Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

New Book 1 format sees gains

- By Nicole Russo

A staggering number of highticket offerings propelled the revised Book 1 of the Keeneland September yearling sale to positive economic indicators as the marquee portion of the sale concluded Thursday night.

At the top of the market, a total of 26 yearlings surpassed the seven-figure threshold during Book 1, doubling the 13 yearlings to do so during the entire sale last year.

Keeneland adjusted the format of the September sale this year, expanding the marquee Book 1 portion from one session to four in a move that had the net result of offering fewer horses prior to the sale’s traditiona­l dark day. Last year’s Book 1 was a single ultraselec­t session with 167 horses in the catalog – ultimately resulting in an average of $570,263 and median of $500,000 – and was followed by three Book 2 sessions, with 1,202 total horses cataloged through the first four days of the sale. Keeneland officials said they received feedback that that format left buyers with too many horses to inspect in a condensed timeframe.

For 2018, Book 1 was restructur­ed to run over four days with 989 hips cataloged – effectivel­y serving as a blended Book 1 and 2 in terms of quality.

The first four sessions of the sale finished with 596 horses sold for $216,813,000 – a gain of 10 percent in gross compared with the 681 sold for $196,645,000 for the four sessions comprising Books 1 and 2 last year. The average price of $363,780 represente­d a gain of 26 percent from $288,759 in 2017. The median was $300,000, up 50 percent from $200,000. The buyback rate sat at 28 percent, improved from 33 percent at this point last year.

Three horses surpassed the $2 million threshold to help their sires rank among the Book 1 leaders – a $2.4 million War Front colt sold to Coolmore, a $2.2 million American Pharoah colt sold to Godolphin, and a $2.1 million Medaglia d’Oro colt sold to Phoenix Thoroughbr­eds.

Medaglia d’Oro, who stands for Darley, and War Front, who stands at Claiborne Farm, each finished with five seven-figure yearlings. Triple Crown winner American Pharoah, who stands for Coolmore, finished with three seven-figure yearlings, giving him eight members of his first crop, overall, to meet that threshold.

Medaglia d’Oro had 31 yearlings sold for a total of $19,395,000, leading all stallions by gross. American Pharoah, with 37 sold, checked in second at $17,270,000. War Front, who had 18 sold, led Medaglia d’Oro by average, $782,500 to $626,645.

The colt, who was consigned by Hill ‘n’ Dale Sales Agency, will head to Ireland and be trained by Aidan O’Brien at Ballydoyle, Magnier said.

The colt is the second foal out of the Grade 1-winning Smart Strike mare Streaming, a full sister to stakes winner Treasuring and a half-sister to stakes winner Cascading and stakes-placed Distractin­g and Gifting. Another sibling, Achieving, is the dam of Group 1-placed stakes winner Arabian Hope and stakes winner Counterfor­ce.

Streaming’s granddam is blue hen Better Than Honour, the dam of Kentucky Oaks and Belmont Stakes winner Rags to Riches, fellow Belmont Stakes winner Jazil, Breeders’ Cup Marathon winner Man of Iron, and Grade 2 winner Casino Drive.

Dubai ruler Sheikh Mohammed al-Maktoum was in attendance at the Keeneland September sale for the first time in several years, and his internatio­nal Godolphin operation led all buyers by both number and gross, purchasing 22 horses for $18,940,000. The group was led by the $2.2 million American Pharoah colt, for which Godolphin had to outslug longtime commercial rival Coolmore.

The colt was consigned by Peter O’Callaghan’s Woods Edge Farm, as agent. That outfit purchased him for $400,000 as a pinhook prospect out of last fall’s Keeneland November breeding stock sale for Cavalier Bloodstock.

“I knew when [Sheikh Mohammed] saw him today, his eyes lit up, and I just had a feeling he was gonna try hard to buy him,” O’Callaghan said. “It took a monumental effort to outbid Coolmore, I’d say. That’s what [consignors] all dream of – that two of the great racing powers get stuck into your horse and go at it.”

The colt is the second foal out of the Indian Charlie mare Kindle, a multiple Grade 2-placed stakes winner. She is a half-sister to Grade 3-placed stakes winner Tonopah and to Grade 1-placed Latigo Shore.

Amer Abdulaziz’s Phoenix Thoroughbr­eds landed the $2.1 million Medaglia d’Oro colt who led the final session, outlasting several other highprofil­e bidders for the purchase.

The colt, out of the stakeswinn­ing Montbrook mare Exotic Bloom, is a half-brother to 2015 Breeders’ Cup Distaff winner Stopchargi­ngmaria. The colt was consigned by Taylor Made Sales – Book 1’s leading consignor by gross, with 89 sold for $31,854,000 – as agent for breeder Stonestree­t Farm.

Curlin, who stands at Hill ‘n’ Dale Farm, was represente­d by three yearlings who sold for $1 million or more during Book 1. Other stallions to record seven-figure offerings were WinStar Farm’s Pioneerof the Nile, Gainesway’s Tapit, and Coolmore’s Uncle Mo, with two each; and Gainesway’s Empire Maker, Adena Springs’s Ghostzappe­r, Spendthrif­t Farm’s Into Mischief, and Lane’s End’s Quality Road, with one each.

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