With Strength in Numbers, Repole and Viola Hope to Hit It Out of the Park

Passionate about the sport and determined to win at the highest level, partners Vinnie Viola and Mike Repole have come up with a formula they hope will mean lasting success. It's not just about quality, but quantity. Attack the game with an army of well-bred horses, most of them colts, send them to Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher and sit back and wait for good things to happen.

In what amounts to a historic buying spree, Repole and Viola's St. Elias Stable bought 43 yearlings at Keeneland September, paying a combined $16.045 million. That's after they spent $1.375 million on two yearlings at Fasig-Tipton October and one at Fasig-Tipton Saratoga for $350,000.

Represented by bloodstock agent Jacob West, the Repole-Viola partnership bought 40 colts at Keeneland and three fillies, paying anywhere from $40,000 for a colt by Always Dreaming to $1.05 million for a City of Light colt. They went after a number of sires, including four by Curlin and three by City of Light. The average price they paid was $373,000.

“There really is a good formula,” Repole said. “We know what we are doing. We have incredible lists. We have incredible advisors, an incredible team. We expect to do the same next year, the year after. We do it because we really enjoy this game.”

It's all about putting yourself in a position to win at the highest levels of the sport, something both have achieved. They teamed up to win the 2019 GI Breeders' Cup Classic with Vino Rosso (Curlin), a horse they bought at the 2016 Keeneland September sale for $410,000. Viola owned 2021 GI Florida Derby winner Known Agenda (Curlin) and was a co-owner of 2017 GI Kentucky Derby winner Always Dreaming (Bodemeister), while Repole campaigned, among others, GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile winner Uncle Mo (Indian Charlie) and GI Travers S. winner Stay Thirsty (Bernardini).

At the end of the day, it's not necessarily about the bottom line, but a thirst to win in a sport neither can get out of their systems.

“We've developed a passion,” said Viola, who owns the NHL's Florida Panthers. “It's less market driven. It makes sense on a sportsman's level. Every sports person wants to compete at the highest level at whatever activity or sport they participate in.”

Viola is from Brooklyn and Repole is from Queens. Both used Pletcher as their primary trainer and have similar goals and philosophies when it comes to the sport. It made their teaming up natural. As a partnership, their first big splash at the sales came at the 2020 Keeneland September Sale, where they bought 23 horses for a total of $9.295 million.

They are not just spending a lot of money, they are trying to spend a lot of money wisely. It starts with a team of advisors that includes West, Pletcher, Ed Rosen, Jim Martin, Rory Babich and Monique Delk. Each one has their strengths. Their information is passed on to Viola and Repole, who continue the hunt to find the next Vino Rosso.

“This is not an easy task” Viola said. “This is part art, part science, part team discipline. Mike and I are constantly communicating about those three challenges. It is very, very easy when you have a partner like Mike. He is an ultra-talented individual. We work really well together.”

“In business, it's 80% plan and 20% luck” Repole said. “In horse racing, it's 20% plan and 80% luck. Not too many people have that 20% plan. They are all over the place. Vinnie and I are hyper focused right now.”

Buying mainly colts is part of that plan. For Viola, it comes down to trying to win another Kentucky Derby.

“We are primarily buyers of colts,” Viola said. “The sole purpose is to win what we think is the Super Bowl of horse racing , the Kentucky Derby. You will see us buying 90% plus colts.”

Repole wants to win his first Derby, but he also wants to develop stallions, another reason why the two buy very few fillies.

“It's driven by having colts and driven by having stallions,” he said. “The one thing that Vinnie and I figured out pretty quickly is that the ability to make money in this game is with stallions. I still own a big percentage of Uncle Mo. His stud fee is $175,000 and he's bred every year to 200 mares. Anyone can do the math.”

Repole said he's reluctant to go over $1 million for any horse and prefers to stay in the range of $300,000 to $600,000.

“It's a numbers game” he said. “What Vinnie and I are trying to get is quality and quantity. That's what we are looking for. If somebody wants to go up to $2.7 million, God bless and good luck. Vinnie and I will never buy the sales topper because there's always going to be one horse that goes for $4 million and everyone says, 'Wow, look at that horse.' A couple of years later tell me what that horse did.”

The relationship has grown over the years. In 2016, the year they bought Vino Rosso at Keeneland, Repole and Viola went in on only two horses together. Repole said the success they had with Vino Rosso cemented the partnership, which has come to be more than just a business relationship. It has become a close friendship.

“Vinnie and I have gone from partners to great friends to family over the last 12 years,” Repole said. “There's no doubt I'd rather own 50% of a great horses with Vinnie than own 100% of as great horse by myself. It feels more special that way.”

Buying yearlings is never easy and there are no guarantees, but there is something to be said about having such a deep group of horses. So they hope to make some memories in the years ahead, starting next year when the 2021 yearling class hits the track and continuing in the 2023 Kentucky Derby. From the 2021 yearling buys, they'll have 46 chances to find a star. The odds are in their favor.

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Record-Setting Fasig October Sale Concludes

LEXINGTON, KY – The Fasig-Tipton October Yearlings Sale, which had already surpassed its previous highest gross with a day to go, concluded Thursday with new high-water marks for average and median and its lowest buy-back rate since 2013.

“Day four was another outstanding day for the October sale,” said Fasig-Tipton President Boyd Browning. “It was a fitting conclusion to a great horse sale. It's been a great week. The numbers have been tremendous all four days across the board. There were dramatic increases in gross, dramatic increases in average and dramatic increases in median and a pretty meaningful reduction in the RNA rate also. It was a very vibrant marketplace with tremendous depth in the bidding activity. There was a very diverse group of buyers to the bitter end. The sale exceeded our most optimistic expectations.”

By the close of business Thursday, 1,153 yearlings had sold for $52,607,500. The average of $45,672 was up 33.9% from 2020 and bettered the sales previous record figure of $37,955 set in 2019. The median of $25,000 was up 66.7% from 2020 and bettered the previous record of $18,500 set in 2014.

With just 205 horses reported not sold, the buy-back rate was a sparkling 15.1%.

Jacob West, bidding on behalf of Vinnie Viola's St. Elias purchased four of the auction's top five lots. West signed on behalf of the partnership of Viola and Mike Repole at a record-equaling $925,000 to secure a colt by Street Sense Wednesday. He made the highest bid of Thursday's final session of the auction when going to $500,000 to secure a colt by Nyquist (hip 1281).

Thursday's session topper was consigned by St. George Sales.

“It's been a really good sale, top to bottom,” confirmed Archie St. George. “We have sold nearly everything through the ring. There is money here, obviously, for good horses, but the middle and bottom market is good. I'd say it's carried on from September. Everything is positive. Long may it last. It's a fun time to sell horses.”

Patience Pays With Nyquist Colt

Vinnie Viola's St. Elias Stable added a colt by Nyquist (hip 1281) to its October haul when Jacob West, bidding over the internet, went to $500,000 to acquire the yearling from the St. George Sales consignment Thursday. The dark bay is out of Froyo Star (Rockport Harbor), a half-sister to multiple Grade I winner Sweet Reason (Street Sense) and graded winner Don't Forget Gil (Kafwain).

“He's a beautiful colt,” said Archie St. George. “He's got a lot of quality and presence. I'd like to thank Vinnie Viola and St. Elias for purchasing him and wish them the best of luck with him. We loved him and hopefully Vinnie will love him down the road.”

St. George and partners purchased the colt for $270,000 as a weanling at last year's Fasig-Tipton November sale. The yearling was making his second trip through the sales ring this year after RNA'ing for $295,000 at the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga sale in August.

“He was probably in a bit of a growthy spurt then,” St. George said of the yearling's trip to Saratoga. “He did really well when he came home. The extra month to October helped. He just matured and filled out. To me, he's the whole package and I hope he runs now. We bought him here last November. We gave him a lot of money for him, so it's nice when it turns out.”

St. George has had success selling into a competitive yearling market. Asked if he was concerned about buying weanlings in that market when the calendar shifts to bloodstock sales in two weeks, he said, “It will be tough, but it always is. It's always very competitive to buy foals. There are a lot of good judges out there, people who do well year in and year out. And you have to work the sale hard. We are lucky between my wife, Michelle, and Roger O'Callaghan, we have a great team and we've had a lot of luck together. So we just have to work hard and hope we get lucky.”

Glen Hill Gets Its Gun Runner

After getting outbid on yearlings from Saratoga to Kentucky, bloodstock agent Donato Lanni finally signed a ticket on behalf of Glen Hill Farm when going to $335,000 to acquire a filly by Gun Runner (hip 1584) just two hips before the end of the Fasig-Tipton October sale Thursday night.

“If there is a good horse here, people will wait around for her,” Lanni said. “We've been trying to buy a horse for Glen Hill all year and we've been outbid all year. This is the first horse I bought for [Glen Hill's Craig Bernick] all year. We waited for the last sale of the year and one of the last horses through the ring. He said he wanted to buy something. We stretched a little bit for her, but we had been outbid at Saratoga, September and here. So we feel fortunate we were able to get her.”

The bay filly is the first foal out of stakes-placed Lunar Gaze (Malibu Moon). She was bred by Waymore LLC of the late Tom Conway and Charles Moore and was consigned by Taylor Made. Waymore purchased Lunar Gaze, in foal to Pioneerof the Nile, for $450,000 at the 2018 Keeneland November sale. The mare sold in foal to Vino Rosso for $90,000 at the 2020 Keeneland November sale.

Gun Runner is off to a great start,” Lanni said. “And this filly was very nice. She had a lot of tone to her and a lot of strength to her.”

Zacney Strikes for Two Thursday

Chuck Zacney had been outbid on a couple of horses earlier in the October sale, but came back strong to take home two yearlings in the name of his Cash is King Thursday. First up, bloodstock agent Michael Hernon signed the ticket for the operation at $230,000 on a colt by Bolt d'Oro (hip 1332) and, as the sale was winding down Zacney, bidding on the phone, went to $290,000 to acquire a colt by Street Sense (hip 1580) from the Burleson Farms consignment.

Hip 1580 is the first foal out of Lucky Cover (Medaglia d'Oro), a daughter of multiple graded stakes winner Teammate (A.P. Indy).
“He was a big, strong, athletic colt with a great page,” Zacney said of the colt. “With Medaglia d'Oro on the bottom and I'm a big fan of Street Sense. When I saw him, I loved everything about him.”

The yearling was bred by Nice Guys Stable, which purchased Lucky Cover for $195,000 at the 2018 Keeneland November sale.
Hip 1332 is out of the unraced Gwithian (Street Sense), a half-sister to multiple Grade I placed Solomini (Curlin). He was bred by Clark Brewster and was consigned by Fort Christopher's Thoroughbreds.

“We are hearing a lot of good things about Bolt d'Oro, so we decided to jump in and get one,” Zacney explained. “We thought he was one of the better ones.”

Of his October shopping, Zacney said, “I actually came in last night and bid on one or two earlier in the sale and didn't get them. They were fillies, so I had to step up my game a little bit and jump a little higher for the colts, and I did.”
Zacney said both yearlings will likely be trained by Butch Reid.

Legion Bloodstock Takes Off

A group of four friends, each with sales and racing interests, decided to pool their resources and their talents under one umbrella and Legion Bloodstock was formed. Travis Durr, Evan Ciannello, Kristian Villante and Kyle Zorn debuted the new agency at the Keeneland September Yearling Sale and came away with 17 yearlings for a total of $2,110,000. The group continued to be active at this week's Fasig-Tipton October sale, signing for five yearlings for a total of $373,000. Leading the Fasig purchases was a $250,000 filly by Good Magic.

“Travis Durr is a good friend of ours and he breaks all of our yearlings for us,” Ciannello said. “He approached us and said, 'What if we combine forces? We can work on marketing and getting our name out there.'”

Ciannello continued, “We have another syndicate, and we have other clients that we've bought for in the past, we had never bought under a banner. We've used different agents, but we mostly use different trainers and then the trainer would get the horse. So it just made sense to pool our talents.”

Also joining the new venture was Kristian Villante and Kyle Zorn.

“Kristian Villante is a bloodstock agent, he's been doing this and he has his own clients,” Ciannello said. “Kyle works for Hagyard Pharmacy. He worked for [trainer] Pat Byrne for years and now he manages Chuck and Maribeth Sandford's racing operation. So he brings that background with the horsemanship and the racing side of it.”

Pooling their talents and resources, the group works as a committee.

“At the sale, we will look at everything and everyone will say, 'OK, here are the horses I like.' We will all go off of different short lists and everybody splits up and then we compare notes. Then we do a second look and, if everybody signs off, we go after that horse.”

Joining forces has also allowed the agency to have coverage at, not just all the major sales, but also regional auctions. In additional to Keeneland September and Fasig October, Legion Bloodstock was on the results sheets at the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Fall Sale, the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Fall Yearlings Sale, and the Ocala Breeders' Sales Company's October Yearling Sale.

“We buy at every level, from the bottom, the top and everywhere in between,” Ciannello said. “We do some pinhooking. We have a partnership where we bought four yearlings this year all for $30,000 or less and the goal is to sell them. Hopefully they will be precocious, maybe get a start at Keeneland in April and have a good showing and get sold privately. If not, the July Horses of Racing Age Sale here [at Fasig-Tipton] will be the end of the road.”

Have a broad base of clients to draw from also gives Legion Bloodstock the flexibility to put together various partnerships to better compete in a competitive market.

“We will get creative,” Ciannello said. “We will put together partnerships. We aren't afraid to partner with partners. We bought a filly Tuesday for $250,000, a Good Magic filly, and we had to stretch, but we got her. For the perceived good ones, they are hard to buy. So we go back to the drawing board at the end and talk to everybody and say this is what we got and who wants what percentage. It's very flexible and everybody is like-minded. We can say these people will gel well with these people, so we can put together a group. Let's face it, the partnerships are the future. Even the billionaires out there are partnering, so if we want to compete, we have to do the same thing.”

Legion Bloodstock has already gained a toe-hold in the sales arena.

“So far, it's been very encouraging,” Ciannello said of the agency's early reception. “I didn't think it would grow so far this fast, but already we have our hats and people saying, 'Hey, Legion Bloodstock!' So it's been pretty cool so far. Hopefully, some horses from this first group hit. That would be great for us and we can keep it growing.”

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No Slowing Down at Fasig-Tipton October Sale

LEXINGTON, KY – The Fasig-Tipton October Yearlings Sale, with a session still to come, soared past its record gross with another day of break-neck bidding Wednesday at Newtown Paddocks. By the close of business Wednesday, 856 yearlings had sold at the October sale for a total of $39,511,600, bettering the previous record gross of $38,258,900 which was set in 2019.

“Obviously, it was a continuation of the euphoria/excitement and enthusiasm throughout the day,” Fasig-Tipton President Boyd Browning said of the October sale's third session. “It's beyond what we could have hoped for. There were a couple strings throughout the day where for three hours it seemed like every horse got sold. We ended up with an RNA rate of less than 13%. And I promise you by noon tomorrow, a big chunk of that 13% will be sold because they will be in there fighting for them in the morning.”

The October sale looks set for more records as it reaches its final session Thursday. The three-day average of $46,158–up 31.7% from the corresponding 2020 figure–is ahead of the record average of $37,955 that was set in 2019. The median of $21,000 is up 40% from a year ago and well ahead of the sale record of $18,500 set in 2014.

Bloodstock agent Jacob West twice tied the highest price for an October colt, going to $750,000 for a colt by Empire Maker (hip 513) Tuesday and again for a son of Gun Runner (hip 870) early in Wednesday's session–both on behalf of Vinnie Viola's St. Elias Stable–before smashing that colt record and equaling the highest bid in October history when acquiring a son of Street Sense (hip 1107) for $925,000 for the partnership of St. Elias and

Mike Repole. The price matched the auction's record set in 1999 for a filly by Storm Cat.

The sale-topper was bred by Sam-Son Farm as the historic Canadian operation began to reach the conclusion of its ongoing dispersal.

“Honestly the sale topper is a little bittersweet,” Browning admitted. “You hate to see a 50-year operation like Sam-Son make a business decision and make changes as the family dynamic has changed. They've had a wonderful program and they brought some wonderful horses here to October and some wonderful horses to Saratoga. It was a great tribute to [Sam-Son Farm Manager] Dave Whitford and [Racing Manager] Tom Zwiesler, and to the Samuel family to set the record here in October.”

The only hiccup in the October sale came when the internet bidding went down briefly late in the afternoon, but the sales company didn't know of any missed bids, according to Browning. “We tried to be as reactive as possible,” Browning said of his team's efforts to notify bidders of the issue as quickly as possible.

The Fasig-Tipton October sale concludes with a final session Thursday beginning at 10 a.m.

“It's been a great three days so far and we hope to finish up strong tomorrow,” Browning said.

Street Sense Colt Ties October Record

Jacob West, who had already tied the sale's top price for a colt twice, tied the Fasig-Tipton October sale's overall top price when bidding $925,000 to secure a colt by Street Sense (hip 1107) on behalf of Mike Repole and Vinnie Viola's St. Elias Stable Wednesday. The colt was bred and consigned by Sam-Son Farm.

“It's that stupid saying that everybody always says, 'He checked all the boxes,' but this horse really did,” West said. “He has a stallion's pedigree and he's by a horse that can get a two-turn dirt horse. That's how we looked at it. He's bred to get the distance and he looks like a horse who will get the distance. We are lucky to get him.”

Bidding on behalf of St. Elias Stable, West bid a co-record $750,000 to acquire a colt by Empire Maker (hip 513) Tuesday and he matched that figure when securing a colt by Gun Runner (hip 870) early in Wednesday's third session of the auction.

His $925,000 bid matched the highest price ever for an October yearling, equaling the figure set by a filly by Storm Cat in 1999.

“I had a pretty good idea that he was going to be around there based on what the other horses we bought had brought earlier in the sale,” West said of the sale-topping bid. “And with the interest I saw at the barn. Every time I was over there looking at him, one of the big players had him out and was looking at him. So I had a pretty good idea that he was going to be that way. We were lucky enough that we had two incredible owners who got involved.”

West also gave credit to the team behind the partnership's selections.

“It's a team effort,” he said. “Monique Delk, Eddie Rosen, John Sparkman and Rory Babich and the two most important people on that team are Mike and Vinnie. But it's a team approach. And he jumped through a lot of hoops. Hopefully it works out.”

In partnership with Repole or alone, West has signed the ticket on nine yearlings for St. Elias Stable for a total of $3,650,000.

Hip 1107 is out of Dance With Doves (A.P. Indy) and is a half-brother to graded placed Dance Again (Awesome Again). He comes from a line of Sam-Son Farm champions. His second dam is Dancethruthedawn (Mr. Prospector) and his third dam is Dance Smartly (Danzig).

Sam-Son Farm's Tom Zwiesler admitted it was bittersweet watching as the dispersal of the historic Canadian operation started to wind down. Just two hips after the sale topper, Sam-Son sent its final yearling through the sales ring.

“It was a great sale,” Zwiesler said. “It's a little melancholy. Our last yearling just went through. But we are very happy. It's a testament to the Samuel-Balaz family that have bred these horses. And of course you have people stepping up to the plate and spending this money on these horses. That's wonderful to see. St Elias and Repole stepped up and bought two of our best. We wish them all the luck in the world.”

The Repole/St. Elias partnership purchased a filly by Uncle Mo (hip 469) from the Sam-Son consignment for $450,000 Tuesday.

Asked how hip 1107 ended up in the October catalogue, Zwiesler said, “I wanted to just take fillies to Saratoga, which we did and that plan worked out. And the logistics at Keeneland worked out that we would have probably been in a later book. Fasig was very good and Peter Penny has been wonderful to us and a big help. So we chose this one and it certainly paid off. I just feel like if you bring the horse, they are going to find you. It's nothing we do. It's how the horse is brought up. And this sale is turning into a much nicer sale and I think a lot of people like to keep their babies a little bit longer. Which I did in this case. I thought he'd be a standout later on.”

Eight Sam-Son yearlings sold at the October sale for $2,067,000.

“We still have nine mares [to sell] in November and we also have 25 still in the racing stable that they are going to see through and race,” Zwiesler said.

One of those Sam-Son mares slated to sell at the upcoming Keeneland November sale is Dance with Doves, who is catalogued as hip 818 and will sell in foal to Lookin at Lucky.

Gun Runner Colt Another Score for Stokes

Beryl “Sonny” Stokes, Jr., who has steadily racked up an impressive list of pinhooking successes over the last few years, scored another home run Wednesday at Fasig-Tipton when a son of Gun Runner, purchased for $80,000 at last year's Keeneland November sale, sold for $750,000 to Vinnie Viola's St Elias Stables.

“He had my shape–I am an athlete guy, I want that shape,” Hoby Kight, who selected the colt last fall for Stokes, said. “And then it was a bubble year for Gun Runner–there was the bargain. If it wasn't the bubble year, I don't think we would have gotten him for that. Everybody bought them as weanlings and everybody wanted them as yearlings, but until they race, you don't know. And then they turned out like they did and you've got one and you've got a really shapely one.”

Stokes, who led his family's seafood company for 55 years, started pinhooking as a hobby after he retired almost a decade ago. His first big success came with a colt by Goldencents who was purchased for $115,000 and resold for $400,000 at the 2018 OBS March sale. A Pioneerof the Nile colt purchased by Kight on Stokes's behalf for $175,000 at the 2018 Keeneland September sale returned the following spring to sell for

$1.2 million at the OBS March sale.

Kight, in the back walking ring at Newtown Paddocks, had Stokes on the phone during the bidding Wednesday.

“I had him on the phone because his computer went down right before he went in,” Kight explained. “So he was listening. He got real quiet after he got to $500,000 and he's an older guy, so I got a little worried. I said, 'Sonny are you ok?' And he said, 'Yeh. I'm here. I'm here. I'm all right.'”

Hip 870 is out of Archstone (Arch) and is a half-brother to multiple graded stakes winner Proctor's Ledge (Ghostzapper). He was consigned by Reiley McDonald's Eaton Sales, which had success for Stokes with another Gun Runner colt at last year's October sale when selling a $170,000 weanling purchase for $235,000.

“Our reason for putting him in this sale was simplistic,” McDonald said. “We held one over by Gun Runner last year for the same guy and we thought, well it worked last year, so let's give it a go again this year. Also, it's kind of getting to a point that we thought it would be good to separate a Gun Runner out. It worked to a T.”

Of Wednesday's result, McDonald said, “We knew he was going to sell well, but you never know, at this sale, past $300,000 where you are going to land. He is a beautiful colt, the best mover I saw of the entire sale.”

Fahey Strikes for Justify Colt

John Fahey, bidding on behalf of an undisclosed client, went to $450,000 to acquire a colt by Justify (hip 893) from the Hunter Valley Farm consignment Wednesday at Fasig-Tipton.

“He's been in the game awhile,” Fahey said of the client. “He's going to go to Florida to be broke and the plan is to race.”

The bay colt is out of Back to Love (Street Cry {Ire}), a half-sister to graded winner Necessary Evil (Harlan's Holiday).

“He's by Justify, a Triple Crown winner, he's a Canadian-bred, and he looks like a nice horse,” Fahey said of the yearling's appeal.

Of the Justifys Fahey has seen, he said, “They are strong, athletic, good-looking horses.”

The result was a pinhooking score for partners Colt Pike and Craig Wheeler, who purchased the colt for $150,000 after he RNA'd at this year's Keeneland January sale.

“I had good notes on him and I thought he looked very racey and balanced and he was put together well,” Pike said of his early impressions of the yearling. “He was a little bit of a later foal, so I was thinking maybe he'd fly under the radar. But I didn't vet him because all of the Justifys, if they looked good, they were bringing a lot of money. I saw he RNA'd, so I hustled back there. They wanted $150,000 for him, I thought that was fair and it just went from there.”

Pike admitted he was surprised he was able to purchase the youngster.

“I walked back to the barn and was thinking, 'What am I missing here? This horse is pretty nice and $150,000 is the stud fee.' But they said he was good to go, so I said, 'Deal, I'll take him.'”

The yearling continued to improve heading into the October sale.

“He's gotten real racey. Some of the other Justifys colts have been bigger horses and I think he was a little bit more refined and racey, so I think some people kind of hopped on him because of that,” Pike said. “I'm very happy with that result, he exceeded expectations. I couldn't be more happy with the job that the people that prepped him did and Hunter Valley did a wonderful job. I've had a couple of horses with them before and they just knocked it out of the park.”

Pike is already looking forward to next year's yearling sales.

“I've actually already bought a few [weanlings] in New York, so we are getting loaded up and ready,” he said.

A Bolt for Petersen

Michael Lund Petersen added a colt by Bolt d'Oro to his racing stable when bloodstock agent Donato Lanni went to $300,000 to acquire a yearling by the first-crop sire from Wayne and Cathy Sweezey's Timber Town consignment Wednesday.

“He was a cool dude,” Lanni said after signing the ticket on hip 1063. “I loved him. They came out and they just had a chain over his nose. He was just so cool. I sent Bob [Baffert] a video of the horse last night and he just loved him. So I got the green light.”

The yearling is out of Colby Cakes (Scat Daddy), a half-sister to stakes winner and graded placed Lucky Copy (Unbridled's Song). He was bred by Timber Town Stable and Wood Duck Stable.

Bradshaw on the Board With Justify Colt

Randy Bradshaw made his first purchase of the Fasig-Tipton October sale early in Wednesday's third session when going to $250,000 to acquire a son of Justify (hip 810) from the Baccari Bloodstock consignment.

“He is a May foal, but he's quite well-developed,” Bradshaw said of the yearling. “I liked that part of it. And I knew a little bit about the family, the Bernardini half-sister [the unraced Believein] doesn't show in there because she got hurt, but she was a terrifically fast filly. He looks like a speedy colt and, if everything goes well, we'll probably try to get him to Miami or maybe the OBS sale in March.”

Hip 810 is out of Aguilera (Unbridled's Song), a half-sister to Japanese Group 1 winner Mr Melody (Scat Daddy). He is a half-brother to stakes winner and graded placed Bluegrass Singer (Bluegrass Cat).

Chris Baccari's Baccari Bloodstock purchased Aguilera for $240,000 at the 2015 Keeneland November sale. The yearling was bred by Seclusive Farm and Chester and Anne Prince.

Bradshaw said he felt this colt from the first crop of Triple Crown winner Justify would be well-suited to his pinhooking program.

“Some of [the Justifys] are very big,” he explained. “Some of them are almost 17 hands, a lot of them are huge with the Scat Daddy sire. But I thought he looked a little more typey and, for what we do, trying to sell one early, he looked like the type. He looks quick.”

Bradshaw doubled up on Baccari Bloodstock offerings later in the session when going once again to $250,000 to acquire a colt by Into Mischief (hip 925). The bay, out of the unraced Bella Gattino (Tapit), was bred by Jumping Jack Racing and Seclusive Farm and RNA'd for $195,000 at the Fasig-Tipton July sale.

Of his October shopping, Bradshaw said, “We tried on a couple yesterday and we have a couple more coming up today that we're going to try to buy. It's always competitive for a nice horse. That's always the hard part. If a good horse comes in here and vets clean, you're going to have to pay for them.”

Mattmiller Looking for More Black Type

Maddie Mattmiller has been an active bidder at the yearling sales this fall, shopping on behalf of husband Jake Ballis's Black Type Thoroughbreds partnership and the agent made a pair of quick purchases Wednesday at Fasig-Tipton. She went to $150,000 to acquire a colt by Goldencents (hip 816) from Bill Murphy's consignment and came right back to secure a filly by Uncle Mo (hip 825) for $170,000 from the Taylor Made Sales Agency consignment.

“We are really just focused on a good physical,” Mattmiller said of her approach to buying for Black Type. “Pedigree helps. We bought a colt who has a pedigree that, were he to be a Grade I winner, he would be a stallion. That always helps when spending six figures on a colt. You kind of have to do that. Fillies on the other hand, we aren't as hard on them as far as pedigree, as long as we get the athlete. We have had success with fillies with pedigrees and without. So we focus on the athlete and physical.”

Mattmiller signed for four yearlings at the Keeneland September sale last month, going to $255,000 for a filly by

Mo Town (hip 1014) and $250,000 for a daughter of Army Mule (hip 3158).

“Keeneland was tough, very tough,” Mattmiller admitted. “I don't think we could have afforded these [October] horses at Keeneland. This sale has been a little easier–in our price range–to come in and pick exactly what we wanted. At Keeneland we struck out a few times.”

She continued, “It's hard for us to come in and spend $300,000 or $400,000 on a yearling when we can find value at the 2-year-old sales. For yearlings, we like to stay in that $100,000-$200,000 budget. Obviously we spent a little more in September, but the market told us that we had to.”

In just three years, Black Type Thoroughbreds has been represented by Up in Smoke (The Big Beast), third in last year's GI Test S., as well as this year's GI Ashland S. runner-up Pass the Champagne (Flatter).

“Black Type started about two years ago when my husband Jake had a bunch of buddies that had had horses in the past and he kind of revisited them and they showed some interest to get back into horses,” Mattmiller said of the origins of the partnership. “So he put his buddies together and they bought the filly Up in Smoke and had success with her. And these guys told all their friends. And it just seems to have built from there. Jake has a good group together now which we are having a ton of fun with.”

There could be much more fun in the group's future as they head to Del Mar with GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies contender Hidden Connection (Connect). Black Type bought into the filly following her 7 1/2-length debut win for Hidden Brook Farm at Colonial Downs in August. She returned to take the

GIII Pocahontas S. by 9 1/4 lengths, which earned her an automatic berth on championship weekend.

“To have been able to buy into a filly who had just broken her maiden and sell these people on the idea that we are pointing to this race that gets us points to go to the Breeders' Cup and then, not only to win that race, but to do it the way she did it,” Mattmiller said with a huge smile. “They are all over the moon–the Breeders' Cup, Del Mar, I mean it's worked like it was written, which is rare. Every time I come home, Jake is pulling his hair out trying to figure out how he's going to find all of these tickets.”

Asked if she was done shopping for yearlings this year, Mattmiller said, “I am going to say we are done. Jake is going to kill me if I don't.”

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October Sale Continues at Record Pace

LEXINGTON, KY – The Fasig-Tipton Kentucky October Yearling Sale continued its frenetic pace Tuesday and figures remained ahead of record pace at the half-way point of the four-day auction.

“It was a great session,” Fasig-Tipton President Boyd Browning said Tuesday night. “It was record-breaking in all regards: gross, average and co-highest price ever for a colt. But more important than that was the continued level of activity. There is a great RNA rate overall with people walking in there with reserves that were getting doubled and tripled. It was an energetic crowd. It's a pretty fun time to be selling horses.”

Through two sessions, 554 yearlings have grossed $24,977,100. The two-day average of $45,085–up 34.5% from the same point in 2020–is ahead of the record figure of $37,955 that was set in 2019. The median is $20,000, up 33.3% from the halfway point of the 2020 sale and above the sale record of $18,500 set in 2014.

The buy-back rate is 18.4%. It was 21.4% a year ago.

The auction is also on track to set a record gross. The all-time high of $38,258,900 was set in 2019.

“There is a sense of optimism,” Browning said of the strength of the market. “People need horses and virtually everybody you talk to is trying to upgrade the quality of the horses that they are training and they are racing. That's a very positive sign for our industry, short-term and long-term. It's really encouraging and we are thrilled with the results today.”

Jacob West, acting on behalf of Vinnie Viola's St Elias Stable, made the day's highest bid when going to $750,000 to acquire a colt by Empire Maker from the Machmer Hall Sales consignment. It was the co-highest priced colt in sale history, matched by a Saint Ballado colt sold in 2000.

While West signed the ticket solely in the name of St Elias, the agent admitted Mike Repole could join the ownership line on the colt. West purchased the day's top-priced filly, a $450,000 daughter of Uncle Mo, for the Repole and St Elias partnership which was the leading buyer at last month's Keeneland September sale.

“It's been totally insane–in a good way,” Gainesway's Brian Graves said of activity on the sales grounds this week. “It's just full of action and it seems like more people are showing up every day. We are busy into the third day of the sale showing horses. I think people are getting shuffled back and just trying to find something they could make a case for. It's been a feeding frenzy.”

The Fasig-Tipton October sale continues through Thursday with sessions beginning each day at 10 a.m.

Empire Maker Colt Shares October Record

Jacob West did his bidding out back to secure an Uncle Mo filly for Mike Repole and Vinnie Viola's partnership, but was in action on the internet a few hips later to acquire a colt by Empire Maker (hip 513) for a co-sale record $750,000. West had to fend off Donato Lanni and SF Bloodstock's Tom Ryan, who were bidding from the balcony in the sales pavilion.

“He was kind of the pick of the litter here at the sale,” West said. “I went over and saw him on the first day of inspections and immediately texted those guys to let them know. He was a representative of the big, two-turn looking colt that those guys have been trying to buy.”

West signed the ticket on hip 513 in just the name of Viola's St Elias Stables, but indicated the yearling would likely become part of the partnership.

“As of this second, no [he's not part of the partnership],” West said of Repole. “But I have a pretty good feeling. There was some discrepancy on what they were going to end up doing partnership-wise, so as of right now, no, but I would say Mike will invest in him.”

The result was an emotional one for Carrie Brogden, whose Machmer Hall Sales consigned the yearling on behalf of co-breeders Tom Conway and Calvin Crain. Conway, a longtime owner and breeder, passed away in September.

“Tom was so excited about this colt,” Brogden said. “I am just sorry he can't be here. Because this is what we do, what we live for, to have the big sales days and the big race days. If I had passed away, like he did in September, boy I hope there is a heaven because I would want to watch this. He was so passionate about the game and he was such a lovely man. He wanted to talk about his horses all the time and he knew this one could be really special.”

The dark bay colt is out of Stop Time (GB) (Street Cry {Ire}), a daughter of Group 1 winner Musical Chimes (In Excess {Ire}). Conway purchased Stop Time for $75,000 at the 2014 Keeneland November sale.

“We've lost a lot of good people lately,” Brogden said. “And all it does is remind me to live every day.”

 

Uncle Mo Filly Draws a Crowd

Partnerships went to the fore again at the Fasig October sale Tuesday when bloodstock agent Jacob West went to $450,000 to acquire a filly by Uncle Mo (hip 469) on behalf of Mike Repole and Vinnie Viola's St Elias. The bay yearling was bred and consigned by Sam-Son Farm.

“She is a beautiful filly with a great pedigree,” West said of the yearling's appeal. “They kind of turned the page down based on the pedigree when the catalogue came out. She is a big-framed filly and we hope she grows up into her body.”

Hip 469 is out of Song of the Lark (Seeking the Gold) and is a half-sister to Canadian champion Up With the Birds (Stormy Atlantic). As part of the on-going Sam-Son dispersal, Song of the Lark sold for $145,000 while in foal to Uncle Mo at this year's Keeneland January sale.

Repole and Viola were the leading buyers at the Keeneland September sale where West signed the ticket on 43 yearlings for $16,045,000 on behalf of the partnership.

Asked what impact partnerships like Repole and Viola's, as well as the SF Bloodstock/Starlight/Madaket axis which purchased the $700,000 son of Tapit Monday at Fasig-Tipton, West said, “I can only speak for myself, but Mike and Vinnie have spent almost $20 million on horses. Are we going to say that is bad for the game? They are putting a lot of money through these sales companies. I know some people are complaining that it's two big titans teaming up, but they are good friends and they grew up together, their families are family. They still own horses fully on their own, but they didn't see a reason to compete against each other. It is a partnership that works. They are putting a lot of money through the sales and I think everybody needs to be excited that they are doing it. Really wealthy people in this industry and in this world can find a bunch of other stuff to put their money into. Anybody who is signing a ticket on a horse, I applaud. I think what gets lost in the shuffle, is that good horses always bring good money regardless. This year we didn't have an Arab presence in our sales, so everybody should be thanking God that Mike and Vinnie stepped up the way they did–and the other partnerships, too. It did create a little bit of a feeding frenzy, but at the end of the day I think it was a good thing.”

 

Mendelssohn Colt to BlackRidge Partners

Will Daugherty, bidding on behalf of the BlackRidge Partners, went to $400,000 to acquire a colt from the first crop of Mendelssohn (hip 545) from the Taylor Made Sales Agency consignment. The yearling is out of Super Girlie (Closing Argument) and is a half-brother to this year's GI Arkansas Derby winner Super Stock (Dialed In). He was bred by Pedro and P.J. Gonzalez.

“We will bring in a couple of partners and syndicate him out just a little bit,” Daugherty said. “He's a nice Mendelssohn colt, one of the best we've come across, and you have to love the page. If he's anything like his half-brother, he'll be pretty successful.”

Daugherty operates BlackRidge with his father Bill and partner Bill Barr. Their BlackRidge Resource Partners is an investment firm specializing in the oil and gas industries. The group bought into California Chrome shortly before his win in the G1 Dubai World Cup and began building a broodmare band to support the stallion. Breeding has remained their primary focus.

“We don't race a whole lot, we mostly breed,” Daugherty explained. “We just come in on a special horse. We have a little-to-some of five or six [horses in training].”

Tuesday's result was no surprise to Taylor Made's Duncan Taylor.

“He was one of the most popular colts we had up at the barn,” Taylor said. “And with Super Stock running so good, we knew he would sell well. We didn't know quite how well, but we are very happy with that result.”

 

Bolt d'Oro Filly Pays for Hamlins

Nancy and Tim Hamlin's Wynnstay Sales, consigning only since 2018, sold the top-priced filly at last year's Fasig-Tipton October sale and continued its strong returns Tuesday at Newtown Paddocks when selling a filly by Bolt d'Oro (hip 705) for $375,000 to St Elias Stables. Out of Urloveisasymphony (Forest Wildcat), the filly was bred by Deann and Greg Baer and was raised at the Hamlins' Wynnstay Farm near Winchester.

“She was out all day for three days in a row,” Tim Hamlin said of the yearling's popularity on the sales grounds. “She was a trooper all through it and never turned a hair.”

Hamlin continued, “Good horses are hard to come by. You can lose people when you bring them to the sale if they act stupid in the back ring. Everything has to go right, all the boxes have to be checked. When they check all the boxes you get paid. And she checked all the boxes.”

Bolt d'Oro's first yearlings have proven popular in the sales ring this summer and fall and Hamlin admitted he was a fan of the young Spendthrift stallion.

“We just like them mentally,” Hamlin said of the yearlings by Bolt d'Oro he has dealt with. “They are all so easy. They do whatever you want them to do. They are willing and athletic. They are just happy horses. I tried to get two more breedings tonight. The minute she sold, I got on the phone with [Spendthrift's] Mark Toothaker and he said, 'I can't get you any more. He's full.' But I tried. We love him.”

 

Miami Date for Curlin Colt

Randy Hartley, one of a group of Florida-based pinhookers bundled up against the suddenly chilly temperatures in the back walking ring at Fasig-Tipton, went to $300,000 to acquire a colt by Curlin (hip 437) from the Hill 'n' Dale Sales Agency consignment Tuesday.

“He just looks like he is going to get better and better,” Harley said after signing the ticket on the yearling. “He is good now, but he looks like one of those colts who, over this training period, is just going to develop into a spectacular colt. He looks like he has tons of speed, along with the distance. He reminded me a lot of Khozan when I bought him, a smaller type with that shoulder and walk. Of all the horses, he was my pick of the sale.”

The yearling is out of the unraced Silverbulletway (Storm Cat), a daughter of champion Silverbulletday (Silver Deputy) and the dam of graded winner Govenor Charlie (Midnight Lute) and stakes winner Crisis of Spirit (Vindication). He was bred by Mike Pegram.

Hartley and Dean DeRenzo have narrowed their pinhooking focus this year and hip 437 is expected to head to next year's Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream Sale as part of a select consignment of colts.

“I have just a small really good group of colts this year and I am going to try to go down there and go to one place and get it done in one place,” Hartley said. “I bought a City of Light, a Good Magic and a West Coast and an Uncle Mo, but I needed something more with a proven pedigree. So if everything does go well, there is a lot of upside to him. If it doesn't, I don't have far to fall.”

Of the October market, Hartley said, “The good ones are bringing good money. They have been hard to buy. It's been a pretty strong sale if you really like something. So I've been waiting on this one.”

 

Empire Maker Filly to Rutherford

Mike Rutherford, whose broodmare Sluice (Seeking the Gold) produced Grade I winner Mushka (Empire Maker), went back to the cross when acquiring a filly by the late Gainesway stallion (hip 457) for $230,000 at Fasig-Tipton Tuesday. The yearling was consigned by Gainesway and was co-bred by Best a Luck Farm and the Empire Maker syndicate in Florida.

The yearling is out of Slew's Quality (Elusive Quality)–a granddaughter of Triple Crown winner Seattle Slew–and she is a half-sister to champion female sprinter and GI Breeders' Cup F/M Sprint winner Shamrock Rose (First Dude).

“She had a beautiful neck and shoulder and I loved the sire,” Rutherford said of the yearling. “Mushka won over a million dollars and she was by the same sire out of a Lakeway daughter, who was Seattle Slew, so I liked the cross.”

The yearling will be trained by Bill Mott.

“[Rutherford] only buys the really pretty ones,” Gainesway's Brian Graves said. “And she was. She was just a really well-balanced filly and very athletic. She's already a half to a Grade I winner. She'll have a lot of broodmare potential one day.”

 

English Channel Filly Scores for Fallbrook Team

Jared Hughes purchased a filly by English Channel for $13,000 at this year's Keeneland January sale as a thank you to the team at Fallbrook Farm. The yearling (hip 596) duly rewarded the group when selling for $112,000 to Magnolia Racing Syndicate Tuesday at Fasig-Tipton.

“Jared Hughes helps at Fallbrook Farm, he advises and helps manage the farm,” said Joe Seitz of Brookdale Sales, which consigned the filly. “He bought her for the employees of Fallbrook. They called her the bonus baby, that was her nickname all year long. It's been nice watching her develop. She's really come on all summer and fall.”

English Channel was represented by the one-two in the GIII Sycamore S. at Keeneland Saturday when Spooky Channel scored a narrow victory over Two Emmys and the sire's momentum continued on into the Fasig sale.

“She started to heat up yesterday,” Seitz said of action on the yearling. “People were coming back for her and she started to get vetted. English Channel has done so well this year and he's finally starting to get the respect that he deserves. And she was very attractive. She kind of stuck out here. And especially having the first and second in the Sycamore, the timing was perfect. The stars started lining up.”

Asked if the Fallbrook team had plans to reinvest their profits, Seitz smiled and said, “We haven't gotten that far. I just gave Jared a high five and I had to sell another one. But I am sure they will. I am sure those guys will be keen to reinvest.”

 

Soup for a Cause

Proceeds of soup sales made in the Kentucky Room between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. during each session of the Fasig-Tipton October Sale this week will go to support the family of the late bloodstock agent Mike 'Soup' Recio, who passed away in September.

Donations can also be made directly to the 529 College Funds of Recio's children, Wesley and Addison, by clicking the links below:

Wesley Recio: https://gift.my529.org/8TSDXZ

Addison Recio: https://gift.my529.org/TD0IEM

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