Magnier takes Keeneland spend to $5m-plus with Curlin colt leading the way
Book 1 September Yearling Sale curtains comes down with top price of $1.6m
The Book 1-topping Quality Road colt that cost $1.6 million highlighted a strong second session for Stonestreet Bred & Raised at the Keeneland September Yearling Sale.
The colt, purchased by Woodford Racing and West Point Thoroughbreds, was the first of two seven-figure yearlings produced by Stonestreet sold on Tuesday.
Coolmore's MV Magnier went to $1.3m for a Curlin colt and also took home a $750,000 Justify filly, both bred by the Kentucky operation owned by Barbara Banke.
Magnier's six purchases on Tuesday were topped by the Curlin colt, consigned as hip 333 by Gainesway and who commanded the co-second highest price of the day.
Magnier said: "[Gainesway general manager] Brian Graves, when we went down to see first, really, really liked the horse and our guys liked him as well. Barbara Banke has bred some incredible horses over the last couple of years and currently Curlin is doing very well."
Curlin was Horse of the Year in 2007 and 2008 for Stonestreet and stands at Hill 'n' Dale at Xalapa. His daughter Grace Adler won the Del Mar Debutante Stakes just before the sale began. He also sired the first two home in the Alabama Stakes, Malathaat and Clairiere, both of whom were bred by Stonestreet. Malathaat won the Kentucky Oaks in the spring.
Hip 333 is out of the stakes-winning Medaglia D'Oro mare Dashing Debby, who has produced multiple Grade 1-placed winner Dawn The Destroyer and multiple stakes winner Bronze Star. Dashing Debby was privately purchased by Stonestreet after winning on debut in stakes company at two in 2009.
With six purchases totalling $4,425,000, adding to his first day tally for a total of eight yearlings worth a combined $5,775,000, Magnier struck early in the session for an $800,000 Uncle Mo colt.
Consigned as hip 218 by Woodford Thoroughbreds, agent for WinStar Farm Bred & Raised, the colt is the first foal out of the 2017 Mother Goose Stakes winner Unchained Melody. He was bred in Kentucky by WinStar.
"Uncle Mo is doing thankfully exceptionally well at the moment," said Magnier. "[Hip 218 is] a very nice horse as well, very well built. The plan is to leave him in America. He's just a lovely, lovely horse and hopefully he'll do pretty well."
Ashford Stud's Uncle Mo was well represented at the recent Kentucky Downs meet, at which his daughters Family Way and Hendy Woods won the Kentucky Downs Ladies Marathon Stakes and One Dreamer Stakes respectively. Another daughter, Burning Ambition, captured the Indiana Grand Stakes, while his son Yaupon won at the highest level last month when taking the Forego Stakes at Saratoga.
With Justin Casse serving as agent, Magnier went to $775,000 for a colt from the first crop of Ashford's Justify and a half-brother to 2019 champion older dirt female Midnight Bisou. The colt consigned as hip 340 by Hunter Valley Farm is out of the Graded-winning Repent mare Diva Delite. He was bred in Kentucky by Hunter Valley and Mountmellick Farm.
Magnier picked up another Justify yearling in hip 272, going to $750,000 for a half-sister to 2015 champion sprinter Runhappy.
The filly was consigned by Gainesway, agent for Stonestreet Bred & Raised, and was bred in Kentucky out of the Broken Vow mare Bella Jolie, a $1.6m purchase by Stonestreet from Ashview Farm's consignment at the 2015 Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale.
With Ben McElroy as agent, Magnier bought an Uncle Mo filly for $400,000. Consigned as hip 282 by St George Sales, the filly is out of the Grade 1-placed stakes winner Bon Jovi Girl and is a half-sister to Graded winner You're To Blame.
Bon Jovi Girl is in turn a half-sister to dual champion grass horse Gio Ponti. Pursuit Of Success bred the filly in Kentucky.
Magnier's final purchase of the day was hip 399C, a $400,000 colt from the first crop of Ashford's Mendelssohn.
Paramount Sales consigned the colt, who was bred in Kentucky by Springhouse Farm and Circular Rd Breeders. He is out of the Grand Slam mare Tessie Flip, also the dam of stakes winner Jo Jo Air, who is by Mendelssohn's sire Scat Daddy. Tessie Flip is a half-sister to multiple Grade 1 winner Switch.
Quality all the way
The $1.6m Quality Road colt was consigned as hip 300 by Eaton Sales, agent for Stonestreet Bred & Raised. He is out of the Malibu Moon mare Catch The Moon, making him a half-brother to Midnight Bourbon, who won this year's Lecomte Stakes and was second in the Preakness and Travers Stakes.
"He is fabulous looking," said Banke. "And, of course, the mare has had some great foals by some lesser stallions. I am hoping this one takes it all the way. I think I will be back in for [a piece of] him. I am excited about that. He was on my list of favourites. We need sire power; we need another sire."
Woodford Racing founder Bill Farish signed the ticket on the session topper.
"The plan is to gather a partnership together with Woodford Racing, West Point [Thoroughbreds], and a few others and Barbara Banke," he said. "He will go to [trainer] Shug McGaughey.
"If you're doing it on your own, it's tough to compete with the partnerships. But I think it's exciting for people to get in and be involved in high-end colts this like which they normally couldn't do if they did it on their own."
Eaton's Reiley McDonald said of hip 300: "Beautiful colt. Beautiful mover. Every day he seemed to flourish and get a little better out here.
"Bill was our neighbour [at the sale with Lane's End]; he kept poking his head around the corner. I think he fell in love. Terry Finley [of West Point] followed suit."
Catch The Moon also produced 2017 Haskell Invitational Stakes winner Girvin, as well as Graded winners Cocked, Loaded and Pirate's Punch. Stonestreet purchased the unraced mare for $240,000 from Legacy Bloodstock's consignment at the 2015 Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale.
"Our broodmare band is getting better all the time," said Banke. "We have new ones to add after they race. For example Mia Mischief is in foal this year. Lady Aurelia has a really nice Curlin colt, but I doubt he will come to the sale; he is my pet.
"We upgrade our broodmare band all the time. We retire some of them, like Lady Aurelia's mother [D'Wildcat Speed]. She has a Justify weanling that is her last. We try to keep the broodmare band current - and really fast. We raise them right."
From four Stonestreet-breds offered on Tuesday, three were sold for a total of $3.65m.
Book 1 facts and figures
Eight yearlings broke the $1m barrier on Tuesday, when, from 203 horses catalogued, Keeneland reported 112 sold through the ring for gross receipts of $52,300,000, at an average price of $466,964 and a median of $400,000.
The day-two RNA rate was 30 per cent, as 48 horses failed to meet their reserve for the session, compared to 75 horses that failed to meet their reserve in 2020 at an RNA rate of 42.8 per cent.
Cumulatively in 2020, 209 horses sold during Book 1 with a gross of $85,215,000 for an average price of $407,727, an RNA rate of 39.6 per cent and a median of $335,000. This year Keeneland reported 214 horses sold cumulatively in Book 1 (208 through the ring and six private sales) for gross receipts of $92,017,000, an average price of $429,986 and a median of $350,000. A total of 102 horses went unsold in Book 1, for a cumulative RNA rate of 32.9 per cent.
The sale continues on Wednesday from 4pm BST.
For all the racing and bloodstock news from North America, visit Bloodhorse
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