in because if we didn't get her sold, we were happy to race her ourselves.”

In total, Spendthrift sold four of six of its yearlings Tuesday, with the Into Mischief filly topping the nursery's receipts for the day.

“Most everything that we have comes through the ring and we just try to put a fair valuation on them,” he explained. “If we get it, then that's great, and if we don't, we're happy to go on and run them. It was very fair money for that filly.”

Into Mischief Filly Bound for Juvenile Sale

Those who took a liking to hip 320, a daughter of red-hot sire Into Mischief, will get another chance to take her home next year at a 2-year-olds in training sale, according to Justin Casse, who purchased the filly Tuesday for $345,000. The bloodstock agent, who signed the ticket as Bullet Bloodstock, was acting on behalf of an undisclosed pinhooking syndicate.

Casse was quite familiar with the bay's family as he pinhooked her mother Vaudevillian (Distorted Humor), a $170,000 KEESEP buy who sold privately after RNA'ing for $215,000 at EASMAY. The now 7-year-old mare is a half-sister to MGISW and millionaire Life At Ten (Malibu Moon).

“When you find something you like by that sire, I think you have to dig in deep to buy it,” Casse said. “I had actually pinhooked the mare. I bought and sold the mother. She was a nice model and I think this individual is a good representation of both the sire and the dam's sire [Distorted Humor]. She looks fast, looks powerful, looks quick. She has a nice hip and is a good mover.”

The filly was consigned by Taylor Made on behalf of her breeder, PTK.

To no one's surprise, the offspring of leading sire Into Mischief continued to be in high demand during Tuesday's auction. He was represented by a total of five yearlings who sold for $1.8-million and averaged $345,000, including the $800,000 sale-topping filly. @CDeBernardisTDN

Munnings On the Money at F-T July

Holding the distinction as one of only six horses to surpass the $300,000 mark at Fasig Tuesday was hip 178, a filly by Munnings out of the 8-year-old mare Haraawa (Medaglia d'Oro). Consigned by Four Star Sales, the Feb. 3 filly was purchased by Jacob West, acting as agent for Robert and Lawana Low.

“She is a beautiful filly, well bred and well prepared,” said West, explaining the dark bay's allure. “She was well spotted in this sale and as a result, a lot of people were on her. It was right where we had priced her and we were lucky to get her.”

The Florida-bred filly, who was purchased for $92,000 at the Fasig-Tipton November sale last fall, is the second foal out of his unraced dam, also responsible for 3-year-old Gregory's Pride (Tamarkuz).

Hip 178's $300,000 price tag represents a notable increase over the Coolmore stallion's highest-priced yearling in 2020, a filly out of Show Me (Lemon Drop Kid) that brought $240,000 at Keeneland September before being pinhooked for $550,000 at the OBS March sale earlier this season.

“At the end of the day, Munnings is a very good racehorse sire and a good sales sire, obviously,” West said. “He is just a solid stallion. A son of Speightstown and he was very talented himself and he is passing that on to his offspring, including [Grade I winner] Kimari.”

According to West, the filly will go to newly named Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher, who also trains Grade I winner Colonel Liam (Liam's Map) for the Lows.

“She is the standard type of horse that they like: well bred and good physicals, they rely on me for that,” said West. “Mr. and Mrs. Low are not just hands-off owners. I would put them up against many of the sport's pedigree experts out there. They know a lot about families. So when they check those boxes, they let me be my guide, which is how this filly came up. This horse checked all the boxes. We were happy to get her.”

McPeek Strikes Early and Often

Trainer Ken McPeek came out swinging right from the start of Tuesday's Fasig-Tipton July sale, kicking off the day's purchases with hip 2 before ultimately signing the ticket for 13 yearlings for a total of $1.4 million during the one-session auction.

Hip 2, a colt by first-season sire Tapwrit, brought a final bid of $100,000. Consigned by Four Star Sales, the yearling is out of the Curlin mare Black Coronas.

McPeek's other early expenditures Tuesday included a $160,000 son of Cloud Computing (hip 51). Out of My Lady Lauren (Hard Spun), the dark bay was consigned by Gainesway. The colt hails from the family of Pioneerof the Nile.

During the early action, McPeek purchased eight yearlings within the first 76 offerings, all of them by first or second-crop stallions.

“It's just the way it landed,” he said of his early purchases. “I called my clients and told them it's going to be a lot of gunfire early.”

Also among the first-season sires secured by McPeek Tuesday were: hip 4 (f, Mo Town); hip 6 (c, Free Drop Billy); hip 18 (f, Awesome Slew); hip 31 (c, Good Samaritan) and hip 76 (f, Always Dreaming).

“This crop of first-season stallions seems to be pretty impressive,” he said. “The Cloud Computing I thought was just a fantastic colt. The Always Dreaming filly was a beautiful horse out of a Pure Prize mare. I also bought a Tapwrit who is out of a Curlin mare and he was a beauty, too. The Awesome Slew is a Florida-bred and although I try to stick with Kentucky-breds, she was really well made. She looked like she would be fast and we spend time in Florida, so it seemed like it was worth the shot.”

While some of his purchases appeared to be a chip off the old block, McPeek explained that wasn't always the case.

“I don't think [the Free Drop Billy] looked anything like his sire,” he said. “He is out of a Bertrando mare and he was a very good horse. I didn't see on the pedigree where it was coming from among the physicals. But I thought the Always Dreaming filly really looked like her daddy.”

The Kentucky-based trainer also secured hip 19, a filly by first-season sire Collected. The chestnut is out of Film Idol (Bernardini), a half-sister to the Grade I winning turf mare Film Maker (Dynaformer).

“I thought the Collected filly was exceptional, physically speaking,” McPeek said.

Asked whether he had made a concerted effort to buy yearlings by young stallions, he said, “I buy a lot of horses by first-season sires. And I buy them on physicals. And I think Fasig does a great job recruiting horses by first-crop stallions that have great conformation. I am not scared of buying those horses.”

Later in the session, McPeek bagged his most expensive purchase of the afternoon, a colt by Dialed In who sold for $185,000. Consigned by Burleson Farm, hip 146 is out of Dreamy Lady (Giant's Causeway). McPeek also secured a filly by Goldencents (hip 272) for $175,000 and hip 177, a Midshipman filly out of Grouse Grind (First Samurai), for $100,000.

Graves Hits Another Homerun With Army Mule Colt

Brian Graves has enjoyed plenty of pinhooking success at the yearling sales through the years and Tuesday was no different. The horseman purchase hip 8, a colt from the first crop of Army Mule, for $40,000 at OBSWIN and sold him to WinStar's Maverick Racing for $200,000 at Newtown Paddocks.

“I bought him with Danielle Jones at OBS,” said Graves, who offered the colt in the Gainesway consignment. “Danielle had him the whole time and did a good job with him, so I was glad to see her do well.”

He continued, “We are always pleased when we can make a profit, but we are even more pleased when we can watch them go on to do good things on the racetrack. [WinStar's] Elliott Walden has done really well with a lot of the horses he has bought from us in the past. One of them was [MGISW] Audible (Into Mischief). We appreciate his support and wish him the best.”

When asked what attracted him to this Florida-bred son of Congarette (Congaree), Graves said, “He was a refined horse with real definition to his neck and shoulder. He also had a good hip and hind leg, but he moves really freely and loosely.”

A $35,000 EASOCT yearling turned $825,000 EASMAY 2-year-old purchase, Army Mule (Friesan Fire) made just three starts, but won them all impressively, capping his career with a win in the GI Carter H. He stood for $10,000 when Caperlane Farm bred this colt in 2019 and now stands for $7,500 at Hill 'n' Dale.

“I saw several Army Mules that I liked,” said Graves. “It seems he is getting a nice refined horse and that is the type of horse that I like.”

Four yearlings by Army Mule grossed $455,000 Tuesday with an average of $113,750. @CDeBernardisTDN

The post Into Mischief Reigns Supreme at Fasig-Tipton July appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Selling Around The Dispersal: Sellers Navigated Uncharted Waters In Fasig-Tipton July Breeding Stock Sale

Fasig-Tipton's auctions are well-known for their flexibility when it comes to adding late entries to an established sale, but Monday's inaugural July Breeding Stock Sale introduced an entirely new marketplace segment with the clock winding down.

The Breeding Stock Sale was introduced by Fasig-Tipton on June 15, less than a month before the auction was to take place on July 12. The initial announcement centered around the Far From Over/Fountain of Youth Dispersal, but it invited other sellers to enter the catalog with their mares and foals to take advantage of the tentpole liquidation.

Summer broodmare sales are uncommon on the U.S. landscape, save for an urgent dispersal here and there, meaning the July Breeding Stock Sale would be an untested marketplace in a business that clings harder to the sure things each passing year. Entering the sale would be a leap of faith, with the hopes that buyers would be there to catch the horses on the other side.

How successful that leap was depended on who one asked around the sales grounds on Monday afternoon, but the general ethos in the new offering didn't change from what one might see in any other sale.

“It seems like if you have something of quality, in foal to a quality horse, they're going to buy them, and I don't think it matters if it's now or November,” said Gainesway's Brian Graves.

Gainesway handled the breeding stock session's highest-priced offering, Jeweled Princess, a Cairo Prince mare who sold in foal to Horse of the Year Gun Runner to Stoneriggs Farm for $225,000.

Graves said the mare's owner contacted him about her potential chances in the new sale when it was announced, and they agreed she could do well in the venue, which was a common refrain among several consignors when it came to recruiting prospects for the auction, even on relatively short notice.

“When Fasig announced that they were going to have that dispersal, and they were opening up, the phone really started ringing for us,” said Mark Taylor of Taylor Made Sales Agency. “It wasn't a lot of arm-twisting, it was really more people calling and saying, 'I really hadn't thought about it, but I've got this mare I'd like to turn into some cash; I'm going into the yearling market, or whatever, and I just would rather get the money now, as opposed to pay bills and wait until November.'”

Consignors said the opportunity for mid-season liquidity on the open market was one of the sale's biggest selling points their clients discussed when considering a mare for the sale.

“Generally speaking, we did reach out, but didn't get a great reception,” said Derek MacKenzie of Vinery Sales. “Most of the ones we got, the people called us – partnership dispersal type stuff. Most people thought it was better to wait until fall.”

MacKenzie said the market showed up for his mare in foal to Omaha Beach, who is likely to be an early leader among commercial sires when his first foals hit the sales ring later this year. However, there was not as much depth as he'd hoped for horses below that level, and having a foal on the ground next to the mare was not necessarily the selling point one might assume it would be.

The buyer ranks made it clear that young mares were a priority on Monday. Of the six horses to sell for six-figure prices, only one had more than two foals on her produce record.

“I probably would have missed the market a little bit,” said Fasig-Tipton president Boyd Browning. “I was really surprised with how well some of the in-foal mares and broodmare prospects sold that weren't part of the dispersal. I was a little surprised that some of the mares with foals at their side didn't bring a little more money, but it's making a significant commitment to buy a mare that might have five or six foals on the ground. We've seen that be an area of weakness in the marketplace, whether it's in November, January, or February, and it's still there.”

However, that's not to say having a mare with a foal at her side made her an instant disqualifier in the July marketplace. Taylor said that the sale's placement on the calendar, before the foals are weaned from their mothers, has the potential to open up a more diverse group of buyers in time.

“We're pretty new into this, but I definitely thinks it was a plus,” he said. “It gets weanling pinhookers basically bidding on mares. Then, it gets mare buyers bidding also, so it just opens it up. A mare we sold for $40,000, the baby by her side was a Big Brown, but it was a New York-bred, and a really good foal. She's in foal to Maclean's Music, and I think a lot of people said, 'Man, if she can have a Maclean's Music that looks like that Big Brown, I'm rolling.'”

So much of selling a Thoroughbred comes down to getting the horse to look their best when they arrive at the sales grounds, and for those who might be looking to sell a young horse as a weanling in the fall, Taylor said moving ahead in the calendar to July might help a few horses be at their most marketable.

“When you're selling foals in the fall that have been weaned, it eliminates at least half of the foals from being good candidates, because the weaning process makes them go into a crash,” he said. “They get a weaning crash, where they lose weight, they lose their topline, they don't look as good as they did before, so this allows you to sell a foal that looks in good shape – still got that milk fat, looks good – but when you pull them off the mare, a lot of them just go really downhill, and you can't get them back to where they should be by November. This is just a whole new way to do commerce surrounding foals.

“A lot of times, you go look at all these babies before they're weaned, and I'll be giving a lot of high grades,” Taylor continued, “but then you go back and look at them in October when they've all just been weaned for a few months, all my grades go down, because they're pot-bellied, they've got no top line, they look like little guppies.”

From the group of six horses that sold for $100,000 or more on Monday from the breeding stock session, five of them came from outside the tentpole dispersal, proving there was buyer interest beyond the headline act.

There likely won't be a dispersal to serve as the foundation of future July Breeding Stock Sale catalogs, should it become an annual part of Fasig-Tipton's calendar, but solid returns among the sellers who took the chance in the new market could help fill catalogs in the future.

“The people that brought them thought there was an opportunity, and I agree with them,” said Pat Costello of consignor Paramount Sales. “I think it was a success.”

The post Selling Around The Dispersal: Sellers Navigated Uncharted Waters In Fasig-Tipton July Breeding Stock Sale appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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