Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Breeder Stonestree­t glad to stay invested in Good Magic

- By Joe Nevills

The fall of the hammer on a seven-figure auction purchase is usually where the breeder’s part in a horse’s story ends, but Barbara Banke’s Stonestree­t Stables doesn’t always play by that narrative.

Banke has been a frequent partner with other major owners in the auction ring and on the racetrack. When the Stonestree­t-bred Good Magic sold to bloodstock agent Mike Ryan on behalf of e Five Racing Thoroughbr­eds for $1 million at the 2016 Keeneland September yearling sale, it didn’t take long to open the lines of communicat­ion and go back in for a piece of the Curlin colt.

With an Eclipse Award, the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile, and now the Grade 2 Blue Grass Stakes on Good Magic’s résumé, and a gate in the Kentucky Derby clinched, it’s clear Banke made the right call.

“I knew that I really didn’t want to sell this horse,” Banke said. “I’ve known Mike Ryan for a long time. He was the one who sold me Hot Dixie Chick, who was actually my first stakeswinn­ing filly. Mike said, ‘Yes, we’d be interested and we’d like you to stay in.’ It was a perfect match.”

Ryan co-bred Hot Dixie Chick through his Santa Rosa Partners, and the filly sold to Banke’s Grace Stables for $435,000 at the 2009 Fasig-Tipton Florida select 2-year-olds in training sale. She was consigned at that sale by Niall Brennan Stables, a regular business partner with Ryan, and became a Grade 1 winner for Banke.

Ryan’s eye for horseflesh has been especially lauded over the past year. He co-bred last year’s Kentucky Derby winner Always Dreaming, and selected Preakness Stakes winner Cloud Computing at auction. He finished the 2017 season with a pair of Breeders’ Cup winners picked out for the Edwards family’s e Five Racing, with Good Magic winning the Juvenile and Rushing Fall taking the Juvenile Fillies Turf.

Good Magic is out of the Grade 2-placed stakes-winning Hard Spun mare Glinda the Good, and he was identified by Ryan as the top yearling of the sale by Curlin, whose stock as a commercial sire was rising quickly. Not normally one to play in the seven-figure range, Ryan said bidding on the colt was a high-pressure situation, but he had the blessing of e Five’s Bob Edwards.

Said Ryan: “I was on the phone with him, and said, ‘Can you hear me, Bob?’ He said yeah, and I said, ‘You want to go again?’ He said, ‘Yeah, poke him again.’ He’s very trusting. He’s got a feel for it, and he knows when I really tell him we’ve got to get tied on, he’s got confidence in what we’re doing. He loves to play the game.”

Good Magic would be the first Kentucky Derby starter for e Five Racing, the nom de course for Bob and Kristin Edwards and their three children – Cassidy, Riley, and Delaney – who entered the Thoroughbr­ed realm in 2015.

Stonestree­t’s previous two Kentucky Derby starters were both campaigned in partnershi­p. The champion Curlin ran third in in 2007 with Padua Stables, George Bolton, and Midnight Cry Stables, while Carpe Diem was run with WinStar Farm when he finished 10th in 2015.

Scat Daddy is top Beyer sire

An active weekend of prep races for the Kentucky Derby and Oaks left the late Scat Daddy at the top of the Beyer Sire Performanc­e Standings by 3-year-old Beyer Speed Figures at the 90-plus and 100-plus levels in 2018.

Scat Daddy, whose second-tolast crop is on the classic trail this year, has had his runners notch eight Beyer efforts of 90 or more through April 8, double the four sires tied for second.

The standout of that group is the undefeated Justify, whose three efforts have all generated 100-plus Beyers to give his sire the lead in that category, as well. Justify earned a 107 for his dominant score in the Grade 1 Santa Anita Derby, the highest figure by a 3-yearold this season to date. That effort followed a 101 earned in a March 11 optional claimer and a 104 picked up in his debut on Feb. 18, both at Santa Anita.

Flameaway also charted highly for Scat Daddy, earning a 93 Beyer for finishing second in the Grade 2 Blue Grass Stakes at Keeneland. It tied his career-high figure, first earned when he won the Grade 3 Sam F. Davis Stakes at Tampa Bay Downs on Feb. 10.

Scat Daddy stood at Coolmore’s Ashford Stud until his death in 2015.

Curlin rose into the four-way tie for second by 90-plus Beyers following a weekend that saw two sons take major Kentucky Derby preps.

Vino Rosso punched his ticket to Louisville with a score in the Grade 2 Wood Memorial at Aqueduct, in which he earned a career-best 98 Beyer. It was his second 90-plus effort of the season after earning a 90 when third in the Sam F. Davis.

Champion Good Magic picked up a 95 for winning the Grade 2 Blue Grass Stakes at Keeneland, his highest mark of the year.

Curlin stands at Hill ‘n’ Dale Farms in Lexington, Ky., for an advertised fee of $150,000.

 ?? BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON ?? Barbara Banke’s Stonestree­t Stables bought back into Good Magic after he was sold for $1 million at the 2016 Keeneland September sale.
BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON Barbara Banke’s Stonestree­t Stables bought back into Good Magic after he was sold for $1 million at the 2016 Keeneland September sale.
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