Son of Arrogate Stars As More Records Fall in Saratoga

SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY – A week of record-setting results continued in Saratoga when the two-day Fasig-Tipton New York-Bred Yearlings Sale concluded Monday with its highest gross in history. An action-packed Monday session was highlighted by a yearling by Arrogate–a full brother to recent 'TDN Rising Star' Cave Rock–who became the auction's highest-ever priced colt when selling for $700,000 to the bid of bloodstock agent Tom McCrocklin, on behalf of Michael Sucher's Champion Equine.

At the close of business Monday, 188 yearlings had grossed $20,175,000–eclipsing the auction's previous record of $18,566,500 set just last year. The average of $107,314 was second best in sales history, eclipsed only by the $107,512 set in 2018. The median of $74,000 was also just off the record of $76,000 set that same year.

The auction concluded with a sparkling 19.3% buy-back rate. Only the 1981 sale had a lower figure when 17.2% of horses were bought back.

During last year's New York sale, 203 horses sold for $18,566,500 for an average of $91,461 and a median of $70,000. The buy-back rate was 21.3%

“It was another record-breaking sale,” said an ebullient Boyd Browning Monday evening. “We established a new record for the gross–we exceeded $20 million for the first time in the history of the sale. We just had a wonderful week. It started last Monday evening and it continued through the last 166 hours. It's been very heartening and encouraging and satisfying. It is reflective of the quality of horses that people have given us the opportunity to sell. It is reflective of the interest and enthusiasm of the racing product and particularly here in New York. Saratoga is a magical place. It is magic for yearlings that are born in New York, it's magic for yearlings that are born in Kentucky, it's magic for yearlings that are born in Virginia that are all quality.”

Browning continued, “The grounds for both sales were stocked with high-quality physical individuals. That's a tribute to our inspection team–they do a great job. Bayne Welker, Jesse Ullery, Peter Penny, Evan Ferraro, Grant Williamson and Max Hodge have done a fabulous job identifying the right horses. It's done hand in hand with the consignors and the owners of the horses. It begins and ends with the horses.”

The hype was high in the days leading up the sale, but results surpassed many expectations.

“I thought it was going to be good, but I didn't think it would be quite this good,” admitted Taylor Made Sales Agency's Frank Taylor.

Mallory Mort, general manager of Gallagher's Stud, had his highest sale as a breeder Monday when his Not This Time colt sold for $320,000.

“There are a lot of good horses here and I think the prices are reflecting that,” Mort said. “Obviously, if they don't like them, they don't pay much for them or they won't buy them. But if you bring a nice horse here, you can see, they bring a lot of money. The economy is good–even though we have a bit of inflation–but the economy, generally, is still really good. That helps.”

Arrogate Colt Lights Up Fasig-Tipton

A colt by Arrogate out of 2011 GIII Schuylerville S. winner Georgie's Angel (Bellamy Road) might have been flying slightly under the radar coming into the New York-bred Yearlings Sale last week, but he was no secret heading into the ring Monday after his full-brother Cave Rock aired by six lengths in a 'TDN Rising Star'-worthy debut at Del Mar Saturday. Bloodstock agent Tom McCrocklin, bidding out back on behalf of Michael Sucher's Champion Equine, outlasted Jacob West, bidding inside the pavilion, to secure the prized yearling for $700,000–top price ever for a colt at the auction.

“We came in here to buy horses,” McCrocklin said back at the Eaton Sales consignment barn as Sucher got to know his newest acquisition. “We were very serious about it. We only wanted what was perceived to be the very best. He certainly fell into that category. And then when the update came, obviously the horse was the same, but we were aware that the price had changed. We were going to buy him. We went in there with the idea that we were going to buy this horse.”

Sucher has been successful on the pinhooking front for a number of years and made several high-price purchases at the 2-year-old sales this year with the intention of racing near his Florida home. McCrocklin said either racing or pinhooking were options for hip 573.

“It's undecided,” McCrocklin said of plans for the yearling. “What if the other colt wins the Breeders' Cup Juvenile? Right now I think it's very likely he will be the favorite for the GI Del Mar Futurity. He has to stay sound and he has to go around two turns, but he's an Arrogate, you'd have to think he is only going to get better with distance and time.”

McCrocklin continued, “We are going to do what we do with all of our horses. We are going to get him broke and treat him like a young horse, train him and see how it pans out. [Pinhooking] is a possibility for sure. Crazier things have been done in this game. At these 2-year-old sales, people want high-end horses. They want a real deal horse and they will pay for them. I have to do my job now. Certainly it was my job to hopefully pick out a nice horse, but I also have to get him, if he was to go to a 2-year-old sale, to get him to breeze well. ”

Asked to speculate on how much Cave Rock's win Saturday might have added on to his brother's price tag Monday, McCrocklin said, “I was thinking he was going to bring $450,000 to $500,000 without the update. So it probably cost us a couple hundred thousand dollars, but that's the way this game works.”

For his part, Sucher added, “We just thought he was the best horse in the sale.”

Longford Farm Hits It Out of the Park

The $700,000 sale of a colt by Arrogate was a huge home run for Dan Burke's Longford Farm, which purchased 2011 GIII Schuylerville S. winner Georgie's Angel (Bellamy Road) with the colt in utero for $75,000 at the 2020 Keeneland November sale. The mare is one of about eight mares in the broodmare band at the Elmira, New York farm.

“I knew he would sell well,” Burke said while accepting congratulations out back along with his daughter Kathleen Schweizer. “He has just been a superstar since the moment he was born. He was born at our farm. Kathleen and I almost delivered him–we made it there about five minutes late.”

In the midst of the pandemic, Burke and Schweizer were shopping for mares remotely in 2020, with the on-site help of Michael Barnett and Troy West of Blackburn Farm.

“She and I go over the Book 1 mares in Kentucky and we really try to get stakes winners or graded stakes placed,” Burke said. “So we can forgive who they are in foal to or their sires. It was the COVID year, so we were home.”

Schweizer continued the story, “I tend to do our computer research. That's my job–to take our short list and really research the family as in depth as I can. And then we work with Mike Barnett and Troy West and other friends that we have. We had come up with our short list and Mike and Troy were in Kentucky walking all over looking at mares for us and we were just not having any luck. So I said, 'I think we need to look early in the day. That seems to be where some are slipping through.' And that's when I found Georgie's Angel and I thought she looked good.”

Schweizer continued, “We hadn't touched base again with Mike because we had already sent them over miles of Keeneland, but my father gave me a number and said, 'You can bid online to this.' This was my first solo bidding. We were bidding and there really weren't a ton of quick answers and they hammered her down and we got her. It was great, but it was nerve-wracking, too, no one had seen her.”

The team almost immediately felt better when the mare's weanling went through the ring right after his dam and sold for $210,000. The colt would sell again the following year, going to Three Amigos Racing Stable for $550,000 at the 2021 Keeneland September sale.

Burke was keeping an eye on both Cave Rock and the sales calendar as the New York auction approached.

“I knew his brother was good because he was working four Saturdays in a row, :59 from the gate,” Burke said. “I was looking at the condition book to see when he might be entered. I figured they didn't want to run him five furlongs, but there was a 6 1/2-furlong race two days before our sale. I said, 'Oh Boy.' We watched that race. He was the favorite, but still, 2-year-olds are 2-year-olds. But he ran just beautifully.”

As for Georgie's Angel, Schweizer said, “She is now in foal to Connect and has an Improbable filly.”

Nyquist Colt a Remote Purchase for Stanley

Mark Stanley may have paid more than expected for a colt by Nyquist (hip 529) when his online offer of $375,000 was the winning bid for the yearling consigned by Indian Creek, but the owner was still excited by the purchase.

“In full disclosure, I was going to a meeting and set a Max Bid online of $225,000,” Stanley said. “I guess my electronic deficiencies or fat fingers caused me to add a zero to my bid, which I didn't notice until Fasig called to say I bought him. Make no mistake, he was my top choice, but at a figure somewhat less than what I paid. I'm glad I have him and will be anxious to get him started. Thank goodness someone didn't get drunk and start running up the price…I couldn't have covered that other zero.”

The chestnut colt is out of Court Dress (Speightstown), a half-sister to G1 Dubai World Cup winner Well Armed (Tiznow), as well as graded winner Witty (Distorted Humor). The yearling is a half-brother to graded placed Runnin' Ray (Street Sense) and stakes-placed Estilo Femenino (Midnight Lute).

“I liked the way the colt moved and I am a big fan of Nyquist,” Stanley said. “The Speightstown mare is a bonus. He's a beautiful colt. I like the New York program as well. I have great confidence in Jeremiah Englehart and Travis Durr and they both rated him at the top of the sale.”

Indian Creek consigned the colt on behalf of his breeder, Wildwood Farm.

“We expected him to sell really well, but he definitely exceeded our expectations by a bit,” said Indian Creek's Sarah Sutherland. “He was very well-received on the grounds. It's a great family, a very active family. He was the type who could have fit in the select sale as well, but we opted to put him here to showcase him. I think, as a breeder, you always hope these good ones can win nice races in New York and I think you have a really good shot of that happening when you bring them here.

Almost all of our full-time boarding clients support the New York-bred program with a couple of their mares, which has been great over the years. That's the case here. It will be fun to follow him.”

Pinhooking Success for Marshall Taylor

Marshall Taylor's Castleton Way pinhooking partnership enjoyed its second success of the week in Saratoga when a filly by Ghostzapper (hip 439) sold for $340,000 to the bid of Donaldson Bloodstock. Taylor had purchased the filly for $155,000 at last year's Keeneland November sale. She is out of Thin Disguise (Yes It's True), already the dam of graded winner Holiday Disguise (Harlan's Holiday), multiple stakes winner Midnight Disguise (Midnight Lute), and Grade I placed Forest Caraway (Bodemeister). The mare's colt by Into Mischief was a $400,000 weanling before selling for $850,000 at last year's Keeneland September sale.

“I loved her pedigree–that was the first thing I loved, just looking at that catalogue page and everything she has coming,” Taylor said of the weanling's appeal. “There are so many fillies in the pedigree who are producing. So I knew we had that on the back end, plus she's by one of the best broodmare sires in Ghostzapper.”

Taylor continued, “As a weanling, she just had a big walk on her and that's what drew my eye to her. How she strode out and she was really a good mover. We took her back to the farm and she grew up nice and developed the right way. We got lucky. That was great.”

Taylor agreed the filly's weanling price tag was high, but he felt she would have even more appeal to the end-users who traditionally shopped the yearlings sales more than the weanling sales.

“As weanlings, there aren't a lot of end-users at the sale,” he said. “So what went through my mind that with a filly like that, there might be more people wanting her as a yearling when you are one step closer to a broodmare. And there are a lot more end-users. It was a lot of money, but I thought as a yearling, bringing her back there might be more of a buyers market for her.”

This is the first year for the pinhooking partnerships and the group has had three yearlings go through the ring. During last week's Saratoga Selected Yearlings Sale, the group sold a colt by Not This Time (hip 159) for $675,000. He had been a $100,000 Keeneland November purchase. At the Fasig-Tipton July Yearlings Sale, the partnership sold a colt by Mitole (hip 29) for $82,000. The youngster had been acquired for $55,000 at Keeneland last November.

“This is the first year we've done it,” Taylor said. “It's been a great week. You can't beat it.”

Not This Time Colt Pays for Mort

Mallory Mort, who by day serves as general manager of Gallagher's Stud, enjoyed success as a breeder in the sales ring Monday at Fasig-Tipton when selling a colt by Not This Time (hip 409) for $320,000 to the online bid of Maverick Racing and Siena Farm. The yearling surpassed Mort's previous high sale, which he enjoyed in the Saratoga ring three years ago when a half-brother by Speightster to hip 409 sold for $210,000. Both colts are out of Sheet Humor (Distorted Humor), a daughter of graded winner Sheets (Scatmandu) who was purchased by Mort for $14,000 at the 2015 Keeneland November sale. Her 3-year-old daughter Sterling Silver (Cupid) is a two-time stakes winner this term and was third in the GIII Victory Ride S. in July.

“Coming up here, he wasn't quite this,” Mort said of the yearling. “But I thought he would do well, as hot as Not This Time is and having the nice update on the page. But as it went on and we saw who was interested in him and we saw how many times he was vetted–and it looked like he was passing the vet really well–our expectations went up a bit. Our reserve was way lower than that, but I had expectations he might bring somewhere in that range.”

Mort and his wife Karen have just two broodmares after selling Sheet Humor, in foal to Central Banker, for $3,000 at last year's Fasig-Tipton New York Fall Sale.

“She was 10 and they start to lose value,” Mort said of the decision to sell the mare. “She had a nice maiden special weight winner, but really hadn't produced a lot yet, the Cupid filly wasn't racing yet, and we have a share in Central Banker. But I knew this colt in the barn. I figured, hopefully, if things went well, I could recoup my money there.”

Windylea Scores Again

The O'Neill family's Windylea Farm enjoyed sales success at the New York-bred sale for the second year in a row when a colt by Mendelssohn (hip 485) sold for $210,000 to the bid of Jacob West, as agent for Repole Stable. The yearling was out of Anabaa's Creation (Anabaa), a mare Kip O'Neill purchased for $50,000 at the 2020 Fasig-Tipton November sale.

“We liked the mare, we liked the page,” O'Neill recalled. “She had been a competitive racehorse and had some offspring that had run some. Unfortunately, we lost the mare about three weeks ago. She became ill and we lost her, so that was unfortunate. But we were happy to see the yearling sell as well as he did.”

O'Neill said Anabaa's Creation's in utero Mendelssohn colt was a primary reason for the purchase of the then 16-year-old mare.

“Her age limited the number of buyers on her,” O'Neill said. “It was one of those things where my dad, he was still with us at the time, said, 'You need to go buy the old mare.' So we did.

Typically we look for younger mares, but this was just something that worked out. We had sold a Mendelssohn weanling and we really liked that breeding line. We wanted to go back in and invest in the Mendelssohn and since she was carrying one, we wanted to stay in that circle so to speak.”

West also signed for another Windylea-bred during the two-day auction. The agent went to $150,000 for a colt by Practical Joke (hip 366) on behalf of Repole and Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners during Sunday's opening session. The yearling is out of Mo Savings (Uncle Mo), a mare Windylea claimed for $40,000 in 2019. The mare has a Vekoma weanling and was bred back to Tacitus.

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Measured OBS June Sale Opens With a $290,000 Topper by Bolt d’Oro

OCALA, FL – The Ocala Breeders' Sales Company's June Sale of 2-Year-Olds opened with a workmanlike session Tuesday as four horses sold for over $200,000, led by a filly by Bolt d'Oro who attracted a final bid of $290,000 from bloodstock agent Donato Lanni, acting on behalf of Greg and Caroline Bentley.

In all, 184 sold Tuesday for a gross of $7,107,500. The average of $38,628 slipped 2.4% from last year's opening session, but the median of $25,500 was up 27.5% from the 2021 sales record-tying figure of $20,000.

With 90 horses reported not sold, Tuesday's buy-back rate was 33.1%. At the close of business after last year's first session, the buy-back rate was 26.7%. It fell to 18.3% with the inclusion of post-sale transactions.

“It's been competitive all year,” Lanni said of the juvenile market. “It's been a very, very tough year. I love coming to June–not for the weather–but this is a typical June sale. They are out there, you just have to try to find them. There is a horse here for everybody. A horse at every level. You just have to get through them all.”

Seven horses topped the $200,000 mark at the 2021 opening session, led by a $425,000 daughter of Practical Joke. During the session, 196 horses grossed $7,756,400 for an average of $39,573 and a median of $20,000.

Tuesday's opening session of the June sale missed a break-out horse when hip 112, a daughter of Into Mischief, RNA'd for $625,000.

The June sale continues through Thursday with bidding beginning each day at 10 a.m.

A Bolt for Runnymede

Bloodstock agent Donato Lanni had been shopping all season long for a filly to purchase for Gregory and Caroline Bentley's Runnymede Farm and the Pennyslvania-based operation finally got on the board Tuesday in Ocala, purchasing a filly by freshman sensation Bolt d'Oro (hip 191) for $290,000 from the Niall Brennan consignment.

“We have been trying really hard all year to buy fillies for them,” Lanni said. “Good fillies are hard to find and they bring a lot. We have struck out all year trying to buy a filly for them.”

The bay filly is out of stakes winner Over the Edge (Thunder Gulch) and is a half to graded placed Top of Mind (Curlin). She worked a furlong in :10 flat during last week's under-tack show.

“This was a good filly,” Lanni said. “Bolt d'Oro made it easy for me to sell it to them. And she's got pedigree. But more importantly, she worked extremely well and she galloped out very well. She came back well. Typically when you do all of those things, it's going to cost a lot.”

The Bentleys, who have been involved in racing since the mid-1990s, won the 2014 GI Arlington Million with Hardest Core (Hard Spun) and were represented in the 2019 GI Preakness S. by multiple stakes winner Alwaysmining (Stay Thirsty). Greg Bentley is CEO of his family's software company, Bentley Systems.

Hip 191 was purchased by Ryston Stables for $75,000 at last year's Keeneland September sale.

Candy Ride Filly Heads West

A filly by Candy Ride (Arg) (hip 331) will be joining the Southern California barn of trainer Peter Eurton after selling for $240,000 to Exline-Border Racing.

“Some things just speak for themselves–the page, obviously, and how she breezed,” Justin Border, who did his bidding sitting alongside bloodstock agent Marette Farrell, said of the filly's appeal. “But, really, it's about her mind and how she comported herself all throughout the process. It seems like she was brought up right from the farm and from an excellent breeder. We can tell she's been brought up the right way. We're excited to take her out to California where she can do big things for us.”

The filly, who worked a furlong in :10 1/5, is out of Seaside Escape (Bernardini), a full-sister to multiple Grade I winner Cavorting who is the dam of Grade I winner Clairiere (Curlin).

“Her breeze was very flashy, but at the same time, you could tell she was doing it well within herself, which is something we always look for,” Border said. “A lot of horses have flashy breezes on a surface they'll never run on again the rest of their lives. We're much more interested in how they do it, and she did it the right way. She checked all the boxes for us.”

Bred by Paul Pompa, Jr., the bay sold for $12,000 as part of the late owner/breeder's dispersal at the 2021 Keeneland January sale. She sold to Joseph Klausa's Thoro Ventures for $75,000 at last year's Fasig-Tipton October sale and was consigned Tuesday by Juan Centeno's All Dreams Equine.

“She has a very good mind,” Centeno said. “She is lovely and has an excellent pedigree. Everything came together and she performed well. And she was well-received at the barn. You are always nervous and excited at the same time at these sales. But I am very happy for the owner.”

Adios Charlie Filly for FSS Series

A speedy filly by Adios Charlie (hip 116) topped early returns at the OBS June sale when selling for $235,000 to the bid of Michael Sucher's Champion Equine. Consigned by Ocala Stud and bred by the O'Farrells, the bay 2-year-old worked a quarter-mile in a bullet :21 flat. She is out of stakes-placed Miss Melinda (Malibu Moon), a daughter of group-placed Black Escort (Southern Halo).

“She had all the metrics: breeze time, gallop out, vetted perfectly, and she is a beautiful physical horse,” Sucher's advisor Tom McCrocklin said. “Kind of all the things you hear all the time.”

The filly will join the South Florida barn of trainer David Braddy and will have a specific target this summer.

“He is kind of obsessed with winning the Florida Stallion Stakes and she is eligible for that series,” McCrocklin said of Sucher's plans for the filly. “He bought a really nice colt in April. He lives in South Florida and he's very bullish on trying to win those races.”

Sucher purchased a colt by Girvin (hip 112), also from Ocala Stud, for $300,000 at the OBS Spring Sale in April. Now named Commandant, the colt is working steadily at Gulfstream Park.

In addition to his Florida racing stable, Sucher is also an active pinhooker and breeding.

“Pinhooking, racing and breeding,” McCrocklin said of Sucher's Thoroughbred interests. “He owns a lot of mares, too, mostly in Kentucky. He keeps his mares with Martha Jane Mulholland in Kentucky and he bought a lot of broodmares over the last couple of years. So he's evenly distributed between breeding, he will sell some, he will pinhook, and he races as well. He's a great guy, loves the game and I am glad we have him in it.”

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Irish War Cry Filly Fastest at OBS Friday

A filly from the first crop of Irish War Cry (Hip 795) put in the fastest work of the day Friday during the fifth session of the Ocala Breeders' Sales Company's June 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale under-tack show. Consigned by Thorostock LLC, she completed the breeze in :9 4/5, making her just the second juvenile so far to clock a furlong in under :10 flat.

A trio of juveniles worked a quarter in a bullet :20 4/5.

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Spendthrift Strikes for Bolt d’Oro Filly at Fasig

Spendthrift Farm supported its first-crop stallion Bolt d'Oro in a big way Wednesday at Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream, fending off all challengers to land hip 48 for $1.2 million. An $80,000 KEENOV weanling and $85,000 Keeneland September pick-up by her breeder Solana Beach Sales, the granddaughter of MSW Richetta (Polish Numbers) blazed her way through a :20 2/5 quarter-mile breeze on Monday. She was consigned by Tom McCrocklin, Agent I.

 

 

 

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