A brief history of the most expensive horses bought at auction
The good, the bad and the costly from thoroughbred sales
Most expensive yearling
Name:Seattle Dancer
Price:$13.1 million
Buyers:John Magnier, Robert Sangster, Vincent O'Brien, Stavros Niarchos, Danny Schwartz
A half-brother to Triple Crown winner Seattle Slew, the son of Nijinsky was the hottest ticket in town when bought by a partnership spearheaded by Coolmore partners John Magnier, Robert Sangster and Vincent O'Brien at Keeneland in 1985. The colt developed into a smart performer, winning the Group 2 Derrinstown Stud Derby Trial at three before bringing the curtain down on his racing career with a second in the Group 1 Grand Prix de Paris.
First yearling to fetch more than $10 million
Snaafi Dancer
$10.2 million
Sheikh Mohammed
Snaafi Dancer has become a byword for ill-advised spending, having been picked up at Keeneland in 1983 for a then-record sum. A son of the legendary sire Northern Dancer, the colt was reportedly too slow to even warrant an entry. He was given a chance at stud but sired just four foals after suffering from fertility problems. Only one of those foals, a filly named Winloc's Dancer, managed to win a race.
Most expensive two-year-old - and, indeed, any thoroughbred at auction
The Green Monkey
$16 million
Coolmore
The infamous The Green Monkey grabbed the headlines when costing the Coolmore axis of John Magnier, Michael Tabor and Derrick Smith an eye-watering $16 million at Fasig-Tipton in January 2006. His name is taken from a golf course in Barbados, but he failed to land a hole-in-one in any of his three racecourse starts.
Most expensive broodmare
Better Than Honour
$14 million
Southern Equine
Better Than Honour had already supplied consecutive Belmont Stakes winners Jazil and Rags To Riches when she went under the hammer at the 2008 Fasig-Tipton November Sale. She was purchased by her part-owner Michael Moreno, who bought out partner John Sikura's Hill ‘n' Dale Farm. Sikura did bid for the mare but cried enough at $10 million.
Most expensive European yearling
Al Naamah
5,000,000gns
Al Shaqab Racing
The Galileo filly out of Dank may have grabbed the headlines when selling to Godolphin for 4,000,000gns at Tattersalls on Thursday, but that sum wasn't quite enough to surpass the price paid by Al Shaqab for another daughter of Coolmore's phenomenal sire in 2013. The filly won one of her seven starts, and retired with earnings of £44,399 having been placed in a Deauville Group 3. She finished 16 lengths behind Treve on her final start in the 2015 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe. She produced her first foal, a filly by leading French sire Siyouni, earlier this year.
Read more:
Zarak joins Aga Khan's Haras de Bonneval roster for 2018
Electrifying experience as the gavel comes down at 4,000,000 gns
Published on inSales reports
Last updated
- 'We stretched our budget but are pleased we did' - Sheila Lavery happy to win bidding battle for sale-topping Pinatubo colt
- 'When you buy something nice you're always going to have to pay for it' - Smash Ticket tops Keeneland at $600,000
- The Tally-Ho band plays on as Starman and Kodiac top the early charts at Goffs
- Mandy Pope prevails at Keeneland to land Roses For Debra at $2.4 million
- Mohaather filly the star attraction as six-figure offering sparks Goffs ring alight
- 'We stretched our budget but are pleased we did' - Sheila Lavery happy to win bidding battle for sale-topping Pinatubo colt
- 'When you buy something nice you're always going to have to pay for it' - Smash Ticket tops Keeneland at $600,000
- The Tally-Ho band plays on as Starman and Kodiac top the early charts at Goffs
- Mandy Pope prevails at Keeneland to land Roses For Debra at $2.4 million
- Mohaather filly the star attraction as six-figure offering sparks Goffs ring alight