Big Buyer Best Starts New Chapter As A Commercial Seller At Fasig-Tipton July

Larry Best has shaken plenty of hands at Thoroughbred auctions after the hammer falls and sales tickets are signed, but there was something different about the exchange on Tuesday at the Fasig-Tipton July Yearling Sale.

After years at the top of the bloodstock market as a high-dollar buyer through his OXO Equine operation, Best shook the hand of winning bidder James Bernhard for the first time as the breeder and seller of a high-dollar sale horse.

“I just congratulated him,” Best said. “Everybody congratulates me when I buy a horse, and this is the first opportunity I've had to congratulate someone as the breeder, and now I know how it feels. We got a fair value for the horse, and you hope they do well.”

The breakthrough offering was Hip 111, a Candy Ride colt out of the Uncle Mo mare Beyond Grace who sold to Bernhard for $350,000.

Best made his intentions to build a top-level broodmare band known in 2019, when he spent $5 million on Breeders' Cup Distaff winner Blue Prize at the Fasig-Tipton November Sale. However, the true foundation of the program was built with his first major purchases at auction.

Though he'd made a couple six-figure purchases during the previous season's yearling sales, Best introduced himself as a sticker-shock buyer at the 2017 Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream Selected 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale, where he landed Beyond Grace for a sale-topping $1.5 million.

The filly went unplaced in three career starts for trainer Chad Brown, and she was sent to Candy Ride for the first time in 2018. Then, she went back to the well a year later to produce the horse that sold on Tuesday.

“I bred her to Candy Ride twice because of the quality of the first foal,” Best said. “This one has a big walk. About nine months from now, he's going to be right-sized, and should have some speed.

“Next year, I'll have probably 30 foals on the ground, and I can't keep all of them,” he continued. “A lot of people do the same thing, they tend to sell the colts and keep the fillies. In this case, I loved the horse but I have the full-brother (a still-to-be-named 2-year-old) already.”

Best keeps his roughly 35-head broodmare band at Taylor Made Farm in Nicholasville, Ky. The operation has further tied itself to the commercial future of OXO Equine as the consignor of his yearlings and the residence of his stallions, Instagrand and Instilled Regard.

Both Instagrand, a Grade 2-winning son of Into Mischief, and Instilled Regard, a Grade 1 winner by Arch, entered stud in 2021, and Best has committed his flashy mares to support them. In December, it was revealed that Blue Prize would be part of Instilled Regard's inaugural book at stud.

“We had a big year with Instagrand,” Best said. “He had 190 mares, so I'm excited about that. I got a little late start with Instilled Regard, but I love him. The pedigree is hard to compete with.”

The factory portion of the OXO Equine operation is approaching the point where it can start producing a full class of homebred racehorses and sale prospects every year, but Best said he still plans to continue being active as a buyer going forward.

Still, with one homebred sale under his belt, Best said he gets the appeal of being on the selling side of the transaction.

“It feels so good to actually breed a horse that someone values,” he said. “It feels right, so I'm going to balance my portfolio out, and it's part of my strategy.”

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First Mares Confirmed in Foal to Instagrand and Instilled Regard

Instagrand (Into Mischief) and Instilled Regard (Arch) have both had their first mares confirmed in foal. MGISW Cambier Parc (Medaglia d'Oro) scanned in foal to Instilled Regard, and Grade I winner Concrete Rose (Twirling Candy), confirmed in foal to Instagrand. Both stallions stand at Taylor Made.

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Who’s Your Pick? George Adams

GEORGE ADAMS, Housatonic Bloodstock

Instagrand (Into Mischief), $7,500, Taylor Made

   Of the first-years, Instagrand is a really interesting horse and priced competitively at $7,500 at Taylor Made. If he’d retired after his first two starts, folks would have knocked him on soundness but they’d have bred to him because of that brilliance and the Into Mischief factor, and his fee would’ve been higher. Nothing he did after that changes anything about his juvenile campaign, and physically he’s a beast. Plus, Into Mischief has only gotten hotter. I think the commercial market will really love him, even without Larry Best supporting him strongly at the sales.

Jimmy Creed (Distorted Humor), $10,000, Spendthrift

     I was a huge Jimmy Creed fan last year at $15,000, and Spendthrift knocked him down even more this year to $10,000. I think that makes him hands-down the best value in Kentucky this year —we will book more mares to him than anything else this year.

I’m not the only one who has noticed that he’s achieved great stats with very mediocre mares (7.4% stakes winners to runners and 16.8% black-type horses to runners, including four top-class graded horses, all from mares good for just a 1.01 CI) and there are some very sharp people going in big on him this year. With better-bred crops in the pipeline, he could be the next one on that Kantharos/Munnings trajectory as far as commerciality and stud fee.

Thank you to the breeders and agents who have participated in our ongoing ‘Who’s Your Pick’ series this week. Did you miss a few responses? You can catch up on the entire series here.

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Who’s Your Pick? Andrew Cary

As we approach the end of the calendar, we turn our attention to the incoming sire class of 2021. We asked several judges who their favorite incoming sire is for next year and if there are any other stallions, new or otherwise, that have caught their eye as under-the-radar picks. 

ANDREW CARY, Cary Bloodstock 

McKinzie (Street Sense), $30,000, Gainesway

This is a very strong group of incoming freshman sires and it’s very hard to just pick one, but I am a huge fan of McKinzie. I think had he retired in a “normal” year, he would have stood for more.

When he was at the top of his game in the summer of 2019, he was the best horse in the country. He was incredibly unlucky not to win the GI Met Mile (where he only got to run for about a sixteenth of a mile) and he galloped to a very easy win in the GI Whitney S. against a strong field and in fast time.

Any horse who can compete at the highest level from ages two through five and run first or second in 14 graded stakes has to be immensely respected.

In addition, he’s got the strong physical and pedigree that the market requires. Street Sense is a tremendous sire who still has plenty of years of production left, and his dam Runway Model (Petionville) was an elite runner herself. Bob Baffert was always very high on this horse from the moment he entered his shedrow. I think Gainesway did a great job pricing him where they did and my clients are breeding five mares to him.

Instagrand (Into Mischief), $7,500, Taylor Made

I think Instagrand is the potential home run horse of this whole crop, especially at his stud fee. He is a tremendous physical by the hottest sire on the planet, was a $1.2 million 2-year-old and flashed top level ability from the get go. He did train on as a 3-year-old to place in the GI Santa Anita Derby against the previous year’s champion 2-year-old Game Winner (Candy Ride {Arg}) and Roadster (Quality Road).

Unfortunately he never got to truly fulfill all of his potential on the racetrack, but his profile matches up with many top stallions who began their careers standing for under $15,000 (including his own sire Into Mischief, as well as Distorted Humor, Mr. Prospector, Danzig, War Front, etc).

I encourage people to go back and watch Instagrand’s first two races–his maiden win and the GII Best Pal S., both of which he won by over 10 lengths. They are jaw-dropping. Mr. Larry Best (leading buyer at Keeneland November Sale) has made a huge commitment to the horse and my clients will be supporting him strongly as well.

Thank you to the breeders and agents who have participated in our ongoing ‘Who’s Your Pick’ series this week. Did you miss a few responses? You can catch up on the entire series here.

 

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