Record-Priced Colt Tops First Session Of Relocated Tattersalls Ireland September Sale

It proved to be a record-breaking first session for the relocated two-day Tattersalls Ireland September Sale when Boherguy Stud's colt by Teofilo (Lot 165) fetched €351,000 (US$413,063), a new record price for the sale.

He was bought by Mick Kinane, signing on behalf of the Hong Kong Jockey Club, the day's leading buyer by aggregate spend.

The colt, bred by trainer Jim Bolger, is a full-brother to two Group 3 winners – the Group 3 Eyrefield Stakes winner Guaranteed and this year's G3 Acomb Stakes winner Gear Up, whose success is an update on the catalog page.

The March-born yearling was sold by Bolger's grand-daughter Clare Manning of Boherguy Stud in just her second season consigning yearlings.

“He has been a superstar since he has been here,” Manning said. “He has the pedigree and the physique, he was busy and had a number of vettings, but it was difficult in this climate to gauge what he would fetch.

“He came to prep eight weeks ago and has always been straightforward, he is one of those that just have got something about them. I have had a brief chat with grand-dad and he is absolutely delighted.”

Kinane, standing outside the ring, said: “He is a lovely horse, and we didn't think we'd be pushed that hard. He was a stand-out, he could have been sold here in a few weeks at the October Sale. Hopefully, he can run like his brother, he was a good horse.”

The sale was the highlight on a day which produced a strong clearance rate of 83 percent (206 horses offered and 172 sold), an average price of €25,706 (US$30,251), a slight increase of 1 percent on the same session in 2019, a median of €20,330 (US$23,924), a drop of just 3 percent. The day's aggregate sales totaled €4,421,441 (US$5,203,244).

The post Record-Priced Colt Tops First Session Of Relocated Tattersalls Ireland September Sale appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Exhi Filly Tops CTHS Alberta Thoroughbred Sale

The Canadian Thoroughbred Horse Society (Alberta Division) Thoroughbred Sale brought in smaller bulk numbers during its 2020 renewal on Friday, Sept. 18, but it made up with increased average and median sale prices, led by a filly by Exhi who sold for $44,000 (Canadian).

In total, 40 horses changed hands during Friday's sale for revenues of $327,400, down 27 percent from the previous year when 67 horses brought $451,300. The average sale price rose 25 percent to $8,395 from $6,736, while the median increased 67 percent to $4,500 from $2,700. The sale's buyback rate finished at 38 percent, compared with 40 percent in 2019.

Greg Tracy, agent, purchased the sale-topper, an Exhi filly out of the multiple stakes-winning Forestry mare Eustacia, for $44,000.

The second foal out of the dam, the Alberta-bred sale-topper hails from a deep family of stakes producers throughout North America, including stakes-winning second dam Sparkling Pink. Highfield Investment Group consigned the filly, as agent.

True North Stable landed the auction's second-highest-priced offering, a Kentucky-bred Laoban filly, for $26,500.

The bay filly is out of the stakes-placed Bernardini mare Kimono, and her extended family includes Grade 1 winners Declassify, A Phenomenon, and Seattle Meteor. Stone Ranches Ltd. consigned the filly.

This year's sale, like all of the country's sales operated under the CTHS banner, offered online bidding for the first time in 2020 to accommodate those unable to attend due to COVID-19.

Online bids accounted for six of the auction's successful purchases, totaling $45,900 – roughly 14 percent of the sale's total gross. The two most expensive online purchases each brought $15,000: an O'Prado Again filly who sold to Shot In the Dark Racing and a Cross Traffic filly who sold to Meadowlake.

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

The post Exhi Filly Tops CTHS Alberta Thoroughbred Sale appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

‘They Have A Lot Of Star Quality About Them’: Nyquist’s Second Crop Performing Well At September Sales

It can be hard out there for a second-crop yearling sire.

Between a fresh class of rookies and the ever-narrowing upper echelon of proven commercial sires to flock toward, a fickle marketplace can quickly forget a stallion still trying to establish himself on the racetrack and in the auction ring at the same time.

That hasn't quite been the case for Darley's Nyquist.

The champion son of Uncle Mo has been well-represented through the first two books of the Keeneland September Yearling Sale, including a class-leading seven in Book 1. Through the end of Book 2, Nyquist is the leading second-crop sire with three or more sold by average sale price, with 16 yearlings changing hands for an average of $256,250.

Nyquist was also responsible for the most expensive second-crop yearling of the Fasig-Tipton Selected Yearlings Showcase, with Mike Ryan, agent, landing a filly out of the Elusive Quality mare Perfect Note for $510,000. That was one of two Nyquist yearlings sold for $500,000 or more at the Fasig-Tipton sale.

“They have a lot of star quality about them,” said Darren Fox, Darley's sales manager. “It's a very strong second crop of yearlings. He had a tremendous bunch of physicals at the Fasig sale, and that's obviously continued on strong into Keeneland September.”

Fox noted the fortunate timing of this year's Grade 1 Spinaway Stakes, run Sept. 6 at Saratoga Race Course, which Nyquist's daughter Vequist won by 9 1/2 lengths. Lady Lilly, also by Nyquist, finished third in the same race, giving the sire a strong update in the days leading up to the September sales.

Nyquist currently sits in second on the freshman sire list by earnings, with $562,073, trailing WinStar Farm's Outwork with $682,684. However, Nyquist holds the advantage for average earnings by runner ($24,438), and he is tied for the lead in both stakes winners (three, with Outwork) and graded stakes winners (one, with Not This Time). His eight total winners to date ties him for third in the class.

Nyquist himself got off to a blazing start as a runner, spearheading the record-setting freshman crop for his sire, Uncle Mo.

He went undefeated in five starts at two, capped off by a victory in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile at Keeneland, which clinched that season's champion 2-year-old male honors. Nyquist then won the first three starts of his 3-year-old campaign, including the G1 Florida Derby and ultimately the Kentucky Derby, making him just the second horse to ever pull off the Breeders' Cup Juvenile/Kentucky Derby double. He later ran third in the Preakness Stakes.

The first of the Nyquists have come out running early like their sire did five years ago, but Fox said he expected them to show another gear in a year's time.

“These are horses that are coming good at the right time,” Fox said. “[Nyquist] was an unbeaten champion 2-year-old, but he trained on to win the Derby. These are horses that have a two-turn 3-year-old look to them. They have lovely length of body. They certainly will not just be 2-year-olds. They have a 3-year-old year in them, and that's something that's exciting about them. What we're seeing at two certainly gives us a lot to look forward to.”

Nyquist's top yearling of the season so far is a colt out of the winning Vindication mare Invitation who sold to Courtlandt Farm for $635,000 during Book 1 of the Keeneland September sale. After the two yearlings sold for $500,000 or more at the Fasig-Tipton sale, Nyquist has since added three more at that price point during the Keeneland September sale.

Aside from the buying public's acceptance of Nyquist's second-crop yearlings this season, another thing worth noting is that Nyquist has been put in a unique position to succeed during the first books of Keeneland September, and at Fasig-Tipton's select sale, in the first place based on the quality of his stock.

At both auctions, the offerings are sorted by inspection teams based on their projected commercial appeal, and the selling that has already commenced this month represents the highest-quality commercial yearlings committed to both auction companies. The fact that Nyquist has been this active so early in the season is a stout endorsement for a stallion still proving himself.

Nyquist had 20 yearlings cataloged for the Fasig-Tipton Selected Yearlings Showcase. Fellow Darley resident Frosted was the only other stallion in the class with more than 10 in the book.

At Keeneland, only seven second-crop stallions had yearlings in the auction's select Book 1 at all, and Nyquist had the most of that group. When the catalog opened up a bit more for Book 2, still firmly in the market's higher levels, Nyquist had 16 yearlings entered, tying him with Frosted for the most in that segment.

When it came to the respect Nyquist and his foals have seen beyond the high-profile first crop, Fox credited the consistent, high-level support the stallion has gotten from breeders throughout his time at stud. Without that sustained quantity and quality, he said, a performance like the one his yearlings have put on so far wouldn't be possible.

“Nyquist booked full every year his first four years at stud at full fee, not a dime off, and his quality never tapered off,” Fox said. “He bred a consistent, high-quality book of mares through his first four years. If anything, the market might have gotten stronger on him as the years have gone on.”

The post ‘They Have A Lot Of Star Quality About Them’: Nyquist’s Second Crop Performing Well At September Sales appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Keeneland And TCA Team On Sales Initiative To Assist Essential Workers

Keeneland and Thoroughbred Charities of America (TCA) today announced an initiative to provide September Yearling and November Breeding Stock Sales buyers the opportunity to make a voluntary contribution to TCA to assist our industry's backstretch and farm workers, many of whom have been impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The voluntary donation will be included in the buyers invoice and equate to one-half of one percent (.05%) of the hammer price of their purchase.

“This partnership with TCA reflects Keeneland's mission to support worthy causes, and during this time of great need it's even more important that we take care of our front-line heroes,” Keeneland President and CEO Bill Thomason said. “Keeneland is grateful for the tremendous work done by the TCA, and we are pleased to include this donation opportunity on our buyer forms this fall alongside the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance (TAA) and National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA).”

Since 1990, TCA has distributed more than $24 million in grants to approved charities working to help not only Thoroughbred aftercare organizations but also those that provide health and human services for backstretch and farm workers.

“Without our backstretch and farm employees we wouldn't have a Thoroughbred industry,” said TCA President Mike McMahon. “Our charities work to provide health and dental services, ESL classes, legal assistance, food pantries, counseling services and so much more to our industry's workers. In the face of the pandemic and the economic strain it has caused, Keeneland has answered the call. Keeneland's support for TCA and for horse people everywhere is unprecedented. We are very grateful for the opportunity for buyers to be able to support the people who care for horses.”

Earlier in September, TCA distributed grants totaling nearly $1,070,000. A record 92 grant applications were received during the organization's annual grant cycle. Ultimately, 70 organizations were approved for a grant, including 45 aftercare organizations, 16 backstretch and farm worker programs, five equine-assisted therapy organizations, three Thoroughbred incentive programs and one research organization. Grant recipients from the last three years can be found on www.tca.org 

Additionally, TCA's Horses First Fund, an emergency fund started in 2016 by LNJ Foxwoods, provided COVID-19 relief funding to three backstretch organizations and seven aftercare organizations while supporting two feed assistance programs earlier this year. The total expended from the Horses First Fund was $79,900, bringing the organization's total 2020 grant making to more than $1 million.

The post Keeneland And TCA Team On Sales Initiative To Assist Essential Workers appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights