Mastery’s First Yearlings Gaining Pre-Sale Traction

Since the start of sales season last fall, comments have circulated on how Mastery could be the dark horse in his class of first-crop yearling sires.

There are many unknowns about the son of Candy Ride (Arg), as he may have never reached his full potential on the track when an injury forced him to retire prematurely. But his four-for-four career start had garnered talk of Kentucky Derby favoritism after dominating performances in the GI Los Alamitos Cash Call Futurity and the GII San Felipe S.

Now in the stud barn at Claiborne Farm, he’s gained attention early on in his career. His weanling average of $153,272, with 22 of 28 sold, placed him near the top of his class by weanling averages with a $25,000 stud fee.

His leading weanling, a filly named Shes Bout a Mover, is a half-sister to GIW Nereid (Rock Hard Ten) and sold to agent Andre Lynch at the Keeneland January Sale for $365,000. Earlier in the season, a colt out of Native One (Indian Charlie) and from the same family as GI Breeders’ Cup Sprint Champion Mitole (Eskendereya) sold for $325,000 at the Fasig-Tipton November Sale.

“He’s one of two stallions that stood out to me from the group of first-crop stallions at the sales last year,” said Stonehaven Steadings’ Aidan O’Meara. “The Masterys have a little more frame and size to them than I would have expected with the sire line. He’s a decent-sized horse himself and after what he did in the San Felipe, we never got to see him do a whole lot more, but the raw brilliance was there. He’s been producing the physicals that people are looking for and is putting himself in a good position going forward to be the real deal.”

O’Meara found one Mastery weanling at the Fasig-Tipton November Sale that he couldn’t leave without. Stonehaven Steadings went to $240,000 for a colt out of the stakes-placed Broken Vow mare Janis’s Joy.

“I thought he was one of the top three foals I saw last year,” O’Meara said. “We loved him. He was a big, beautifully-framed foal and looked like a horse with a lot of potential going forward.”

The yearling is now slated for the Keeneland September Sale as Hip 1021.

“He’s developing into the horse you hoped he would,” O’Meara reported. “He’s a big, two-turn colt. He’s a magnificent physical specimen and mentally, he’s solid as a rock. He has that intangible, special way about him that separates your average good-looking horse with something that has legitimate class. He’s probably going to be our top physical at the sale and will be a standout in Book Two.”

An additional 67 Mastery yearlings are catalogued for the Keeneland September Sale. At the Fasig-Tipton Selected Yearlings Showcase, 14 of his offspring will be featured including Hip 194, a filly out of GIW and stakes producer Last Full Measure (Empire Maker), as well as Hip 350, a filly out of GI Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Turf Champion Shared Account (Pleasantly Perfect) and a half-sister to last year’s GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf winner Sharing (Speightstown).

Claiborne’s Bernie Sams spoke on the quality he saw in the mares from Mastery’s first books, and how that has reflected onto this first class of yearlings.

“We bred 139 mares to him the first year, and a couple mares that were in there were the dams of Sharing and of Monomoy Girl (Tapizar). So he got good support for a horse that stands for $25,000. I’ve gotten good reports on the yearlings and the few I’ve seen have been really nice. They’ve been very athletic, well-conformed, a good size with plenty of bone to them.”

Sams said that an additional 143 and 137 mares were in Mastery’s next two books.

“He’s been very popular with the breeders,” Sams said. “He’s a good-looking horse, obviously he’s very much Candy Ride. I think people like the pedigree.”

His dam, Steady Course (Old Trieste), was picked up by Arthur Hancock for $20,000 at the 2009 Keeneland November Sale.

“She was barren at the time, but it’s a really good family and she was a big, strong, good-looking mare,” Hancock recalled. “I thought I’d probably have to pay a little more. I actually came to find out Garrett O’Rourke at Juddmonte was going to bid on her, but he got stuck in traffic.”

A few months later, Steady Course’s first foal Clear Sailing (Empire Maker) became a stakes winner, but Hancock didn’t have much luck with the mare in her first few years at Stone Farm until he bred her to Candy Ride in 2013.

Hancock noted, “My dad had a saying, ‘A good bull is half your herd, and a bad bull is all of it. I wanted to breed her to a good bull and Candy Ride is a good stallion. Mastery was a grand-looking foal.”

Mastery sold for $425,000 at the Keeneland September Sale to Cromwell Bloodstock as agent for Everett Dobson’s Cheyenne Stables.

He was sent to Bob Baffert and burst onto the scene when he broke his maiden on debut by over four lengths in October of his 2-year-old season. He continued on by taking three consecutive graded stakes wins in the GIII Bob Hope S., the GI Los Alamitos Cash Call Futurity and the GII San Felipe S. by over a combined 15 lengths.

“He became a really good racehorse,” Hancock said. “I think Baffert thought he had a big shot to win the Derby until he got an injury and went to stud after that. And now, we wait and see what happens.”

While it won’t be a long wait before Mastery’s progeny have the opportunity to prove their worth on the track, Hancock patiently monitors the development of Mastery’s full-brother who was born in late May this year.

“He’s a really nice colt and his looks speak for themselves.” Hancock nods to the rolling pasture of his Stone Farm and said, “He’s always running around out there and who knows? These fields here, not me but these fields, have raised three Kentucky Derby winners, two others who were second and seven who were in the Derby. If I stay out of his way, maybe he’ll develop into something.”

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Keeneland & Fasig Credentials Available Via the Virtual Badge App

Earlier this week, Keeneland and Fasig-Tipton released their joint safety protocols for their upcoming September Sales, which included a credential system for all attendees, including buyers. All consignors and their staffs, vets and their staffs and media are required to provide proof of a negative COVID-19 test 10 days prior to the start of the Sept. 9-10 Fasig-Tipton Sale.

Keeneland and Fasig-Tipton have partnered with a trusted technology provider, Virtual Badge, to serve their digital credential needs for both September sales. Both sales companies will share a common credential, accessible from your mobile device on the Virtual Badge app. In order to request a credential, interested parties must complete the following steps:

  1. Download the Virtual Badge app on your smartphone in your App Store or Google Play. Create an account within the app, log in and select “Keeneland” or “Fasig-Tipton” under Organization.
  2. Complete the credential application. Select your role at the sale and complete the questionnaire.

Buyers and their agents should complete the form and submit your request. No other action is needed.

All other sales participants should indicate whether you will be testing at Keeneland/Fasig-Tipton or off site. If testing at Keeneland or Fasig-Tipton, your results will be linked to your Virtual Badge account once a negative test is received. If testing off site, upload a copy of your test result into the app.

  1. Credential approved. You will receive notification within 48 hours after submitting your request and test results are received. Your approved credential will appear in the Virtual Badge app on your phone, which will be scanned at entry to the sales ground each day.

An approved credential issued by Keeneland or Fasig-Tipton will be valid for both sales, and therefore you will only need to complete this process once. Please apply with the organization that you will first enter within 10 days of your COVID-19 test.

The release also expanded on other sales protocols, such as the policies in the back ring and barn areas.

  • Barn Area

– The barn area is open to credentialed participants.

– Participants must wear a face covering and socially distance at all times. Only consignors and their staff will be permitted to enter barns and shedrows.

– Van drivers are not permitted to leave their vehicles, and therefore consignors must meet their horses at the receiving chute to unload.

  • Back Holding Ring & Sales Ring

 

– Capacity in the Back Holding Ring will be reduced to two horses at a time with a maximum of three representatives per horse (one groom, one showperson and one consignor). No one else may enter this area or congregate in the chute area.

– To limit contact, the show person responsible for the horse will also lead the horse while in the Sales Ring.

  • Sales Pavilion

– Capacity will be limited in the Sales Arena to 40%. No seating will be permitted on the benches encircling the Sales Arena.

– Bidding locations have been expanded to allow for social distancing. In addition to the Sales Arena and Back Holding Ring, buyers may bid in the Show Ring.

  • Sales Offices

– The Sales Counter will operate as normal but we have constructed plexiglass to protect sales participants and staff. Access to this area will be limited based on the number of people in the office at a given time.

– The Sales Accounting Offices will be expanded for increased space and distancing. Signage will be available to point to this area located to the left of the Sales Counter.

The Administrative Offices at Keeneland are closed. All paperwork should be submitted to the Sales Counter or the Stable Office.

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Shannon Arvin Discusses Upcoming Keeneland September Sale

In just five weeks, the annual Keeneland September Yearling Sale will be underway. Despite unprecedented challenges and ongoing uncertainty, it will mark the start of a marathon of events for Keeneland and its future President and CEO Shannon Arvin.

“We’ve got a long fall,” said Arvin, who now serves as Interim Head of Sales and will be officially named President-elect on September 1. “We’ve got the September Sale, the October race meet, the Breeders’ Cup that we’re so excited about and then we’ve got the November Breeding Stock sale to follow that. So we’re trying really hard to do everything in our power to continue to be able to host all of those events that are so important to the market and to the industry.”

On July 29, Arvin issued a racing and sales update that offered a glimpse into some of the protocols that would be in place next month once the yearlings enter the sales ground. She explained that Keeneland has been working closely with state and federal government officials, including representatives from Senator Mitch McConnell and Congressman Andy Barr, to seek allowance for international travelers. They’ve also been coordinating with Fasig-Tipton to ensure consistent protocols between the two sales organizations.

In addition, it was announced that anyone entering the sales ground will be required to present proof of a negative COVID-19 test completed within the last five days.

Many questions and concerns have been circling throughout the industry on the logistics of this protocol, but Arvin said that Keeneland has partnered with Wild Health to facilitate on-site testing and that she has full confidence in the company’s ability to offer efficient and accurate testing.

“We’re working really closely with Wild Health, which is based in Lexington,” said Arvin. “We’ve got the ability to test in a way that I don’t know of many other geographic locations that have that available to them. In fact, Wild Health has gone to California and other states where testing is not available and they were able to provide testing. So through that relationship, we are confident in the testing that they are providing. I think it’s really important for people to know that this is not arbitrary.”

Arvin noted that if someone is able to receive testing from other sources, they will be welcome to use those methods if more convenient. She also said that Wild Health is prepared to accommodate anyone who requires on-site testing, regardless of the number of attendees who will be taking advantage of its use.

“We have access to a sufficient number of test. Nobody will be denied entry to the sale because they can’t get access to a test,” Arvin said.

For anyone that may test positive for COVID-19, they will be required to undergo a 10-day isolation period before they can be tested again.

Arvin said, “We know the ramifications of that and we know how that could cause a lot of anxiety for people who say, ‘well, what happens if it’s a false positive?’ We are confident the tests we have are sophisticated enough. Even if somebody is asymptomatic, if they’re spreading the virus, that just heightens the chances of us ultimately being told by government officials that we’re not going to be able to continue to host the sales, the races, and the Breeders’ Cup in November. So we’ll work with people, certainly, but we’ve got to set those rules so that we can act responsibly in the marketplace and continue to stay open.”

For all attendees, masks will be required and bidding locations will be offered in several remote parts of the sales ground in an effort to increase social distancing capabilities.

“I’m not wild about wearing a mask,” said Arvin. “But it seems like it’s a small price to pay to be able to go back to business and conduct the marketplace. It’s not political to me, it’s just polite. However you feel about the virus, the virus is making decisions for us. So we just have to react in the way that has the greatest chance of getting us the result we want, which is to get back to the real world and get back to business.”

Although COVID-19 best-practice responses are subject to change in the coming weeks, Keeneland is continuing to develop protocols in conjunction with Fasig-Tipton, and Arvin said that more detailed plans are to be revealed later this week.

For buyers who are unable to attend this year’s September sale, bidding will be available online and via phone.

Keeneland will be conducting a walking video program for this year’s yearling sale. Consignors will be able to use Keeneland’s broadcast services to film Book 1 and 2 yearlings.

Arvin has been conversing with buyers to find out how they can best utilize these services.

“I’ve heard a lot of people say that they’re not comfortable buying horses off a video,” she said. “I’ve heard some people say that the video is what got them interested in the horse, then they called someone that was physically there that could inspect the horse in person to get that extra confidence you might not have in a video.”

The Keeneland sale’s team is putting together a list of agents who can serve as a source to physically inspect horses for buyers who are not able to attend.

“We certainly understand that videos don’t replace a physical inspection, but in light of where we are, it’s a really good enhancement and an opportunity for people to inspect horses.”

Arvin’s optimistic outlook remains unscathed as the calendar closes in on September.

“Back in March when all this started before my current role, I was, like a lot of people, having trouble sleeping and I was concerned. There was fear. And then at some point I think you just have to wake up and say, ‘you know what, we’ve got what we’ve got and we’re going to make the very best of it.’ It’s going to be tough, but we’re making good decisions. We are strong, we are intelligent and it’s going to be okay.”

And still, the annual anticipation of seeing that first top-class yearling enter the sales ring remains the same.

“You know, I’ve heard so many people say what a great crop it is this year,” Arvin said. “So we’re really excited about it. We are going to do everything physically and intellectually possible to facilitate a really strong marketplace.”

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