Kamden Racing Strikes for 550k Spritz as KEENOV Book 3 Closes

LEXINGTON, KY–The market remained competitive as Book 3 of the Keeneland November Sale closed its two-day run Friday with a frenzy of activity towards the end of the session. After a slow, but steady beginning to the day, Spritz (Awesome Again) (Hip 1747) commanded everyone's attention deep into the session, topping the day's action at $550,000 from Gary Holland's Kamden Racing. She is carrying her first foal by Quality Road.

The day's co-second-highest priced offering came just six hips later when the Brogdens fended off all comers for a mare from a family very close to their hearts, the $400,000 Stonetonic (Candy Ride {Arg}), who sold in foal to Yaupon.

SF Bloodstock, who sold the topper, was also responsible for the other $400,000 mare Hotshot Anna (Trappe Shot) (Hip 1561), who was also in foal to Quality Road. She was bought by Frederick and May Construction.

They also bred the weanling co-topper, a $175,000 daughter of first-crop sire McKinzie. That filly tied a filly from the first crop of champion Game Winner at $175,000. Coincidentally, both of those first-season stallions were bred by Jane Lyon's Summer Wind Farm, which, of course, produced superstar Flightline.

During Friday's session, a total of 246 head grossed $18,641,500 compared to last year when 282 horses brought $19,590,500. However, average was up from $69,470 to $75,778 and median was up from $57,000 to $60,000. The RNA rate increased from 15.32% for the fifth session last year to 21.41% this term.

Through the first five days of selling, 1,041 horses have sold for $182,437,00, well ahead of last year when 1,120 grossed $166,206,000. Average is up to $175,252 compared to $148,398 last year and median increased from $95,000 to $100,000. The RNA rate was up from 20.90% to 25.38%.

“I think the market is good. It is a careful market,” said Neal Clarke of Bedouin Bloodstock, which sold the mare and weanling toppers Friday and were the session's leading consignor by average. “There is plenty of money there for the right stock. I don't think a high tide raises all boats. I think it raises a lot of them, but others get left by the wayside. I think it is a very good sale. We are enjoying it. Long may it last.”

Carrie Brogden noted that as we reach the midway point of the sale, a stronger middle market is starting to emerge.

“We walk up here looking to spend $100,000 or $200,000 on a mare and they bring $390,000 or $350,000,” the horsewoman said. “I think there is plenty of money for those that tick all the boxes. It is very strong for quality. I will say things are starting to change here and there is more of a middle market for weanlings.”

The Keeneland November Sale continues through Wednesday with sessions starting at 10 a.m. and is followed by a single-session Horses of Racing Age Sale Thursday.

Spritz Tops Strong Day For SF

Mares sold by Gavin Murphy's SF Bloodstock have been extremely popular this week at Keeneland and two of them topped Friday's trade during the Book 3 closer. Spritz (Awesome Again) (Hip 1747) was the session topper, bringing $550,000 from new owner Gary Holland's Kamden Racing, and Hotshot Anna (Trappe Shot) (Hip 1561) shared the second spot at $400,000 from Frederick and May Construction. Both mares were sold by Bedouin Bloodstock carrying foals by Quality Road.

“It's been a great sale for us,” said SF's Caroline Wilson. “They are both in foal to Quality Road and are both great mares, who we thought would suit the sale very well. Obviously, we are invested in Quality Road. We have a lot of faith in him. He really adds value to his mares. We thought they would be great sale prospects and they have not let us down.”

Bred by SF in partnership with Tony Holmes, Spritz raced under SF's colors after they bought out their partner at KEESEP for $140,000. Out of SW Holy Blitz (Holy Bull), the 4-year-old filly is a half-sister to champion female sprinter Judy the Beauty (Ghostzapper). Spritz was stakes-placed during her 11-race career and is carrying her first foal.

“I bought this for a new guy, Gary Holland,” said Darby Dan's Charlie McKinlay, who signed the ticket as Kamden Racing. “He just bought the old Windhaven Farm. This mare will be the top of the heap. He is just getting into the game. He lives in northern Kentucky and owns a bunch of restaurants in the area, like the Merrick Inn.”

McKinlay added, “I think she really stood out today. I think she was the prettiest one by far.”

Hotshot Anna, who is also carrying her first foal, was a dual graded winner who earned just over $975,000. The SF team purchased her for $100,000 at the 2020 renewal of this auction.

“We purchase mares with two ideas in mind,” Wilson said. “We may keep them in our broodmare band and take foals out of them or we may breed them and put them back into the market. We thought this was a good opportunity to put Hotshot Anna back into the market. She was a tremendous racehorse and now in foal to Quality Road, which makes her appealing and an exciting horse to sell.”

She continued, “Spritz we actually co-bred with our good friend Tony Holmes. We purchased her as a yearling and raced her ourselves. She got her stakes placing with our friend Rodolphe Brisset. She was a special horse for us. We bred her to Quality Road and thought it was a good time to put her back in the market. We are delighted with how she has done.”

SF also bred and sold the weanling co-topper, a $175,000 filly (Hip 1594) from the first crop of MGISW McKinzie.

Anna Still a 'Hotshot' at Keeneland

MGSW Hotshot Anna (Trappe Shot) (Hip 1561) was back in the spotlight at Keeneland Friday, summoning $400,000 from Chad and Todd Frederick's Frederick & May Construction while carrying her first foal by Quality Road.

“We have been wanting to pick up a mare,” said Chad Frederick. “We have lost out on several, so we decided this was one we were going after. A racemare in foal to Quality Road meant a lot.”

As for the price, he said, “It was a little more [than we thought], but it was our limit. The market is very strong.”

The Frederick brothers bought a pair of weanlings post sale, a $100,000 Bolt d'Oro colt (Hip 1031) and a $90,000 Audible filly (Hip 1007). Todd Frederick also signed the ticket on A Bit of Both (Paynter) (Hip 1412), who brought $110,000 in foal to McKinzie.

Hotshot Anna was a six-time black-type winner, with two of those being graded events. She had 12 wins in total from 27 starts and earnings over $975,000. SF Bloodstock purchased her for just $100,000 at the 20202 KEENOV sale.

“We were hoping for this,” said Neal Clarke of Bedouin Bloodstock, which consigned the 8-year-old mare. “Everybody really, really liked her. It is very hard to find a mare that had that graded stakes-winning streak that she had. Twelve wins, seven seconds, a real racemare and in foal to Quality Road. It was the perfect package.”

Bedouin and SF have been having a very good November Sale, including selling the day three topper, the $1-million Proud Emma (Include), who is in foal to Charlatan.

Stonetonic a Sentimental Purchase For Brogden

It is no secret just how special the aptly named Special Me (Unbridled's Song) is to Carrie Brogden. Purchased for just $6,000, the now-17-year-old mare has produced four graded winners, two at the Grade I level, and the Brogdens have sold her offspring for a combined $3.081 million over the past decade.

Brogden and her husband Craig, who operate Machmer Hall Farm with her mother Sandra Fubini, have not retained any of Special Me's daughters, so they were hell bent on acquiring her grandaughter Stonetonic (Candy Ride {Arg}) Friday and were successful at $400,000. The 4-year-old sold in foal to new sire Yaupon.

“Special Me has paid for everything,” said Brogden as she choked back tears after Craig Brogden signed the ticket out back. “She has paid for our kids' education, our house. Special Me is getting old now and we don't know how many more foals we will get out of her. She had a Curlin filly that got kicked and killed in a freak paddock accident, which just broke my heart. She has a Twirling Candy filly in her belly and people ask if we are going to keep her. She will be a half to four graded winners. They get to be so valuable.”

The Brogdens and Fubini bred Stonetonic's fleet-footed dam Stonetastic (Mizzen Mast), who was Special Me's second foal and brought $77,000 as a KEESEP yearling from Stoneway Farm. She went on to win four black-type events, two at the graded level, and was Grade I-placed for earnings over $856,000.

Stonetastic was Special Me's first black-type winner and was followed by Grade I winners Gift Box (Twirling Candy) and Gina Romantica (Into Mischief)–a seven-figure yearling and recent winner of the GI QEII Challenge Cup here at Keeneland–as well as MGSW Special Forces (Candy Ride {Arg}).

The first foal out of Stonetastic, Stonetonic (Hip 1753) was retained by Stoneway Farm and never made the races. She is carrying her first foal by new Spendthrift stallion Yaupon (Uncle Mo).

“This filly was so much like Stonetastic, who was a beautiful, beautiful yearling,” said Carrie Brogden. “We were going to buy her no matter what she cost! I was kind of hoping no one else felt about her the way we did. I was told Mandy Pope did. We love the mating with Yaupon, too.”

She continued, “When you make millions of dollars out of a mare and then all those horses run and win and have heart and beauty and they vet, we are just very blessed. David Ingordo, who bought Gift Box off of us, bought Stonetastic's Gun Runner [filly for $925,000] in September [at Keeneland], so we have a lot of faith in that program.”

McKinzie's First Crop Proves Popular at KEENOV

The first foals by MGISW McKinzie (Street Sense) were in high demand at Keeneland this week with one of his daughters co-topping all weanlings during Friday's session. Hip 1594 summoned $175,000 from Creek Bloodstock, tying a colt from the first crop of champion Game Winner (Hip 1735) for top-priced weanling. Another filly by the Gainesway stallion (Hip 1551) sold for $170,000 to Teddy Town Racing.

“We are proud to be shareholders in McKinzie,” said Caroline Wilson of SF Bloodstock, which bred Hip 1594. “We had a lovely weanling out of Lady Rapper. We are very pleased with how that filly sold. Bedouin has done a great job for us. We got a lot of action today. The price was great for her.”

Hailing from the same farm that produced Flightline and Game Winner, Jane Lyon's Summer Wind Farm, McKinzie won five Grade Is at varying distances throughout his career and was a solid second to champion Vino Rosso in the GI Breeders' Cup Classic. The 'TDN Rising Star' has had 22 weanlings sell so far at Keeneland for a total of $3.13 million and an average of $142,273.

“We are really thrilled with the way the marketplace has accepted the McKinzies,” said Gainesway's Brian Graves, who consigned Hip 1551. “When we first started looking at the offspring of the stallion, it was obvious he was really stamping and that's what we've put out there. They are all these big, leggy, bay horses with big, long, beautiful necks just like him. They are correct and we are thrilled. It is just as optimistic a start for a stud as we could hope for.”

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Tapit Remains at $185,000 for 2023

Tapit's stud fee will remain at $185,000 in 2023, according to a press release from Gainesway Farm Wednesday morning announcing their roster and stud fees for the coming breeding season.

The farm's top stallion is currently the leading active sire in North America by Grade I winners (29), Grade I horses (62), graded stakes winners (96), graded stakes performers (184), stakes winners (154), and stakes performers (299), and he is the all-time leading sire by lifetime progeny earnings ($188,654,112).

The fee is the third-highest announced thus far for 2023, behind Spendthrift Farm's Into Mischief at $250,000, and Hill 'n' Dale's Curlin at $225,000.

In 2022, his progeny was led by the unbeaten Flightline, whose dominant victories in the GI Metropolitan H. and GI Pacific Classic S. (G1) have established him as the odds-on favorite for this year's GI Breeders' Cup Classic at Keeneland.

A sire-of-sires, his top sons at stud include Constitution, Tonalist, Tapiture, Essential Quality, Frosted and Gainesway's Tapwrit, whose first foals raced this year, and who was the sire of a `TDN Rising Star' Victory Formation at Keeneland last week. He will stand for $10,000 in 2023.

McKinzie will remain at $30,000 in his third year at stud. His first weanlings will be offered this fall, along with those of GI Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile winner Spun to Run, who will again stand for $10,000 in 2023.

Karakontie (Jpn), the sire of this year's GI Del Mar Oaks winner Spendarella, remains at $10,000, as does Raging Bull (Fr), in his second season at stud at Gainesway.

Gainesway will add two new stallions to its roster for the 2023 breeding season, Olympiad and Drain the Clock. The latter will stand for $10,000, while Olympiad's stud fee will be determined after his next anticipated start in the GI Breeders' Cup Classic.

Following is the complete Gainesway stallion roster and their advertised fees for the 2023 breeding season:

Tapit – $185,000
McKinzie – $30,000
Drain the Clock  – $10,000
Karakontie – $10,000
Raging Bull – $10,000
Spun to Run – $10,000
Tapwrit – $10,000
Olympiad  – TBD

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Nyquist Firster Strolls Home to Big Margin at Ellis Park

6th-Ellis, $60,000, Msw, 8-12, 2yo, 5 1/2f, 1:04.30, ft, 7 3/4 lengths.
STUD LOVIN (c, 2, Nyquist–Livin Lovin {GSW-USA, GSP-Can, $162,153}, by Birdstone) never gave his backers and connections a moment's doubt here, debuting with a stylish 7 3/4-length victory as the 5-2 second choice. Leading from the two path right from the jump, Stud Lovin came into the stretch off the back of a :46.09 half and cruised home from there. Meraj (Army Mule) out kicked a rival home for second. Last Cookie (Bernardini), Frosted's half-brother and 'Insights' runner, was slow into stride from the blocks, trailed early and came home seventh after floating six wide into the stretch. A $220,000 OBS June (:10 1/5) purchase this summer after selling for $160,000 at last year's Fasig-Tipton July sale, Stud Lovin is the most recent winner for his graded-stakes winning dam. Livin Lovin has a 2022 McKinzie filly and was bred to Game Winner for 2023. Sales history: $160,000 Ylg '21 FTKJUL; $220,000 2yo '22 OBSOPN. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $36,000. Click for the Equibase.com chart.
O-Paradise Farms Corp., David Staudacher, Angelo Carlesimo, Below The Rim Stables LLC and Gata Racing Stable LLC; B-David Soblick (KY); T-Michael J. Maker.

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‘Speaker’ Latest to Cry Freedom for Sire Line

Not quite nailing the GI Kentucky Derby with Essential Quality (Tapit) felt like one of very few omissions from a spectacular 2021 for Godolphin on both sides of the Atlantic. And while it seems that Sheikh Mohammed must wait at least another year to satisfy that particular craving, his team certainly won't have felt too marginalized during the coast-to-coast sequence of rehearsals that gripped our attention last Saturday. Because they now know for a fact that they have one of the outstanding talents of the previous crop in Speaker's Corner (Street Sense), whose spectacular performance in the GI Carter H.–one of four graded stakes winners on the weekend for Godolphin–represented an unmistakable coming of age.

A 114 Beyer set a formal seal on that breakout, as the highest of the year so far, but it's been clear for a while that a Bill Mott master class is coming together with the maturity of Speaker's Corner. In his two previous starts he had extended his superiority over runner-up Fearless (Ghostzapper) from just over a length in the GIII Fred W. Hooper S., to 5 1/2 lengths in the GII Gulfstream Park Mile. Dropping back in trip at Aqueduct, he showed high energy throughout to dominate a solid field by 4 1/2 lengths, volunteering himself as a third dimension to the showdown everyone wants to see between Flightline (Tapit) and Life Is Good (Into Mischief). If all three happen to converge on the GI Met Mile, then the Triple Crown series may have to produce something pretty special to keep open the status of Horse of the Year.

The blossoming of Speaker's Corner will be all the more gratifying to the Jonabell team because his pedigree is royal blue top and bottom. The solitary dissent on the farm may come from Maxfield (Street Sense), who's entitled to feel nervous about a future rival bred on the same cross with such an abundance of commercial speed.

Regardless, it's good to see their sire now giving himself every chance of extending a line that for a while had a fairly tenuous look. To start with, he had appeared to emulate his own father Street Cry (Ire) by majoring in fillies. Without Street Sense himself, who famously exorcized the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile curse in the 2007 Derby, the legacy of Street Cry (Ire) would have been uncomfortably vested in his female legends Zenyatta and Winx (Aus). (Albeit Street Boss, also at Jonabell, has proved a stalwart at his level). And while Street Sense did come up with Hallowed Crown (Aus) and one or two others in Australia, his first five Grade I winners in the U.S. were fillies and he had to wait until his seventh crop for McKinzie to start redressing the balance.

But now Street Sense is finally scraping out a promising foothold in Kentucky for the extension of the line. Next year Speaker's Corner will presumably jump into the slipstream of McKinzie and Maxfield, respectively launched over the past two years at $30,000 and $40,000 by Gainesway and Jonabell.

If this momentum feels pretty timely for a stallion now 18-years-old, then we must remember how he was obliged to regroup after being loaned to Darley Japan in 2014, when at a real crossroads of his career. (Having also shuttled to Australia five times early on, Street Sense has a pretty tattered passport).

Fair enough, the Japanese migration he shared with Hard Spun served a valid wider agenda for their owner. And it actually created a lasting opportunity for Kentucky breeders in one of the last sons of Danzig: Hard Spun, standing at $60,000 before he left for Hokkaido, resumed here at just $35,000 and is again standing at that fee in 2022. But while Hard Spun at least matches the lifetime ratios of his buddy, across all indices, Street Sense will nowadays cost you more than double at $75,000.

That's how precious was the emergence of both McKinzie and Maxfield to win Grade I races at two. Hard Spun's diverse portfolio, in contrast, has seldom extended to precocity. As such, it reflects very well on Street Sense that both those horses, having unfortunately been sidelined during the Classics, continued to do so well in maturity. (McKinzie even persevered into a fourth campaign, albeit with mixed results).

Just like Maxfield, Speaker's Corner represents a deferred reward for the expensive recruitment of an aristocratic granddam. Maxfield is out of a daughter of Caress (Storm Cat), a $3.1 million graft from a Harbor View family at Keeneland in November 2000; while Speaker's Corner is the belated yield on an even bigger investment at Fasig-Tipton seven years later.

Round Pond (Awesome Again) entered that ring after a truncated third campaign, having won the GI Breeders' Cup Distaff by 5 1/2 lengths at Churchill in 2006. In giving as much as $5.75 million, Sheikh Mohammed perhaps felt a sentimental hook in her kinship to one of the more charismatic European colts to have carried his original, maroon-and-white silks.

Round Pond's mother, who was by the stamina influence Trempolino, had failed to break her maiden in 10 attempts, but the next dam Coral Dance (Fr) (Green Dancer) had not only been Group 1-placed as a juvenile in France but also produced no fewer than three elite scorers. Her second named foal was Nasr El Arab (Al Nasr {Fr}), a group winner in France exported to California where he harvested four Grade Is, three on turf and one on muddy dirt. At the other end of her breeding career, 13 years later, she produced a top miler for Ballydoyle in Black Minnaloushe (Storm Cat), winner of the G1 Irish 2,000 Guineas/G1 St James's Palace S. In between, however, she had produced the memorable Pennekamp, a champion juvenile for Andre Fabre before winning a famous duel with the odds-on Celtic Swing (GB) (Damister) for the G1 2,000 Guineas. Pennekamp proceeded to the Derby as hot favourite, but finished down the field and was not seen again. Sadly his stud career was also an anti-climax, and he ended up covering jumping mares in Ireland at €3,000.

As a half-sister to those three elite winners, Coral Dance's daughter by Trempolino was threatening to prove as mediocre in her second career as she had been in her first, and she was sold for $20,000 at Keeneland November in 2004. By then she was 15, and unfortunately the foal she was then carrying turned out to be her last-meaning that her new owners could not profit when her unraced 2-year-old filly by Awesome Again, much her best cover, emerged the following year to win the GI Acorn S. and then at the Breeders' Cup.

Round Pond's lucrative transfer to Darley represented a huge return for Fox Hill Farms, John Servis having signed for her as a $105,000 yearling. (Unfortunately for Servis, she was later switched to Michael Matz). After that kind of outlay, Round Pond was obviously guaranteed commensurate coverings, but she evidently had her troubles and was confined to the sporadic production of six named foals.

She made a fair start with Long River (A.P. Indy), a longshot third behind Tonalist (Tapit) in the GI Jockey Club Gold Cup before serving in Dubai as a veteran, actually coming up trumps in a G1 Maktoum Challenge at the age of seven. And her final foal by Dubawi (Ire) won at Saratoga last summer and is still chipping away at black type (one podium to date) at the age of five. Her Tapit was gelded after failing to build on a promising start, while two daughters by Bernardini never even made it to the starting gate.

Now all was not yet lost, clearly, for this pair. A Bernardini filly out of a Breeders' Cup winner by Awesome Again is about as resonant a formula as you can find, in terms of distaff branding. And one, Tyburn Brook, has promptly salvaged the whole investment in her dam by producing Speaker's Corner as her very first foal.

He must always have been a standout, as the Jonabell team doubled down and sent Tyburn Brook straight back to Street Sense. Actually the resulting sophomore, Town Branch, was also in action last Saturday, stepping up on his debut to run fourth in a Keeneland maiden. Tyburn Brook has since delivered colts by Maclean's Music and Nyquist.

And while Mott is hardly known for detonating newcomers, on debut Speaker's Corner was made odds-on in a sprint on the last day of Saratoga's “ghost” meet in 2020. Third that day, he then won a Belmont maiden that in hindsight warranted graded status: chased home by GI Arkansas Derby runner-up Caddo River (Hard Spun), GII Fasig-Tipton Fountain of Youth winner Greatest Honour (Tapit) and GI Runhappy Travers S. third Miles D (Curlin), with GII Wood Memorial S. winner Bourbonic (Bernardini) down the field on debut.

In a vexing coincidence, Speaker's Corner followed Maxfield and McKinzie in having to sit out the Triple Crown and was relaunched with an allowance win back at Saratoga. He took a backwards step in the GI Pennsylvania Derby and it was a similarly fitful story in New York last fall, when he blew apart an allowance field before being run down late over a ninth furlong. As we said at the outset, however, everything now seems to have fallen into place.

There's no question that the Street Sense legacy is a precious one with its elusive balance of brilliance and staying power. The brilliance is perhaps rooted in the dam of Street Cry's sire Machiavellian, Coup De Folie (Halo), who was a pretty smart miler herself but above all a genetic powder keg: the great Almahmoud matches up her daughters Natalma and Cosmah respectively as Coup De Folie's second dam and mother of Halo. But there's also plenty of dash along Street Sense's bottom line. Fourth dam Lianga (Dancer's Image) was a top-class sprinter in Europe, while his second dam is a half-sister to both Mr. Greeley (Gone West) and the granddam of Vekoma-whose own Carter success, a couple of years ago, arguably qualifies him as the briskest son of Candy Ride (Arg).

This dynasty has also produced a couple of very quick horses in Europe, but is leavened by some sturdy Classic influences. Machiavellian sired Street Cry from an Irish Oaks winner by Troy (GB); and Street Sense himself is out of a Dixieland Band mare, though again she was another to have run rather quicker than the label (just missed black-type in sprints on both surfaces). Obviously this brings Natalma back into the equation through her son Northern Dancer, as sire of Dixieland Band.

As we've already seen, the family of Speaker's Corner has itself been repeatedly seeded with two-turn depth: first four dams by Bernardini, Awesome Again, Trempolino and Green Dancer. But he has plainly drawn pretty lavishly on the strands of speed behind his sire. In other words, he will have something for everybody in his next job.

Street Sense capped off his Saturday with slow-burning sophomore Whelen Springs at Oaklawn becoming his 73rd domestic black-type scorer. These include 30 at graded level and eight (plus four in Australia) in the top tier. Bernardini, for his part, is now up to 14 Grade I winners already as a historically precocious broodmare sire.

One final footnote: among all the credit owing to the Sheikh's team, don't overlook the wit with which he was named. His dam Tyburn Brook was named for a stream, nowadays subterranean, through Hyde Park in London; and the combination with Street Sense prompted Speaker's Corner, as a longstanding platform for amateur “soapbox” orators in Hyde Park.

But it goes without saying that this horse is the result of some rather more important calls, from the choice of Tyburn Brook's first date to the forbearance of Mott. With such good people in his corner, here's a speaker only now warming to his theme.

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