Tapit Tops 2024 Stud Fees At Gainesway

Three-time leading North American sire Tapit will stand for $185,000 S&N on the heels of another strong season for his offspring both on the racetrack and in the sales ring, Gainesway Farm said in a press release Thursday morning in an announcement of its 2024 stallion roster and their advertised stud fees for the next breeding season.

Olympiad, a Grade I-winning son of Speightstown, will stand his second season at stud for $35,000. Breeders sent over 200 mares to be part of the 5-year-old's inaugural book. Meanwhile, McKinzie, a four-time Grade I-winning son of Street Sense, will stand for $30,000 after his first yearlings went to auction this year.

Young stallions Drain the Clock (Maclean's Music), Raging Bull (Fr) (Dark Angel {Ire}) and Spun to Run (Hard Spun) will each stand for $10,000.

GI Belmont S. hero Tapwrit will stand for $7,500 and rounding out the roster is GI Breeders' Cup Mile winner Karakontie (Jpn) (Bernstein), whose fee will be announced at a later time.

Here is the complete list of the 2024 stallion roster and advertised fees:

The post Tapit Tops 2024 Stud Fees At Gainesway appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Ocala Stud Sets 2023 Stallion Roster

Ocala Stud has set 2023 stud fees for its roster of 10 stallions for the upcoming breeding season, led by GI Santa Anita Derby winner Roadster, who will stand his initial season at stud for $7,500 S&N. Also new to the roster for 2023 is GISW Gretzky the Great, who will stand for $3,000 S&N.

Awesome Slew, Florida's No. 1-ranked First Crop Sire, will once again stand for $4,000 S&N.

Seeking the Soul, a Charles Fipke homebred, will stand for $5,000 S&N. He welcomed first foals in 2022.

Win Win Win, like Seeking the Soul, saw his first foals hit the ground in 2022 and will stand the upcoming breeding season for $5,000 S&N.

Stud fees for Adios Charlie, Jess's Dream, and Noble Bird will be $3,000 S&N, and Dak Attack and Battalion Runner will stand for $2,500 S&N.

The post Ocala Stud Sets 2023 Stallion Roster appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Taking Stock: Courting Rituals of Breeders and Stud Farms

In about three weeks, another breeding season will begin, but that's the easy part for stud farms.

Getting those mares was the hard part, and that process played out over the last four or five months, an annual courting ritual of farms and breeders. It includes behind-the-scenes hustling, heavy-duty advertising campaigns, and some occasional arm twisting or deal making, because except for a handful of elite or popular sires that breeders are banging doors down to get into, most stallions need mares, usually as many as possible to fill books that can sometimes number more than 200.

The Jockey Club will take an active role in changing that somewhat, beginning with stallions born in 2020 and later. The organization issued a ruling that will limit books to 140 mares a year when those colts go to stud in a few years. Well, that's if TJC ends up prevailing, because there are some lawsuits, brought by a few farms that would like to keep things as they are now, floating around to challenge that rule. Some of these farms are big-time players and they're not going to go away quietly, but that's a story for another day.

In the meantime, stud farms need as many mares as they can get to stallions, as I said. It's either to recoup their initial investments in these stallions or, if they're lucky, to make money. The most commercial stallion prospects–the champions and “horses of a lifetime”–cost an arm and a leg to procure off the track, and lesser recruits are always in danger of not getting enough mares to cover costs. That's why you see so many ads for them in that important first year they enter stud. These days, you see even more of this on social media, where everyone seems to be attending one stallion show or another and then posting amateur photos that in many cases will make farms cringe, but, hey, that's the price of publicity, and most folks on Twitter or Facebook see everything as either “sexy,” “handsome,” or a “hunk,” so it's not all bad.

Stud farms need to front load new horses, meaning they will try to breed as many mares as they can, not only for the income it generates but also to guarantee that they have as many first-crop runners as possible to have a chance at success.

Everyone, of course, wants to find the next Gun Runner (Candy Ride {Arg}), who had a phenomenal run in 2021 with his first 2-year-olds, but most horses are destined for failure, at least in the commercial sense–which is how the breeding industry operates. You've probably noticed that even some leading freshman sires have been sold abroad after they couldn't sustain the pace constructed for them with boatloads of mares, numbers which most are unlikely to see again, in their first books. And once the numbers and quality drop off, so too does sire performance, for the most part.

If a farm has an elite stallion or a particularly attractive first-crop horse, a stallion director sometimes might let you in to him if you'll send a mare or two to a lesser stallion in his third or fourth year on its roster, a classic case of scratching your back if you'll scratch his, except in this case you might get a couple of foals you don't really want just to get the one you do.

Or maybe a stallion director will give you a good deal on a stud fee if you send multiple mares to a stallion, which is usually more common with horses after their first year, when demand and stud fees drop off. There are plenty of deals like that to be found because these types of horses aren't popular with commercial breeders, and it's a simple enough concept to understand.

I once explained this to a guy at TJC. Look, I said, imagine you're a commercial breeder for a moment. Would you want to breed to a horse in his third year at stud, when you know that you're going to sell a yearling by him when his oldest foals are three? What if that stallion has bombed with his 3-year-olds and 2-year-olds by the time you're sending your yearling into the ring? You'll likely get hammered in sales ring, right? Can you see why breeders, I said, prefer to patronize first-year horses who don't have black marks against them when their first yearlings sell? He slowly and deliberately nodded in agreement, but his expression–a light bulb going on–had already beaten the nod to the punch.

What was left unsaid in that conversation was that that paradigm isn't going to change just because you limit a stallion to 140 mares.

What it will do, however, is give more stallions a shot at stud, because more farms will have more first-year horses to sate commercial demand, and by the numbers alone, that will reduce books for each horse at each price point as more stallions enter the market. The net effect will mean more diversity and more cheaper horses at stud, too, which isn't a bad thing at all, right?

Of course, there will be more churn and burn, too, with stallions getting even shorter leashes on which to operate, but there's a Darwinian element to this that's fair enough: Either make it with your first 2-year-olds or get sent to Korea or Turkey or Louisiana, because we don't have time to see how the 3-year-olds will do, as commercial breeders aren't interested in breeding to a horse in his fifth season at stud unless he's a star.

That's what happened to Daredevil (More Than Ready). Sold to the Turks before his 3-year-olds raced, he was brought back to Kentucky after the success of Swiss Skydiver and Shedaresthedevil, but with a twist. He's owned by the Jockey Club of Turkey, and that entity is standing him at Lane's End. So, we might be seeing a new trend with hastily exported horses, if they succeed after they've been sold and are then brought back by their foreign ownership entities to capitalize on commercial demand in North America.

In fact, Horse of the Year Knicks Go (Paynter) is owned and raced by Koreans in North America and was initially destined for stud duty in Korea, but after his success last year, his owners decided to stand him here, at Taylor Made. If he doesn't make it here, he can always be sent home, but if he's a success, the foreigners will reap the financial rewards.

Paradigms, therefore, are also shifting within the overall commercial scheme we're operating under, which is yet another change to a series of changes that began when tightly held syndicates that limited horses to 40 mares gave way to increasingly bigger books that were fashioned to make money, necessitated by bidding wars for the most desirable stud prospects.

Change is necessary for growth, and one change that'd be refreshing to see is a move away from the commercialism that's dominating the breeding industry. How? Well, how about more people racing the horses they breed?

Homebreeders once made this a sustainable business– in fact, they also made it more sporting and more humane, because there's a tendency to give a horse more time if you've foaled and raised him–and though we're far removed from that model these days, a wider array of cheaper stallions might spur some growth in that area and make it viable again to breed to race, particularly as purses have risen to levels never seen before.     And at the top end, those multi-member partnerships speculating on yearling colts as potential stallion prospects may in the future form multi-ownership groups to race some of the foals of their most successful prospects.

If some of that were to happen, it would strengthen the underpinnings of a business that's way too top heavy on selling alone.

Wishful thinking? It's a thought, anyway.

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

The post Taking Stock: Courting Rituals of Breeders and Stud Farms appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Lord Kanaloa Leads 30-Strong Shadai Roster

Lord Kanaloa (GB) (King Kamehameha {Jpn}) leads the Shadai Stallion Station roster for 2021. The sire of recent dual G1 Japan Cup heroine and Horse of the Year Almond Eye (Jpn), he will command ¥15,000,000 (US$143,654/£107,013/€119,227) tops among the 30-member roster next year. Shadai welcomes three new recruits for the upcoming breeding season-GI Arkansas Derby hero Nadal (Blame) (¥4,000,000), G1 Irish 2000 Guineas victor Siskin (First Defence) (¥3,500,000) and G1 Champions Cup winner Le Vent Se Leve (Jpn) (Symboli Kris S) (¥1,500,000).

A trio of stallions stand at Â¥10,000,000 and are already fully booked for 2021-dual Japanese Classic scorer Duramente (Jpn) (King Kamehameha {Jpn}); Epiphaneia (Jpn) (Symboli Kris S), the sire of this year’s Japanese Fillies’ Triple Crown victress Daring Tact (Jpn); and young sire Kizuna (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}). Maurice (Jpn) (Screen Hero {Jpn}), the “Beast from the East”, will stand for Â¥8,000,000. The 2019 Horse of the Year Bricks and Mortar (Giant’s Causeway), who retired to Shadai for 2020, will command Â¥6,000,000, as will fellow second-year sire and MG1SW Rey de Oro (Jpn) (King Kamehameha {Jpn}). A price of Â¥4,000,000 has been set for Harbinger (GB) (Dansili {GB}), the sire of globetrotting MG1SW Deirdre (Jpn), as well as for Rulership (Jpn) (King Kamehameha {Jpn}), sire of 15 black-type winners. Dual G1 Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe hero Orfevre (Jpn) (Stay Gold {Jpn})’s fee is Â¥2,500,000, while New Year’s Day (Street Cry {Ire}), whose best progeny is notorious MGISW Maximum Security, is at Â¥2,500,000. Two sons of the breeding-shaping Sunday Silence remain on the roster and the venerable pair of Daiwa Major (Jpn) and Heart’s Cry (Jpn) are both listed as private.

The post Lord Kanaloa Leads 30-Strong Shadai Roster appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights