The Premier Book in Every Way: Keeneland September Book 1 by the Numbers

Here's a conundrum for you. When does your outstanding yearling become merely one that stands out?

It's something the Keeneland sales team find themselves asking a great deal right now, out on the farms, during the annual process of sieving entries into the right tier of the world's biggest yearling catalog.

Time after time, they run into the same, nearly superstitious nervousness among some consignors about September Book 1. The action is too tight at the top end. Let this guy be a big fish in a smaller pond.

Well, that kind of talk is hardly unfamiliar to Tony Lacy and Cormac Breathnach, respectively Vice President of Sales and Director of Sales Operations, in that both took up their appointments last year from positions with leading consignors. On being invited to the other side of the dais, however, Breathnach decided to test perceptions against the data.

He did so with an open mind. If there turned out to be genuine vulnerabilities, whether in the format of the sale or a horse's position within it, then Keeneland would do something about it. But where he found misapprehensions, equally, then those would be clarified.

“We wanted to look at the sale and its performance as objectively as possible,” Breathnach emphasizes. “To look at facts, not preconceptions. We know how strongly some assumptions have been propagated over the years and we need some objective analysis. Our goal is to identify where any weak spots might truly be in the sale, and how to combat those: whether by altering start times, or the numbers in a particular session, or marketing focus, anything that Keeneland might do to help offset any dead spots.”

But the headline discovery is unmistakable. There should be no cold feet about Book 1. Just best foot forward. In fact, wilfully seeking relegation to Book 2 can be downright counter- productive.

On joining Keeneland a year ago, Breathnach first ran the basic numbers on the relative performance of Books 1 and 2 over the previous decade. In that time, of course, there had been all manner of format changes–with Book 1 variously allocated one, two, three and four sessions; and Book 2 either two or three–and evidently most people now agree that it is time for some consistency. Remarkably, however, Breathnach found that the Book 1 brand had crushed Book 2 every single year, regardless of how the elite stock had been spread.

“Through all those different formats, the average from Book 1 into Book 2 dropped every year between 51 and 60%,” Breathnach says. “And the median fell between 48 and 64%. In other words, both the Book 1 average and median were at least double those achieved by Book 2 every year. [Okay, strictly 1.96x for the 2019 median!] Honestly, that shocked me–and some of the agents I shared the figures with couldn't believe it either. I really did think that there were going to be years when Book 2 at least came close. Even the blended RNA rate was lower in Book 1. Over those 10 years, it came in at 24% for Book 1 and 25% for Book 2. Book 1 is where the money is.”

Having established the power of the Book 1 brand, Breathnach set out on a deep dive through his first September Sale at Keeneland. What could be learned by comparisons made Book to Book, session to session, and even within sessions?

The real revelation came in the modelling of buyer activity, which Breathnach measured by the number of radiograph views (blue in the table below) and the number of videoscope views exceeding 30 seconds (orange). This is a most interesting and instructive graph, showing that purposeful prospecting is nowhere higher than across both sessions of Book 1.

“The repository data show convincingly that a large volume of buyers are here, and, more importantly, are active in Book 1,” suggests Breathnach. “Some sellers tend to feel that a higher RNA rate might suggest otherwise, even though the RNA rates in Books 1 and 2 over the preceding 10 years are virtually identical. But buyers are not in the habit of vetting horses without intent. This shows that they're here, and they're here to buy from the beginning.”

While some vendors are convinced of greater purchasing depth in Book 2, Breathnach argues that some bumper transactions in the opening Book would never be made about the same horse in the next one. Several important principals, if they have come at all, tend to have left town by Book 2. He points to recent Book 1 purchases for $1 million and $800,000 that were made simply because those principals were on the spot for Book 1 only.

Breathnach urges sellers (and buyers) to grasp how the complexion of Book 1 is changing: “If you compare Book 1 from September 2019 and 2021 side-by-side–skipping 2020, when international travel was so restricted–buyers who contributed close to $60 million worth of purchases from 2019's Book 1 did not participate in 2021, for various reasons. But that deficit was backfilled extremely well, primarily by domestic racing stables: people like Vinnie Viola and Mike Repole, and new entities like the BSW/Crow Colts Group and the Bernhards [Jim and Dana, of Lynnhaven Racing], among others.

“With more exposure for the sport of horse racing and the improved purses, it was refreshing to see domestic end-users so active from the very beginning of the sale. Many vendors sold horses very effectively in the $400,000-$750,000 range for example. Of the first 15 horses through the ring last September, 12 sold, to 11 different domestic buyers.”

This feels huge, in the perennial debate with nervous vendors. Breathnach believes that some people may set too high a bar when considering their stock for Book 1: that every yearling entrant has to be 'perfect.'

“What we are looking to sell in Book 1 is as many good physicals as possible,” he says. “Pedigree and sire power are important too, to a degree, but athletes are what the buyers are looking for in Book 1, and that's what they are going to pay for. They can't all be by the same six-to-eight sires because we have a deep international buying bench, as the repository data shows. If the median is $325,000, like in 2021, and you've got a $400,000 horse, Book 1 is where your market is. You're an outlier anywhere else.”

In terms of Book-to-Book trends, Breathnach focused on medians and RNA rates as the most reliable gauge of sale performance. As this next table shows, the median conformed pretty neatly to the status of each Book. The RNA line (orange in the table) also descended as the sale moved forward, but that's pretty much as you would expect given the high production costs of elite yearlings, whose breeders are often equivocal about selling at all. (Moreover at an auction that broke records for average, median and completed sales, there may never again be an RNA rate like the one achieved in the second week of last year's September Sale.)

Another nervous assumption is that there are inbuilt momentum swings even within a session. Vendors typically dislike slots at the very beginning or end of the day. Again, Breathnach investigated last September. He identified the first and last 20 hips that sold in each session, and compared them to the 20 that sold right in the middle of that session. In doing so, he compared the average and median price of each of those subgroups as well as the likelihood that a horse sold for at least 50% above its reserve, what might be termed the “pleasant surprises.”

“It's interesting to me that in the 11 sessions, those good sales (50% above reserve) were more likely to happen in the first 20 sellers in three sessions (incidentally including the first and fourth sessions); the last 20 sellers in three sessions; and right in the middle of the day in the other four,” Breathnach says. “The average sale price of those yearlings was only highest in the middle 20 sellers in two of the 11 sessions. In other words: no pattern.”

Where there can surely be virtual unanimity is that the sale finally needs a more settled format. That's certainly Keeneland's intention for 2022, with the first two Books once again expected to be spread over two sessions apiece, with Book 1 opening around 1 p.m. (as was the case last year).

“Industry-wide, almost everybody agrees that we need a consistent format, and that includes our sales team,” Breathnach concedes. “Based on the performance of last year's sale, and particularly from a stabling point of view, we feel that the format we landed on was very positive.”

Obviously there will always be a certain critical mass of yearlings eligible for the two opening Books. And Breathnach feels that there are two important differences between the format of two sessions apiece, as opposed to commingling over four days.

“You get too many peaks and valleys [with a four-day Book 1],” he explains. “There aren't 1,000 really top-end horses, so the sale gets too inconsistent, and it's hard to build momentum. And, maybe more importantly, when you use the entire barn area like that, it's very hard for buyers to patrol the whole of Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and then to do their shortlists and their second looks, when they're going from Barn 1 to 49 on every pass. Some sellers might think they would prefer that–but the horses are just too spread out that way, and several of them are going to be missed.”

So if 400 won't necessarily be the precise number of elite horses out there for Book 1, it's a number that gives everyone a chance–buyers and vendors alike.

“It's a manageable number and you can start a 200-horse session at 1 p.m.,” Breathnach says. “That allows extra time in the mornings for buyers to get their second looks and vetting done, and to get ahead with Book 2, and not be constantly falling behind. And it gives these good horses the time they deserve. They can be stabled loosely in some of our best show areas, with the time and space for people to show them to the best of their ability.”

The lunchtime start also allows atmosphere to build for the beginning of what is, after all, an occasion of great theater.

“Tony and Shannon [Arvin, president and CEO] and the entire team, we want to make sure there's a buzz to kick the sale off,” Breathnach says. “That is a priority. The September Sale is a significant event for Lexington and this area, but it's critical to our customers and it deserves to start off the right way.”

As he mentions, this is all a team effort. Besides Lacy and Breathnach, the inspections so vital to the balance of these Books are being shared by Mark Maronde, Dean Roethemeier and Kyle Wilson, with valued external perspectives from the experienced Frankie Brothers and Julie Cauthen. And of course there are also important contributions from other vital cogs in the Keeneland machine like Gatewood Bell, Buff Bradley and Ryan Mahan. While every sales company candidly strives on behalf of the vendor, once a horse is on the dais, in planning an auction these people must try to achieve an equilibrium between seller and buyers.

But obviously there's a limit to how much the hosts can assist trade.

“We do understand that there's a lot of anxiety and opinion among breeders and consignors about book placement,” Breathnach says. “Our job is to put the whole sale together, which requires taking a broad view, and factoring in the requirements and preferences of buyers and sellers alike. The kind of things we're talking about can't create a strong market, of themselves. But we can do our best to give it space to breathe.”

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Q and A with Courtney Reid on New Breeders’ Cup Incentive Programs

An incentive-based participation bonus program called the Breeders' Cup Dirt Dozen was unveiled by the Breeders' Cup this Thursday. The new program will award monetary credits, funded by Breeders' Cup, for first through third-place finishes in selected races for horsemen to use toward entry fees in six of the Breeders' Cup World Championships dirt races. Learn more here.

Also this week, Breeders' Cup announced that the Breeders' Cup Challenge Series: Win and You're In schedule will feature 82 qualifying races in 11 counties. New for this year, the 2022 series in the U.S. has been restructured into a regional qualifying program in order to balance divisional competition across the country. Learn more here.

The TDN spoke with Courtney Reid, the Director of Racing and Industry Relations at Breeders' Cup, to learn more about these new programs ahead of this year's Breeders' Cup World Championships at Keeneland. The following has been edited for brevity and clarity.

TDN: How did the idea for the Dirt Dozen come about?

Reid: Just like the Challenge series, we try to make our races more attractive for our horsemen to participate in each year. We decided that offering bonus money toward these 12 graded stakes races is a great way to defray the entry fee costs into the Championship dirt races. The incentives offered with this program will not only add starters to our Championship dirt races, but also hopefully help bolster the field sizes of the 12 races selected for the Dirt Dozen. We have received positive feedback so far from the racing secretaries included in the program.

TDN: How are the divisions in the program set up and how will the bonus credits be allocated?

   Reid: Of the 12 races, there are two races per division. So for example, in the Breeders' Cup Sprint division, the first Dirt Dozen race is the GIII Smile H. at Gulfstream Park on July 2. The first three finishers of this race will receive a bonus tier of credit funds that will go toward entry fees for the Championship race. The first-place finisher will receive $30,000, which is half of the entry fee. They would just need to pay the remaining $30,000 to run in the GI Qatar Racing Breeders' Cup Sprint. The second-place finisher will get $15,000 and the third-place finisher will receive $7,500.

With these races, a horse could technically get complete free entry into the Championship if they ran in both races in the division. With the Qatar Racing Breeders' Cup Sprint example, if they ran in the GIII Smile H. and the GII Santa Anita Sprint Championship, they could have the entries fully paid for if they won both.

TDN: Do you think that in the past, entry fees have held horses back from attending the Breeders' Cup?

   Reid: I don't think that entry fees have been the main factor that has held horses back, but I will say that over the years, prohibitive favorites have discouraged some outfits who might be on the fence. But if you take last year for example, we had three heavy favorites in Jackie's Warrior, Gamine and Letruska who were all defeated, so you never know. We hope that this new program will be additional incentive for connections who might be on the fence.

TDN: Why was there a need to create this program specifically for dirt races?

   Reid: We have 56 turf races in the Breeders' Cup Challenge series program, so we think there is ample room to automatically qualify in a Challenge race for a turf race. We wanted to give more opportunities for dirt races. Historically, dirt races around the country–particularly in stakes races–haven't been filling as much as they have in turf races. This was an opportunity to bolster our dirt races.

TDN: Could you give an overview of the restructured format this year for the regional qualifying program in the U.S.?

Reid: The Breeders' Cup Challenge Series is in its 15th year this year. We will have 82 challenge races worldwide in 11 countries covering all the divisions. We have 43 domestically and 39 international.

Domestically, we have restructured the program to establish regional balance throughout the country with an East, West and Midwest division. In 11 of the 14 divisions, there will be one Breeders' Cup Challenge Series race per region. We wanted to ensure that one part of the country did not have an advantage over the other.

TDN: What are some of the most notable changes with races that will or will not be considered a Win and You're In?

Reid: For example, in New York, the Jockey Club Derby, the John A. Nerud S. and the Personal Ensign S. are no longer Challenge races, however they gained the Pilgrim S. and the Miss Grillo S. Some of these categories had too many races in certain parts of the country, so this was an effort to balance it out. For some of the dirt races that lost Challenge series designation, we were able to add them to the Dirt Dozen program.

The GI Longines Breeders' Cup Classic is an outlier here. It's our richest and most poplar race, so we are continuing to give more opportunity to earn automatic qualifying in this division. With that, four of the six U.S. Classic division races will be nationally televised on NBC and CNBC for Breeders' Cup Challenge Series programming.

TDN: With this new setup, do you expect to see regional rivalries form on the road to the World Championships?

   Reid: Absolutely. Rivalries are part of what makes sports more interesting and exciting. We want to see fans have a rooting interest for horses in their part of the country. Surely there will be racing fans in California who will be rooting and betting on horses in their region to beat the best in the East and Midwest at Keeneland this fall.

TDN: The Breeders' Cup Win and You're In Challenge Series has evolved since it was launched 15 years ago. What do you think has made it so successful over the years?

Reid: Each year, we assess the races and we have had a lot of participation from our horsemen. We think it's special to participate in a Challenge series race. We're thankful and proud of our owners and trainers who have channeled their efforts into training horses toward winning a Challenge series race so they can take advantage of gaining that automatic starting position. The horsemen have always told us that if they are deciding between two races and one is a Challenge series race, they typically will point for the Challenge race.

TDN: As you plan for the Breeders' Cup World Championships at Keeneland this fall, how do you envision the entries shaping up in respect to these new formats and programs.

   Reid: We always get a significant number of our Challenge winners to run in our Championship races and we hope that our Dirt Dozen program will have the same results. We hope it will add one or two, if not three or more starters per dirt race. Our goal is to bolster field size for our races. We want to offer the most competitive betting races and provide entertaining races for our fans each year. We think that this year at Keeneland will be an exceptional experience.

TDN: Will there be any major changes or updates this year specifically with respect to international participation, given their incredible results last year?

Reid: The only international change in regard to the Challenge series is that at Royal Ascot, the King's Stand S. will replace the Diamond Jubilee S. The King's Stand is a five-furlong race, which better suits a runner for our Championship Turf Sprint division.

We expect to have another strong international contention as we did last year. We're constantly reaching out to connections there. Josh Christian will be making a few trips abroad and we have our international liaisons, John Fulton in South America and Kate Hunter in Japan, who do a great job for us with creating awareness and helping recruit horsemen to come to the Championships.

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Breeders’ Cup Introduces Dirt Incentive Program

The 'Breeders' Cup Dirt Dozen', a series comprised of existing graded stakes races at a variety of distances taking place from May through October at six U.S. tracks, will award monetary credits–funded by Breeders' Cup–for first- through third-place finishers in selected races for horsemen to use for entry fees in six Grade I Breeders' Cup Dirt races–the $2-million Longines Breeders' Cup Distaff, the $2-million Qatar Racing Breeders' Cup Sprint, the $2-million TVG Breeders' Cup Juvenile, the $2-million NetJets Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies, the $1-million Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Sprint and the $1-million Big Ass Fans Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile.

The bonus tier within the $2-million Breeders' Cup divisions is paid out $30,000 for first, $15,000 for second and $7,500 for third. In the $1-million race division, the bonus tier is $15,000 for first, $7,500 for second and $3,750 for third.

The GI Derby City Distaff was the first of the 'Dirt Dozen' races to be contested this year. The series continues July 2 with the GII Fleur de Lis S. at Churchill and the GIII Smile H. at Gulfstream Park.

“In our continuing efforts to support horsemen, the new 'Dirt Dozen' program is an innovative way to provide credits which can be put toward entry fees for runners to compete in the dirt races of the World Championships,” said Dora Delgado, Breeders' Cup Executive Vice President and Chief Racing Officer. “We look forward to connections taking advantage of the incentives of the Dirt Dozen program and seeing them at Keeneland this November.”

Click here for further information and for the races that make up the 'Dirt Dozen.'

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2022 Breeders’ Cup Challenge Series Features 82 Qualifying Races

The 2022 Breeders' Cup Challenge Series: Win and You're In schedule will feature 82 qualifying races in 11 countries, Breeders' Cup announced Tuesday. Winners, as usual, will receive automatic qualifying positions, and fees paid, into a corresponding race in the 2022 Breeders' Cup World Championships.

Horses from around the globe will be qualifying through the Win and You're In program for the 39th Breeders' Cup World Championships, consisting of 14 Grade 1 races and purses and awards totaling $31 million. This year's Championships will be held at Keeneland Race Course in Lexington, Ky., on Nov. 4-5. The first U.S. Breeders' Cup Challenge Series race of the year will be the GI Shoemaker Mile S. at Santa Anita Park May 30. The Breeders' Cup Challenge Series, now in its 15th year, will be hosted at many of the world's premier racetracks in Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, England, France, Ireland, Japan, Peru, South Africa, and the United States.

The 2022 series in the U.S. has been restructured into a regional qualifying program to balance divisional competition across the country. In 11 of the 14 race divisions, there will be one Breeders' Cup Challenge Series race per region, identified as East, Midwest, and West. Breeders' Cup Challenge qualifying races in the Juvenile Turf and Juvenile Fillies Turf Divisions will be limited to two races. Breeders' Cup will promote these regional rivalries on the road to the World Championships.

The exception to the regional format will be in the Longines Breeders' Cup Classic Division, which will have six domestic races in this year's series. The complete 2022 schedule is available here.

“We're excited to introduce our restructured regional format for the year's domestic Challenge Series to better identify our top qualifiers from each part of the country as they move on to the World Championships,” said Dora Delgado, Breeders' Cup Executive Vice President and Chief Racing Officer. “The Win and You're In format has been in place since 2007 and provides a fast track to the World Championships through an automatic selection into the race and free entry fees. We look forward to working again with our racetrack partners in conducting the Challenge Series races around the world this year.”

Last year, 40 Breeders' Cup Challenge winners competed in the World Championships at Del Mar, including five Championship race winners: Knicks Go, Yibir (GB), Ce Ce, Echo Zulu and Corniche. As part of the benefits to horsemen, Breeders' Cup has allocated $5,180,000 in free entry fees for this year's Challenge Series. Breeders' Cup will pay the entry fees and guarantee a starting position in a corresponding Championships race for all Challenge Series race winners. If not already Breeders' Cup nominated, the Challenge winner must be nominated to the Breeders' Cup program by the Championships' pre-entry deadline of Oct. 24 to receive the rewards.

In addition, Breeders' Cup will provide a $10,000 travel allowance for all starters within North America that are stabled outside of Kentucky and a $40,000 travel allowance to the connections of all Championship starters from outside of North America.

Complementing the season in North America, there will be 39 international Breeders' Cup Challenge races. The international portion of the series began on Dec. 11 when the 7-year-old Village King (Arg) captured the G1 Gran Premio International Carlos Pellegrini at Hipodromo de San Isidro in Argentina to gain the first automatic starting berth into the Longines Breeders' Cup Turf.

In support of the Horse Racing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA), which was signed into law in the U.S. in 2020, medications will not be permitted to be administered within 24 hours for all Breeders' Cup Challenge Series races.

NBC and CNBC will televise the “Breeders' Cup Challenge Series: Win and You're In–presented by America's Best Racing,” featuring nine live programs in the U.S. this summer and fall. The full 2022 television schedule will be announced on Wednesday, May 25.

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