Don’t Jump the Gun, His Runners Are Coming On Fast

The team at Three Chimneys could hardly have asked for a better start at stud for champion Gun Runner. The most expensive horse to retire to stud for the 2018 season, he filled a 171-mare book his first year, was the leading first-crop weanling sire the following year with an average exceeding $275,000, and again topped his class with his yearlings in 2020.

By most accounts, the son of Candy Ride (Arg) has not done a thing wrong in his early stud career and yet, as his first crop was building a foundation in training early on this year, they were pigeonholed into the theory that they might take some time to develop into top form.

After all, Gun Runner was competitive at the highest level in his early career, but it wasn't until late November of his sophomore campaign that he scored his first of six Grade I victories in the Clark H. and from there, was nearly unbeatable against top company as he earned his Horse of the Year title at four, capped off with a GI Pegasus World Cup win at five.

The stereotype doesn't go without strong reasoning then, so the Gun Runners will just have to prove the doubters wrong.

Perhaps no one can provide more insight on how Gun Runner's first crop is progressing than the one who trained the dual champion.

Steve Asmussen currently has seven Gun Runner 2-year-olds in training at Keeneland, many of which he is pointing to debut once the Churchill Downs Spring Meet is underway. He said that each of these juveniles received glowing praise from his father Keith when they were first put under saddle at the family's training center in Laredo, Texas.

“We're very interested in wanting Gun Runner to succeed because of all he's done for us from an emotional aspect, but from all the conversations I've had from my father, he consistently talks about how good their attitude is about taking what you're doing with them. They're very businesslike, they keep their appetite and continue to get stronger. Straightforward is how he describes them.”

Asmussen stressed that the most common thread found in all of the Gun Runners is their mentality.

“They have very good minds about them,” he said. “They're extremely sound and mentally mature. They're showing some talent, so we're more than a little excited about them.”

On Monday, three of Asmussen's Gun Runner trainees, all Winchell Thoroughbred homebreds, had their first timed gate works at Keeneland. The first, a colt out of SW Louisville First (Girolamo) named Under the Gun went a half mile in :47.40 (5/38). Asmussen said he told his team to slow down the next set. Red Run, a colt out of the Tapit mare Red House, breezed in :47.80 (8/38) while Gunite, the son of 2015 Bolton Landing S. winner Simple Surprise (Cowboy Cal), worked in 49.20 (19/38).

“It's not hard on them to move fast,” Asmussen noted. “Gun Runner was that way too. We had Gun Runner at Keeneland at a similar time when he was a 2-year-old, and it was the same thing-very intelligent, athletic and forward in his training. He was capable of working and training and racing as fast as horses can do.”

$1.7 million Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream Gun Runner colt is now settling into training at Santa Anita. | Fasig-Tipton

Another Gun Runner that may not be too far off from debut made headlines a few weeks ago at the Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream Sale. Selling as Hip 181, the colt out of the stakes-winning Ohio-bred mare Needmore Flattery (Flatter) brought $1.7 million as the second-highest purchase of the sale. Agent Gary Young purchased the April foal on behalf of Zedan Racing Stable to train under the tutelage of Bob Baffert.

“He was the spitting image of Gun Runner,” Young recalled. “There was no DNA test necessary for him. I loved his work on the track and then I went to see him and I thought him and the Nyquist [Hip 28, $2.6 million sale topper] were two very, very nice colts. Between Baffert, Mr. Zedan and I, we decided that the Gun Runner would be the one we would go for and we were very happy to get him.”

Young reported that the colt is now thriving in training at Santa Anita.

“He's galloping there and Bob is very happy with him,” he said. “His barn habits are terrific. He goes to the track and trains and then goes back in his stall and lies down and relaxes all day. So there's absolutely no buyer's remorse so far.”

Young explained that he has always expected Gun Runner's progeny to progress early on in their career.

“Gun Runner was built like a fast horse and he was a very athletic horse,” he said. “I wasn't surprised that the Gun Runners are showing precocity, but the people who are more surprised probably base that on how Gun Runner got better as his career progressed. He wasn't a bad two-year-old or three-year-old, he just wasn't dominating as much as he was later on when he was practically unbeatable.”

Young recalled watching Gun Runner train in California leading up to his memorable victory in the GI Breeders' Cup Classic.

“This horse trained like there was no way he could lose that race. You could tell by watching him train that it was going to take one hell of a horse to beat him. He definitely got better as he got older, but he was a good 2-year-old too, which is a very good combination.”

Speaking from his hotel in Ocala, Young said he has his eye on a few more juveniles by the same sire at the upcoming OBS Spring Sale.

“I'm very bullish on Gun Runner,” he said. “I could foresee myself buying more of them maybe even this year. It would be no surprise if he turned out to be a very good sire. Candy Ride hasn't had a whole lot of sons at stud yet, but he was a freak of a racehorse that turned out to be a very good sire, so you would expect his sons to make good sires.”

On the first day of the OBS breeze show on Monday, a Gun Runner colt selling as Hip 118 from the Eisaman Equine consignment and out stakes winner Salamera (Successful Appeal) fired a :10 bullet.

Consignor Barry Eisaman said he was not surprised by the speedy work.

“His breezes had been showing us that kind of speed any time you asked him,” he said. “He's a really big colt and a classy mover. It's astonishing that he has as much speed as he does because he doesn't look like a sprinter at all; he looks like a classic, two-turn sort of creature.”

Eisaman said that he has worked with roughly half a dozen Gun Runner juveniles at his farm this spring.

Hip 118 is one of nine Gun Runner juveniles currently entered in the OBS Spring Sale. | Tiborphoto, courtesy Barry Eisaman

“All of them have excellent minds, including this colt,” he noted. “This colt will work like that and then come back and act like a sensible 3-year-old. Nothing rattles him. If I was rooting for Gun Runner's success with his first crop, I would think he has a pretty good chance.”

Eisaman said he was once a believer that Gun Runner might not see a fast start at stud with his first 2-year-olds, but that working with them this year has proven him otherwise.

“All the Gun Runners that I have act precocious,” he said. “When I was looking at them as yearlings or when we were first breaking them and watching them gallop, I would have agreed wholeheartedly that they're probably going to be later. But as I started to do little baby breezes with them, they all displayed plenty of speed.”

A winner in his first two starts as a juvenile, Gun Runner should have all the potential to produce the same with his first runners. But even so, just as the best was still to come for Gun Runner's career, the same may be said someday for his progeny.

“He was a special talent,” Asmussen said. “As we all know, he was very good at two and three against good company, but he was Horse of the Year as a 4-year-old. Who he was at four and five is as good as it gets, so it's hard to measure that. We were pleasantly surprised that his progeny are showing plenty of ability now, like him, but the exciting part is the fact that his last four to five starts were so phenomenal and when he retired at five, he was still trending up.”

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Young Sires Reign At The Top Of Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream Sale

The Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream Selected 2-Year-Olds In Training Sale was the first casualty of COVID-19's havoc on the auction calendar, and as one of the market's first checkpoints when the juvenile season came back around in 2021, this particular renewal would reveal plenty about the state of the upper market.

That's a lot of weight to carry, but the auction's returns presented plenty of reasons for optimism, especially for sellers of juveniles by young sires.

Returns were down across the board, but not in the kind of way that should sound alarms. The most recent Gulfstream sale in 2019 was a record edition in nearly every measurable way, and pinhookers were buying into a different, less stable market in the fall of 2020 than they had been in previous yearling seasons, so there were plenty of valid causes.

What makes this slight decline palatable is the fact that Wednesday's sale still produced some of the best returns in the auction's history.

A total of 67 horses changed hands on Wednesday for revenues of $25,360,000, the second-highest gross since the sale moved to Gulfstream Park in 2015. The average sale price was $378,507 (third-highest since 2015), the median price was $300,000 (second-highest in that time span), and the buyback rate finished at 36 percent.

Where the sale saw its most drastic change was in its upper-middle market, similar to the squeeze seen at the higher-end yearling sales in 2020.

Three horses changed hands for $1 million or more on Wednesday, which was down from six in the record-setting 2019 edition, but it was equal with the 2018 sale. However, the 13 juveniles that sold for $500,000 or more was down from 20 in 2019 and 19 the year before that.

The top of the market at the Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream sale is often a playground for the most proven sires, but this year's edition turned that notion on its head.

Of the 11 horses to bring $550,000 or more, eight of them came from the first or second crops of their respective sires.

Leading the way was Hip 28, a second-crop Nyquist colt who sold to M.V. Magnier of the Coolmore partnership for $2.6 million.

The bay colt garnered plenty of attention following Monday's under-tack show after breezing an eighth of a mile in :9 4/5 seconds, giving him sole possession of the day's fastest time at the distance.

Consigned by Wavertree Stables, agent, the colt is the first foal out of the winning Smart Strike mare Spinning Wheel. The dam is a half-sister to classic-placed Ride On Curlin and stakes winner Space Mountain. His third dam is the Grade 1 winner Victory Ride.

Magnier, typically a big player at the Gulfstream sale, also secured Hip 67, an Uncle Mo colt, in partnership with West Bloodstock for $1.3 million for the day's third-highest price.

The full-brother to Grade 1 winner Dream Tree is out of the winning Afleet Alex mare Afleet Maggi, whose foals also include stakes-placed O'Maggi. Grade 1 winner Golden Ticket is in the colt's extended family, along with Grade 2 winner Academy Award.

Wavertree Stables also consigned this colt, who breezed an eighth in :10 seconds flat.

The sale's second-highest price came for Hip 181, a first-crop Gun Runner colt who went to Gary C. Young, agent, for $1.7 million.

The chestnut colt, named Needmore Guns, is the second foal out of the stakes-winning Flatter mare Needmore Flattery. He was consigned by Hartley/De Renzo Thoroughbreds, agent, and he breezed an eighth in :10 1/5 seconds.

Gun Runner joins Triple Crown winner American Pharoah as the only two stallions to hammer down a seven-figure horse from their first crop at the Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream sale since the auction moved to Gulfstream Park in 2015.

Other first-year stallions to with horses sold at $550,000 or more included Practical Joke, American Freedom, and Arrogate. Darley's second-year duo of Nyquist and Frosted were also represented at that price level, with Nyquist having three sold in that range.

To view the auction's full results, click here.

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Fireworks at the Top at Fasig Gulfstream

by Jessica Martini & Christie DeBernardis

The Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream Sale returned from its one-year hiatus with plenty of fireworks at the top of the market as a diverse buying bench competed with enthusiasm for the upper-end offerings in the track's paddock Wednesday afternoon. A colt by Nyquist, who had breezed the bullet furlong in :9 4/5 during Monday's under-tack preview, brought the boutique auction's top price when selling for $2.6 million to Coolmore. The Irish operation returned to secure a colt by Nyquist's sire Uncle Mo for $1.3 million. Both colts were consigned by Ciaran Dunne's Wavertree Stables. A son of Gun Runner purchased by Amr Zedan rounded out the trio of seven-figure transactions when selling for $1.7 million from the consignment of Hartley/DeRenzo Thoroughbreds. Nyquist and Uncle Mo combined represented five of the auction's top 10 prices.

“It was a good start to the 2021 2-year-old sale season for us,” Fasig-Tipton President Boyd Browning, Jr. said at the close of business Wednesday. “We are thrilled to be back at Gulfstream Park. I think it was a typical 2-year-old sale, great demand and great interest at the top of the marketplace for what are perceived to be the quality offerings. The most encouraging thing in that regard was the diversity of buyers across the board. There were lots of bidders willing to spend plenty of money.”

A total of 67 horses sold at the Gulfstream sale Wednesday for an aggregate of $25,360,000. The average was $378,507 and the median was $300,000. In 2019, 59 head grossed $29,115,000 for an average of $493,475 and a median of $375,000.

“Overall, I think it was a healthy marketplace,” Browning said. “People want quality horses and I think it bodes well for the rest of the 2-year-old sales and gives us encouragement for the yearling sales starting this summer.”

But the margin between perceived quality and the lower-end offerings was razor thin. Of the 186 juveniles catalogued, 105 went through the ring and 38 of those failed to sell.

“The 2-year-old game is still a game of performance and vetting,” Browning said. “There are even more hoops to jump through than there used to be. You have to breeze well in a good time, gallop out well, make a good video and the veterinary scrutiny increases every year.”

Coolmore has been a major presence on the Gulfstream buying bench for the last several auctions and Wednesday was the second sale in a row the operation purchased the auction's topper. But after the tickets were signed, Coolmore's Michael Tabor issued a warning salvo aimed at The Jockey Club's impending cap on number of mares bred to stallions born after 2020.

“The Jockey Club stallion cap will reduce the value of these horses from next year, so it's hard to imagine prices like this being repeated unless the horse is to go abroad,” Tabor said.

A number of pinhookers recorded impressive scores during the auction. Wavertree's $2.6-million Nyquist colt had been purchased for $160,000 as a yearling and the consignment's $1.3-million Uncle Mo had been purchased for $335,000. Dean DeRenzo and Randy Hartley had purchased the $1.7-million Gun Runner for $140,000 last fall.

“It's so strong for certain horses, but overall it's very, very thin,” said Becky Thomas, who consigned a filly by Uncle Mo on behalf of Cody Autrey who went from $380,000 yearling to $825,000 juvenile. “But there were fireworks. I think it was great for our whole horse economy. Hoby [Kight]'s horse ($650,000 Frosted) was a home run, Randy and Dean's horse was just a massive home run, Eddie [Woods], Ciaran, everybody had some really good home runs. We had a solid sale. Unfortunately, for not every horse, but we are grateful to be out and moving ahead.”

Bloodstock agent Jacob West saw familiar trends in the sales results.

“Good horses are selling,” West said. “The ones that miss the mark aren't. Unfortunately that's just the reality of our business. We are all looking for the same thing. And when you offer it up in the market, if you have what everybody wants, you get overpaid. And if you miss the mark even by a little bit, the buying bench is pretty harsh on you. But quality sells. And what's deemed as not quality doesn't.”

Nyquist Colt to Coolmore

A colt by Nyquist (hip 28) who lit up the racetrack with a bullet furlong work in :9 4/5 during Monday's under-tack also turned heads in the sales ring at Gulfstream Wednesday when selling for $2.6 million to Coolmore. The youngster was consigned by Wavertree Stables.

Bloodstock agent Jamie McCalmont signed the ticket for the youngster, who will be trained by Bob Baffert.

“He is by Nyquist who looks like one of the best young stallions around right now,” McCalmont said. “He breezed in :9 4/5, very few horses went :10 flat, let alone :9 4/5. He did a good gallop out, he came out of the work good. He trained well in the week before. He's a very nice horse.”

Michael Tabor, who had been leading the Coolmore team around the sales barns Tuesday, said he was happy with the purchase, but he sounded a warning note for future sales.

“I was just saying to the boys that The Jockey Club stallion cap really reduces the value of these horses,” Tabor said. “Next year, it is hard to imagine that these horses will be as high. Unless these horses go abroad.”

Coolmore is one of three farms involved in a lawsuit against The Jockey Club over the mare cap.

Later in the sale, bloodstock agent Jacob West signed the ticket on an Uncle Mo colt on behalf of Coolmore for $1.3 million. West echoed Tabor's sentiments on the cap, which calls for stallions born in 2020 and later to cover no more than 140 mares.

“There is a significant price change coming through with these colts right now,” West said. “In our belief, this is one of the last times we will see something like this. The mare cap might limit what people are willing to spend. You are seeing the result of that now with what the Coolmore group is doing with these colts that are coming through the ring. You better jump on them now because at the end of the day, they are worried about the regulation coming down and affecting the price of the colts if this mare cap gets pushed through.”

Coolmore has been a major buying presence at the Gulfstream sale. In 2019, the operation purchased the $3.65-million sale topper and four of the auction's six seven-figure juveniles.

@JessMartiniTDN

Nyquist Colt a Score for Reddam, Dunne

The $2.6-million son of Nyquist (hip 28) was bred by G. Watts Humphrey, Jr. and is out of Spinning Wheel (Smart Strike), a half-sister to multiple Grade I placed Ride on Curlin (Curlin). The juvenile's third dam is Grade I winner Victory Ride (Seeking the Gold).

Wavertree's Ciaran Dunne purchased the bay colt for $160,000 on behalf of the Red Wings pinhooking partnership, led by Paul Reddam, who campaigned the colt's GI Kentucky Derby-winning sire.

“He is part of a pinhooking package that we do with Paul Reddam and obviously Paul has an attachment to Nyquist,” Dunne said. “So any Nyquist is an easy sell for us. He's a beautiful horse. I don't have to say that. He said that for himself in the ring. He comes from a breeder, Watts Humphrey, those families are generational and at the end of the day, those families come through. When you buy a horse off Watts, you feel a little better about it. Between those two connections, he was an easy horse.”

Asked how the colt had progressed over the winter, Dunne said, “I don't know if he's any different than he was as a yearling. He was a beautiful horse, he can just do it on the racetrack now and that's what it all comes down to at the end of the day. He showed up when it mattered and showed up like a champion all week.”

Dunne admitted Tuesday morning he thought he might have the sale topper, but the colt's final price Wednesday was still a surprise.

“We never had a horse in all the years we've been selling that has been vetted so many times,” he said. “I'm not sure there was a guy on the sales grounds that didn't vet him. We started to get excited yesterday, thinking, 'Wow, he could bring a million,' and then you think, 'Could he possibly bring a million and a half?' Two million is a pipe dream and then to get $2.6 million. It's a dream.”

The Red Wings partnership scored another pinhooking coup when selling a filly by American Freedom for $550,000. The chestnut had been purchased for $160,000 at last year's Fasig-Tipton Selected Yearlings Showcase. @JessMartiniTDN

Gun Runner Colt Sparks Late Fireworks

Just three hips before the conclusion of the sale, a colt from the first crop of Horse of the Year Gun Runner sparked a furious round of bidding in the Gulfstream paddock. When the dust settled it was bloodstock agent Gary Young left holding the $1.7-million ticket on behalf of Zedan Racing.

“We liked a few colts in this sale,” said Young, who did his bidding standing alongside Zedan principal Amr Zedan and trainer Bob Baffert. “We didn't get the [sale-topping] Nyquist. We liked a Classic Empire in the middle too, but we knew this horse would take a lot of money, so we just kind of waited for this horse. I don't know who we were bidding against, but they jogged us pretty good. You could tell it was mano y mano there for quite a while. We liked this horse a lot. I think he looks a lot like Gun Runner and I loved his breeze. See me in six months and I will let you know if we did good or not.”

“He is going to the guy with the white hair. I hear he has quite a future in the game,” Young joked, while nodding in Baffert's direction.

As for the price, Young said, “[Zedan] asked me before and I said $1 million to 1.5-million and if someone likes him as much as I do, maybe a tick or two more. So that is about what we thought.”

Young and Zedan purchased the topper at last year's $1.35-million OBS April topper Princess Noor (Not This Time), who opened her account with a trio of victories for Baffert, topped by the GI Del Mar Debutante S.

Consignors Randy Hartley and Dean de Renzo purchased the strapping chestnut colt for $140,000 at the Fasig-Tipton October Sale and he breezed in :10 1/5 Monday. Bred by Bruce Ryan, Hip 181 is out of MSW Needmore Flattery (Flatter).

“I am ecstatic, but I am more ecstatic that Bob Baffert gets to train him,” de Renzo said. “Now the horse will really get a chance to shine when he moves on to his next level. He just graduated high school and now he is off to college with the professor. That makes us really happy. Now he is really going to get the shot he deserves. We knew he was going to do really well because he has done everything really well his whole life.” @CDeBernardisTDN

Coolmore Strikes Again for Uncle Mo Colt

The Coolmore team didn't waste any time getting back into the fray at Gulfstream Wednesday, going to $1.3 million to acquire a colt by its stallion Uncle Mo (hip 67). It was the operation's second seven-figure purchase and the second from Ciaran Dunne's Wavertree Stables. Out of Afleet Maggi (Afleet Alex), the dark bay colt is a full-brother to Grade I winner Dream Tree. He worked a furlong in :10 flat during Monday's under-tack preview.

Leaving bloodstock agent Jacob West to sign the ticket on the colt, Coolmore's Michael Tabor confirmed the juvenile will be trained by Todd Pletcher.

“I have had horses with Todd Pletcher ever since I can remember,” Tabor said. “When I had the Derby winner [Thunder Gulch] in 1995, he was working for Wayne Lukas. So we go back a long way.”

Earlier in the sale, Coolmore had paid $2.6 million for a colt by Uncle Mo's Kentucky Derby-winning son Nyquist.

“We are very happy to have these two animals,” Tabor said.

Wavertree sold Dream Tree for $750,000 to the bid of bloodstock agent Kerri Radcliffe at the Gulfstream sale in 2017. The filly went on to win that year's GI Starlet S. and the following season's GII Prioress S. for Phoenix Thoroughbreds.

Radcliffe was underbidder on Dream Tree's full-brother Wednesday. The agent, who purchased last year's GI Arkansas Derby winner Nadal (Blame) at the 2019 Gulfstream sale, was bidding Wednesday on behalf of Goncalo Torrealba and George Bolton.

“We were hoping to get another Nadal, but I hope he's another Nadal for somebody else,” Radcliffe said. “He had a fantastic personality. He was so laid back. He was a gorgeous horse. I'm really gutted we didn't get him. But I hope he's very lucky for whoever bought him. ”

For Dunne, it was a second seven-figure juvenile and a second pinhooking score. The Irishman purchased the Uncle Mo colt for $335,000 at last year's Keeneland September Yearling Sale.

“He's a special little horse,” Dunne said of the colt following Monday's work. “He was a beautiful yearling. I couldn't believe they let us buy him.” @JessMartiniTDN

Heavy Hitters Team up for Nyquist Colt

Hip 28, a colt from the second crop of Nyquist, lit up the Gulfstream paddock when hammering for a sale-topping $2.6 million. The very next horse through the ring was another son of Nyquist, who made it a very exciting few minutes for the Darley sire when summoning $900,000 from Spendthrift Farm and West Point Thoroughbreds. Hip 29 was consigned by Eddie Woods as part of the complete dispersal of the Estate of Paul Pompa, Jr.

“He was one of our top picks of the sale,” said Spendthrift's Ned Toffey, who signed the winning ticket. “He is a great looking horse and Nyquist is doing great things. He breezed well and looks very sound. He jumped through all the hoops for us. We are partnering with West Point Thoroughbreds on him and are happy to partner with them. It looks like he will go to Todd [Pletcher].”

Bred by International Equities Holdings, Hip 29 was purchased by bloodstock agent Steve Young, on Pompa's behalf, for $400,000 at Keeneland September. Young also purchased his dam Spirit of the Dawn–a half to GSW Javerre (Outflanker)–for $500,000 as a juvenile at the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Sale and she made two starts for Pletcher and International Equities Holding's racing arm Sumaya US. Hip 29 is the second foal out of Spirit of the Dawn and her first foal, a now 3-year-old colt named Askin for a Baskin (Distorted Humor), brought $500,000 at KEESEP from Travis Durr, who was representing Bill Rucker and JRE Racing.

“He is a nice horse,” Woods said. “Steve Young bought him [as a yearling]. He is very straight forward and has done everything right. He worked good [in :10 2/5], not fantastic, but he is a big, two-turn horse. It is just a shame to be selling him. He is going to a good spot, so we will wish him the best.”

Pompa, a longtime owner and breeder, passed away suddenly Oct. 10. Since then, his top quality racing and breeding stock has been dispersed through various sales with the majority going through the Keeneland January Sale.

“He was a great fella, a great client. I have worked for him for a long time. It was just a shock [when he passed].” @CDeBernardisTDN

Uncle Mo Filly to Lows

Shortly after signing for an Uncle Mo colt on behalf of Coolmore, bloodstock agent Jacob West signed for a filly by the sire for $825,000 on behalf of Robert and Lawana Low. Consigned by Becky Thomas's Sequel Bloodstock, hip 169 is out of Michelle d'Oro (BernardinI) and is a half-sister to last year's Runhappy Juvenile S. winner Pico d'Oro (Curlin). She worked a furlong in :10 flat during Monday's under-tack preview.

“She's an Uncle Mo filly and he can do no wrong,” West said of the juvenile's appeal. “She's out of a Bernardini mare who is absolutely killing it as a broodmare sire. I thought she had the best breeze of any filly down here. We love to buy them when you can see them get across the dirt and gallop out on the dirt. She vetted good and we got stuck in behind her and wanted to buy her.”

The filly was bred by Southern Equine Stables and was purchased by Autrey Bloodstock for $380,000 at last year's Fasig-Tipton showcase.

“Southern Equine sold her to Cody Autrey and he put together a pinhooking group and I was blessed enough to have her to sell,” Thomas said. “He did all the preliminary work and I just finished her off.”

Of the filly, Thomas said, “She was a big, tall, leggy, two-turn looking filly that walked like a panther and moved like one. And was just so fast with no effort. I think she is a rockstar.”

Hip 169, like Coolmore's $1.3-million Uncle Mo colt, will be trained by Todd Pletcher.

“We are very fortunate to get them,” Pletcher said of the two juveniles. “They are typcial of the Uncle Mos. He stamps his babies and I thought both of these have that look that he puts into so many of them. They are very good movers, good walkers, athletic and with good breezes. So we're excited.” @JessMartiniTDN

Coolmore Strikes Again for Practical Joke Filly

The Coolmore team was very active at Gulfstream Wednesday, buying two of the day's top three colts as well as the auction's highest-priced filly, Hip 117, an $800,000 daughter of the operation's freshman sire Practical Joke. Bloodstock agents Jamie McCalmont and Ben McElroy represented the Coolmore contingent on this purchase.

“She was very fast, she had a great breeze, we liked her conformation… what more could you want,” Coolmore's Michael Tabor said.

Bred by Amy Rabanal, Constance Wickes and Highclere. Hip 117 is out of the Speightstown mare Goforitmrsmiller. North London Bloodstock purchased the dark bay for $150,000 at the Fasig-Tipton Select Yearlings Sale in September.

“She's been extremely popular,” said Steve Venosa, who consigned and prepared the :10 flat breezer under his SGV Thoroughbreds. “She's trained well down here and was well received at the barn. She's been nothing but class the whole time she has been here. We are excited she is going to a good home and I am sure we will hear good things about her down the road.”

Venosa added, “This is the top 2-year-old sale in the world. When you come down here, you better a bring a horse who is going to be able to perform on this surface. This filly was able to do that. We are very blessed that we sold her like that. We are very happy.”

North London Bloodstock, a longtime pinhooking partnership of Venosa clients, had a strong sale Wednesday, hitting two more home runs after Hip 117. Hip 141, a Quality Road colt purchased for $190,000 at KEESEP, brought $600,000 from Yugi Hasegawa. A few hips later, a son of Nyquist (Hip 146) the group bought for $200,000 at FTKSEL, summoned $625,000 from R.A. Hill Stable. @CDeBernardisTDN

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Zedan Lands Gun Runner Colt at Fasig

Agent Gary Young, acting on behalf of Zedan Racing Stables, went all the way to $1.7 million late in Wednesday's Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream sale to land a colt from the first crop of Horse of the Year Gun Runner. Consigned by Hartley/DeRenzo Thoroughbreds, agent as hip 181, the son of young Ohio-bred MSW Needmore Flattery (Flatter) was $140,000 Fasig-Tipton October yearling. He breezed in :10 1/5. Amr Zedan has made a big splash in the racing world in a short amount of time–he campaigned last year's $1.35-million OBSAPR topper and subsequent GISW Princess Noor (Not This Time), and will be represented in Saturday's GI Runhappy Santa Anita Derby by $35,000 OBSJUN value buy Medina Spirit (Protonico).

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