Another Good-Looking Winner for Maclean’s Music at the Spa

1st-Saratoga, $80,000, Msw, (R), 8-5, 2yo, f, 5 1/2fT, 1:03.60, fm, 4 1/2 lengths.
MYSTIC EYES (f, 2, Maclean's Music–Cloudburst {SW}, by Storm Cat) suggested an affinity for the turf with a five-furlong spin over the Oklahoma track in 1:02 (9/28) around the dogs July 31, and the money that poured in late for her proved smart. Off at 65 cents on the dollar, the $40,000 Keeneland September yearling purchase was not the quickest away from the inside stall, but was hustled up to grab command moving down the backstretch. Always maintaining a gap on her rivals, Mystic Eyes was under a hand ride into the stretch and proved not for catching. She had 4 1/2 lengths on I'm So Sorry (Uncle Mo) rallied inside for second ahead of late-on-the-scene Mostly Harmless (Violence). A half-sister to Tempers Flair (Smart Strike), the stakes-placed dam of GII Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint and Saudi Derby runner-up Cowan (Kantharos), Mystic Eyes is out of a half-sister to champion Boston Harbor (Capote). Third dam Tinnitus produced champion sprinter Groovy. Cloudburst was most recently bred to Cairo Prince. The Thursday opener was written as an extra on the Wednesday overnight for horses that sold or were RNAd for $45,000 or less at their most recent sale. Sales history: $40,000 Ylg '20 KEESEP. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $44,000. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.
O-MeB Racing Stables LLC & Vincent D Esopi; B-Pursuit of Success LLC (KY); T-Todd A Pletcher.

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Jackie’s Warrior Dominant In Amsterdam, Brings Asmussen Closer To Record

After a thunderous deluge delayed the Grade 2 Amsterdam for thirty minutes, soaking the sealed Saratoga surface, Jackie's Warrior showed that the delay and the track were no trouble at all for the son of Maclean's Music. At Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., the 3-year-old's multi-length victory brought Steve Asmussen another win closer to passing Dale Baird and becoming racing's winningest trainer.

A troubled break in the Grade 1 Woody Stephens last time out compromised Jackie's Warrior's chances at the victory on the Belmont Stakes undercard, with Drain the Clock taking that G1 stakes race. The two hooked up again early in the G2 Amsterdam, dueling for the first couple of furlongs out of the gate. As the field of six entered the turn, Jackie's Warrior accelerated, leaving Drain the Clock in his wake, stretching his lead out to five lengths before they hit the stretch.

Jackie's Warrior lengthened his lead in the stretch, easily pulling away from the rest of the field with jockey Joel Rosario chilly in the saddle. Behind him, Crowded Trade looked poised to make a move on the rail, Drain the Clock in the center of the track trying as well, but neither had enough to catch up to the Asmussen trainee. Rosario eased his colt in the last part of the stretch, the margin of victory 7 1/4 lengths. The final time for the 6 1/2-furlong G2 Amsterdam was 1:15.46. Drain the Clock, Crowded Trade, Flash of Mischief, Mister Luigi, and River Dog rounded out the order of finish.

Jackie's Warrior paid $3.00, $2.20, and $2.10. Drain the Clock paid $2.90 and $2.50. Crowded Trade paid $3.00 to show.

Find this race's chart here.

Bred in Kentucky by J & J Stables, Jackie's Warrior is by Maclean's Music out of Unicorn Girl, by A. P. Five Hundred. Consigned by Taylor Made Sales, the 3-year-old colt sold for $95,000 to owner J. Kirk Robison at the 2019 Keeneland September Yearling Sale. The G2 Amsterdam brings Jackie's Warrior to a record of 2-1-1 in four starts in 2021, for a lifetime record of six wins in nine starts with career earnings of $1,058,964.

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Drain The Clock Will Try To Continue Strong Sophomore Campaign In Sunday’s Amsterdam

Drain the Clock has not left the competition much time to come back on him during a sophomore campaign that has already featured three graded stakes victories. The Maclean's Music colt will look to complete the trifecta of graded stakes scores at a NYRA track, headlining Sunday's Grade 2, $200,000 Amsterdam for 3-year-olds sprinting 6 1/2 furlongs over Saratoga Race Course's main track.

Owned by Slam Dunk Racing and Madaket Stables, Drain the Clock enters his Spa debut off an impressive victory by a neck over fellow Amsterdam contender Jackie's Warrior in the seven-furlong Grade 1 Woody Stephens presented by Nassau County Industrial Development Association on Belmont Stakes Day June 5. The Saffie Joseph, Jr. trainee earned a personal-best 97 Beyer Speed Figure for that victory over Big Sandy, which came two months after a win at the same distance in the Grade 3 Bay Shore at Aqueduct Racetrack.

Drain the Clock has won four of his five starts this year, commencing his campaign with two triumphs in January at Gulfstream Park. In total, Drain the Clock has won six of his seven career sprints, including a 7 1/2-length victory in his 3-year-old debut in the six-furlong Limehouse on January 2 at Gulfstream before posting a 6 1/4-length win in the seven-furlong Grade 3 Swale later that month over the same track.

Joseph, Jr. stretched out Drain the Clock in his only career route in the 1 1/16-mile Grade 2 Fountain of Youth, where he ran a competitive second, just 1 1/2 lengths back to winner Greatest Honour, before racking up two consecutive graded stakes wins when cut back.

“Most of his one-turn races were won in hand,” Joseph, Jr. said. “He was basically geared down the last sixteenth in the Bay Shore. We always thought he had more to give but until you see it you don't know for sure and the Woody Stephens was definitely his breakout race. He earned his respect that day and beat a game horse in Jackie's Warrior. He's in good form and I think he's going over there with a really good chance.

“We tried two turns once and he ran credibly, but one turn is his niche and what he does best,” he added.

Drain the Clock, bred by Nick Cosato in Kentucky, will have Irad Ortiz, Jr.'s services from post 2.

In the Woody Stephens, Drain the Clock edged fellow Maclean's Music progeny Jackie's Warrior at the wire. He will now be returning to a Saratoga track in which he won two graded stakes in his juvenile year, capturing the Grade 2 Saratoga Special last August before winning the Grade 1 Hopeful.

Trained by Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen, Jackie's Warrior made a strong bid for Champion 2-Year-Old honors, notching a 5 1/2-length win in the Grade 1 Champagne in October at Belmont to give him three graded stakes wins in his first four starts. After running fourth in the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile in November, Jackie's Warrior carried that success into 2021, running third in the Grade 3 Southwest in February while on the Kentucky Derby trail.

Shortened up after that effort, Jackie's Warrior bested Dream Shake by a head in the Grade 2 Pat Day Mile on Kentucky Derby Day before matching Drain the Clock's 97 Beyer for the Woody Stephens.

Owned by J. Kirk and Judy Robison, Jackie's Warrior is approaching millionaire status, registering an 8-5-1-1 record with earnings of $948,964. He will look to reach that threshold Saturday, breaking from post 3 with regular rider Joel Rosario in the irons.

Klaravich Stables' Crowded Trade, who last raced when fifth in the Grade 1 Preakness on May 15 at Pimlico, has twice finished in the money in graded stakes, starting when second – a nose back to Weyburn – in the Grade 3 Gotham on March at the Big A. A competitive third in the Grade 2 Wood Memorial presented by Resorts World Casino in April in the Big A's signature race set up his start in a Triple Crown race, where he finished 12 1/4-lengths back to winner Rombauer.

Trained by four-time Eclipse Award-winner Chad Brown, Crowded Trade will make his first start at Saratoga with Hall of Famer Javier Castellano returning to ride from the outermost post 6.

Robert Hahn's New York homebred River Dog will bring his 2-for-2 record into his graded stakes bow. The Jeremiah Englehart trainee was a seven-length debut winner going six furlongs on May 2 at Belmont and won against state breds in the seven-furlong Mike Lee over a sloppy and sealed Belmont track on May 31.

The son of Twirling Candy will face open company on full rest, drawing the inside post with Jose Ortiz aboard.

“He's done everything we expected him to do,” Englehart said. “He ran so well in his maiden, and in the Mike Lee was able to get the job done. We wanted to let some time go by. We gave him two months between races, so hopefully from a timing standpoint, it works out the way we think it will.”

Rounding out the field is Jerry Namy's Flash of Mischief, who will be cutting back in distance off consecutive runner-up efforts at Prairie Meadows in the Prairie Mile and the Iowa Derby, for trainer Karl Broberg [post 4, Eric Cancel]; and Lugamo Racing Stable's Mister Luigi, who won his debut in September and returned off a 10-month layoff to finish fourth against optional claimers on July 9 at Gulfstream Park in his first start since Antonio Sano took over the training duties [post 5, Luis Saez].

The Amsterdam is slated as Race 9 on the 10-race card with a post time of 5:39 p.m. Eastern. First post is 1:05 p.m.

Saratoga Live will present daily television coverage of the 40-day summer meet on FOX Sports. For the complete Saratoga Live broadcast schedule, and additional programming information, visit https://www.nyra.com/saratoga/racing/tv-schedule.

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Juvenile Market Completes $200-Million Bounceback

It may still turn out that we're living under a volcano. For now, however, the first major bloodstock cycle after the trauma of 2020 represents an almost symmetrical, V-shaped recovery–right back to the $200-million breakthrough made by the American 2-year-old market in 2019. Despite restocking with a diminished pool of horses, compared with then, this sector has resembled a giant stress ball in retrieving all its former buoyancy the moment the squeeze was released.

It was the juvenile consignors, of course, that were first broadsided by the pandemic last year. Somehow they got through OBS March, though an air-raid siren might as well have welcomed every horse into the ring, before a dazing series of cancellations or postponements. From the catalogs that were salvaged, the ratio of scratchings approached two-in-five as alternative solutions were improvised with trusted clients, from private sales to racing partnerships. Those that persevered into the ring did so very much with a “fire sale” mentality: cut your losses, get your jabs, start over. The final reckoning, at public auction, obviously didn't represent the full picture but offered a vivid measure of the pain: aggregate turnover collapsed by 38% from $203,206,700 to $125,956,800 and average transactions by 24.4% from $95,807 to $72,388.

A $200-million juvenile market in 2019, remember, had represented a fresh landmark in a breathless bull run for the whole bloodstock industry. Some of us then responded with wiseguy finger-wagging: since perennial growth had historically proved impossible, capitalism instead depended on cyclical correction of overheated markets. But just as nobody could have predicted this particular needle, nor could anyone confidently assert that a new balloon might be inflated virtually overnight.

But that is just what has happened. With obliging neatness, the 2021 2-year-old market–rounded off at Santa Anita last week–has rebounded 59.4% on last year's crash landing, to $200,782,050. The average, similarly, recovered by 28.2% to $92,826. Removing the freak 2020 market from comparisons yields a remarkably solid match-up with the giddy trade of 2019, turnover falling short by just 1.2% and average by 3.1%.

Unsurprisingly, consignment was somewhat leaner this time round. Pinhookers had tightened their belts, while yearling vendors were no doubt less ambitious with their reserves (being less inclined simply to retain a horse and try again next spring). Nor should we forget an ongoing decline in the available pool, the North American foal crop having subsided from 35,000 to around 20,000 since the previous economic shock of 2008. That narrower base has improved the solidity of this market. The RNA rate at juvenile sales in 2007 was around one-in-three, and has in recent years consistently been one-in-four or better.

Indeed, the clearance rate is the more spectacular of all the indices of recovery in 2021, with no fewer than 83% of animals into the ring finding a new home, up from 77.4% in the booming (and bigger) 2019 market. In other words, the symmetry of this 'V' rally can be pretty well ascribed to pure demand. And perhaps that's no surprise, given the forecasting consensus. Yes, the pandemic has been catastrophic for many businesses. On the other hand, those whose affluence is unimpaired find themselves straining with pent-up spending capacity.

For around a decade, leading up to the pandemic, the entire international bloodstock market had been nourished by the fiscal response to the 2008 crisis, with quantitative easing and marginal interest rates fostering liquidity. Then came the tax breaks lavished upon the wealthiest during the last presidency. Throw into the mix a universal suppression of indulgence over the past 15 months–everyone, after all, has been freshly reminded that life is for living–and you have a perfect recipe for a renewal of demand for luxury goods. (And that, as we who view them as a vehicle of subsistence are apt to forget, is precisely what the Thoroughbred racehorse is.)

Some commentators on the wider economy admittedly consider this too fragile a foundation for sustainable recovery. Their fear is that the distribution of wealth, which has not been so unbalanced for a century, leaves too many people unable to contribute to the consumption that drives the economy. If that is so, the stakes are plainly high for the various stimulus programs.

Indeed, those instead predicting a 'K'-shaped recovery see many of the ingredients that fed the Great Depression back in place, with spending power only able to meet production capacity by personal debt. Marriner S. Eccles, chairman of the Federal Reserve under Roosevelt, famously compared the Depression to “a poker game where the chips were concentrated in fewer and fewer hands, [and] other fellows could only stay in the game by borrowing… When their credit ran out, the game stopped.”

So while the resilience of this particular market is a massive relief for many professional horsemen, making a modest living by their skill and sheer hard work, you can bet that some analysts are lining it alongside prices for art and sportscars and sensing trouble ahead.

Be that as it may, for now we can be extremely grateful for such an enthusiastic resumption of investment in our industry. As a result, many a humble household is back on its feet. The juvenile sector, after all, is perhaps the one that trims its sails most bravely into the weather. It tries to eke out extra value from an adolescent Thoroughbred that may already have been through the ring twice, as weanling and yearling–with no backstop, no Plan B. A very strong yearling market, moreover, simply elevates the base costs and places a daunting premium on firing a “bullet” at the under-tack show.

So we're looking at horsemen of unusual flair and endurance. Volatility is embedded in their program. We all read the “home run” headlines, but each of those must repair the damage made by the duds. A market that fluctuates so wildly, then, only adds to a routine precariousness.

Let's take a snapshot of the middle market, where so many pinhookers operate, via the median at Keeneland September–and compare that with the average juvenile dividend.

 

Obviously we're not comparing like with like, but we can see that even at the best of times consignors find themselves either stranded on the beach or catching a rising tide, with very little middle ground. The pinhooker who had operated in the middle market at Keeneland in 2019, with a $47,000 median, last spring sold into a market averaging $72,388. That didn't leave a lot to work with, once the intervening bills had all been paid.

Conversely, they could restock much less expensively–the Keeneland median down to $37,000–and this time round a $92,286 average will have allowed many to patch up some of the holes in the roof.

But they're a hardy crew, for sure. Albeit this is a fairly eccentric gauge of their work, in percentage terms the 2019-2020 cycle, brutal as it was, was little different from those of 2013-14 and 2015-16. What a way to make a living!

As for those stallions who best served their cause, I always consider the table of juvenile averages misleading. Many stallions are represented by so small a sample at the 2-year-old auctions that a single knockout price can conceal a multitude of deficiencies; while often even the highest averages fail to match the same crop's performance at the yearling sales. Let's take a look at the top 20 sires (minimum four 2-year-olds sold) by average–but let's also compare those yields with their averages/medians with the same crop at the yearling sales.

We see that even class leader Quality Road, with a $1.5-million colt to boost his average, actually had an unchanged median. Runner-up Uncle Mo, similarly aided by a $1.3-million sale, made a presentable advance by average but his median was down by half. And third-placed Nyquist, who made impressive gains by average, made only a modest advance with his median.

In fairness, the remarks about a small sample cut both ways. The median, from so limited a group, is perhaps not that instructive. Nonetheless hats off to Flatter, Liam's Map, Maclean's Music, Twirling Candy and Frosted for doubling (or better) their medians in passing stock through 2-year-old consignors. Practical Joke's fine debut in this sector is also clearly legible, whether by average or median. But one or two of the bigger hitters missed their mark this time, for once even champ Into Mischief. His rise had been very well measured by this sector, but in 2021 he rehoused only 21 of 35 juveniles, with his average and median both receding. A rare blip, and if a whole market can bounce back from one dull year, so can the stallion of the decade.

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