Singer Hopes to Strike Early at Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale

Texas businessman Craig Singer, a veteran with over four decades in the breeding business, will look to capitalize on recent additions to his broodmare band when he sends three yearlings through the ring at the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale next Monday. Through the Taylor Made Sale Agency consignment, a filly by Gun Runner out of Baby Go Far (Brz) (Elusive Quality) will kick off the two-day auction when selling as hip 1. Singer purchased Baby Go Far, with the filly in utero, for $150,000 at the 2022 Fasig-Tipton February sale. Just a month later, the filly's full-brother (video) topped the Goffs Dubai Breeze-Up Sale when selling for €543,210.

“This is really a nice Gun Runner filly,” Singer said. “The drawback, if there is a drawback, is that she is number one in the sale. But I think people will find her. She is a really good-looking filly.”

Asked if he knew about the 2-year-old colt when he purchased the mare, Singer said, “I did, yes. I was told about him. Hopefully, he goes on and does well.”

Also at last year's Fasig-Tipton February sale, Singer purchased multiple graded placed Laseen (Ire) (Dylan Thomas {Ire}), in foal to Uncle Mo, for $150,000. The mare's Uncle Mo filly will go through the ring next week as hip 88.

“I was shopping for young mares in foal to good sires,” Singer said of his buying spree last February. “And I was lucky enough to get these two.”

Singer has already enjoyed quick return on a mare investment this year. He sold a daughter of Volatile for $285,000 at the Fasig-Tipton July sale. The yearling is out of Whisper to Me (Thunder Gulch), a mare Singer purchased carrying the filly for $65,000 out of the Pin Oak dispersal at Fasig-Tipton in 2021.

“She was at the Josephine Abercrombie dispersal,” Singer said of the 19-year-old mare. “I was looking for something in the sale and I thought the mare would go for a lot more than that. She's a difficult mare to get and to keep in foal, but obviously one foal paid for the mare. And she's back in foal [to Idol], too. I thought it was a really good purchase.”

Singer's trio of Saratoga yearlings is rounded out by a colt by Munnings out of stakes winner Haddie Be Good (Silver Deputy) (hip 62). The chestnut is a half to stakes winner Story to Tell (Bluegrass Cat). Singer sold the mare's 2-year-old by Justify for $400,000 at the 2022 OBS March sale and the colt was a debut winner in his lone start to date in Japan earlier this year.

“I am always in the market to sell horses, that's a business for me,” Singer said. “And if I get the right amount of money, I will sell them all. All three of these are nice horses. I think they will sell very well.”

Singer, who founded the family entertainment center operator Nickels and Dimes, Inc. in 1972, has been in racing since 1979. The Texan made his first big splash in the industry with the 1981 purchase of a pair of Classic winners, Cairn Rouge (Ire) and Condessa (Ire), who won the G1 Yorkshire Oaks and was second in the G1 Irish Oaks in his colors that year.

In the U.S., Singer campaigned his homebred Salty Strike (Smart Strike) to victories in the 2011 GIII Dogwood S. and 2012 GIII Gardenia S. He sold the filly to Stonestreet for $800,000 at the 2013 Keeneland January sale and she went on to produce champion female sprinter Goodnight Olive (Ghostzapper). The mare died in 2019.

While Salty Strike didn't join his broodmare band, Singer does retain much of the family, while supplementing the band with new purchases.

“I've been cultivating what has turned out to be a great family now with Goodnight Olive,” Singer said. “I sold Salty Strike and Stonestreet did a great job. But I have that whole family. I am going to keep almost all of that family and I needed some new blood, that's why I went back in and bought some new mares.”

Singer has about 15 mares in his broodmare band and the group travels back and forth between his Texas ranch and Kentucky.

“I ship them up to Kentucky to be bred and then I bring them down here to Texas for most of the year,” he said. “Then ship them back up to be bred again and foaled out there. But I raise the babies down here. I have a ranch down here which is also my office. I enjoy having them down here and I enjoy seeing them all of the time.”

Singer said the plan is to sell most of his foals as yearlings.

“I sold a Justify 2-year-old last year that won in Japan, but I normally sell them as yearlings,” he said. “If I don't get what I want and I don't want to keep them to race, then I put them in the 2-year-old sales. I usually keep the fillies and sell the colts.”

And while he currently has just one horse in training with Tom Amoss, as well as a late 2-year-old in Ocala with Niall Brennan, Singer said he isn't opposed to increasing his racing stable if his Saratoga yearlings fail to attract enough attention.

“I don't mind racing them,” Singer said. “I won't have tremendous reserves on any of these, but if they don't bring it, I will keep them and race them.”

A veteran in the industry, Singer still maintains his love of the game.

“I started in 1979,” he said. “I have been doing it for a long time. I love the business. I love having the horses. It's just a passion of mine–but it is a business, you have to run it as a business. But it's always been something I've loved and I've been lucky enough to be able to afford to do it. It's worked out pretty well.”

The Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale will be held next Monday and Tuesday at the Humphrey S. Finney Pavilion. Bidding begins each evening at 6:30 p.m.

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Roth, Dubb Unveil The Residences at the Adelphi Hotel

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. – Four years into their business partnership, longtime friends Larry Roth and Michael Dubb are ready to unveil and start selling condominiums in their massive downtown project, The Residences at the Adelphi Hotel.

Roth and Dubb have scheduled an informational brunch at 10:30 a.m. Sunday, Aug. 6 at the Adelphi Hotel, 365 Broadway. The event is by RSVP only. The Residences at the Adelphi Hotel features 79 condominiums that are part of a $90-million development on the corner of Broadway and Washington Street. A decade ago, Roth was a partner in the purchase, reconstruction and rebirth of the historic Adelphi into a 32-room luxury boutique hotel that melded the past with the present. It opened in Octtober 2017.

In 2019, after splitting with his partners in the Adelphi, Roth joined forces with Dubb–a highly successful real estate developer based on Long Island–and bought the Rip Van Dam building next door. The Rip Van Dam was built as a hotel in 1840s, but in recent decades the building housed businesses and offices. Their original plan was to expand the hotel, add amenities and build apartments. Last year, following some test marketing, the Thoroughbred owners and businessmen changed course a bit and decided to build condominiums instead of apartments. The first group of condos are expected to be completed and ready for occupancy in February 2024. The entire project will be finished by September 2024.

Roth and Dubb scheduled their meeting right in the middle of a very busy period during the Saratoga racing season. In addition to the programs at Saratoga Race Course, which include the $1-million GI Whitney S. on Saturday, The Jockey Club's annual Round Table Conference will be held Thursday, the National Museum of Racing's Hall of Fame Class of 2023 will be inducted Friday and the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale of select yearlings will be held Monday and Tuesday evenings.

“We have so many people who are interested,” Dubb said. “that we thought we would just do an informational brunch, where Larry and I would introduce the team around us, talk about the vision, talk about the lifestyle, and the amenities and kind of let people get a glimpse.”

A residence interior | courtesy Adelphi

Dubb said the offering plan for condominium sales required by New York State was approved by the Attorney General's office last week. He said the condos in the five-story new building will range in price from the high $700,000s for studios to a pair of penthouse spaces priced at $3.5 million.

“We are actually now in a position to sign sales contracts and take binders to hold the units until people go to sales,” Dubb said. “Our sales reps are almost now working 24/7, keeping up with the interest in it.

“We thought, everybody's in town that week, let's get everybody in one room and let's talk and then let's answer the questions. It's one thing to hear it's nice, it's another thing to really get the deep-down on it. I know what it will be. I've done this before, but it's my job to kind of convey to people what the finished product Larry and I have created will look like.”

The nine condo unit types: five studios; 10 studios with den; 21 one-bedrooms; five one-bedrooms with den; 20 two-bedrooms; nine two-bedrooms with den; two three-bedrooms; five three-bedrooms with den; two penthouse suites.

In 2012, Roth and Richbell Capital headed by Simon Milde and his son Toby, acquired the Adelphi Hotel property for $4.5 million. The Adelphi opened in 1877 and is the last of the major hotels that operated on Broadway in the 19th century. The new owners made some improvements to the rundown hotel, had it open for one season while developing a plan then embarked on the major overhaul that took four years. Roth said the hotel has proven to be popular and that occupancy has been at about 100% during the racing season and at an average of approximately 80% for the year.

Roth wanted to continue to grow, incorporating the Rip Van Dam and land behind it on Washington Street, with an even bigger undertaking.

“Basically, the reason I had to separate with my partners was because they did not have the same vision I had,” he said. “I said to them, 'We should do something with the rest of the property because someone's going to do something. Someone's going to take that parking lot and they're going to build a competing hotel. You don't want to compete with a hotel next to the Adelphi because we're getting very good rates at the Adelphi and that hotel was not going to get the same rates.' That's when we completely separated. They said, 'No, we're not going to buy it.' I said, 'Yes, we are.' That's when we separated and I decided to buy the Rip Van Dam and that's when Michael got involved.

“He saw the vision too. We both grew up in that same area of Long Island. We both had the same vision of what this property could be.”

What Roth and Dubb–equal partners in the entire development of the hotel and the Residences–settled on was the expansion into the Rip Van Dam, increasing the Adelphi from its 32 to 45 rooms. Eight more rooms have just become available in a new adjoining structure. The final 12 to reach the total of 65 are expected to go on-line by mid-August.

One of the two penthouses | courtesy Adelphi

Rather than 85 apartments, they opted for the 79 condos in a building being constructed on Washington Street. Among the many amenities available is an underground parking for 100 cars, which includes EV charging stations. A key element of the concept, modeled after top resorts around the world is that amenities, such as gyms, spas, meeting rooms and game rooms, security, as well as hotel concierge and housekeeping services will be available to condominium residents and hotel guests. Condominium owners will be able to rent their properties through the Adelphi, which will handle all the details.

“It's really not just unusual to Saratoga, but I think this is unusual to the entire upstate of New York,” Dubb said.

The foundation of the complex are the historic buildings with their distinctive facades that face Broadway. They required extensive upgrades and the new structures were built behind them. What had been something of a quiet corner on busy Broadway has undergone a dramatic change in the last 10 years.

“This is really born out of a passion and a love for Saratoga. In my case, decades and decades long,” Dubb said. “It's actually 50 years this year since the first time I came to Saratoga and for Larry, kind of love at first sight and he totally immersed himself in it.”

Dubb said the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic slowed the project by six months to a year and added 30% to the cost. Interior work was ongoing for a couple of years, and at the end of last summer, with the permits in place, the structures started to rise.

“In September, there was nothing,” Dubb said. “After Labor Day, we started construction on the additional hotel rooms that would be located in the new building, as well as the 79 condominiums. So if you left Saratoga as a horse person, and left on Labor Day, you came back and you said, 'Wow, there's a whole building standing here.'”

Long gone are the days when Saratoga Springs reverted to a sleepy little upstate city when the 24-day four-week racing season wrapped up in late August.

“What we're finding is Saratoga really stands on its own as a very prominent area in New York state,” Dubb said. “A lot of people who are involved in Thoroughbreds think Saratoga begins and ends with the Thoroughbred season, but it doesn't. It's busy here all year round. In the wintertime, people will come here and use it as a base to ski. Leaf season. Springtime. Skidmore graduation. Parents Weekend in October.”

Roth said his experience through five years with the Adelphi proved there is plenty of demand for luxury accommodations.

“I'm telling you from our own records that the hotel is busy pretty much all year round,” he said.

Construction currently underway, shot from the corner of Broadway and Washington Streets | Mike Kane photo

The purchase of the Rip Van Dam and construction of the building directly behind it has enabled Roth and Dubb to create space to increase the size of the Salt & Char steakhouse on the first floor of the Rip Van Dam. Also, the relocation of a kitchen to a new space, will lead to a larger lobby for the Adelphi Hotel. They have also increased the size of the ballroom.

The condos have open floor plans, are bright with plenty of glass and have balconies.

“We really wanted to provide the highest level of detail,” Dubb said. “Take the detail and the luxury of the hotel rooms, carry it through to the residences. The residences have high ceilings, nice trim, Andersen Windows, Wolf and Sub-Zero appliances, Restoration Hardware (now RH) vanities, seven-inch hardwood flooring. All of the really high-end details that you would find in a hotel room. And large bathrooms.”

The Residences are connected to the Adelphi Hotel with its Morrissey's Lounge and Bistro, Salt & Char, Wine Cellar and the ballroom. A salon will be located in the Residences. The Starbucks coffee shop on the corner has been closed during the reconstruction phase, but will re-open. Nearby on Broadway and side streets are many restaurants, bars and shops. Dubb said that through experience with other properties, he knows the combination is an attractive package.

“I strongly believe in this concept, in this way of living,” he said. “We also own apartment buildings, and retail and industrial, so I have a pretty good sense of what people want. Even in large residential communities I've built, I tried to put in a retail shopping area as an amenity to the community. It's a lifestyle.”

Roth and Dubb will be part of the community at Broadway and Washington.

“I kid everybody that Larry and I love it so much the first two homes we sold to ourselves,” Dubb said. “Then our sales representative also bought one. There's no higher testament to what you believe in than putting your money where your mouth is and wanting to live there. I think both of us look forward to living the dream that we've envisioned and work so hard for. And, trust me, we have worked hard on this project.”

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Wednesday’s Racing Insights: $550K Vino Rosso Filly Debuts at Colonial

1st-CNL, $60K, Msw, 2yo, 6f, 1:30p.m.
Lael Stables' BUBBLING UP (Vino Rosso) marks her career debut at Colonial Downs for trainer Michael Stidham. Out of  GSP Shaken (Uncle Mo), the Mark Stansell-bred filly brought $550,000 at Fasig-Tipton's Saratoga Select Sale last summer. The top-priced offspring by the champion Vino Rosso last season, the filly's pricetag far surpassed the Spendthrift sire's 2022 yearling average of $94,287 for 112 head sold. TJCIS PPs

 

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Summer Breezes: Six-Figure Flameaway Filly Looms Large at Spa

Some of the most highly anticipated races during the summer racing season are the 'baby' races during the boutique meetings at both Saratoga and Del Mar and at Ellis Park, which attract its fair share of high-priced offspring from a variety of top national outfits.

   Summer Breezes highlights debuting 2-year-olds at those meetings that have been sourced at the breeze-up sales earlier in the year, with links to their under-tack previews. To follow are the horses entered for Wednesday at Saratoga:

Wednesday, August 2, 2023
Saratoga 5, $88k, 2yo, f, (S), 1 1/16mT, 3:26 p.m. ET
Horse (Sire), Sale, Price ($), Breeze
Belvoir (Flameaway), OBSAPR, 105,000, :10.2
Consignor: Ordonez Thoroughbreds, agent
Buyer: West Point Thoroughbreds, L. E. B. agent
Brocknardini (Palace Malice), FTMMAY, 35,000, see below
Consignor: Pick View LLC, agent
Buyer: George Weaver, agent for Tom Brockley (PS)
Coach Sessa (Catholic Boy), OBSMAR, 22,000, :10.3
Consignor: Off the Hook LLC, agent
Buyer: Seth Morris

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