Webslinger A Marvel On Breeders’ Cup Undercard, Woodbine Cards Saturday Graded Races Too

Whether digital or the old school paper variety, it is safe to say that most of the forms will be turned to the World Championship races. However, it should be noted that Saturday does sport some graded stakes action that you will not want to miss from both Santa Anita Park and Woodbine Racetrack.

'The Great Race Place' card gets the Breeders' Cup engines warmed with the GII Twilight Derby for 3-year-olds over the turf. If you are interested in how the course sets up for what's to come, then this nine furlong event should provide some interesting indicators.

Probably tops on many a list as he cannonballs in from the East Coast is DJ Stable's Webslinger (Constitution). The bay gelding trained by Mark Casse has had a banner campaign this year with highlights coming when he won the GII American Turf S. on the Derby undercard and in his last race when he lost by a head in the GI Saratoga Derby Aug. 5. His regular rider Javier Castellano is aboard and you can bet that this one will sense the wire late in the game.

Also present is the Charlie Appleby trainee Silver Knott (GB) (Lope de Vega {Ire}). The first-time gelding developed some solid class after he ran second in last year's GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf and he will be one to watch if William Buick can find a way to get him into a free running lane.

An intriguing entry here is the presence of GI Kentucky Derby alum Reincarnate (Good Magic). Out of a Scat Daddy mare with strong Tapeta and turf experience, the Bob Baffert trainee actually began his juvenile career on the grass when he finished second at both Del Mar and Santa Anita. The gray colt's victory in the GIII Sham S. set him on the dirt road, but he returns to what might be his surface of choice.

The graded action doesn't end there because Woodbine has a pair of 2-year-old races for males and females. First up are the colts going 1 1/16th on the Tapeta in the GIII Grey S. Certainly Piper's Factor (The Factor) appears to be incredibly fleet of foot, especially if he can replicate the 82 Beyer that he posted when he broke his maiden by two lengths at second asking in Toronto Sept. 10.

Tunechi | Michael Burns

Others that will press the pace include Pipit (Quality Road), who dead heated for second Oct. 8 in the Algonquin S. at Woodbine, and one of two Barbara Minshall trainees led by Tunechi (Outwork), who finished fourth in the GI Summer S. behind Breeders' Cup bound Carson's Run (Cupid).

“I think two turns is right up his alley,” said Minshall of Tunechi who was bred in Kentucky by Fred Hertrich III and John Fielding. “He definitely acted like a two-turn horse from the day I got him. He's not mean, but you just have to watch yourself around him because he's a big, good-feeling colt.”

Switching over to the fillies who are also traveling the same distance, the GIII Mazarine S. could very well go to Tripolina (Constitution), who is a deserving favorite after she won the Display S. Oct. 15 at Woodbine against the boys in her second career start.

Standing in her way are the second and third place runners from the Oct. 15 running of the Glorious Song S. in Mystic Lake (Mo Town) for Saffie Joseph and Witwatersrand (Connect) for Mark Casse.

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Derby Future Wager Pool 1 Concludes With ‘All Others’ At 4-5, Locked Runner-Up At 14-1

Six months in advance of the 150th GI Kentucky Derby, the pari-mutuel field of “All Other Colts and Geldings” closed as the odds-on 4-5 favorite in Pool 1 of the Kentucky Derby Future Wager and GI Claiborne Breeders' Futurity winner Locked (Gun Runner) was the 14-1 second choice, Churchill Downs said in a release late Thursday after betting closed.

Other horses who attracted mild interest included Dornoch (Good Magic) (19-1), a full brother to this year's Kentucky Derby winner Mage, and GI Champagne S. winner Timberlake (Into Mischief) (20-1).

Total handle for the Oct. 31-Nov. 2 KDFW pool–the first of six–was $164,278 ($132,033 in the Win pool and $32,245 in Exactas), a 43% jump from last year's $114,910 ($90,007 in the Win pool and $24,903 in Exactas).

Click here for full results and the schedule.

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Big Picture Shows Yearling Market Holding Firm

If a tree falls in the forest and there's nobody there to hear it, does it still make a sound? We'll leave their old teaser to the philosophers, to debate whether noise still qualifies as “sound” if it doesn't reach anyone's ear. But for a long time now our own industry has been puzzling over a still more perplexing version: if a tree falls in the forest, or indeed if a war breaks out in Europe, or a pandemic sweeps the planet, or central banks have to douse the fires of inflation…. How does anyone ever know, if they're all at a horse sale?

Our trade has in recent years appeared mysteriously impervious to many of the economic dramas afflicting the outside world. In 2023, however, many keynote auctions have experienced what felt like an inevitable and possibly overdue moderation of the tempo. Nothing too dramatic, in the main: the kind of thing that might be described as a “correction,” often measuring up more than respectably to what had seemed extremely robust figures in 2021, prior to a notably giddy spike at the elite auctions last year. But those trends are internal: they are measured, year to year, in the same ring and in the same currency. Now that we can more or less close out the data on the 2023 yearling market, however, we're in a position to take a step back and assess its overall performance in the kind of transnational terms that match the perspective of its principal investors.

And, with only a couple of minor European sales still to be entered on the ledger, it turns out that the aggregate value of the yearling market either side of the Atlantic in 2023 has almost precisely matched even the historic landmark of last year. Then, for the first time, we were able to acclaim “Billion Dollar Babies.” This time round, the headline figure has inched up 0.3 percent from $1,001,529,828 to $1,004,465,043.

region year catalogued Out % out to cat ring sold % sold to out  gross  average
All 2023 14649 1918 13.09 12731 10268 80.65  $1,004,465,043  $   97,825
All 2022 14499 1825 12.58 12674 10559 83.31  $ 1,001,529,828  $   94,851
All 2021 13546 1769 13.05 11777 9924 84.26  $     937,533,161  $   94,471
All 2020 13876 2336 16.83 11540 8876 76.91  $    687,432,621  $   77,448
All 2019 16055 2173 13.53 13882 10649 76.71  $   905,622,360  $  85,043

When you think of the huge spectrum of yearlings to come under the hammer from each crop, this virtual parity feels almost freakish, especially when so closely matched by the numbers entering the ring: 12,731 this year, compared with 12,674 in 2022. One of the few conspicuous wedges between the two years is a slippage in the clearance rate, from 83.3 percent to 80.7, translating into a 2.75 percent drop in overall sales to 10,268 from 10,559. Sure enough, then, the average cost of every yearling in the combined transatlantic market has actually advanced 3.1 percent to a new high of $97,825 from $94,851.

That headline positive duly contains a mild negative, in that the average achieved from essentially unchanged turnover goes up because there have been more RNAs. But the bottom line is that those that did change hands made more money than ever.

Nonetheless there are a couple of caveats to that statement. The most important is that the European element must always be assessed through the prism of fluctuating exchange rates. Last year, for instance, the dollar value of a soaring internal market in Europe actually weighed in 2.4 percent lighter than in 2021. This time round, European trade converted to $404,163,529, up 3.3 percent from $391,241,817, on the face of it a wholesome contrast with a marginal slip (1.6 percent) in the American gross from $610,288,011 to $600,301,513.

region year catalogued Out % out to cat ring sold % sold to out  gross  average
EU 2023 6019 547 9.08 5472 4556 83.26  $404,163,529  $   88,710
EU 2022 6295 589 9.35 5706 4845 84.91  $  391,241,817  $  80,752
EU 2021 5730 512 8.93 5218 4480 85.85  $400,981,400  $  89,505
EU 2020 6219 765 12.3 5454 4357 79.88  $ 328,852,326  $   75,477
EU 2019 6864 620 9.03 6244 4982 79.78  $  391,396,347  $   78,562

But much of that gain in European trade reflects the anaemic condition of sterling last year. During Book I at Tattersalls it traded at $1.13, and there had been little change by the time the global data was reported for a similar examination this time last year. By the start of the year, sterling had hauled its way up a few rungs to $1.21 and–following a mild midsummer swell–that's pretty well where it remains today. So while an American buying a Book I yearling this year might regard the extra cost of a “guinea” this time as no big deal, the difference was comfortably more than the increase in the dollar value of the European yearling market.

We're a still a long way from pre-Brexit values, however. In October 2015, sterling at $1.52 meant that the Book I average converted to almost exactly $355,000. This time round, when the local value of a Book I yearling was 9.7 percent higher than 2015, the dollar value remained 12.7 percent lower. Domestic vendors should not deceive themselves, then, that it is only the caliber of their stock that might have been tempting American investors since the great Brexit tantrum.

Of course, if you're trading within that market none of this will matter. A domestic pinhooker, or a breeder who pays a local stallion fee, will be paying electricity bills and wages in the same currency. Within that trading environment, in Europe, a few factors together conspired to take some of the heat out of the market compared with 2022: just one of the final crop of yearlings by Galileo (Ire) surfaced in Book I, for instance, even as his premier son Frankel (GB) becomes increasingly the resort of top breed-to-race programs. (And then there was the fact that one of the biggest contributors to turnover in 2023 never actually paid up!)

As for the American market, perhaps the key indicator is the decline in clearance to 78.7 percent sold, from those entering the ring, down from 82 percent last year and 83 percent in 2021. We've already noted the impact on the overall figures, the European rate having held up a good deal better at 83.3 percent, after registering frantic demand (84.9 and 85.9 percent) over the two previous years. As a result, at $105,095, the average North American yearling transaction in 2023 fell only just short of last year's breakthrough figure, when the six-figure barrier was breached for the first time at $106,808. In other words, people appear to have been a little “pickier” in their shopping while being prepared to go harder at their final shortlist. A little tougher to sell, then; but a little tougher to get that hammer to fall, too. But don't forget that a clearance rate touching 79 percent is still way better than 74 percent in the year before the pandemic.

region year catalogued Out % out to cat ring sold % sold to out  gross  average
NA 2023 8630 1371 15.88 7259 5712 78.68  $600,301,513  $ 105,095
NA 2022 8204 1236 15.06 6968 5714 82  $  610,288,011  $106,806
NA 2021 7816 1257 16.08 6559 5444 83  $  536,551,762  $   98,558
NA 2020 7657 1571 20.51 6086 4519 74.25  $ 358,580,295  $   79,349
NA 2019 9191 1553 16.89 7638 5667 74.19  $  514,226,013  $   90,740

One way or another, the market plainly remains robust. A mild loss of momentum in some indices feels somewhat overdue, if anything, a prolonged bull run having suggested bloodstock to be immune even to the most alarming economic and geopolitical tremors. But it may be that those whose affluence has been consolidated even through times of plague and war are not quite so indifferent to an altered fiscal landscape.

It was always contentious that the cash doping of panicked economies persisted so long after the banking crisis, but for a while now we've found ourselves back in a forgotten world of high interest rates. And central banks still aren't getting enough patches of blue sky to put away the umbrella. Meanwhile the S&P 500 is heading towards its third negative month in a row, which hasn't happened since the start of the pandemic in 2020. There's new instability in the Middle East, compounding the ongoing crisis in Ukraine, and a turbulent election year ahead. Those are some of the trees falling in the forest.

Our own world persists in its insularity, albeit without a great deal of coherence. Demand for racehorses can only be described as healthy, if the transatlantic yearling market can maintain the $1 billion breakthrough of last year. But supply continues to diminish, with a declining foal crop ever less eligible to service the betting windows and so, ultimately, purses. In the meantime, we have slot boomtowns even as storied venues are closing; extremes that make our sport's very survival bitterly contentious, including within our own community. Above all, we persist in placing the cart of commercial breeding in front of the horse itself. (We've just come within a couple of shifts of a totally unproven sire covering 300 mares!)

There remain many things we can be positive about, as we hope to be reminded at our principal showcase this weekend. But we can't take this resilience of investment, remarkable as it is, for granted. As and when it dries up, we need to be ready with a resilience of our own: with a breed, and a sport, equipped to last.

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Late Zenyatta Owner Jerry Moss’s Art Collection Offered At Christie’s

The late Jerry Moss, known as a music mogul and the owner of superstar Zenyatta (Street Cry {Ire}), will have 13 works from his personal art collection sold in a single-owner section of Christie's 20th Century Evening Sale on Nov. 9, 2023, the auction house said in a release Oct. 10.

With a passion for art and horses, Moss watched Zenyatta win a remarkable 19 races from 20 career starts and celebrated her being named Horse of the Year in 2010 and champion older mare in 2008, 2009 and 2010.

Spanning a range of genres and representing the European avant-garde, icons of Latin American art, and contemporary masters, Moss's subsequent property from the collection will be sold in the Marquee Week Day Sales and the Design Sales in December. In total, the collection is estimated to realize in excess of $50 million, with partial proceeds to benefit The Music Center.

Highlights from the collection include: Friday Kahlo's Portrait of Cristina, My Sister (estimate: $8–12 million) and Tamara de Lempicka's Fillette en rose (estimate: $7–10 million). The top lot of the group is Picasso's Nu couché, estimated to achieve $10–15 million.

Tina Moss, Trustee and Executor for the Estate of Jerry Moss, said, “Art, was always something personal to Jerry and related to love, beauty, or how an experience of something had touched him. The interest that he took in the artist and respect for their artistic creativity was at the heart of who he was and what he collected.”

The Collection of Jerry Moss will be on display at Christie's New York Rockefeller Center galleries, where the full collection will be on view from Oct. 28 through the day of the auction.

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