Juvenile Sales Put Fourth-Book Sires Back on the Map

By the time a stallion's fourth book opens, the team behind him is usually pulling out all their stops to fill those pages. But perhaps no marketing technique in their repertoire can have quite the same effect as just one big price tag when the stallion's first crop of juveniles go to market.

At last week's OBS March Sale, three first-crop juvenile sires were represented by youngsters that surpassed the $500,000 mark in the sales ring, and representatives from each of their respective farms said the phone has been ringing off the hook for breeding contracts since.

The first young sire to score a half-million-dollar sale was Lane's End's 'TDN Rising Star' Unified, when Hip 163, a Wavertree-consigned colt out of Promise Me a Cat (D'wildcat), hammered home for $530,000. The $190,000 KEESEP graduate had clocked the fastest quarter mile of Thursday's breeze show, going in :20 2/5.

Lane's End's Bill Farish said that since the colt's headline-worthy sale, Unified's book has received a major bump in numbers.

“We've gotten over 30 new contracts and they're still coming in,” Farish said. “So he's going to end up with a really nice book of mares. He's getting very close to full.”

While Unified was busy in his first two years at stud with a combined 254 mares bred, he only managed a 68-mare book in 2020, a number sure to be surpassed this year after his first crop's splash at OBS.

Six of his juveniles went through the sales ring in Ocala, including two additional six-figure colts. A $19,000 FTOCT graduate, Hip 110 returned to the auction ring to sell to Spendthrift Farm for $400,000. Later that day, Hip 159 went for $120,000.

While Unified's $43,390 average at the yearling sales last year kept him just short of the top 10 first-crop yearling sires, a $231,000 average coming out of the OBS sale has him in the early running for the leading 2-year-old sales average within his class.

“They certainly looked, as yearlings, like they would be good 2-year-olds,” Farish said. “But once you get a saddle under them and they get into training, you can tell a lot more about if that's a genuine thing or not. It certainly looks like Unified is answering the questions the right way.”

A second first-crop juvenile sire garnered attention before the sale began when Hip 531, a son of Spendthrift's Gormley, fired a :9 4/5 bullet at the breeze show. On the second day of the sale, the $160,000 Fasig-Tipton Select yearling pinhook for Eddie Woods's Quarter Pole Enterprises went for $550,000 to Breeze Easy LLC.

“I got calls from several people about that horse,” Spendthrift's Mark Toothaker said of the youngster. “I had heard Eddie reviewing his group before the sale and he talked highly of him before he ever breezed, so that lets you know you're seeing some nice things moving towards the sale.”

Toothaker said that he, too, has been busy taking calls from breeders interested in sending mares to Gormley.

“I think we've done about a dozen seasons off of the sale,” Toothaker said. “We're hoping that he can follow it up with another strong sale in Miami [at the Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream Sale, Mar. 31] to really get us some momentum, but we definitely picked up some business. It isn't to the point yet where we're full and trying to turn people away, but it certainly has helped.”

Toothaker added that Gormley's success at OBS is also reflected in the attention he's received from Share the Upside investors.

“One of the things we've seen is that some of the people who had not named a mare on their free spot now have called and have named a mare,” he said. “So we have picked up some business with the sale, but it has also stimulated our breeding right holders to go ahead and breed a mare to him this year. We've been reaching out to folks to make the pitch that, 'Hey, this horse is right there for leading freshman sire. Wouldn't you want one in foal to him?'”

Eddie Woods-consigned colt out of Green Eyed Cat (Tale of the Cat) one of three juveniles to reach six figures for Spendthrift's Gormley. | Photos by Z

Gormley was represented by eight juveniles at the OBS Sale. Of the seven sold, three reached the six-figure mark. Another Eddie Woods trainee, Hip 371, brought $250,000 while Hip 234 went to Patrick Biancone for $130,000. Gormley's $153,857 average from the sale increased off his $37,544 yearling average last year.

“When you sell them as yearlings, there's a missing piece in the equation,” Toothaker replied when asked on what changed as Gormley's first crop matured from yearlings to juveniles. “They can look fast as yearlings, but when you go through the ring as 2-year-olds they have to be fast. I think Gormley just separated himself out. [Last year], everyone looked at him as a horse with a modest stud fee and he probably sold his yearlings where they should have sold. Then when they had a chance to perform on the track, that changed the metrics and he increased his average dramatically.”

Breeding a combined 307 mares in his first two years, Gormley bred 72 mares last year off a $7,500 stud fee.

Both Toothaker and Farish spoke about the major impact a strong showing at the early juvenile sales can have on a stallion's book in his fourth year at stud.

“The 2-year-old sales are big help,” Toothaker said. “They get your name out there and it makes people take a second look. That's all you're asking, is to still be in the game.”

“When you have a fourth-year sire, nowadays with the large books it gets tougher and tougher to find mares until breeders have something to believe in because it's a big risk to breed to a fourth-year sire if you're not very encouraged by what you're seeing,” Farish echoed. “When they have good results at the sales it can really make a difference.”

Both Gormley and Unified will have to contend with a third major player for leading freshman sire status.

Practical Joke made a major splash at last week's sale with a $750,000 sales topper and four more juveniles reaching six figures, and while Coolmore's Adrian Wallace said the farm has received inquiries about the Ashford resident over the last few days, his book was full before the sale began.

“Yes, we've gotten calls on Practical Joke this week, but unfortunately we've been unable to fulfill their requests because Practical Joke is the worst-kept secret out there,” he said. “His 2-year-olds have been doing very, very well and they have been from the beginning, so most people were aware that the horse has been full before we got to see the results from the March sale.”

Practical Joke's leading sale at OBS was Hip 311, a filly out of Peruvian champion Valiant Emilia (Per) (Pegasus Wind). A $120,000 KEESEP purchase for Top Line Sales LLC, the daughter of the buzzed-about sire brought $750,000 after breezing in :9 4/5.

Wallace reported that Gabriela Alvarez-Calderon of Teneri Farms already has Valiant Emilia slated to return to Practical Joke again this year.

The son of Into Mischief has maintained a large book in his first few years at stud, seeing 220 mares in 2018 before filling a 200 and 188-mare book the following two years. His $120,243 yearling average last year placed him amongst the top five first-crop yearling sires.

Last week, he saw seven youngsters go through the ring with five selling to average $296,000. Hip 113, a colt out of SW Mystic City (City Zip) brought $210,000 while four hips earlier, a filly from the Old South Farm consignment sold for $200,000.

“Not a single race has been run yet and we're very mindful of that, but nevertheless it's good to see them in demand and gallop out so well at the breeze sale, and then see a continuation of what they achieved as yearlings,” Wallace said.

Practical Joke filly goes for $750,000 to top the OBS March Sale. | Photos by Z

While Practical Joke didn't necessarily need the added boost of a near-million-dollar sale in order to fill this year's book, Wallace said the added publicity does nothing but help in kicking off this young sire's fourth year at stud.

“It makes them relevant,” Wallace replied when asked what a successful sale helps achieve for a young stallion. “The first-season sires, as most people are aware, are the ones that are easy to sell. They're the ones people put their faith in and they're fresh in people's minds, possibly because they could be the next biggest thing but also because they've never done anything wrong. There's less risk involved.”

He continued, “By the time you get to the fourth and fifth year, the talking stops and the advertising stops, so it very much depends on how they sold as yearlings and how the 2-year-old buyers perceive them. If you're lucky enough to have a horse that's well-received in the marketplace, then it's all well and good.”

One first-crop juvenile Ashford resident that did reap the benefits of a solid OBS Sale was Cupid. Off a $46,786 yearling average last year, the son of Tapit was represented by two six-figure juvenile sales in Ocala, and Wallace reported that his fourth book has increased by 20 mares in the past week.

Both Farish and Toothaker echoed that several of their first-year juvenile sires cashed in on the results of last week.

Spendthrift's Lord Nelson averaged $103,937 at OBS with Hip 67, a colt out of SP Luna Dorada (Seeking the Gold) selling for $385,000.

Toothaker said the son of Pulpit had 15 slots remaining going into last week, and those spots have since been filled.

“We've been saying here for a month that we felt like with a good showing from Lord Nelson and Gormley there at OBS, it would probably finish Lord Nelson off and spark a fire underneath the breeding right holders on Gormley,” he explained.

Meanwhile Lane's End's Connect had three six-figure sales, including Hip 503, a colt that sold for $290,000 to Narvick International.

Connect has a really good group going to Gulfstream, and from what I'm told an even better group going to the April sale,” Farish said. “He's picked up some mares, not as many as Unified, but I think his better ones are in the sales to come.”

Farish can remember another stallion at Lane's End from not too long ago that saw an explosion in demand after his first juveniles went through the sales ring.

“Stephen Got Even had a 2-year-old bring $2 million and change that Sheikh Mohammed bought,” he recalled. “His book jumped by over 100 when that happened. It was absolutely amazing. It has to be genuine when that happens because everybody down there in Ocala is too savvy, so it has to be real and that certainly set his book on fire, and Unified has had a similar reaction.”

Wallace said that Munnings is one Ashford sire that comes to mind as one who saw a jump in demand after his first juvenile sales, while Toothaker reported the same of Goldencents at Spendthrift.

Looking at the bigger picture, Farish said that for now, his sale's team must hold their breath as the whims of the market help decide the size of their stallions' fourth book, but in the future, The Jockey Club's 140-mare cap could change this trend.

“What we've seen in the last 10 years is that it's tougher and tougher to fill any stallion that is not a first year or proven,” he said. “When you're in that crucial second-through-fourth year, it's very competitive because the first-year and proven stallions are getting so many mares that it doesn't leave room for the unproven stallions. With the mare cap, all those mares are going to have to go somewhere. They're going to have to go either to additional new stallions or the second-through-fourth-year horses and hopefully smooth out that transition.”

Taylor Made's Midnight Storm (average $190,000, top price $240,000) and Airdrie's American Freedom (average $123,666 average, top price $260,000) were also in the top five first-crop sires by average.

The post Juvenile Sales Put Fourth-Book Sires Back on the Map appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Practical Joke Filly Tops OBS March Sale’s Second Session

Hip No. 311, a daughter of Practical Joke consigned by Top Line Sales LLC, Agent, went to Hideyuki Mori for $750,000 to top the second and final session of the Ocala Breeders' Sales Company's 2021 March Sale of 2-Year-Olds in Training.

The bay filly, whose eighth in :9 4/5 was co-fastest at Friday's Under Tack session, is out of champion Valiant Emilia (PER), by Pegasus Wind, from the family of recent Grade 2 Tampa Bay Derby winner Helium.

Hip No. 547, a daughter of American Pharoah whose quarter in :20 4/5 was co-fastest at Saturday's Under Tack session, was sold to Colombo Bloodstock Agency for $600,000. The bay filly, consigned by consigned by Wavertree Stables, Inc., (Ciaran Dunne), Agent, is out of graded stakes-placed stakes winner Henny Jenney, by Henny Hughes, a half-sister to grade one stakes-placed stakes winner Zeewat.

Spendthrift Farm / Myracehorse.com went to $575,000 for Hip No. 357, a son of Kantharos consigned by Woodford Thoroughbreds, Agent. The chestnut colt, whose quarter in :20 2/5 was Friday's co-fastest, is a full-brother to stakes winner Adventurous Lady out of Ari the Adventurer, by Pioneerof the Nile.

Hip No. 295, a daughter of Uncle Mo consigned by Pike Racing, Agent, was sold to Live Oak Plantation for $550,000. The bay filly, who breezed an eighth in :10 1/5 on Friday, is out of Town Tour, by Speightstown, a half-sister to Grade 1 winner Moonshine Memories.

Sean Flanagan paid $550,000 for Hip No. 504, a daughter of American Pharoah consigned by Eddie Woods, Agent. The bay filly, who breezed a quarter in :21 1/5 on Saturday, is out of Forgotten Miss, by Afleet Alex, a half-sister to graded stakes winner Woodlander.

Hip No. 507, American Passport, a son of American Pharoah who breezed an eighth on Saturday in :10 1/5, went to Hideyuki Mori for $550,000. The bay colt, consigned by Coastal Equine LLC (Jesse Hoppel), Agent, is out of French Passport, by Elusive Quality, a half-sister to graded stakes winner Smooth Air.

Hip No. 531, a son of Gormley consigned by Eddie Woods, Agent, went to Breeze Easy LLC for $550,000. The bay colt, whose eighth on Saturday in :9 4/5 was the day's co-fastest, is a half-brother to stakes winner Little Kansas out of Green Eyed Cat, by Tale of the Cat.

High Point Bloodstock paid $475,000 for Hip No. 506, a son of Quality Road consigned by de Meric Sales, Agent. The dark bay or brown colt, a half-brother to stakes winner Curlin's Fox out of graded stakes winner Foxysox (GB), by Foxhound, turned in an Under Tack eighth in :10 1/5 on Saturday.

For the session, 151 horses sold for a total of $19,004,500 compared with 150 grossing $14,355,000 in 2020. The average was $125,858 compared with $95,700 a year ago while the median was $70,000 compared with $50,000 last year. The buyback percentage was 18.8 percent; it was 37.7 percent a year ago.

For the entire sale, 326 horses sold for $38,265,000 compared with 295 bringing $27,349,500 a year ago. The average price was $117,377 compared with $92,710 in 2020 while the median price was $62,500 compared with $50,000 a year ago. The buyback percentage was 16.2 percent; it was 38.8 percent in 2020.

To view the auction's full results, click here.

The post Practical Joke Filly Tops OBS March Sale’s Second Session appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Marching Back to Normalcy

By Brian DiDonato & Steve Sherack

What a difference a year makes.

With a $750,000 filly from the first crop of Practical Joke leading the way, the first auction of 2-year-old sales season completed a very promising two-day run as the 2021 OBS March sale concluded with across-the-board gains compared to last year and numbers not too far off of 2019 stats recorded during more normal circumstances.

Consigned by Top Line Sales as hip 311, Wednesday's highest-priced lot and the sale's overall topper was purchased by Japan's Hideyuki Mori, who led all buyers for the auction, purchasing eight juveniles for $2.245 million. She worked a co-bullet in :9 4/5 at the breeze show.

Eddie Woods topped consignors for the second straight day with eight sold for $2.007 million and led the standings overall at the two-day auction, selling 14 juveniles for $4.134 million.

While exact year-to-year comparisons are tricky due to OBS's policy of adding subsequent post-sale transactions to its official statistics, there does seem to be a bright light at the end of the tunnel as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to dissipate.

For Wednesday's session, 151 juveniles grossed $19,004,500, good for a $125,858 average and $70,000 median. As the pandemic just began to take a hold last year and with the stock market plummeting, the corresponding day two session in 2020 grossed $14,355,000 for 150 sold with an average of $95,700 and a median of $50,000. The buyback percentage was 18.8% Wednesday; it was 37.7% a year ago.

A total of 326 juveniles brought $38,265,000, good for a cumulative average of $117,377 and a median of $62,500. In 2020, 295 head realized gross receipts of $27,349,500 with a $92,710 average and a $50,000 median. The cumulative buyback percentage was 16.2%; it was 38.8% in 2020.

The 2019 gross was $44,248,500 for 306 sold at an average of $144,603 and median of $80,000.

No fewer than 16 juveniles brought $500,000 or more at this year's sale. Only five hit that same mark in 2020. Last year's sale was topped by a $650,000 American Pharoah filly. Now named Russian Samovar, she was a debut winner in Japan last fall.

“It was another good, solid day of selling horses,” said OBS Director of Sales Tod Wojciechowski. “We were very pleased with how the sale wrapped up. It seemed to hold its strength all the way to the end.”

He continued, “Mr. Mori was here, and we had a number of Japanese buyers online. It was nice to see their participation, but the domestic spending was strong as well.”

Next on the OBS agenda is the Spring Sale of 2-Year-Olds in Training, scheduled for Apr. 20-23.

“Certainly, we hope the momentum of this sale carries through to the rest of the season,” Wojciechowski said. “April continues to be the premier 2-year-old sale in the world. I know we'll have plenty of good horses in April, and if this sale is any indication, it bodes well for April.”

Top Line Goes Back to the 'Well'

Torie and Jimbo Gladwell's Top Line Sales LLC made a huge score last season when they sold 'TDN Rising Star' and eventual GI Del Mar Debutante heroine Princess Noor (Not This Time) for a sale-topping $1.35 million at the pushed-back OBS April sale, and they turned another nice profit Wednesday with a daughter of a freshman stallion.

Hip 311, by buzzed-about MGISW Practical Joke, brought $750,000 from Japanese trainer Hideyuki Mori after breezing in :9 4/5. The $65,000 KEENOV RNA and $120,000 KEESEP yearling is out of Peruvian champion and GSW Valiant Emilia (Per) (Pegasus Wind) from the family of recent GII Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby winner Helium (Ironicus).

“She's the only one we had here who was for our partnership,” said Torie Gladwell. “It was some of the same partners who we had on Princess Noor last year, so they are definitely some lucky partners. We will not be getting rid of them.”

As for what she and her husband liked about hip 311 as a yearling, Gladwell said,

“We actually found her in the Taylor Made express lane. That was the first time we saw her–when she walked by she just had that big, slinky walk. She wasn't a big filly at the time, but that walk and balance that she had, that's what we look for at the yearling sales. She also had a really, really good, strong hind leg–a big gaskin muscle. So, when we saw her walk by for the first time, we both knew that we really needed that filly. She was early in the day when she sold, within the first 10 hips of the day, and I think that helped us get her at a reasonable price.”

Princess Noor was also purchased from Taylor Made and for similar money–$135,000.

“When we got that filly home, we turned her out, and I was sitting at the computer doing some paperwork,” Gladwell said of hip 311. “They lead her back into the barn and said, 'Boss, we have a problem.' She sliced her chest open from the middle all the way to the side of it and I about threw up. I was sick. She's a really smart filly, but she just got running too fast and slid into the T-post at the perfect angle. Other than that, we've never had any kind of setback with that filly.

“As far as training goes, she's just a filly who you can ask to go slow, or go fast–she'll do whatever you want her to do. I like that type of filly. She's not high strung; never does anything bad. She'll take a hold of the bit and bow her head and do what she's supposed to do.”

Gladwell said that many prospective buyers had remarked that the filly, a Mar. 18 foal, almost looked like a colt given her powerful build. She was still surprised by the price.

“We did not think it was going to go that high,” she said. “She was vetted quite a bit–maybe 15 or 16 times. We were thinking $400,000-$500,000, but last year we had a lot of luck with a filly by a freshman stallion, and if a horse by a freshman stallion jumps up and looks like her and breezes like that on the racetrack, people are going to want to buy them.”

As for any similarities between Princess Noor and hip 311, Gladwell said, “They are both plain, dark bay fillies and that's what I'm going to try to buy from here on out.”

Mori, one of several Japanese buyers playing at the top end this week, purchased eight for $2,245,000. His next-priciest expenditure was a $550,000 American Pharoah colt (hip 507) who breezed in :10 1/5. Consigned by Jesse Hoppel's Coastal Equine, the $220,000 FTKSEL RNA hails from the family of MGISW Got Stormy (Get Stormy) and Grade II winners Smooth Air (Smooth Jazz) and Overdriven (Tale of the Cat).

Mori trains the likes of globe-trotting sprinter and $3-million earner Matera Sky (Speightstown) and the last two winners of the Saudi Derby. —@BDiDonatoTDN

Colombo Snags Pharoah Filly for Yoshida

After struggling for most of the sale to fill his order due to vet issues and high prices, agent Eugenio Colombo swooped in late in the day Wednesday to grab hip 547 for $600,000 on behalf of Shadai's Teruya Yoshida.

The daughter of American Pharoah was consigned by Ciaran Dunne's Wavertree Stables and breezed a quarter in :20 4/5 last week.

“Everything–the conformation, the way she walked, the mental attitude. She's a calm filly,” Colombo said of the filly's appeal. “I'm very, very happy to buy her. I was afraid, with the prices going on here, and after seeing [what hip 311 brought]… She also vetted perfectly–I vetted 11 fillies, and all the others had some minor issues. And then even with those minor issues, they still brought top money.”

Hip 547 was a $200,000 Keeneland September yearling acquisition. She is out of MSW and GSP Henny Jenney (Henny Hughes) and has an unraced full-brother named Primary Colors who was a $350,000 KEENOV weanling buy by Bob LaPenta's Whitehorse Stables. That colt returned to the worktab recently at Fair Hill.

No fewer than three juveniles by Triple Crown winner American Pharoah will be headed to Japan from OBS after this week–Kazuko Yoshida purchased hip 387 for $350,000 from Kings Equine; and Hideyuki Mori bought the aforementioned hip 507 for $550,000.

The Coolmore resident has been well represented on the track in Japan by the likes of last month's G1 February S. winner and $475,000 OBSMAR '19 grad Cafe Pharoah and Japan Dirt Derby hero Danon Pharaoh (Jpn). —@BDiDonatoTDN

Spendthrift Takes Home Four

Wayne Hughes's Spendthrift Farm was an unsurprising player at the top of the market this week, taking home four horses for a combined $1,725,000, led by a Kantharos colt (hip 357) secured Wednesday for $575,000 in partnership with their affiliated MyRacehorse.com.

Consigned by Woodford Thoroughbreds, Agent II, the chestnut breezed a quarter in a co-quickest :20 2/5 during the under-tack preview. He is a full-brother to juvenile MSW Adventurous Lady. His dam was a debut winner as a July juvenile, his second dam was a stakes winner at two and his third dam was graded-placed at two. Bred by Stonestreet, the Feb. 25 foal was a $220,000 Keeneland September yearling.

“He's just an absolutely beautiful horse,” said Spendthrift's Ned Toffey. “He had a little more leg than you might typically find on a Kantharos–just a very classy-looking horse. I feel comfortable that he'll be very fast, but he looks like a horse who may be able to stretch out a little bit as well. We thought he had one of the best breezes that we saw. Kantharos may be a little bit quiet right now, but that doesn't bother me–we think he's a very good sire. We're very happy to have one. Just a very impressive physical–he was our pick of the day.”

The team will take some time before deciding on a trainer for the colt.

“He'll go back to Spendthrift this evening,” Toffey explained.  “Even if there are no issues, we usually like to give them 30 days at the farm to just let them chill out a little bit and put this sale environment behind them, and make sure still are happy with what we've got, and then go on with them. So, we've got about 30 days to make a decision.”

John and Susan Sykes's Woodford had a productive day overall–they also sold a $450,000 Maclean's Music colt (hip 350, :20 4/5, $190,000 KEESEP) to Lauren Carlisle, agent; and a $300,000 Lemon Drop Kid colt (hip 362, :10 1/5, $80,000 KEESEP) to L.E.B., agent for West Point Thoroughbreds.

Spendthrift, meanwhile, made all its other buys Tuesday: a $200,000 Outwork filly (hip 2, :10) consigned by Fast Horses; a $550,000 Violence colt (hip 48, :9 4/5) from Kirkwood Stables; and a $400,000 Unified colt (hip 110, :9 4/5).

Toffey was encouraged, like many, for what a strong market at OBS could mean for the state of the industry.

“Maybe it's a little of the covid rebound factor–people are just eager to get out and get back to normal,” he said. “I was very encouraged walking around the sales grounds, looking at horses in the days leading up to the sale, by how much activity we saw–plenty of buyers and people looking at horses. The vets seemed to have good activity. So, from an overall health of the market industry standpoint, I thought it was very encouraging to see.”–@BDiDonatoTDN

Another Banner Day for Eddie Woods

A day after selling a trio of half-million dollar or more juveniles, including Tuesday's $550,000 Munnings filly co-topper, OBS March's leading consignor Eddie Woods was back at it Wednesday with another pair of big-ticket items.

Hip 504, a filly by Triple Crown winner American Pharoah, brought $550,000 from owner Sean Flanagan. The :21 1/5 breezer was produced by an unraced Afleet Alex half-sister to MGSW Woodlander (Forestry). This is the family of millionaire Coal Front (Stay Thirsty), winner of the G2 Godolphin Mile and GII Amsterdam S. Bred in Kentucky by Mike Connelly, Hip 504 was a $140,000 KEESEP yearling.

“She's been a special filly from day one,” Woods said. “She's very elegant, very classy. Always been a beautiful mover. Just one of them delights to be around.”

Hip 531, a colt from the  first crop of Spendthrift Farm stallion Gormley, was a $550,000 purchase by Mike Hall and Sam Ross's Breeze Easy. The $160,000 Fasig-Tipton Select yearling pinhook fired a :9 4/5 bullet at the breeze show. Gormley's first yearlings in 2020, led by a $270,000 colt, averaged $37,544 (59 sold), according to TDN Sales Results by Stallion.

The half-brother to SW Little Kansas (El Kingdom), out of the Tale of the Cat mare Green Eyed Cat, is a grandson of two-time Grade I winner Critical Eye (Dynaformer). Hip 531 was bred in Kentucky by Ledgelands and Andrew C. Ritter.

“He had a fabulous breeze,” Woods said. “He's a magnificent-looking horse. It's good money for a first-season stallion. He did everything right and was real easy on the eyes, hence everyone liked him.”

Both Hip 504 and Hip 531 were pinhooks by Woods's Quarter Pole Enterprises.

For the second straight day, Woods led all consignors with eight sold for $2.007 million. He topped all consignors at the two-day auction as well, selling 14 juveniles for $4.134 million.

“I thought it was very, very good, it was very healthy,” Woods said of the 2-year-old market. “There were people there at all levels.

You know, nothing silly happened, there was no huge seven-figure number, but a lot of horses got pedaled for the $400,000 and $500,000 [range]. Which is always a way healthier market than one horse bringing it all and the rest just looking at one another.” —@SteveSherackTDN

Pike Has Them Saying Uncle at OBS March

After selling a pair of seven-figure, Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-year-old toppers by Uncle Mo in 2016 and 2020, consignor Al Pike enjoyed another big result with the leading Coolmore sire early in the session at OBS March Wednesday.

Hip 295, a filly by Uncle Mo out of a Speightstown winning half-sister to MGISW Moonshine Memories (Malibu Moon), brought $550,000 from Live Oak Plantation. The Uncle Mo/Speightstown cross is also responsible for promising young sire and GII Jim Dandy S. winner Laoban.

“We're big fans of Uncle Mo, he's been very good to us,” Pike said.

The $185,000 KEESEP yearling graduate breezed an eighth in :10 1/5 at the under-tack show. This is also the female family of 1997 Horse of the Year Favorite Trick.

“We've loved her ever since I laid eyes on her as a yearling with Ben Burleson's consignment at Keeneland and she's never disappointed me a day,” said the Opelousas, Louisiana-based horseman. “She looked beautiful here and she worked beautifully. Some really good horsemen were involved in trying to buying her.

He continued, “The underbidder was [trainer] John Kimmel for a client, he was on the phone. John and Mike Mulligan were trying hard. I had a big group–a partnership of about 10 people on this one. A bunch of people from as far away as Oklahoma and all over from Louisiana, including [former jockey] Shane Sellers and his wife Susan.”

Pike Racing also sold a $430,000 Curlin filly (Hip 83; :10 1/5 breeze) to bloodstock agent Mike Ryan during Tuesday's session.

“We've had a good sale,” Pike said. “Down here it looks like they're looking for a good horse and they'll pay for a good horse. It kinda makes it fun for us.”

Pike concluded, “I'm just excited to get to do what I do and get to train animals like this.” —@SteveSherackTDN

Lieblong Has It All 'Mapped' Out

With his Grade I-winning 'TDN Rising Star' Wicked Whisper (Liam's Map) off to the breeding shed for a date with leading sire Uncle Mo, owner Alex Lieblong added a 2-year-old colt by the young Lane's End sire to his stable for $335,000 at OBS March Wednesday.

Hip 306, consigned by Hoby and Layna Kight, breezed a quarter in :21 at the under-tack show. He was produced by a Giant's Causeway half-sister to MGISW You (You and I). Bred in Kentucky by St. Elias Stables, he RNA'd for $45,000 as a KEESEP yearling.

Content with his current hand of 2-year-old fillies, as well as his homebreds slated to race in South Florida by his former stand out The Big Beast, Lieblong asked Bo Hunt to give him a ring if a nice colt caught his eye this week in Ocala. Hunt breaks most of Lieblong's yearlings.

“Wicked Whisper, she was kind of built stoutly, and this colt, he's not a frail-looking individual, and that's the way she was built,” said Lieblong, chairman of the Arkansas Racing Commission. “I had some luck with her and I liked the way he moved. He didn't have the fastest work, but I don't think that's always the best predictor. They're not gonna run too many two-eighths-of-a-mile races anyway. He looked like he could cover plenty of ground and I liked the fact that he was out of a Giant's Causeway mare. That should give him a little boost, as far as going a little bit of distance and taking the speed he has with it.”

Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen, who campaigned Wicked Whisper to a career-best win in the GI Frizette S. at Belmont at two and a victory in last term's GIII Miss Preakness S. at Pimlico, will likely train Hip 306, per Lieblong.

“[Asmussen] did go by and take a peek himself and he was impressed,” Lieblong said. “His stout-build reminded him of Wicked Whisper, too. I think we'll just keep him with the one that has the experience with it.”

Along with his wife JoAnn, the Central Arkansas natives have campaigned recent standout 2-year-old sale graduates such as: the aforementioned GI King's Bishop S. winner and Ocala Stud stallion The Big Beast (Yes It's True) ($150,000 OBS April 2yo); GII Indiana Oaks heroine High Dollar Woman (Super Saver) ($675,000 OBS March 2yo); GII Saratoga Special S. winner and GI Hopeful S. runner-up I Spent It (Super Saver) ($600,000 Fasig-Tipton Florida 2yo); and Oaklawn Invitational S. winner Laughing Fox (Union Rags) ($375,000 OBS March 2yo).

The Lieblongs have also had their blue-and-white colors carried by GI Alabama S. heroine Embellish the Lace (Super Saver), a $320,000 KEESEP yearling purchase. Wicked Whisper was a $500,000 KEESEP yearling graduate as well. Lieblong heads his own investment firm in Little Rock, Arkansas.

Lieblong concluded, “Somebody asked me one time, 'What's your best sale?' That's kind of like asking, 'What store should I go buy my lottery ticket?' It's still about the individual more than the sale. And it's definitely about who's consigning the horse. And that goes for yearling or 2-year-old in training sales.” —@SteveSherackTDN

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Practical Joke Filly Brings $750k at OBS

A filly from the first crop of multiple Grade I winner Practical Joke (hip 311) shot to the leader board at OBS when selling for $750,000 to Hideyuki Mori Wednesday in Ocala. Consigned by Top Line Sales, the bay filly is out of Peruvian champion Valiant Emilia (Per) (Pegasus Wind) and is from the family of recent GII Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby winner Helium (Ironicus). The bay filly, who RNA'd for $65,000 as a Keeneland November weanling, sold for $120,000 to Down the Stretch at the 2020 Keeneland September sale. She worked a furlong in :9 4/5 at last week's under-tack preview.

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