The Ocala Breeders’ Sales Co.’s March sale of 2-year-olds in training has the pole position, tasked with establishing market momentum for the season – and freshman sire Drain the Clock could be getting away from the pole quickly. Among multiple juveniles to distinguish themselves during the under-tack preview show that precedes the sale, a filly from the first crop of Drain the Clock made headlines by equaling the OBS track record for a quarter-mile breeze. The OBS March sale, the first of three the company will hold this year, is set for March 10-12, with 816 2-year-olds cataloged prior to outs. The under-tack preview show began March 4 and runs through March 7. A number of freshman sires, including 2022 Horse of the Year Flightline and multiple Grade 1 winner Life Is Good, have their first juveniles stepping out this week. Both had strong results in the yearling marketplace, with Flightline averaging $737,274 from 57 yearlings sold against an advertised stud fee of $200,000, and Life Is Good averaging $310,741 from 81 sold against a fee of $100,000. :: Access the most trusted data and information in horse racing! DRF Past Performances and Picks are available now. While the yearling market is a speculative endeavor based largely on pedigree and conformation, the 2-year-old market allows the chance to see young prospects in motion. They’ll breeze a furlong, the traditional yardstick, or slightly longer – or, in some cases, gallop openly. This season, OBS has implemented additional “control measures” for all three of its under-tack preview shows, building upon existing standards. Horses are now required to have a veterinary state they are suitable to perform in the under-tack show, while entries without this statement will be scratched from the sale. This is in addition to the existing practice of a staff veterinarian monitoring training leading up to the breeze show and positioned on track during the show. Use of the riding crop is restricted, with the rider not permitted to strike the horse with their hands off the reins before, during, or after a breeze. Through the first half of the under-tack preview, it was another freshman sire who had distinguished himself. Drain the Clock, by Maclean’s Music, won the Grade 3 Swale and Grade 3 Bay Shore en route to a signature triumph in which he defeated eventual champion Jackie’s Warrior in the Grade 1 Woody Stephens. Drain the Clock averaged $66,953 from 115 yearlings sold last year, a solid return on investment against his $10,000 introductory fee at Gainesway. On Thursday, a filly from Drain the Clock’s first crop breezed a quarter-mile in 20 1/5 seconds on the Ocala Training Center’s all-weather Safetrack. That was not only the fastest time midway through the show, but it tied the track record. :: Get the Inside Track with the FREE DRF Morning Line Email Newsletter. Subscribe now.  “We knew she was fast. We let her run and found she was faster than most of them here,” consignor Jesse Hoppel said. “She had a good day. I have a lot of Drain the Clocks right now, and to tell you the truth, I can’t think of one I don’t like. I think, all in all, the sire might be a pretty decent stallion.” The filly is out of the Street Boss mare Queen of Aces, dam of two winners from as many starters. It is the family of Grade 1 winners Adjudicating, Dispute, and Time for a Change. Midway through the breeze show, three juveniles were tied for the fastest furlong at 9 3/5 seconds. They are an Army Mule colt; a colt by Yaupon, last year’s leading freshman sire; and a Nyquist filly. Last year, only one juvenile, a gray Gun Runner colt, breezed in 9 3/5 seconds at OBS March. That colt, Brant, went on to sell for $3 million, a record for an OBS sale, and won last year’s Grade 1 Del Mar Futurity. He was third in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile, was an Eclipse Award finalist, and is scheduled to make his 3-year-old debut in Saturday’s Grade 2 San Felipe at Santa Anita. Led by Brant, OBS reported that 432 juveniles sold for gross receipts of $65,660,500 during its 2025 March sale, compared to $65,239,100 generated by 454 horses sold in 2024. Last year’s average was $151,992, compared to $143,698 in 2024. The median dropped just slightly to $70,000 from $72,000, while the cumulative buyback rate improved to 18 percent from 24 percent. The March sale kicked off a powerhouse season for OBS, as its April auction finished with a record average, the June sale posted a record average and median, and all three sales posted a buyback rate under 20 percent – strong trade in a selective market. :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.