Curlin colt on top as Pope goes to US$5 million
Mandy Pope’s Whisper Hill Farm went to US$5 million (approx. AU$7.5 million) deep into day two of the Keeneland September Yearling Sale to land Lot 347, a Curlin (Smart Strike) colt that roared to the top of sale standings. The colt, bred by Stonestreet Thoroughbred Holdings and consigned by Indian Creek, is a brother to multiple Grade 1 winner Clairiere..
“As one person just told me, he speaks for himself,” Pope said. “He was my favourite, and obviously the grey one that I bought from Three Chimneys, those were the top two. I knew he was going to be a lot. He should be the sales topper because he’s the best horse in here.”
Primarily known for securing top race fillies, Pope said she is looking to add colts with potential to be stallions to her roster. She is planning deep into the future of the empire she is building. She also purchased the session-topper on Monday, a US$2.2 million Gun Runner (Candy Ride) colt out of Princesa Carolina (Tapit).
“We need colts to become stallions, to get the numbers all working. They’re what makes it work,” she said. “This is not a short game in any manner, unless you’re just once or twice and get out, like day trading, but it’s a very long story. You can’t be faint of heart in this at all.”
Curlin was in high demand on the second day of the Keeneland September sale, with 15 horses sold for a gross of US$14,115,000 (approx. AU$21.19 million). Four yearlings sold for seven figures, with an average of US$941,000 (approx. AU$1.41 million).
It was a bittersweet day for Barbara Banke of Stonestreet Stables, who bred the session-topping colt and also campaigned the colt’s sire, two-time Horse of the Year Curlin. He retired with more than US$10 million in earnings and has stamped himself as one of the most influential stallions of modern times.
“He was the best horse we raised this year,” Banke said of the sale topper, who is the highest-priced September sale colt since Meydan City (Kingmambo) sold for US$11.7 million in 2006. “He’s from a great family, and he looks great.”
Lot 347 is out of multiple Grade 1 winner Cavorting (Bernardini), who was raced by Stonestreet with trainer Kiaran McLaughlin. She won three Grade 1 stakes and retired with more than US$2 million in earnings. Besides Clairiere, she has also produced stakes winner La Crete (Medaglia D’Oro) and stakes-placed winner Judge Miller (Curlin).
When asked if it is hard to part with horses of this quality, Banke said: “Yes, but I can’t keep everything. As my financial adviser and my team tells me, we need to sell to pay the bills, so we can make more and do it again next year.”
Sarah Sutherland of Indian Creek said: “He was one of those that as soon as you saw him, you understood; you got it, you grasped what he is. And I think that speaks for the whole program that Stonestreet has worked so hard to develop and continues to improve upon. It’s pretty cool to have campaigned Curlin, and Cavorting speaks for herself. The mare’s got a 100 per cent strike-rate with stakes horses. It doesn’t get any better than this.
“It’s very, very rewarding and humbling. It’s pretty cool to be a very, very small part of this horse’s life. I know this isn’t the best day of his life, he’s going to have a really, really exciting future, we’re just delighted that Mandy got him.”
The top-priced filly was Lot 210. Heider Family Stables went to US$1.5 million (approx. AU$2.25 million) for the Into Mischief (Harlan’s Holiday) filly who is out of the Grade 1 winner Shared Account (Pleasantly Perfect), making her a half-sister to Grade 1 winner Sharing (Speightstown). Gainesway bred and sold the bay filly.
David Lanigan, serving as agent along with Ted Durcan for the buyer, said she will go to trainer Brendan Walsh. The Heider family has had success with Walsh and wants to put more fillies under his care.
Sixteen horses sold for seven figures on the sale’s second day, with Curlin the leading sire of the session. He had four seven-figure yearlings. Into Mischief and Not This Time (Giant’s Causeway) each had three yearlings sell for seven figures, respectively.
The average for the second session was US$602,227 (approx. AU$904,250), with a gross of US$66,245,000 (approx. AU$99.46 million), including private sales. The median was US$475,000 (approx. AU$713,220). A total of 144 horses went through the ring, with 110 sold, making the buyback rate 23.6 per cent, down slightly from the first session.
“When we were looking at the figures during the day, we could see that it was potentially going to tee up to be equally as good as yesterday, and that was a high bar to try and achieve. The median is up almost 20 per cent over last year,” said Tony Lacy, vice president of sales at Keeneland.
Gainesway was the leading consignor for session two, with a gross of US$11,725,000 (approx. AU$17.61 million), from 17 horses sold. Whisper Hill Farm was the leading buyer of the day with two purchases totaling US$5,300,000 (approx. AU$7.96 million). West Bloodstock, agent for Repole Stable, was very active and the second-leading buyer with eight horses totaling US$3,875,000 (approx. AU$5.82 million).
“These are numbers we dream of,” Lacy said. “It’s not for us; it’s for our clients, the people that entrust us with these horses. We have an incredible team, our auction team, our bid spotters, our sales team, everybody in this organisation that gets behind this. Everybody takes pride in it, but we’re really proud of the people that bring the horses, and the buyers that entrusted that we are doing the job that will give them the opportunities to buy the next champion.”