Kings Of Keeneland

Keeneland's paddock is beautiful.
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Lawn jockeys decorated with the winners of previous stakes decorate Keeneland.
Lawn jockeys decorated with the winners of previous stakes decorate Keeneland.

It’s been exactly one week since things really heated up at Keeneland racetrack in Lexington, KY.  The October meet opened Friday, October 5th and served up some hot temperatures and hotter stakes races.  Fall Stars Weekend delivered 10 stakes races.  Since then they have held another stakes as well.  What has sire power meant to Keeneland’s racetrack so far and who may we expect to win this weekend’s stakes?

 

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Acknowledging the Acorn

Monomoy Girl before the Ashland Stakes!
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Monomoy Girl, winner of the Ashland Stakes!
Monomoy Girl, winner of the Ashland Stakes!

Change is inevitable.  Horse racing has its own trends.  However, some breaks with tradition seem stranger to me than others.  I am surprised that the Acorn Stakes is now described as the Belmont Stakes undercard.  Here are some big reasons why should be acknowledging the Acorn,  the third leg of the Filly Triple Crown, the first jewel of the Triple Tiara.

 

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Graydar’s Groundbreaker

Graydar looks great for fan day at Taylor Made Farm
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Graydar is happy to welcome visitors at Taylor Made Farm
Graydar is happy to welcome visitors at Taylor Made Farm

As the Road to the Kentucky Derby winds its way through Europe this week I’m taking a moment to evaluate the top of the leaderboard to look for patterns and new talent.  I must say, I am overjoyed to have trainer D. Wayne Lukas, with Bravazo and Sporting Chance, back in the running.  Also, I am struck by the presence  of second-crop sires Poseidon’s Warrior, Violence and Graydar.  It is refreshing to see the new breath of young sire power blowing into Thoroughbred racing.  Graydar is the leading second-crop sire in North America by winners.  Watch out for his offspring in the Kentucky Derby and other Classic races.

 

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Buying the Best Breeding

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Get into the game!  Do you want to buy or see the graded stakes winners of the future?  If so, plan to head to Keeneland’s September Yearling Sale in Lexington, KY.  Keeneland prides itself on being the auction company to graduate the best yearlings in the world.

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These are a few of the pictures I took at the sale last September.  Thoroughbreds sold at Keeneland are having a fantastic year.  In 2016, more of their grads have gone on to win Grade or Group 1 stakes races than from any other auction house.  Every winner, of each of the 2016 Triple Crown Series, was once sold at Keeneland’s yearling sale in September of 2014.  Nyquist won the Kentucky Derby, Exaggerator won the Preakness Stakes and Creator won the Belmont Stakes.  It would take too long to name drop all of the talent that came out of that sale.  The 73rd annual sale should lead to greatness as well.

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The sale starts with Book 1 on Monday, 9/12/16, at 11 am EST.  All of Book 1 sale dates start at 11 am.  There are 6 books in the sale that concludes on Sunday, 9/25/16.  Books 2 thru 6 sales start at 10 am daily with the exception of Thursday 9/15 when there will be no sale.  The schedule is as follows by book, dates and hip numbers:

  1. 9/12 hips 1-202, 9/13 hips 203-405, 9/14 hips 406-607
  2. 9/16 hips 608-1007, 9/17 hips 1008-1407
  3. 9/18 hips 1408-1817, 9/19 hips 1818-2227
  4. 9/20 hips 2228-2637, 9/21 hips 2638-3047
  5. 9/22 hips 3048-3456, 9/23 hips 3457-3861
  6. 9/24 hips 3862-4178, 9/25 hips 4179-4479

The sale will include the best sire power.  53 Tapit yearlings will go thru the auction.  Pioneer of the Nile is represented by 60 of the yearlings there.  Fine yearlings by Scat Daddy, Bodemeister, Tiznow and Violence will be available as well.  Several more yearlings by other outstanding sires are also cataloged.  Search the entire catalog here: Keeneland September Yearling Sale

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If you can’t make the sale you can go to the Keeneland website to watch the entire sale or TVG and TVG2 will show parts of the sale.  I will be in attendance on several days and I will post frequent pictures and news to Twitter.  Follow me at Thoroughbred U .  Check my webpage over the next few weeks to see more photos and sales recap information.

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Tapit On Top

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Tapit, the sire of my favorite horse, Juba, stole the show, once again, at the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Selected Yearling Sale.  The two day sale ended last evening with 9 Tapit offspring selling.  Both his average and median prices beat out the other sire’s yearlings at the sale.

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Tapit is a 15 year old super sire.  He is a grey horse that has sired many other greys and he is nearly white in appearance.  He lives at Gainesway Farm in Lexington, KY.  I visited him, at his farm, this past June.  Tapit is the son of sire Pulpit and dam Tap Your HeelsTapit was KY bred at Oldenburg Farms,LLC and owned by Winchell Thoroughbreds, LLC.  His trainer was Michael W. Dickinson.  Tapit only had 6 starts in his racing career.  2 of his 3 wins were in graded stakes races.  He won the Laurel Futurity at Laurel Park and the Wood Memorial  Stakes at Aqueduct in 2003 and 2004 respectively.  Tapit retired to stud in 2005 and by 2008 his first crop was racing.  He immediately shot up to leading freshman sire that year.  Tapit was the leading Champion North American sire in 2014 and 2015 and he is leading again in 2016.  He holds the highest stud fee in the country at $300,000.  He has a slew of successful offspring including Frosted Frosted won the race I wrote about last week, the Whitney Handicap.

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It makes sense, that with the success on the track that Tapit’s offspring have shown it seems everybody wants a Tapit yearling.  Fasig-Tipton’s sale on August 8th and 9, 2016 was no different.  There were 252 yearlings cataloged in the Saratoga Selected Yearling sale that was held in Saratoga Springs, NY.  11 of those were sired by Tapit.  9 of his yearlings sold with an average price of over $700,000 and a median price of over $600,000.  His top seller, hip 140, sold for $1.25 million dollars.  Only one horse sold for more in the two day sale.  That was Medaglia d’Oro’s, $1.45 million dollar filly, hip 191.  Tapit still had Medaglia d’Oro and all the other sires beat with a total of over $6.42 million dollars in sales.  Medaglia d’Oro’s yearlings totaled over $3.65 million.

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Overall, I wasn’t so pleased in the trend but that may just be a matter of personal opinion.  The previous year, the sale sold 156 versus 145 Thoroughbreds.  The sale total, despite more horses sold, dropped by more than a million dollars.  The average price dropped by more than $30 thousand dollars and the median price dropped by $12.5 thousand dollars.  While only 26 horses did not sell in 2015 there were 47 horses that did not get sold this year.

The same auction house will feature the Fasig-Tipton New York Bred Yearling sale on August 13th and 14, 2016.  Tapit is a good ol’ Kentucky boy, thus he won’t have any yearlings in this sale. Perhaps that will give my partnership’s entry an advantage on Sunday.  However, Tapit is the dam sire of hip 387, a filly by ViolenceViolence has 6 yearlings in this sale and I’m expecting those to do very well.  I hope the right matches get made and we all get to enjoy some fantastic racehorses in the following years.  Check back next week for more info on Thoroughbred action!

 

 

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Jaw Droppers and Sale Toppers

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At first I was pretty disappointed that I could not attend the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky Winter Mixed Sale.  The sale was only two days, Monday and Tuesday, February 8 – 9, 2016 and I had to work.  Instead, I was able to go out for nearly four hours the day prior to the sale kickoff and spend time visiting and photographing the Thoroughbreds.  It was cool and dry, that Sunday I spent at the barns, which was the last of that weather.  Winter Mixed is a great name because it not only describes the variety of available bloodstock but the term fits the rain, sleet and snow that fell throughout the sale.  I don’t like cold and wet so I was happy to follow along on the live feed.

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The Winter Mixed had 528 Thoroughbreds cataloged.  Of these 341 sold at a total price of over $8.2 million dollars.  The average hip sold for more than $24 thousand dollars.  The sale offered broodmares, racing or broodmare prospects and short yearlings.  Day 1 of the sale featured hips 1 thru 296 and day 2 featured the remaining hips.  I learned something very interesting about the cataloging from this sale.  When the catalog for an auction house is produced the horses are assigned their hip order based on an alphabetical listing of either their own registered name or, if they have yet to be named, the name of their dam.  A letter is drawn at random to start numbering (hip 1) and then the numbers are assigned in alphabetical order thereafter.  In a select sale the groupings can be made based on quality but not in a mixed sale such as this.  That explains why at a select sale one might see the highest priced horses featured on a particular day but in a mixed sale, like this, it just so happened that day 2 had more sought after horses.

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This sale had 14 horses sell for 6 figure prices.  The sale topper was hip 426, Flashy American for $395,000.  She is a pretty 7 year old gray/roan sired by Flashy Bull, her dam is Inn BetweenFlashy American is pregnant by 2013 Kentucky Derby winner, Orb.  2016 will bring Orb’s 1st crop.  She was consigned by Taylor Made Sales and purchased by Blue Sky Stable.  She may be bred to Tapit next.  She was sold at Fasig-Tipton in the 2015 Kentucky Selected Fall Mixes Sale for $360,000 but the owner defaulted upon her offer.  Funfair (hip 431) went for $350,000.  Achiever’s Legacy (519) sold for $330,000 as did Stoweshoe (522, seen in the above promo poster).  Maggie D’ Oro (55) was session 1’s topper at $210,000.  Zundaq (296) and Dorothy’s Spirit (403, seen below on the top) each sold for $190,000.  Kateri (18, seen below on the bottom) fetched $167,000.  Bonnie Bear (338) and Darling Bird (389) both had a price of $150,000.  Suzy Sage (228) followed at $130,000.  Aunt Ellen (314) sold for $115,000.  Finally Lady Zieg (28) and the yearling topper, a colt out of Bala and sired by Violence (318), each sold for $100,000.

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Dorothy’s Spirit’s sire was the late and great Scat Daddy who passed away this past December of an apparent but unexpected heart attack at only 11 years old.  9 horses in this sale were Scat Daddy progeny and 7 sold.  Another of his offspring is Lady Gayle (26, seen below).  She sold for just $14,000.  While there was quite a price range on his lineage there was a high demand for the mares pregnant with a Scat Daddy sired foal.  Funfair, Maggie D’ Oro and Bonnie Bear, all toppers, are all in foal by Scat Daddy.

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I was pretty impressed to see the next two Thoroughbreds.  It’s Elementary (11, seen below at left) won 1st place at Gulfstream Park last Friday 2/5/16.  She was not sold.  Crocus Hill (383, featured below on the right) came in 2nd at Tampa Bay 2/6/16.  She is sired by Medaglia D’Oro and sold for just $30,000.  I’m going to keep a lookout for these two to see if they race again soon.

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Finally, who doesn’t love, love, love a baby?  A few broodmares had their foals pre-sale but they still go thru the auction as a package deal. Tecnica (239) and her lovely Discreetly Mine foal were a joy to watch.  They sold for just $14,000.  That foal was already off and running.  He gave his handler some trouble keeping up!  Look at this adorable baby below.

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I’m sure I would have loved the auction rain or shine, or sleet and snow.  One thing I am sure of, I am still really glad I was blessed to see many of the Thoroughbreds before they changed hands and futures.  I’m anxious to see how these grads perform at racing and breeding.  Please, share my auction story and comment with your experiences at the sales.  Check back in for next week’s story too.

 

 

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