Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Paris Lights shines as one of several seven-figure mares

- By Nicole Russo

LEXINGTON, Ky. – Grade 1 winner Paris Lights brought the hammer down at $3.1 million late in the Keeneland November breeding stock sale’s Book 1 session Wednesday, bringing the curtain down on an outstandin­g run this week for the WinStar Farm breeding program.

WinStar, which also campaigned Paris Lights with its WinStar Stablemate­s Racing syndicate, earned the Eclipse Award as outstandin­g breeder in 2020 as its graduates on the track included Eclipse Award winner Swiss Skydiver, Kentucky Oaks winner Shedaresth­edevil, and Grade 1 winner Paris Lights. Those three sold for a combined $12.8 million this week between the elite Fasig-Tipton and Keeneland November sales, helping to fuel market gains as Kentucky kicked off its mixed sales.

“It’s absolutely thrilling,” said Mary Cage, director of WinStar Stablemate­s. “I really think it speaks to the breeding program that we have and our broodmare band and the work that our bloodstock team puts into determinin­g the matings, producing these champions and these horses that people want to have in their own breeding programs.”

Both Shedaresth­edevil and Swiss Skydiver are from the first crop of Daredevil, who WinStar stood at the time of their conception. The farm sold Shedaresth­edevil as a weanling, and Swiss Skydiver as a yearling, and both went on to decorated racing careers. Shedaresth­edevil, winner of the 2020 Kentucky Oaks and a pair of Grade 1 events this season, led the way as she sold for $5 million Tuesday evening at Fasig-Tipton to the partnershi­p of Mandy Pope’s Whisper Hill Farm, Staton Flurry’s Flurry Racing, and Qatar Racing. She is scheduled to remain in training for 2022.

Swiss Skydiver was the 2020 Eclipse Award champion 3-year-old filly, with five graded stakes victories including the Preakness Stakes over Kentucky Derby winner Authentic. She will begin her broodmare career for Northern Farm in Japan after selling for $4.7 million at FasigTipto­n.

The next day, at Keeneland November’s Book 1 session, Spendthrif­t Farm outlasted other outfits in a spirited bidding duel to secure Paris Lights for $3.1 million. Spendthrif­t general manager Ned Toffey said that the royally bred filly, who was offered as a racing or broodmare prospect, will be bred to Spendthrif­t’s two-time reigning leading sire Into Mischief.

“Very classic American racehorse,” Toffey said. “Big, scopey filly. I think she will fit Into Mischief really well. We are happy to have her.”

Paris Lights, a 4-year-old Curlin filly, was consigned to Keeneland by Elite Sales, as agent, on behalf of WinStar Stablemate­s. The Stablemate­s program was born in 2011 as a virtual program and fan club that provided an inside look into WinStar’s operations, with the aim of involving and educating fans. It evolved into a racing syndicate that provided an entry point into Thoroughbr­ed ownership without an exorbitant buy-in fee or ongoing expenses.

Paris Lights was an early and top-level success for the syndicate. The filly won 3 of 4 outings last year, including the Grade 1 Coaching Club American Oaks at Saratoga. Away from the races for more than eight months following that victory, she returned to win the Grade 3 Distaff Handicap in April at Aqueduct. She placed in two other stakes this year, at Churchill Downs and Colonial Downs.

“For her to be our first Grade 1-winning filly in such a short time period is very special in and of itself,” Cage said. “And for her to then be able to come to Keeneland November and sell for such a high price tag really speaks to the quality of fillies and mares that we’re able to offer to these people to be part of the ownership experience.

“Partnershi­ps and syndicates are so important to getting people into the sport for a fraction of the cost, a fraction of the risk. And to be able to do it at this level, I think is a second-to-none sort of experience that they’re gonna remember forever.”

Paris Lights sports a stellar pedigree for a broodmare prospect, as her family is full of prominent producers. She is out of Paris Bikini, a winning half-sister, bred on the same A.P. Indy-line cross as America, a Grade 3 winner and also multiple Grade 1-placed. America is the dam of the Curlin colt First Captain, a seven-figure yearling who won this year’s Grade 3 Dwyer Stakes.

Paris Bikini’s great-granddam is Kentucky Oaks winner Blush With Pride, a daughter of Broodmare of the Year Best In Show. Blush With Pride’s daughter Better Than Honour was also a Broodmare of the Year honoree, producing classic winners Rags to Riches and Jazil, Breeders’ Cup winner Man of Iron, and Grade 2 winner Casino Drive.

“She comes from as good a family as we have in the stud book,” Toffey said.

Keeneland November starts strong

The Keeneland November breeding stock sale began its 10-day run on Wednesday with the single-session Book 1 portion, which closed with double-digit gains in average and median.

Keeneland reported 118 horses sold in the single-session Book 1, which opened the 10-day run of the November sale, for gross receipts of $50,634,000. In last year’s Book 1 session, 128 horses brought $49,775,000.

Paris Lights led the way at $3.1 million. The second-highest price of the session was fetched by multiple graded stakes winner Pink Sands, sold carrying her first foal, by Into Mischief. The young mare sold for $2.3 million to Japanese owner and breeder Masahiro Miki. Those two led seven fillies and mares traded for seven figures, which fueled by Book 1’s average price of $429,102, a 10 percent jump from $388,867 last year. The median – which many consider a more important indicator of market health because it is less influenced by outlying horses the way the average can be – rose 18 percent, to $330,000 from $280,000. The buyback rate remained relatively steady, ticking up to 29 percent from 28 percent.

 ?? KEENELAND PHOTO ?? Grade 1 winner Paris Lights brought
$3.1 million Wednesday at the Keeneland November sale.
KEENELAND PHOTO Grade 1 winner Paris Lights brought $3.1 million Wednesday at the Keeneland November sale.

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