The Citizen (Gauteng)

So close to record sale

THE BEST: ‘INCREDIBLE’ THOROUGHBR­ED AUCTION DEFIES LIMP ECONOMY

- Mike Moon – news@citizen.co.za

R136.75m not far behind what was spent at 2019’s bigger pre-Covid event.

It was one of the best thoroughbr­ed horse sales in South Africa in many a long year – if not the best. That’s what Alistair Gordon, former trainer and now Bloodstock SA official, had to say about the 2022 National Yearling Sale (NYS) last weekend.

Along with other industries, racehorse breeding was badly hit by the coronaviru­s pandemic. But statistics from the country’s premier sale of young horses this year tell a story of profession­alism and resilience in the face of adversity – “bounceback­ability”.

The sale’s total turnover was R136.75 million, just R3 million off the peak for this sale, in 2019, when 80 more horses were auctioned. That was before anyone had heard the word Covid and lockdown was strictly for games of Scrabble.

The NYS aggregate was nearly 30% up on 2021 and nearly 40% more than in 2020, when the sale was held online and most people were preoccupie­d with trying to avoid being killed by the “plague”.

The 2022 median price on 382 yearlings sold was R250 000, a 25% rise on last year; while the average price of just below R358 000 was a 30% jump.

The clearance rate was 90%, indicative of a very strong appetite, despite a feeble national economy and a febrile racing scene.

“It was an incredible sale, really,” says Gordon. “And not only on the stats side. The quality of yearlings in the draft was very high and was commented on many people who’ve been around horses for a long time.

“Jane Thomas and I go around the country’s stud farms to do selecting for the sale and we thought

it was an outstandin­g crop of yearlings, on both pedigree and conformati­on.

“And the individual­s that pitched up at the sales ring in Germiston certainly matched up to our expectatio­ns,” says Gordon.

The top price paid –

R3.3 million for a colt by champion sire Silvano – was a long way off the national record of R9 million achieved in the heady days before Jacob Zuma got busy.

However, Gordon points out that is no reflection on the actual quality of the youngster or his siblings.

Also, the horseflesh excellence this year was spread more evenly across the entire catalogue, which is what both breeders and buyers want.

The top lot, named Forest God, was consigned by Varsfontei­n Stud and bought by agents Form Bloodstock.

He is a half-brother to three winners, being out of the Jet Master-sired Oaks Trial victress Touch the Sky, a half-sister to five graded stakes winners, notably Equus champions Bela-Bela and Rabiya.

A total of 21 yearlings went for more than R1 million, with another four fetching R900 000.

The toppriced filly was an unnamed Vercingeto­rix filly consigned by Klawervlei Stud.

A daughter of erstwhile champion sire Captain Al’s Grade 3 Sycamore Sprint winner My funny valentine, and from the immediate family of champion fillies Consensual and Just Sensual, the filly was knocked down to Vermaak Equine for R1.4 million.

Varsfontei­n ended the NYS as leading vendors by aggregate, selling 24 of their 25 yearlings offered for a gross total of R17.53 million.

Form Bloodstock was the leading buyer, ahead of Vermaak Equine, John Freeman and Greg Bortz. Form signed for 34 yearlings for a total of R22.61 million, with seven lots being knocked down for more than R1 million.

While Silvano and his son, Vercingeto­rix, both enjoyed excellent results, it was reigning champion Gimmethegr­eenlight who headed the sires’ list by aggregate. His 37 lots sold for a total of R26.02 million, at an amazing average of R703 243.

Vercingeto­rix, champion sire-in-waiting for the current season, had an excellent sale with 41 yearlings fetching R25.555 million. His top lot sold was a R3-million colt named Celtic Chief, who was knocked down to Sabine Plattner.

Gordon says an eminent racing man told him: “If we could only get the rest of the racing industry to work as well as the this, we’d be home and dry!”

All the statistics for the sale can be viewed at www.bsa.co.za.

It was an outstandin­g crop of yearlings, on pedigree and conformati­on

 ?? Picture: BSA ?? BIG-TICKET YEARLING. The colt, Forest God, fetched the top price of R3.3 million at the National Yearling Sale in Germiston last weekend.
Picture: BSA BIG-TICKET YEARLING. The colt, Forest God, fetched the top price of R3.3 million at the National Yearling Sale in Germiston last weekend.

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