The Washington Thoroughbred Breeders and Owners Association summer yearling and mixed sale saw steady declines on Tuesday despite a larger catalog, and was topped by a $67,000 Smiling Tiger colt. In the auction’s yearling portion, 92 horses sold for revenues of $1,204,600, down 16 percent from the previous renewal’s yearling session when 84 horses brought $1,431,400. The average sale price declined 23 percent, to $13,093 from $17,040, while the median was cut in half, to $7,500 from $15,000. The buyback rate finished at 21 percent, improving slightly from 22 percent last year. Grade 1 winner Smiling Tiger is the highest-profile graduate of the WTBOA sale, and his name continued to hold tremendous weight among the state's buyers on Tuesday. That was evidenced by the sale-topper, a Smiling Tiger colt who sold to John and Janene Maryanski. The bay colt is out of the stakes-winning Supremo mare Premo Copy, whose seven foals to race are all winners, led by stakes winners Seattles Best Copy and Castinette Dancer. Castinette Dancer was Washington's 3-year-old filly of the year in 2011. The colt is the most expensive foal out of Premo Copy to sell at public auction, surpassing Color Me Gold, a Harbor the Gold filly who sold for $30,000 at the 2014 WTBOA sale. Bred in Washington by John Roche, the colt is from the family of stakes winners Soft Copy and Run a Copy. Roche has owned the sale-topper's female line dating back to second dam Soft Copy. Halvorson Bloodstock consigned the colt, as agent for the breeder. The colt will eventually be trained by Blaine Wright. The Maryanskis were the auction’s leading buyers, spending $155,000 on three horses. They also took home a $53,000 Mineshaft colt and a $36,000 Munnings filly. The auction’s mixed session moved one horse from three offered. James Garrett bought Miss Chatt, a winning War Chant mare in foal to Harbor the Gold, for $3,700.