Wed, 08/23/2006 - 00:00

Ocala momentum continues

The Ocala Breeders' Sale Company's August yearling sale showed Tuesday that regional demand for yearlings was stronger than last year, and some of that momentum carried over into the Wednesday session in Ocala, Fla.

Wednesday's session leaders at 5:30 p.m. were a pair of $110,000 yearlings. The first was a More than Ready colt signed for by Nick de Meric, agent. The chestnut colt is out of Pulla Surprise, an unraced A. P. Indy mare. The Sugar Hill agency consigned the colt as Hip No. 748.

Tue, 08/22/2006 - 00:00

Barbaro continues progress on both sides

Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro is making such good progress while in the hospital that his surgeon, Dr. Dean Richardson, has said he does not plan to change the colt's right hind cast during the next two weeks.

Barbaro shattered his lower right hind leg in the Preakness Stakes on May 20. He underwent surgery at the University of Pennsylvania's New Bolton Center the following day to repair three fractures. He remains in intensive care at the equine hospital.

Tue, 08/22/2006 - 00:00

Record opener at Ocala sale

A filly by first-crop sire Whywhywhy who sold for $105,000 looked likely to be the session-topper as of 5:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Ocala Breeders' Sales Company's August yearling sale. The Tuesday session was the first of four open sessions that followed a record-breaking select opener on Monday at the Ocala, Fla., auction house.

Tue, 08/22/2006 - 00:00

Marcavelly quietly emerging for Johannesburg

Horsephotos
Scat Daddy (left) rallies past Teuflesberg in the Sanford. Both are sons of leading freshman sire Johannesburg.

LAS VEGAS - The two leading freshman sires, Johannesburg and Officer, are waging a ding-dong battle for supremacy, and both had impressive stakes winners last weekend. While they each have three stakes winners, Officer does not have any graded stakes winners; Johannesburg has two.

Mon, 08/21/2006 - 00:00

Foal crop in 2007 expected to rise

The North American foal crop looks set to rise slightly in 2007, according to projections by The Jockey Club.

The Jockey Club is estimating that the 2007 foal crop will hit 37,500, an increase of 0.5 percent from the estimated 2006 registered foal crop of 37,300. The Jockey Club, the Thoroughbred breed's registering organization, makes its foal crop projections based on the annual Reports of Mares Bred. Those forms are to be filed by Aug. 1 of each breeding season, though some trickle in after the deadline.

Mon, 08/21/2006 - 00:00

OBS sale off to fast start

The Ocala Breeders' Sales Company's August yearling sale got off to a promising start Monday with an early session-leader of $300,000 amid a rash of six-figure horses.

The five-day auction in Ocala, Fla., opened with a single select session. By 5:30, that session's top lot was Hip No. 220, a $300,000 Smart Strike colt out of Cent Nouvelles. Ken McPeek signed the ticket as agent.

Fri, 08/18/2006 - 00:00

Six-figure yearlings spur record average

With a $230,000 colt from the first crop of state sire Hook and Ladder leading the way, the New York-bred preferred yearling sale at Saratoga last weekend produced a record average of $54,122.

Gross receipts for 101 yearlings sold at the two-day auction were $5,294,500. The gross represented a gain of 6 percent over 2005, and the average represented a gain of 11 percent. Twelve New York-breds commanded a six-figure price at the auction.

Consigned by Lakland North LLC, agent, the sale topper was purchased by Buzz Chace, agent, as Hip No. 315.

Fri, 08/18/2006 - 00:00

Second in Command bags rare triple

Few horses go out and set three course records at a single track, let alone at Saratoga. But Second in Command, a classy old Maryland-bred, completed that rare triple when he won Saratoga's Troy Stakes on Aug. 14 by 2 1/4 lengths.

Second in Command, 6, has made three starts in 5 1/2-furlong turf races over Saratoga's Mellon turf course in 2005 and '06, and each time he won - in course-record time.

Fri, 08/18/2006 - 00:00

Rice confident of contingent

Woodside Ranch in Fort McCoy, Fla., is the base for the Rice family, a well-known clan of multi-generational Thoroughbred professionals. The active members are Bryan Rice, his brothers Wayne and Curt, and his sister, Linda, a prominent New York trainer in her own right. Woodside Ranch is mostly known for the rehabilitation and training of horses for clients who race or sell in the 2-year-old market. This Tuesday, Woodside Ranch, as agent, will sell the Sherman Family Trust's yearlings during the four days of open sessions at the Ocala Breeders' Sales Co. yearling auction.

Fri, 08/18/2006 - 00:00

Northern sale's average grows for third year

It took three years, but the California Thoroughbred Breeders Association's northern California yearling sale has begun producing the results that organizers expected when the sale was founded.

Last Tuesday, the one-day sale at the Alameda County Fairgrounds in Pleasanton, Calif., grossed $1,351,600 when 165 horses sold for a record average of $8,192. There were 58 horses bought back. The average grew 8.6 percent over 2005, while the median of $4,000 remained unchanged from last year.