Sale Voided On Seven-Figure Speightster Colt At OBS Spring Auction

One of the highlights of the Ocala Breeders' Sales Co. Spring 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale was undone when buyer Larry Best of OXO Equine turned back the purchase of a $1.1-million Speightster colt, BloodHorse reports.

The purchase was voided under the Conditions of Sale after staff at Taylor Made Farm in Nicholasville, Ky., found the colt to be a cribber; a condition that was not announced at the time he was in the ring. Video was taken of the horse cribbing, and sent to the OBS staff, with Best formally announcing his intention to return the horse shortly before the end of the seven-day window to do so.

To learn more about cribbing in relationship to sales, click here.

Tom McCrocklin consigned the colt as agent for Solana Beach Sales, the pinhooking wing of the Little Red Feather Racing partnership. The colt will be sent to trainer Bob Baffert to begin his racetrack career. McCrocklin told BloodHorse that the colt had showed no signs of cribbing prior to the sale, thus an announcement was not warranted, but the sellers were happy to retain the horse to race.

Named Fortunate Son, the New York-bred colt is out of the stakes-placed Indian Charlie mare Auspicious, who is the dam of three winners from four foals to race. He sold for $110,000 at last year's Fasig-Tipton New York-Bred Yearling Sale.

Read more at BloodHorse.

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Taking Stock: Race Records and Stallion Prospects

Sackatoga Stable’s Tiz the Law (Constitution) was a Grade l winner at two, won the Grade l Florida Derby this year, and goes for the first Classic of the season as the favorite in the Gl Belmont S. on Saturday. His breeding rights have been tied up for months, and if he does nothing from here on in–highly unlikely as that is–he’ll still have a place at stud at a prominent farm.

Tiz the Law’s racetrack future is bright. After the Belmont, he’ll likely contest the Gl Travers at Saratoga in August ahead of the Gl Kentucky Derby in September and the Gl Preakness in October, and a win in one or more of those races will only burnish his resume and take him to another level as a stallion prospect.

Classic winners who were also highest-level winners at two are the most sought-after types in the breeding shed among both owner-breeders and commercial breeders, and at this moment Tiz the Law is perhaps the only colt of his generation with a legitimate chance to attain that status.

Godolphin’s Maxfield (Street Sense) was another Grade l-winning juvenile like Tiz the Law who had a chance to become a Classic winner this year, but following a comeback win in the Glll Matt Winn S. at Churchill Downs last month, he suffered a fracture in his first breeze back and it appears likely his career is over. If he’s done racing, his record will stand at three wins from three starts, including a top-level win in the GI Breeders’ Futurity at Keeneland in his second start, and he’ll probably go to stud at Darley, Godolphin’s breeding arm, where his sire stands.

Nadal didn’t win a Grade l race at two, but he was undefeated in his four career starts, including the GI Arkansas Derby, and was a leading contender for the Classics before he suffered a career-ending fracture in a workout, too. One of his owners, George Bolton, has said he’ll go to stud next year, though where that may be hasn’t been announced yet.

Fragile Horses
Victoria Keith, who’s affiliated with Fox Hill Farm, tweeted on June 10: “At some point, racing may want to address the fragility of the breed. Several top 3yos out with injury, Maxfield the latest, who’s had 2 bone injuries in 3 starts.”

She followed that tweet with this one: “Where are the soundness stats? In an industry full of handicapping, nick, and other data, shouldn’t owners and breeders be equipped with soundness data when they make their breeding and buying decisions?”

Keith certainly raises some legitimate questions, something Fox Hill dealt with after the death of the stable’s Eight Belles (Unbridled’s Song) in the Kentucky Derby gallop-out. In fact, it’s an issue that’s been addressed since the beginnings of the sport, and you can throw a dart into any time frame since and find commentary on the issue from various angles. In the Nov. 13, 1961, issue of Sports Illustrated, for example, Whitney Tower, writing about some racetrack injuries, referenced this quote from the Chronicle of the Horse: “Far more important has been the long established practice of breeders to put to stud any animal which will transmit speed, no matter what its shortcomings in other respects. Thus, there have crept into the Thoroughbred breed various types of inherited unsoundness–crooked legs, round ankles, bad knees, shelly feet, curby hocks, soft and brittle bones.”

In 1961, there were far more owner-breeders in the sport who raced the horses they bred, but nowadays, especially in Kentucky, commercial breeders dominate the landscape, and because they frequently use first-crop sires as an investment strategy, there isn’t any “soundness data” on the offspring of these horses on which to base mating or buying decisions, except for their own race records.

And race records are sometimes unreliable guides to future sire performance. Raise a Native (Native Dancer) and Northern Dancer (Nearctic) were both foaled in 1961. The latter won the Kentucky Derby and Preakness and went on to a fabulous stud career that is still profound to this day. But the former, a brilliantly fast and undefeated black-type winner who made only four starts at two before bowing a tendon, has been just as influential, particularly as the sire of Mr. Prospector.

Northern Dancer sired his version of Raise a Native in Danzig, a foal of 1977 who won each of his three starts–none in stakes company–before a bum knee stopped him. Contrast him to Temperence Hill (Stop the Music), the champion 3-year-old colt of their crop in 1980 and the winner of the Belmont S. who made 31 starts. As a stallion, Temperence Hill sired sound stock, getting 83% starters to foals, but he got only 4% black-type winners to foals. Danzig, on the other hand, gave up some soundness, at 77% starters to foals, but sired better horses, with 18% black-type winners.

Nureyev (Northern Dancer), like Danzig, also made only three starts, finishing first in all of them, but he was disqualified from the G1 2000 Guineas and officially had only Group 3 credit next to his name, though he was also named a champion French miler. He, too, became a world-class sire, getting 81% starters to foals and 17% black-type winners. His name has already been peppered throughout the pedigrees of several European Classic and Group 1 winners so far this season. Claiborne stood Danzig but bred Nureyev, whose homebred dam, Special, raced only once, finishing unplaced, because she was a bleeder.

Claiborne also bred and stood Drone (Sir Gaylord), who broke down after four wins from four starts–none in stakes company. A foal of 1966, Drone sired 80% starters from foals and 9% black type winners. He’s been an influential broodmare sire. More recently, Claiborne stands Mastery (Candy Ride {Arg}), a Grade I winner at two and undefeated in four starts. His career, like those of Nadal and Maxfield, was cut short by a condylar fracture. His stud services have been highly sought despite a limited career.

Not This Time
On the same day–June 10–that Maxfield’s injury was announced and Keith tweeted her concerns for the “fragility of the breed,” Not This Time (Giant’s Causeway), a first-crop sire who made four lifetime starts and won one Grade lll race, was represented by the session and eventual sales topper at the OBS Spring sale. Hip 1254, a filly out of Sheza Smoke Show who’d worked the fastest quarter-mile at the sale in :20 1/5, brought $1,350,000 from Gary Young. The next-highest price that day was the $800,000 that D.J. Stable paid for a Candy Ride (Arg) colt (Hip 561) who’d worked a furlong in :10 1/5.

Not This Time sustained a soft tissue injury and he never raced after two. Candy Ride, likewise, had a career-ending soft tissue injury when he was four and was plagued by foot problems throughout his career, which lasted for all of six starts–the same as Pulpit and his son Tapit. He was undefeated in three starts in Argentina and three in the U.S., and he was a Grade l winner on two continents. He’s since become a premier stallion and has sired such as Horse of the Year Gun Runner, who came into his own as an older horse, and Mastery, an outstanding 2-year-old.

Not This Time, who stands at Taylor Made and entered stud for a $15,000 fee, has not put off buyers with his abbreviated race record. Aside from the sale topper, the horse was represented at OBS with lots that made $700,000 and $575,000 as well. It’s also notable that WinStar’s Speightster (Speightstown), a homebred who entered stud for a $10,000 fee and also has first-crop runners, had the third-highest price at OBS, a colt who sold for $1.1 million. Speightster won three of four starts, his only stakes win a Grade lll race.

Both Speightster and Not This Time are just beginning their careers and are represented by winners from limited opportunities available this year. They have a long way to go to become recognized as successful sires, but their early results have already earned them the support of horsemen in the sales ring. And they are exactly the types of horses, along with the Masterys, Nadals, and Maxfields, that Keith questions as stud prospects and that Whitney Tower’s article from almost 60 years ago addressed, but it’s from this pool of types with abbreviated race records that have also sprung breed-shaping horses like Raise a Native, Danzig, and Nureyev.

In short, it’s difficult to predict sire success from a race record alone. And if it turns out, years from now, that Maxfield becomes a better sire than Tiz the Law or any of his other contemporaries who carve out longer careers, it shouldn’t surprise anyone with a knowledge of history.

Sid Fernando is president and CEO of Werk Thoroughbred Consultants, Inc., originator of the Werk Nick Rating and eNicks.

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Predictably Painful Market Opens New Cycle

These, as we all recognize, are unprecedented times. Only the foolhardy would forecast the duration, or future direction, of the tempest we suddenly find ourselves trying to navigate. Even so, one thing seems nearly guaranteed. There are people out there, whose most critical resources are not merely financial but sooner measured in intrepidity and acuity, who will turn out to have sown a great harvest during these times of famine.

Because that’s the other side of the same coin that made the current crisis as inevitable as it was impossible to foresee. As a system theoretically predicated on something that is simply impossible–perennial growth–capitalism relies, in practice, on cycles of growth and recession. Even these may not be very sustainable, if repeatedly taking the extreme form of “boom” and “bust.” But if society as a whole cannot easily absorb so bumpy a ride, the great individual fortunes will often be made by riding (along with Shakespeare’s Brutus) that “tide in the affairs of men which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune.”

The trick, as after the financial crisis of 2008, will be catching that tide. For the moment, some degree of trauma seems inevitable for a market that ultimately trades–among end-users, at least–in luxury goods.

Setting aside the March Sale in the same ring, a surreal episode even as the pandemic took hold, the postponed 2-Year-Old Spring Sale at OBS last week was the first real measure of the initial shock. Here was an auction that had registered records in gross, average and median for three years running and now faced an onrushing train (containing no overseas passengers, obviously).

Year-on-year comparison, in the accompanying table, is of limited value because of the accommodation this time of a small but valuable group of refugees from Fasig-Tipton’s cancelled sale at Gulfstream. These realized eight of the sale’s top 10 prices.

Taking these and other supplementary entries out of the equation, the core catalog naturally suffered rather deeper losses than those registered on the surface. The gross for the whole sale shrank by 19.8% and the average by 14.4%. Without the Gulfstream transfusion, however, the core market would have shed around one-third of its 2019 value; and the average would have been down by around a quarter.

Some, no doubt, would settle for even so severe a bump in the road, compared with the kind of abyss that has been opening up in the industry’s collective imagination. Regardless, the fact is that even the core of last week’s catalog can’t be sensibly compared with the equivalent sale in 2019.

Across all North American juvenile auctions last year, 30.2% of the animals catalogued were scratched; last week, 40.8% failed to make the ring. While vetting was presumably at a higher premium than ever, the principal driver for this jump in defections was surely the number of private sales preceding the sale. Pragmatic consignors had been receiving scouting missions from trusted clientele all spring. And while private deals doubtless accounted for the very numerous no-shows in the supplementary catalog, they may also have contributed to loss of impetus in the core market. (Certain elite stallions were conspicuously reduced in their representation through the sale.)

Remember, also, that the earlier auctions usually leave vendors the option of regrouping at Timonium. This time, of course, there was no such safety net. Though itself postponed, the Fasig-Tipton Midatlantic Sale is only days away.

If anyone is equal to tough decisions on a horse’s value, it’s the guys who present a 2-year-old for sale. They know that 10 seconds of theater can sometimes be too unforgiving a window to demonstrate the true potential of a horse. Often, if retaining sufficient faith and nerve, they will cling to the wreckage and find partners to prove a higher value on the track. This time round, however, many surely felt obliged to write off a project altogether. Despite the depressed values, the clearance rate held up at 80.1%, virtually identical to last year.

Nor, as such, would a juvenile auction necessarily be the most reliable litmus test for the wider market. These represent the end of a cycle, already comprising serial visits to the ring: as a yearling, weanling, even in utero. Throughout that process, values depend heavily on the confidence of pinhookers. The industry’s morale, to that extent, is nearly self-fulfilling.

But the cost of the raw materials has been rising steeply in recent years. So yes, the North American juvenile market last year passed $200 million for the first time ever, with the average transaction up 8.5%. But the typical yearling, the previous fall, had cost pinhookers nearly 30% more than had been the case only two years before.

Now, in contrast, we may have the kind of environment in which fresh cycles of investment can begin. If you’re a talented young pinhooker, you probably won’t need quite such a head for heights to test the water now.

In the end, last week’s sale was a nettle that had to be grasped by a few unlucky vendors and consignors on behalf of the whole industry. If the usual complaints about polarisation were shriller than ever, then that’s hardly surprising. If anything, the fact that there was still competition for the better horses is more important than a predictable expansion of no-man’s-land.

In 2009, the average at this sale shed 15%. But since the tremors on Wall Street were already being felt the previous year, it may be more pertinent to record that the average between the 2007 and 2009 sales slumped by 23.5%. Conceivably this crisis, being more abrupt, may have compressed its impact in corresponding fashion.

Either way, it will doubtless feel like a long way home. Looking back to 2008, the worry is that the bloodstock market–though greatly favored by all those cash steroids injected into the economy–took much longer to filter the benefits than did mainstream indices. The Dow Jones lost 33.8% in 2008, but recovered 18.8% the following year and maintained solid gains annually until 2015. The United States GDP, similarly, haemorrhaged 2.5% in 2009 but rebounded 2.6%in 2010 and maintained a decade of growth. North American bloodstock, in contrast, lost 21.2% in 2008; 32.2% in 2009; and another 6.5%, even on those compound losses, in 2010. It was not until 2011 (up 18.2%) and 2013 (up a crazy 27.9%, and even then only in tandem with the biggest spike in the Dow Jones) that its own recession levelled out.

Whether our business will again ride the slipstream of recovery in this very different crisis remains to be seen. But let’s just give a moment’s attention, and due credit, to the dollars and cents banked by the big winner in whatever kind of market may be left to us.

It’s obviously an unlucky time to be launching a stallion. Having recently reiterated a personal regard for the horse, however, it was gratifying to see Not This Time consolidating his brisk start on the track–and a precocity that had not been widely anticipated, in a son of Giant’s Causeway–with a knockout sale. From 23 members of his debut crop catalogued, it was a rare distinction to get as many as 21 into the ring; staggering, to find a new home for all but one (a colt who got as far as $95,000 without reaching his reserve); and spectacular, to top two of the four sessions. As a $12,500 stallion, Not This Time baked a cake of rare consistency for a $205,400 average; and then applied the icing in the $1.35 million filly who led the whole sale.

At the best of times, of course, many a good horse will slip through the cracks. Browsing the returns, it looks as though a reluctant farewell must have been said to several youngsters that showed all due gusto under tack and still failed to gain traction. Equally, someone out there will have taken home a foundation mare, or maybe a game-changing stallion, for little money: a tide taken at the flood.

After all, we’re dealing with a guess laid upon a guess. Who can say how the global economy will look, even in a few months’ time? For now, it’s about laying duckboards across the mudflats and keeping as balanced as possible.

The last big shock to the system was caused by financial institutions squeezing its functionality to breaking point (i.e. precisely because of that pressure towards constant growth). The origins of this crisis, plainly, are more extraneous. But you could argue that the post-2008 recovery, and subsequent surge, in turn saw boundaries being pushed, whether in fiscal, political and regulatory terms.

Certainly the instruments used to stimulate growth were all about liquidity–nugatory interest rates, quantitative easing, etc.–and much medication was still being prescribed long after the patient came out of intensive care. That was always going to leave governments short of options, in the event of a relapse. So it remains to be seen how they get back on an even keel, after suddenly being forced into lavish paternalist interventions to stem the catastrophe of a global economic shutdown.

What we do know, in our business, is that the post-2008 therapies were especially congenial for the affluent and that some of them played up their winnings in our business. Then they landed a bunch of tax breaks. The bull run continued breathlessly. It seemed like it would go on forever. After each record-breaking sale, it felt like a moral duty to remind everyone what happened to the “unsinkable” ship. But you might as well go round the Churchill infield on Derby day with a sandwich board, urging repentance, for the end is nigh.

By the same logic, however, it is an equal imperative now to urge everyone not to panic; to keep the faith; to know that the value now available in the marketplace will someday generate the next boom.

As we’ve noted, last week’s market was really centred on the current appetite for a racehorse. We’ll have a better idea of what lies ahead when the pinhookers show what they have left–whether literally, in their coffers, or simply in terms of confidence–at the yearling and weanling sales.

Meanwhile here’s something for them all to ponder. Because one of the problems of the bull run was that it inverted the whole premise of commercial breeding. It made the sales ring, not the racetrack, the key to far too many matings. If it takes a market crash to correct that, well, for the long-term sake of the breed, that might even be a price worth paying.

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Speedy First Two-Year-Olds for WinStar’s Speightster

WinStar’s Speightstown continues to prove himself as an accomplished sire of sires. Already, he’s had four sons go on to produce Grade I winners and just in the last two years, he’s seen eight additional sons, including GISW Force the Pass and the multiple graded stakes-winning Qurbaan, begin their stud careers.

In 2017, WinStar welcomed their graded stakes-winning homebred Speightster into the same stud barn as his prodigious sire.

With an initial stud fee set at $10,000, a price that has stayed in place since, Speightster has been supported with a grand total of 464 mares in his first three books.

Now into his fourth year at stud, the former ‘TDN Rising Star’ is presenting himself as a freshman sire to watch as his first 2-year-olds go through the sales ring and make their initial appearances in the starting gate.

A $1.1-million dollar juvenile that sold late on Friday at the OBS Spring Sale is sure to help ensure a strong start for the young stallion, but perhaps an even more promising indicator of future success could be the people signing the tickets.

“A great benchmark for a freshman sire with his first crop is the agents, trainers, and owners buying those horses,” said Sean Tugel, director of bloodstock services at WinStar. “We’ve seen early on that top agents like Steve Young, Jacob West, and Mike Ryan are buying sons and daughters of Speightster. To do that as a freshman sire, obviously they’re making a great impact on people, both physically and as they’re training.”

Although the OBS March Sale generally reflected the economic uncertainty as the Coronavirus pandemic was just reaching the U.S., three Speightster juveniles sold for six figures.

His top-priced youngster at that sale breezed in :21 2/5 and sold to Steve Young for $200,000. Consigned by Eddie Woods, the colt is out of the Smoke Glacken mare Done Smoking, who is herself a half to two graded-stakes winners.

Two more Speightster babies made headlines at this week’s OBS Spring Sale.

A filly out of the stakes-winning Souper Miss (Alphabet Soup) worked :10 1/5 for the Grassroots Training and Sales Consignment. She sold for $185,000 on the second day of the sale to John Kimmel as agent for Sean Flanagan.

“She’s got tremendous overall balance,” John Kimmel said of his purchase. “She has a beautiful topline and a nice walk with good over-reach. Her mind is very good for a horse that’s been through the rigors of a 2-year-old sale.”

Kimmel said that he has been impressed with several Speightsters this year.

“The Speightsters weren’t really ones I was pointing my attention towards going into the sales, but a combination of their racetrack performance and physical presentation really caught my attention,” he said. “There are handfuls of these Speightsters that have a very good physical presence and breeze well. If I had to be selecting a freshman sire, I would put Speightster, Not This Time, and either Nyquist or Frosted as my top three.”

A second of the Speightsters stole the show as one of the last five horses to go through the ring at this week’s OBS Spring Sale. A New York-bred colt named Fortunate Son sold for $1.1-million late on Friday afternoon to agent Christina Jelm, agent for Larry Best’s OXO Equine LLC.

Out of the stakes placed Indian Charlie mare Auspicious, the juvenile worked in :20 4/5 for consignor Tom McCrocklin, who purchased the speedy colt last year for $110,000 at the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga New York-Bred Yearling Sale.

The successful pinhook placed the colt as the third-highest selling juvenile of the sale, and one of only three horses to reach seven-figures.

After an exciting week for the freshman sire, Tugel reflected on Speightster’s fast start in the sales ring.

“Even in the limited exposure he’s had at the 2-year-old sales, he’s been very well supported by buyers and has averaged 10 times his stud fee. The 2-year-olds we’ve seen are showing the class that Speightster had during his career.”

Unraced at two, Speightster broke his maiden on debut as a sophomore for trainer Bill Mott. The seven length-winning romp at Keeneland earned the colt ‘Rising Star’ status. Next he would take an allowance at Belmont over future Grade I winner Joking (Distorted Humor). One month later, he scored a 104 Beyer in his stakes debut in the GIII Dwyer S. over GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile champion Texas Red (Afleet Alex) and Tommy Macho (Macho Uno), who would go on to become a four-time graded stakes winner later in his career.

“All three of his wins were very impressionable races that really made an impact on people,” Tugel said. “Just showing his brilliance and his talent carried over to the breeding shed where he’s been well supported in all four years.”

Speightster returned to his home farm in 2017 to stand alongside his sire, an Eclipse champion sprinter with over a million dollars in earnings and 18 Grade I winners to his credit.

“Speightstown is a horse that really passes on that class and intelligence, and that’s what we have seen in Speightster himself,” Tugel said. “I think the ability to pass on that excellent quality of class is what really separates your top notch horses from the rest of the group.”

Speightster hails from a prolific female family that includes several champions. He is out of the unraced Danzig mare Dance Swiftly,  a sister to Hall of Fame inductee and Canadian Horse of the Year Dance Smartly (Danzig), as well as the late champion sire Smart Strike (Mr. Prospector).

Tugel said that Speightster represents the best of both sides of the pedigree.

“From day one, he was a standout physically,” he said. “When you see him come out of his stall, you can see all the great qualities that Speightstown passes on to him. But then you get to see the great qualitites his mother gave him through that Sam-Son family. He’s a scopey horse, he stands over some ground, he’s got plenty of leg, and he has really passed that on to his offspring.”

Speightster checked another box as a freshman sire on May 29 when his daughter Queen Arella broke her maiden at first asking for connections Rudy Rodriguez and J Stables LLC.

Following a rough start where she was bumped and squeezed between horses, the juvenile filly rallied from the back of the pack and went four wide approaching the stretch, then drew clear late to win by four lengths.

Queen Arella was bred in New York by WinStar and is out of the winning mare Unbridled Sonya (Unbridled’s Song), who hails from the same family as GI Breeders’ Cup Classic winner Volponi (Cryptoclearance).

A quick start for Speightster both on the track and at the sales has done nothing but increase demand from breeders sending mares to the popular young sire.

“I think that’s a great acknowledgment for a young horse when you haven’t got the racetrack past performances to work off to give people that confidence,” Tugel said. “But you’re presenting good physicals, and you’re presenting a horse that breeders like to be around. We know this horse is making a great impression on breeders and they’re coming back year after year. And I think it’s going to be well paid off for all the breeders here in Kentucky and around the country who have supported Speightster.”

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