Graded-Placed Juvenile County Final Tops Modified Fasig-Tipton July Horses Of Racing Age Sale

Live auction action returned to Kentucky on July 13 with a robust renewal of the Fasig-Tipton July Horses of Racing Age sale at Newtown Paddocks in Lexington.

Conducted as an open sale for the first time, the sale was modified to serve an industry that has been balancing limited racing and sales opportunities since March. All horses offered were on the sales grounds, and buyers had the option to bid in-person, on the phone, or via the new online auction tool.

Graded stakes-placed juvenile County Final topped the sale when sold for $475,000 to West Point Thoroughbreds, L.E.B., agent.

The gray or roan colt by Preakness Stakes winner Oxbow was consigned as Hip 166 by John Ennis Training, agent. The sale-topper broke his maiden on debut going 5 1/2 furlongs on the Churchill Downs turf on June 5, wiring a field of straight maidens to win by four lengths. He followed up that effort with a second-place finish in the Grade 3 Bashford Manor Stakes on June 27, this time going six furlongs on the Churchill Downs main track.

County Final earned $65,000 in his first two starts for owner-train John Ennis and owners Hayden Noriega, and 47 Roses LLC. The colt is a half-brother to two other winners out of the multiple stakes winning Tapit mare Tapajo, from the immediate family of Grade 1 winner Currency Swap.

Per Capita, a winning 4-year-old colt by Tapit, sold for $325,000 to Red Oak Stable, agent for Rick Sacco, to become the sale's second-most expensive offering.

Offered as Hip 85 by Gainesway, agent, Per Capita was a winner last out, breaking his maiden going a mile on the dirt at Churchill Downs on May 24. The colt won once in four starts for owners Peter M. Brant and Gainesway Stable and trainer Chad Brown, earning $65,150.

Per Capita is out of the graded stakes winning Orientate mare Successful Outlook, making him a half-brother to Grade 1 winner Sweet Lulu and a full brother to Grade 2 winner Anchor Down and Grade 3 winner Iron Fist.

The session's top filly came in the form of recent G3 Indiana Oaks runner-up Impeccable Style, who was purchased for $275,000 by Bradley Thoroughbreds, agent.

The 3-year-old winning daughter of Uncle Mo was offered as Hip 53 by Gainesway. The dark bay or brown filly broke her maiden on her second try last year at two at Churchill Downs and was most recently second in the Indiana Oaks on July 8 at Indiana Grand. Impeccable Style has won or placed in four of six career starts to date for Gainesway Stable, Catalyst Stable, Paul McInnis, Patty Slevin, and Magdalena Racing and trainer Kenny McPeek, with earnings of $134,912.

Overall, 81 horses changed hands for a total of $5,072,000. The average was $62,617 and the median was $30,000.

Results are available online.

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Lively Trade at Fasig-Tipton July Horses of Racing Age Sale

Early action seemed tepid, but bidding picked up noticeably throughout leading to a lively day of business at the Fasig-Tipton July Horses of Racing Age Sale in Lexington Monday.

“There was lots of activity at all price ranges and a lot of horses got moved and found new opportunities with new buyers,” said Fasig-Tipton President Boyd Browning. “The sale was well-attended. Veterinary activity, which is one of the things that I always look at to kind of evaluate pre-sale interest, was higher this year than last year. We have now had two sales in a row that should provide some confidence in the marketplace.”

The 2-year-old County Final (Oxbow), coming off a runner-up effort in the GIII Bashford Manor S., achieved the night’s highest bid when selling to West Point Thoroughbreds for $475,000. The gray colt was one of six to sell for $200,000 or over on the night.

“It’s rational, but it’s a legitimate marketplace,” Browning said. “It is a balanced market that is equitable for buyers and sellers alike.”

From 182 catalogued lots, 81 sold for a total of $5,072,000. The average was $62,617 and the median was $30,000. There were 38 horses reported not sold for a buy-back rate of 31.9%.

Monday’s auction, coupled with positive results from Fasig-Tipton’s Midlantic 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale two weeks ago, should help to stabilize the market ahead of the fall yearling sales, according to Browning.

“All in all, I am certainly much more encouraged today than I was three weeks ago because we’ve demonstrated with these two sales that there is a viable, legitimate marketplace that exists,” Browning said.

Ennis Scores by a County Mile

Trainer John Ennis heads into the yearling sales each fall working on a strict budget and hoping to take home a yearling who will have success at the track before returning to a horses of racing age auction. The Irishman worked his plan to perfection with County Final (Oxbow) (hip 166), purchasing the colt for just $9,500 at last year’s Keeneland September Yearling Sale and selling him Monday at Fasig-Tipton for $475,000 to West Point Thoroughbreds. In between sales, the gray colt broke his maiden over the turf at Churchill Downs and finished second over the main track in the June 27 GIII Bashford Manor S.

“It was easy to like him really,” Ennis said after watching County Final go through the sales ring Monday. “He looked like a smaller version of what he looked like today. He was a top physical with a professional look to him and a great walk. I’m sad to see him go, but it’s something we’ve got to do.”

Asked about the colt’s bargain basement price last year, Ennis said, “Oxbow, unfortunately, is not that commercial and in the sales ring, especially with yearlings, they want to buy commercial sires. With my budget, buying inexpensive yearlings, I have to go on physicals.”

Ennis was happy to see the colt sell, but he and his partners were prepared to take him home if the price wasn’t right.

“I had a couple of other partners on him and they didn’t mind if we kept him,” he explained. “They would have happily taken him home and taken him to Saratoga and places like that because he’s a runner. They put a high reserve on him and we thought we probably wouldn’t get that because the market didn’t seem that strong. But it was fantastic. I’m over the moon.”

Ennis said the yearling sales-to racetrack-to sales ring route can sometimes be more profitable than pinhooking yearlings to the 2-year-old sales.

“It’s very hard to pinhook yearlings to 2-year-old sales,” Ennis said. “You only get one shot at going a furlong in :10 flat or whatever you need to do and the X-rays have to be super correct at the sales. I feel like, if you buy an inexpensive yearling who looks like a runner and if you win a maiden special weight at some place like Churchill or Keeneland and improve on the next run, no matter who he’s by, they will come and buy him. For me, with my budget, that’s the only way I can do it. I’d love to keep the horse, but this is what I do every year. I love the horse and he’s a fantastic horse. But now it’s back on to September.”

Country Mile will be transferred to the barn of trainer George Weaver with plans to run at Saratoga, according to West Point’s Terry Finley.

“I hope he ends up as a runner, but he’s shown he has a lot of talent,” Finley said. “Everything just fell into place with him and he vetted well. We are going to take a shot. We find that our partners are very open to horses like this that have shown a good bit of ability. It’s very exciting that he ran so well on dirt and turf. We didn’t think he’d bring that much in the ring, but it is what it is.”

Per Capita Joins Red Oak Roster

Recent maiden winner Per Capita (Tapit) (hip 85) will join the Brunetti family’s Red Oak Stable after the operation’s racing manager Rick Sacco went to $325,000 to secure the strapping chestnut from the Gainesway consignment Monday at Fasig-Tipton. The 4-year-old, bred by Gainesway and racing for Gainesway and Peter Brant, graduated in his fourth lifetime start at Churchill May 24 for trainer Chad Brown. He is out of Successful Outlook (Orientate) and is a full-brother to multiple graded stakes winner Anchor Down and graded winner Iron Fist, as well as a half to Grade I winner Sweet Lulu (Mr. Greeley).

“It’s a beautiful page, a very good family and Tapit jumps out at you,” Sacco said of the colt’s appeal. “His race at Churchill was very impressive, not in only in the way he did it, but he ran a 5 3/4s on the sheets, which is kind of extraordinary for a maiden winner, even though he is four.”

Per Capita joins an operation already stocked with older graded stakes performers, led by multiple Grade I winner Mind Control (Stay Thirsty), Grade I placed Bal Harbour (First Samurai), and graded placed King for a Day (Uncle Mo).

“We are trying to buy some racing horses to fill some gaps in our stable,” Sacco said. “We have some good older horses and we are just trying to fill some gaps. This horse came up with all of the curb appeal of the pedigree and then, when I dug into it a little bit more, with the sheet figure that he ran and his physical–he’s a very powerful-looking horse.”

As for where the colt may start next, Sacco said, “I would say we will most likely come back in an a-other-than at Saratoga as the next progression. We haven’t decided who is going to train the horse yet. We wanted to get our hands on him first and then we will figure it out.”

Bradley Strikes for Impeccable Style

Bloodstock agent Pete Bradley, bidding over the phone while in Ocala for the OBS July Sale, went to $275,000 to acquire the graded-placed Impeccable Style (Uncle Mo) (hip 53) on behalf of an undisclosed client. The 3-year-old filly was second behind Shedaresthedevil (Daredevil) in the July 8 GIII Indiana Oaks for the partnership of Gainesway, Catalyst Stable, Paul McInnis, Patty Slevin, LLC and Magdalena Racing and for trainer Ken McPeek.

“It’s not often that you get to buy a graded placed filly who has Oaks points,” Bradley said. “She has been very consistent and she appears to be a filly that is getting better and that’s what we look for when we try to buy a race filly. I think she is a beautiful framed filly. She is a little on the light side, but I’d rather have one on the light side than too heavy. She has some quality to her and obviously she can run.”

A maiden winner at Churchill last September, the dark bay filly was fifth in the GII Rachel Alexandra S. and third in the Bourbonette Oaks earlier this year.

“We are going to give her a little bit of a break just because she will go to a new barn and I always think it’s a good idea to give them a couple of weeks before you do too much with them,” Bradley said. “And then we will point her to some races in September and October.”

Of the final price, Bradley said, “I thought in that price range, she was pretty good value. I think it’s a function of our market being off a little bit, I think she might have been a $350,000 filly last year. I wouldn’t say $275,000 is a bargain, but I’d say that it’s good value for what she is.”

Three Diamonds Restocks

The Wycoff family’s Three Diamonds Farm enjoyed a big day at Keeneland Sunday, winning two races including the GIII Transylvania S. with Field Pass (Lemon Drop Kid), and the operation was busy across town at Fasig-Tipton Monday night. Three Diamonds purchased nine horses at the auction for a total of $499,000.

“We thought there were a lot of nice horses there,” Jordan Wycoff said. “The races are definitely getting tougher because there are fewer of them and there are more horses in them, but we felt it was probably a buyer’s market at this time in the world. We love to race and wanted to go in to the sale like we would any other year, which is to try to buy some good horses that we thought were value that we could race with.”

Three Diamonds’ Fasig purchases were led by Journeyman (Animal Kingdom) (hip 56), who was purchased for $85,000 and is coming off a fourth-place effort in the July 4 GII Eclipse S.

“We like to run on the grass with [trainer] Mike Maker,” Wycoff said of the 4-year-old gelding’s appeal.

Wycoff continued, “There was a lot of Kentucky Downs in our mind as we were looking at these horses. And they might not let us on Saratoga, but we still like winning races there. So that all played a part in buying these horses.”

While the July sale started off slowly, it seemed to build momentum as the evening wore on.

“The sale got really strong at the end,” Wycoff agreed. “We were trying to bid on a few more late and got completely outrun, so we were happy we were able to strike a little bit early. Fifty hips into the sale, I think we had bought six at the time, I was shocked we were able to get those horses for that value and I thought we were going to get a few more. But in the last 100, we got outrun like crazy.”

Three Diamonds has had success buying out of the Fasig July Horses of Racing Age Sale in the past. The operation purchased Cross Border (English Channel) for $100,000 in 2018 and that 6-year-old is now graded stakes placed, while Go Noni Go (Get Stormy), purchased for $100,000 in 2017, won the GIII Bourbonette Oaks.

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Gabby Gaudet Joins TDN Writers’ Room

Like everyone else, Gabby Gaudet is looking forward to Keeneland’s special summer meet, which kicks off Wednesday. With 10 graded stakes races packed into a five-day schedule, she knows the meet will be special, but also different. Keeneland has never run in the summer before, and, for this meet, no spectators will be allowed to attend. As one of the hosts of the track’s simulcast feed, Gaudet’s job will be to deliver the “Keeneland experience” to people’s living rooms.

“I know people will miss Keeneland and miss being on track,” said Gaudet, this week’s Green Group Guest of the Week on the TDN Writers’ Room podcast presented by Keeneland. “Hopefully, we’ll be back in the fall. I think what we will be doing will make the transition a little bit easier for the passionate racing fan.”

Because fans aren’t allowed to attend, Keeneland is enhancing its simulcast production as part of the “Keeneland at Home” theme that will be part of the meet. Gaudet, along with Scott Hazelton, will kick things off each racing day at 11:30 with a 30-minute simulcast show previewing the day’s races. It can be viewed on Keeneland.com, the Keeneland Race Day app, Keeneland Select or CWKYT locally in Lexington. During the meet, the Keeneland simulcasting feed will also be available on the TDN website.

Once the races start, Gaudet, a regular on TVG, and Hazelton will be giving blanket coverage of the meet. Gaudet will, of course, handicap the races and give her opinions on the looks of the horses in the paddock. Since the media is not allowed in, she will also conduct numerous post-race interviews in an effort to make as much information as possible available to the writers and the fans.

“We’ll be trying to do more with the interviews after the races,” she said. “We’ll talk to the winners but also to a trainer who has a heavy favorite that loses. We will be trying to provide as much information as possible for the media and for the fans and for the public who cannot be onsite.”

Not everything will be about who wins and loses.

“There will be the entertainment and the fun element,” she said. “Keeneland will be posting some of their famous recipes, like burgoo, online. Burgoo in July doesn’t sound too appetizing, but you can print it out and put it in the cookbook for later.”

Gaudet has become one of the most visible personalities in racing. When asked what others can do to follow in her footsteps, she said the easiest way to get there is to put in a maximum effort.

“Work hard, ask questions, and don’t pretend that you know everything because you won’t get very far,” Gaudet said.

Gaudet made history earlier this year when she worked as an announcer at the Keeneland January sale, becoming the first woman to do so. She said she felt immense pressure, but would like to work more in that role in the future.

“Yes, I would definitely like to do more of it and I believe I might be doing some more at the September sale,” she said. “I haven’t confirmed that with anybody, but I believe that’s in the pipeline. That whole experience was such a whirlwind. And honestly, because of the pandemic, it feels like that happened maybe five years ago. It was a historic moment.”

Elsewhere on the show, in the West Point Thoroughbreds news segment, the writers discussed the latest developments out of Arkansas, where, according to reports, two Bob Baffert-trained horses, Gamine and Charlatan, tested positive for the banned substance lidocaine. Earlier in the week, the split samples from both horses confirmed the positive, but Baffert has vowed to fight the impending penalties. The consensus among the writers was that Baffert was fighting an uphill battle because of the trainer’s responsibility rule.

The writers also dove into the story of Tom VanMeter, the Lexington area consignor who made racist posts on social media. Click here to listen to the podcast and click here to watch it on Vimeo.

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Indiana Derby Favorite Winning Impression A ‘Dallas Stewart Prototype’

West Point Thoroughbreds president Terry Finley was asked how much he is thinking about the delayed Kentucky Derby with his partnership's 3-year-old gelding Winning Impression, the 3-1 favorite in Wednesday's $300,000, Grade 3 Indiana Derby at Indiana Grand Racing & Casino.

“Sure, yeah, we are,” Finley said of the Arkansas Derby fourth-place finisher. “Especially with Dallas Stewart at the helm and the repertoire he has with these kinds of horses.”

That would be distance-thriving horses who come running late to pick up a good part of the pieces while speedier rivals stagger home. Prime examples: Commanding Curve, second in the 2014 Kentucky Derby at 37-1; Golden Soul, second in the 2013 Kentucky Derby at 34-1; Tale of Verve, second in the 2015 Preakness at 28-1. West Point campaigned Commanding Curve, as well as the Stewart-trained Macho Again, second in the 2008 Preakness at 39-1.

“He reminds us a lot of Commanding Curve — just kind of getting there, getting there,” Finley said.

If Winning Impression wins the 1 1/8-mile Indiana Derby, he'll claim one credential that Commanding Curve never achieved: being a stakes-winner. One thing that helps is Winning Impression has more versatility to stay near the early lead if needed, while Commanding Curve was dependent on a fast pace to set up his closing kick.

“Ever since he went two turns, he's been a very consistent horse — and run with the best,” said Jeff Lifson, West Point's executive vice president for Midwest Operations. “He is a Dallas Stewart prototype: Gets better and better and better. He was never a flashy 2-year-old. As soon as he went two turns, it was like, 'This is what I was meant to do.'

“The fun part is looking at the Thoro-Graph (handicapping) sheets. He has a pattern very similar to Commanding Curve. If the sheets are at all predictive, he's going to run massively big at Indiana — if he's getting better, and he seems to be getting better.”

West Point was a minority partner in Always Dreaming, the Todd Pletcher-trained colt who got really good early in his 3-year-old season, carrying his speed to four impressive victories to start off 2017, capped by the Florida Derby and Kentucky Derby. He was never the same horse after that.

By contrast, Winning Impression is an example of a horse benefiting from the coronavirus forcing the Kentucky Derby to be postponed from May 2 until Sept. 5.

After a pair of fifth-place finishes sprinting last November, Winning Impression promptly won a 1 1/16-mile maiden race in New Orleans. That was followed by a second and third at the Fair Grounds and a disqualification from first to fifth for interference in an Oaklawn Park allowance race. But his team had seen enough to take the next step.

Winning Impression's stakes debut came on May 2 in the Arkansas Derby, in which he finished fourth by a total of nine lengths at 20-1 odds. The first- and third-place finishers that day, Charlatan and Gouverneur Morris are on the shelf and runner-up Basin is going in Keeneland's Blue Grass Stakes on Saturday.

“He's a nice horse,” said the Louisville-based Stewart. “He ran great at Oaklawn — won and got disqualified but he ran terrific. He ran great in the Arkansas Derby, has trained very consistent and this race will tell us a lot where we're at. He's doing well and he needs to run. We'll see where we're at in September, but right now we're just focused on this race. I think he fits real well in there, and we'll take it from there.”

Julien Leparoux, who rode Winning Impression in the Arkansas Derby and once in New Orleans, has the mount. Winning Impression drew post 9 in the field of ten 3-year-olds.

“It's a good race, it's a legitimate race,” Finley said. “There are no superstars in there. But the horses who figure to run well in here are very, very similar to what we are at this point in their careers. If we run well, we'll have a little stronger circle around the first Saturday in September.”

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