Six K’s Training & Sales Relocates

Florida's Six K's Training & Sales, owned and operated by Scott Kintz and family, is relocating from Midwest Thoroughbreds in Anthony to Woodford Thoroughbreds in Reddick by the end of the month. Kintz used to work for Woodford, in addition to Taylor Made Farm and Mandy Pope's Whisper Hill Farm, prior to starting his own training and sales company in 2019.

“I couldn't be happier to be moving back home,” said Kintz. “I came to Florida to work for Woodford and now we're taking Six K's back there. My son Nick, who is my assistant, grew up there and worked on the farm while in high school, so we both know the farm very well. We are grateful that Mr Sykes has allowed us the opportunity to come to what I feel is the best farm in Florida and grow our business. I want to thank Mr. and Mrs. Papiese and the entire staff at Midwest for our time there.”

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After Weathering An Early Storm, Kintz Makes Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Debut

Scott Kintz rolled out the debut consignment from his Six K's Training and Sales at just about the worst possible time.

After nearly three decades in the Thoroughbred industry, he hung his own shingle for the first time at the 2020 Ocala Breeders' Sales Co. March 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale – the one that took place while the world started shutting down around it in the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic.

At a time when there were plenty of questions and very few answers, averages sunk and buyback rates skyrocketed at the March sale. Things didn't get much easier for the rest of the 2-year-old season as schedules shifted, sales were canceled, and several end-users circled their financial wagons as we all tried to figure out how long this thing was going to stick around.

It's been a long 14 months since that initial sale, but Kintz enters another first for his consignment in an entirely different marketplace.

The 2-year-old market is largely back to the record-setting pace it was cruising at in 2019, the COVID-19 vaccine is widely available in the U.S., and Six K's appears in the catalog for the first time at the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale.

For Kintz, surviving to the point where he can blaze new trails with his consignment was a victory in and of itself. Even if the start of it came in the midst of historically significant times, he wouldn't take it back.

“I couldn't have been happier,” Kintz said about his first year with Six K's. “I'm so glad I did it. It's something I've been wanting to do for a long time, and I finally just decided to do it. Yes, it was a terrible time, but I figured if I live through it, I'll just be better for it when it's all said and done, and that's how it's been. I've been very blessed to have clients that have stuck with us and gave us another shot, and we've kind of paid them back by doing better this year. I think we're turning out horses that are happy, sound, and ready to go.”

The Six K's operation may still be in its relative infancy, but Kintz's experience in the industry runs deep.

The Reddick, Fla., resident is a third-generation horseman who worked as a public trainer in Florida and the Midwest for five years, with his biggest success being the Ohio-bred stakes winner Ambridge Augie. He then rooted himself in Kentucky to join the Taylor Made Farm operation, where he spent over a decade as farm manager.

After his time with Taylor Made, he spent five years as the general manager of Woodford Thoroughbreds' Florida wing, then he spent two years as farm manager for Mandy Pope's Whisper Hill Farm.

Kintz formally announced the formation of Six K's Training and Sales in the summer of 2019, starting with the other parts of his business – breaking, layups, rehab, and bloodstock consultancy among them – before he debuted the consignment in the spring of 2020.

More than anything, Kintz said the decision to leave the security of working for someone else and fly his own banner came down to family, on several different levels.

“It was just time,” he said. “My kids were grown and gone, and it was just simpler, and it's an easier time to do it. I've only got one son at home now, and the rest of the kids are on their own and doing their thing.

“My son Nick, who is my assistant, worked for me at Woodford (as yearling manager), and he'd gone and done a couple other things,” Kintz continued. “He was actually at Double Diamond at the time (working as assistant broodmare manager) I'd made the decision. I could tell that was going to be his career, in the horse business, so it just seemed like the right time to go try it. We've been surviving, and that's all you can do.”

Kintz was one-for-one during Monday's opening session of the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic sale, selling Hip 123, a New York-bred Tiznow filly out of the Forestry mare Queen Amira, to Myracehorse.com for $120,000.

His consignment is small this year. He's got one more selling during Tuesday's session, a first-crop Gormley colt, but Kintz said he didn't plan on his first trip to the Midlantic sale under his own shingle to be his last.

“Next year, I hope to bring more,” he said. “I entered more than I brought. They just didn't quite get here. Next year, the plan is to bring more up here. I think it's been a really good experience. They get plenty of people out here, and Fasig is always a great company to sell with.”

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Six K’s Standing Strong Heading into Second Sales Season

Scott Kintz's Six K's Training and Sales has a strong foundation to build on after surviving its first 2-year-old sales season, of all years, in 2020. The veteran horseman has enjoyed some strong advertisements on the track in the interim as he and his crew being their first group of 2021 juvenile offerings to market at this week's OBS March sale.

“Obviously, it has not been fun or easy,” Kintz said earlier this week of the added difficulties of building a new business in the middle of the covid pandemic. “I was just talking to [fellow consignor] Tristan de Meric and we were going back and forth about all the things that were happening at this time last year–first there were the indictments, and then the pandemic. Every single day when we were at the sale, you hear all the rumors that things are going to start shutting down. At the last day of the breeze show, things were really heating up. Every big city's shutting down, and we're wondering if we're even going to make it through this. Then you're showing horses to people and they're on their phones and you see them talking to people and saying things like, 'Louisville just shut down all their restaurants' or 'Lexington just shut down everything.' Every day it was just another kick in the shins. I commend OBS for doing what they did–we were there, the horses were there and they did everything they could do. I think they did really well by us as consignors to keep the show going.”

Kintz hails from a family of horse people. Both his grandfather and father were trainers, and his brother Matt is a multiple graded stakes-winning conditioner himself. Scott Kintz started his own training career as an assistant for Bill Helmbrecht before training on his own throughout the first half of the 90s at tracks like River Downs, Turfway and Thistledown.

“I got married and my wife got pregnant,” Kintz said of what made him eventually change his career path. “It's a tough way to make a living, and tough on a family, so I called Frank Taylor [at Taylor Made]. Frank gave me a job, and I worked my way up to farm manager there.”

After 10 years at Taylor Made, Kintz spent another five as general manager at Woodford Thoroughbreds in Florida. His wife Kim remains Woodford's office manager.

“Once I got down to Florida, and got to be around the training horses and this and that, it was inevitable that l fell back in to training horses,” he said.

After a stint managing Mandy Pope's Whisper Hill Farm, Kintz took the plunge and opened up his own operation in the summer of 2019. Six K's is based at the Ocala Jockey Club.

Kintz called on his past relationships, particularly those forged at Taylor Made, to help him navigate treacherous waters early on.

“Mark Taylor called me and he said, 'Just survive. If you can survive, you're going to be better off when it's all over. Just do what you've got to do survive this.' And that's all we did–we just worked harder to make it work,” said Kintz, whose team includes his son Nick and his aforementioned brother. “This year things are better, and we've got the opportunity to start climbing out of it now. For me, being the new guy, it wasn't easy, but it might have been a little easier on me because I didn't have the infrastructure that the bigger guys have. We were able to just tighten down our belts. We were broke going into it, so we were broke coming out of it.”

Kintz got a major boost that first year when prominent owner/breeder Robert “Shel” Evans sent him a group of horses.

“We had all of Mr. Evans's mares at Taylor Made when I was there,” Kintz noted. “Shared Interest, who was [Evans-bred GISW and sire] Forestry's mother, had some real problems when I was there, and needed extra care. Because of who she was, being Forestry's mother and [GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies winner] Cash Run's mother, she always got a little extra. Mr. Evans, I think, really appreciated that, so he and I got to be pretty close. When I went on my own, I ran into him at Saratoga and I said I'd love the opportunity to train some for him, so that's how it happened… I can't thank him enough.”

Among the group of youngsters Kintz got from Evans was a Candy Ride (Arg) colt out of a mare by none other than Forestry. Bought back for $190,000 as a KEENOV weanling and $70,000 as a KEESEP yearling, the dark bay breezed in :21 flat at the pushed-back OBS Spring sale.

Acquired by Frank Fletcher Racing Operations for $250,000, he was named Candy Man Rocket and turned over to Bill Mott. After a 9 1/4-length second-out romp at Gulfstream Jan. 9, the colt annexed the Feb. 6 GIII Sam F. Davis S.

“I loved that horse. I know it's easy to say now, but he was the best horse I had last year by a lot,” Kintz said. “The pandemic probably helped him. He was in the April sale, so pushing things back to June for him, as a Candy Ride and a big, strong horse, he needed that little bit of extra time. The first time we breezed him, he galloped out in :35, and I told the rider when he came back to never do that again. And the rider said, 'I didn't expect to do it then. I smooched to him one time and he was gone.' He was a superstar from the start, and real laid-back, easy to get along with horse at the barn… But when you asked him, he was there.”

Candy Man Rocket was 11th as the favorite in the Mar. 6 GII Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby.

“I was obviously a little disappointed with the way he ran the other day, but I know he's in the right hands–there's no better person to have him than Bill Mott, and he'll figure out what happened and he'll come back to be the horse we thought he was a month ago,” Kintz said.

Evans had never before targeted the 2-year-old sales with his produce, and won't again this year–Kintz said last year was a function of a number of Evans's horses being bought back as yearlings. At the 2020 yearling sales, Evans was able to get most if not all of his horses sold.

Six K's 2020 crop of juveniles also included Broadway (Quality Road), a $500,000 Fasig Saratoga buy by Evans who RNA'd last March for $485,000. Now with trainer Christophe Clement, the well-bred colt broke his maiden in January at Tampa Bay Downs.

In addition to quality first graduates like Candy Man Rocket, perhaps an even bigger endorsement for the Six K's program is how many from last year's sales have made it to the races. Kintz consigned a total of 15 head at last year's OBS auctions, and no fewer than 12 have already made the races by March of their sophomore season.

“We're very hands-on,” Kintz said when asked about his training approach. “I see and touch every horse every day. My brother and my son are very good at being hands-on as well. We have a great crew, and we just take our time. There's no pushing them through things… That's my biggest thing. Obviously, I want to sell and I want to be profitable selling, but if I push every horse through a sale and get them all sold, but they don't become racehorses and they don't become decent racehorses, eventually I'm not going to sell them for long anyway. So I'd rather take my time, and maybe not get the absolute last dime I can get out of them. Then they'll be good for me down the road. They're going to go on and be good, sound horses who make it to the races and become as good as they can become, and then those buyers come back and see me again.”

While Six K's current crop may not possess the pedigree power that last year's did, Kintz believes this group makes up for it and then some on raw talent and physicality.

“I think this is a better crop than the one I had last year,” he said. “I don't think I have the pedigree that I had last year, but I think my horses physically and talent wise are better. The four I have here in March are very solid, sound horses. I think they're going to go right on and be fine. Last year, I had Candy Rides and Into Mischiefs and Quality Roads, and they were superior pedigrees, and pretty good physicals and pretty good talent wise. But the ones I have this year have half the pedigree, but I think they're twice as talented, I really do.”

When asked to single out members of his March consignment, Kintz said, “I think my Summer Front colt (hip 215) of Dr. Hansen's is a standout–he's really fast and very precocious. The one who I think may turn out to be the best racehorse of the bunch is the First Samurai filly (hip 278). At every sale you go to, there's a horse who gets better as you get to the sale, and she's that one. Every day she's here she's a better horse. Some horses just thrive on the action and starting to crank things up a bit and that's her. I'm really looking forward to her. She doesn't have a ton of pedigree, but she's got a ton of talent.”

Hip 215 is out of a mare by Dr. Kendall Hansen's champion juvenile Hansen. His dam is a half to MSW/GSP Thirtyfirststreet (Good Journey). The Feb. 23 foal went in :10 flat during the under-tack preview.

Hip 278 was an $18,000 KEENOV weanling and $19,000 KEESEP RNA. Her third dam produced 2012 Canadian champion 2-year-old filly Spring in the Air as well as the stakes-placed dam of GISW juvenile Sweet Loretta. She breezed in :10.3.

While there's still plenty of uncertainty surrounding the market heading into another sales season, Kintz remains optimistic.

“I sure feel like racing is going to help us,” he said. “Oaklawn just bumped their purses up huge; Belmont's going to have record purses; Churchill and Keeneland's purses, with getting the historical horse racing back, those purses are going to get crazy. All that has to help us; it can't be hurting us. The one thing hurting us some still is the uncertainty of the pandemic. Even though it's kind of winding down, I just feel like owners aren't as emotionally attached when there's uncertainty about whether or not they'll be able to go to Saratoga this summer or be able to go watch their horses run. I think that's going to hold us back a little bit, but to me, racing seems to me to be thriving through the pandemic. It's almost been a shot in the arm we've kind of needed to make people realize that we're here. We're always here, and we're never going away, so hopefully that's what helps us.”

 

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Bear Brian Tops OBS Winter Mixed Sale’s Opening Session

Hip No. 368, Bear Brian, consigned by Summerfield (Francis and Barbara Vanlangendonck), Agent for Stonestreet Stables LLC, went to Kerri Raven for $150,000 to top the Horses of Racing Age section on the first day of the Ocala Breeders' Sales Company's 2021 Winter Mixed Sale.

The 3-year-old bay colt by Tiznow, who captured a maiden special at Sam Houston Race Park on Jan. 9, is out of stakes winner Lil Super Bear, by Super Saver.

Hip No. 182, a son of Practical Joke also consigned by Summerfield, was purchased by Ronald Clark Shepherd for $130,000 to top the Consignor Preferred Session. The bay yearling colt is out of Mobeautiful, by Uncle Mo, from the family of graded stakes winner Speed Dialer.

  • Hip No. 321, Polterer, a 3-year-old son of Ghostzapper, went to Danny W. Brown for $110,000. Consigned by Kaizen Sales (Richard Kent), Agent, the chestnut colt is out of graded stakes winner Honey Hughes, by Henny Hughes.
  • J. Stable LLC paid $100,000 for Hip No. 360, Pledge, a 3-year-old filly by Candy Ride consigned by Six K's Training & Sales, Agent. A 6-1/2 length winner of a maiden special at Turfway Park on Jan. 2, she's a half sister to graded stakes placed stakes winner Hello Don Julio out of Faithful, by Vindication.
  • Hip No. 25, a daughter of Mendelssohn consigned by Stuart Morris, Agent, was sold to Democracy Bloodstock for $95,000. The dark bay or brown yearling filly is out of stakes placed Simply Confection, by Candy Ride (ARG), from the family of champion Ashado.
  • Hip No. 117, a daughter of Malibu Moon consigned by Kerri Szegi, Agent, went to Windylea Farm – NY LLC for $95,000. The bay yearling filly is out of graded stakes placed Fortunia, by Leroidesanimaux (BRZ), a half sister to grade one stakes winner Dionisia.
  • Hip No. 315, a son of Distorted Humor consigned by Oscar Brown Stables, was sold to Kerri Raven for $90,000. The 3-year-old bay colt, whose three eighths in :32 2/5 was co-fastest at the distance at the Under Tack Show, is out of graded stakes placed Goldstryke Glory, by Second in Command.
  • Hip No. 289, Street Ruckus, also consigned by Kaizen, was sold to Holly and David Wilson and Peernboom – Bowyer, LLC for $85,000. The dark bay or brown 3-year-old colt by Street Boss, a half brother to grade one stakes placed Sir Sahib, is out of Xs Belle, by Dynaformer.
  • Hip No. 307, Waltzing Champ, by Ghoszapper, went to Al and Bill Ulwelling for $85,000. The 4-year-old chestnut gelding, consigned by Kaizen Sales (Richard Kent), Agent, is out of First Waltz, by Medaglia d'Oro, a daughter of graded stakes winner Spring Waltz.
  • Hip No. 338, Brother Brody, consigned by L. G. Agent, was sold to Emerald Sales, Agent for Michael Eiserman for $80,000. The 3-year-old dark bay or brown colt by Brody's Cause, who breezed three eighths in :32 3/5 at the Under Tack Show, is out of Mesa Mist, by Sky Mesa, from the family of graded stakes placed Logan's Mist.
  • DKW Racing paid $67,000 for Hip No. 90, a daughter of Hard Spun consigned by C & S Thoroughbred Sales, Agent. The dark bay or brown yearling filly is out of Cleo, by Pioneerof the Nile, a half-sister to graded stakes winner Prospective Saint.
  • Hip No. 63, a daughter of Twirling Candy consigned by Pelican State Thoroughbreds, Agent, was sold for $65,000 to Al and Bill Ulwelling. The bay yearling filly is out of American Kitty, by Tale of the Cat, a half sister to stakes placed American Diva.

For the Consignor Preferred session, 98 horses sold for a total of $1,893,300, compared with 85 horses grossing $1,912,300 in 2020. The average price was $19,319 compared with $22,498 a year ago, while the median price was $10,050 compared with $13,000 last year. The buyback percentage was 30.9 percent; it was 37.9 percent last year.

For the Horses of Racing Age session, 73 horses grossed $1,676,500 compared with 70 selling for a total of $1,366,900 in 2020. The average was $22,966, up from $19,527 a year ago, while the median price was $13,000 compared to $11,000 last year. The buyback percentage was 12 percent; it was 11.4 percent in 2020.

The OBS Winter Mixed Sale continues Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. with Hip No.'s 451 – 805 in the Open Session.

To view the full results, click here.

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