Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

ARROGATE, GUN RUNNER YEARLINGS HIT RING

- By Nicole Russo

Gun Runner and Arrogate’s stars were tied together on the racetrack, each taking his turn at a championsh­ip season. Both horses entered stud in the same year in Kentucky, and the racetrack rivals became commercial rivals, with similar stud fees and well-received weanlings. There’s now a sense of anticipati­on for their first yearlings to come to sale in a major market – but that is undercut with a sense of loss for a fallen star after Arrogate’s shocking death earlier this year.

Arrogate burst onto the scene with a 13 1/2-length victory in the 2016 Travers Stakes – with Gun Runner third – establishi­ng a track record of 1:59.36 in the 1 1/4-mile race. The son of Unbridled’s Song went on to edge Horse of the Year California Chrome by a half-length in the Breeders’ Cup Classic, locking up an Eclipse Award as the year’s outstandin­g 3-year-old.

Early the following year, he won the inaugural Pegasus World Cup, establishi­ng a track mark at Gulfstream, and then made an improbable last-to-first move to run down Gun Runner in the 2017 Dubai World Cup.

That race marked the last victory for Arrogate, but it was the final loss for classic-placed Gun Runner, who proceeded to win five consecutiv­e Grade 1 races to conclude his career. That streak included the 2017 Breeders’ Cup Classic over Arrogate to lock up Horse of the Year honors. The son of Candy Ride then added the Pegasus World Cup in January 2018 before heading to stud.

Arrogate retired to Juddmonte Farm, which had purchased him as a yearling, following the 2017 Breeders’ Cup Classic.

His career bankroll of $17,422,600 was a record for a North Americanba­sed racehorse. Gun Runner, who earned $15,988,500, shipped home to co-owner Three Chimneys Farm the day following the Pegasus.

Arrogate stood for an advertised fee of $75,000 in 2018, making him the year’s most expensive new stallion. He covered 143 mares, according to The Jockey Club’s Report of Mares Bred. Eight of those mares sold at public auction later in the season in foal to him, averaging $417,500. Meanwhile, Gun Runner stood for $70,000 and covered 171 mares. He averaged $367,500 from 10 mares sold in foal in fall 2018.

The two remained in close commercial proximity when their first weanlings sold last fall, as Gun Runner had eight sell for an average of $344,375 and Arrogate had four change hands for an average of

$311,250.

“Arrogate and Gun Runner are the obvious two,” Mark Taylor of Taylor Made Sales said in evaluating this year’s first-crop yearling sires. “Both were tremendous racehorses and are throwing very nice physicals from what I have seen.”

However, the anticipati­on for their next commercial showdown, in the yearling sales ring was overshadow­ed by Arrogate’s shocking death due to an illness that caused neurologic­al issues. Juddmonte said the 7-year-old stallion had been heading for the end of his third breeding season without incident, but then developed a sore neck, causing him to be suspended from the breeding shed. Later that week, he fell in his stall and was unable to rise. He was transporte­d to the Hagyard Equine Medical Institute for treatment and extensive testing, including spinal-tap evaluation, X-ray, ultrasound, CT scans, and many blood tests. The stallion was still unable to stand after four days and was euthanized on June 2.

“His will to fight, so valuable to him on the racetrack, became a challenge in his care,” a statement from Juddmonte read. “When serious secondary health issues set in, the decision was made to put him to sleep.”

Arrogate will have the opportunit­y to pass on his traits, as he covered stellar mares in his limited stud career. Juddmonte slated some of its star American mares for his first book, including multiple Grade 1 winner Sightseek, Kentucky Oaks winner Flute, the latter’s stakesperf­orming daughter Filimbi, and Rising Tornado, dam of champion Close Hatches. It also actively sought out and acquired additional high-quality mares who would fit his profile, such as Grade 1 winner Paulassilv­erlining.

Arrogate also was supported by some of Kentucky’s other top breeding operations, including Mandy Pope, who sent twotime Eclipse Award champion Songbird and Kentucky Oaks winner Plum Pretty from her star-studded broodmare band. Clearsky Farm, which bred Arrogate, also supported him with Grade 2 winner Justwhistl­edixie, the dam of Grade 1 winner New Year’s Day and graded stakes winners Enforceabl­e, Kingly, and Mohaymen.

“His physical and personalit­y traits are passing very strongly to his offspring,” Juddmonte Group CEO Douglas Erskine said.

The strength of the books Arrogate bred is evident at this September’s yearling sales in Kentucky. The stallion is represente­d by a dozen yearlings at the FasigTipto­n selected yearling showcase on Sept. 9-10, including a filly out of Eclipse Award champion She Be Wild and a colt

who is a half-brother to Grade 1 winner Power Broker. Arrogate then has 55 yearlings cataloged at the Keeneland September yearling sale that runs Sept. 13-25, including 26 selected for the premier Book 1 portion of the catalog.

Pope entered Songbird’s Arrogate filly at Keeneland, and she will be one of the highlights of Book 1. Other highlights for the stallion in Book 1 include a filly out of Sovereign Award champion Points of Grace, the dam of champion Victory to Victory; a half-sister to Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Sprint winner Wavell Avenue; and half-siblings to Grade 1 winners Denman’s Call, Force the Pass, Heart to Heart, Weep No More, Whitmore, and Wicked Strong.

Another 16 of Arrogate’s yearlings are slated for Book 2 at Keeneland, including Plum Pretty’s colt; a filly out of Grade 1 winner Artemis Agrotera; a colt out of Canadian champion Serenading; a halfbrothe­r to Canadian champion Ria Antonia; and a half to Grade 1 winner Mani Bhavan.

Meanwhile, Gun Runner also got a solid book of mares at Three Chimneys, supported by co-owner Winchell Thoroughbr­eds, which sent him Broodmare of the Year Fun House, and several other major outfits.

“Gun Runner covered an exceptiona­l book of quality mares, which should lay the foundation for him as a successful sire,” Three Chimneys chairman Goncalo Torrealba said.

The Fun House colt is among Gun Runner’s 67 yearlings at Keeneland September, including 20 slotted in Book 1. The colt is a half-brother to Eclipse Award champion Untapable, as well as to Grade 1 winner Paddy O’Prado. Gun Runner’s Book 1 yearlings also include a pricey pinhook prospect. His filly out of multiple Grade 1 winner Love and Pride was the most expensive weanling at last November’s Fasig-Tipton Kentucky fall selected mixed sale, purchased for $750,000 by bloodstock agent Mike Ryan.

“They’re bigger than I thought they were going to be, to be honest,” Ryan said of Gun Runner’s offspring after signing for the filly, who will be consigned at Keeneland by Four Star Sales, as agent. “He looks magnificen­t, but the thing that impressed me about him was the way he moved on the racetrack. He looked like a cheetah – his feet barely touched the ground. But his breeding, I think there’s some [broodmare sire] Giant’s Causeway coming through there – [his weanlings] have size and scope and bone and substance. I’m liking what I’m seeing.

“He was as good a runner as we’ve seen in recent years,” Ryan continued. “He turned out to be a hell of an older horse. I wish people would keep more 3-year-olds in training as older horses.”

Gun Runner’s Book 1 offerings at Keeneland also include yearlings out of Chilean champion Wapi and Canadian champion Youcan’tcatchme, and half-siblings to Grade 1 winners Bowies Hero and It Tiz Well. He has another 29 yearlings placed in Book 2, including a half-brother to Canadian Horse of the Year Biofuel and fellow champion Tu Endie Wei; a yearling out of another Canadian champion in Embur’s Song; a filly out of Grade 1 winner Sweet Lulu; and half-siblings to Grade 1 winners Finley’sluckychar­m and My Conquestad­ory.

Prior to Keeneland, Gun Runner has a dozen yearlings cataloged for the FasigTipto­n sale, including a half-sibling to classic-placed Grade 1 winner Brilliant Speed.

Pulpit and Tapit sons

The late Pulpit, who was a multiple graded stakes winner in the gold silks of Claiborne Farm before retiring to stand at his birthplace, was a fine stallion in his own right. From his debut at stud in 1998 until his death in 2012, the son of A.P. Indy sired 85 stakes winners, including Grade 1 winners Corinthian, Ice Box, Lord Nelson, Mi Sueno, Power Broker, Purge, Pyro, Rutherienn­e, Sky Mesa, Stroll, and Tapit.

But it’s one generation removed, as a sire of sires, that Pulpit has truly made his mark on the Thoroughbr­ed world. Tapit, a perennial leading sire who holds the single-season earnings record for a North American stallion, has sired three winners of the Belmont Stakes, more than any stallion in modern history. Pulpit has another classic sire in his late son Lucky Pulpit, sire of 2014 Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes winner and two-time Horse of the Year California Chrome. Sky Mesa is a consistent toplevel stallion; Mr Speaker is the sire of Grade 1 winner and Kentucky Oaks hopeful Speech in his first crop; and Essence of Dubai sired Eclipse Award champion Dubai Majesty, to name a few more accomplish­ments.

Pulpit has two of his final significan­t sons, Lord Nelson and American Freedom, among the stallions represente­d by their first yearlings at this fall’s sales. Meanwhile his famed son Tapit, emerging as a sire of sires in his own right, also has two sons with their first yearlings this year.

Lord Nelson was an eagerly anticipate­d addition to the Spendthrif­t Farm roster. Winner of the Grade 2 San Vicente Stakes and second in the Grade 1 Malibu Stakes to champion Runhappy as a 3-year-old, he blossomed at 4 to win all four of his starts, with triple-digit Beyer Speed Figures

in each race. That included consecutiv­e Grade 1 triumphs sprinting in the Triple Bend, Bing Crosby with a career-best 107 Beyer Speed Figure, and Santa Anita Sprint Championsh­ip. He was forced to scratch from the Breeders’ Cup Sprint when a minor cut he had sustained developed an infection that required antibiotic­s. He was expected to debut at Spendthrif­t in 2017.

However, Lord Nelson then developed laminitis as a secondary complicati­on to his initial injury, and an extended battle and recovery from the hoof disease forced him to miss that season, putting Spendthrif­t in the position of re-introducin­g the stallion a year later. Mindful of the stallion’s health, Lord Nelson covered a limited book of mares in 2018, which could potentiall­y help breeders now looking to sell his offspring, as there are a limited supply of them.

From 10 weanlings sold at

public auction last year, Lord Nelson averaged $54,800, against their advertised conception stud fee of $25,000. The stallion has 17 yearlings cataloged at the Fasig-Tipton selected yearling showcase – including a filly out of graded stakes winner Hour Glass – followed by 28 cataloged at Keeneland September. Four of those are slotted in the Book 2 portion of the sale, including half-siblings to graded stakes winners Happy Farm and Maximus Mischief, and a filly out of graded stakes winner Malibu Pier, dam of stakes winner Coasted.

American Freedom, who now stands at Airdrie Stud, won the Sir Barton Stakes at Pimlico in just his third career start, then rolled by 4 3/4 lengths in the Grade 3 Iowa Derby. He subsequent­ly finished second in the Grade 1 Haskell Invitation­al to Preakness Stakes winner Exaggerato­r, finishing ahead of both Kentucky Derby winner and champion Nyquist and future champion Gun Runner. He then was a distant second in

the Travers to stablemate Arrogate, finishing ahead of Gun Runner, Exaggerato­r, Belmont Stakes winner Creator, and future Grade 1 winners Gift Box and Connect.

American Freedom, who debuted for $10,000 at Airdrie, was represente­d by 14 weanlings sold last year for an average of $22,800. The young Pulpit stallion has eight yearlings cataloged at FasigTipto­n, including half-siblings to graded stakes winners Chanteline and Jeltrin. He has one yearling in Book 2 at Keeneland, from 56 total in the catalog.

Pulpit’s son Tapit, one of the perennial commercial leaders at the yearling sales, has sons Cupid and Mohaymen with their first yearlings in the mix this season. Both are likely to get a close look, as Tapit, who reigns at Gainesway, has steadily emerged as a sire of sires in recent years. His sons have been represente­d by Eclipse Award honorees two years in a row, as Tapizar sired 2018 Kentucky Oaks and Breeders’ Cup Distaff winner and champion Monomoy Girl, followed last year by Flashback’s daughter British Idiom, who won the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies and was named division champion.

Tapit had four sons among the top 15 freshman sires by earnings in a competitiv­e class last season in Constituti­on, Tapiture, Tonalist, and Race Day. Constituti­on is the sire of this year’s Belmont Stakes, Runhappy Travers Stakes, and Florida Derby winner Tiz the Law, the favorite for the Kentucky Derby.

Cupid, a three-time Grade 2 winner as a 3-year-old, scored the biggest victory of his career in his 4-year-old debut, taking the Grade 1 Gold Cup at Santa Anita off an eightmonth layoff. He earned a Beyer Speed Figure of 108 for his 3 1/4-length victory. Cupid proved one of the most popular stallions of the season when he debuted at Coolmore’s Ashford Stud in 2018 for $12,500, covering 223 mares. That was second in North America only to standout sire Into Mischief, with 245.

From that first book, Cupid averaged $44,060 from 25 weanlings sold last year, about 3 1/2 times his stud fee. He has 13 yearlings cataloged at FasigTipto­n and 50 at Keeneland in September, with his lone Book 2 representa­tive being a half-sister to Grade 3-placed stakes winner Giza Goddess.

Mohaymen was a multiple Grade 2 winner at ages 2 and 3 before retiring to Shadwell Stud in Kentucky. He stood for a fee of $7,500 in his debut season, and subsequent­ly averaged $46,364 from 11 weanlings in 2019, more than six times that fee. He has five yearlings cataloged at Fasig-Tipton and 28 at Keeneland September. The highlight of the latter group is a half-sibling to multiple Grade 1 winner Got Stormy, who is slotted in Book 2.

‘Other’ sons of Candy Ride

While Horse of the Year Gun Runner is, unsurprisi­ngly, taking the lion’s share of the attention, two other sons of Candy Ride among this year’s class of first-crop yearling sires have been roaring in the background with solid sales results.

Mastery was unbeaten in four career starts, including the Grade 1 CashCall Futurity, before injury forced him into retirement. The young son of Candy Ride was well received in his first season at Claiborne Farm. His solid book of mares included Drumette, dam of Kentucky Oaks winner and champion Monomoy Girl and Grade 2 winner Mr. Monomoy; Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Turf winner Shared Account, dam of Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf winner Sharing; Gold Vault, dam of Grade 1 winner Contested and stakes winner Mosler; Ragtime Hope, dam of two-time Breeders’ Cup winner and Dubai Golden Shaheen winner Secret Circle; and Grade 1 winner Last Full Measure.

“We have several Masterys, and I’ve been impressed with all of them,” said Conrad Bandoroff of prominent consignor Denali Stud. “They have good size and scope for a son of Candy Ride, and they have a lot of quality.”

Mastery has already had solid commercial results from

 ?? BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON ?? Champion 3-year-old Arrogate, who died in June at age 7, will be represente­d by three crops, the first of which are now yearlings.
BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON Champion 3-year-old Arrogate, who died in June at age 7, will be represente­d by three crops, the first of which are now yearlings.

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