$75K Maximus Mischief Colt Leads Busy Keeneland Session

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Photo: Anne M. Eberhardt
A horse enters the pavilion at the Keeneland November Sale

The Keeneland sales grounds remained busy with buyers as Book 5 of its November Breeding Stock Sale began Nov. 17. Topping trade for Wednesday's eighth session of the sale was a colt from the first crop of Maximus Mischief  , who sold on a final bid of $75,000 to Patillo Equine.

Through the first eight sessions of the sale, 2,002 horses have sold from 2,404 offered to bring total sales to $194,399,200, the average to $97,102, and the median to $50,000. The cumulative RNA rate is 16.7%.

At the same point in 2020, 1,848 horses had sold from 2,235 offered to gross $150,646,500, with an $81,519 average and a median of $32,000. The cumulative RNA rate was 17.3%.

Through Wednesday, Taylor Made Sales Agency is the overall leading consignor of Keeneland November, with 195 sold for a total of $22,646,000. 

"(The sale) started off really strong and it's stayed pretty strong throughout," said Marshall Taylor, Thoroughbred adviser for Taylor Made. "In the past I think you saw a bigger drop-off (toward the end). There's been a lot of action in the back ring, a lot of action on the sales grounds. I think this year carried over from September. There was a bunch of action throughout the (Keeneland September Yearling) sale and November's the exact same thing it was in September, similar action."

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Marshall Taylor
Photo: Anne M. Eberhardt
Marshall Taylor at Keeneland

During Wednesday's session, 260 head from 318 offered changed hands for gross receipts of $4,363,200, an average of $16,782, and a median of $12,000. The RNA rate was 18.2%.

The eighth session of 2020 saw 256 horses sold from 292 offered to gross $3,797,300, average $14,833, and have a median of $8,000. The RNA rate for the same session in 2020 was 12.3%.

Sale statistics continue to be updated as post sales are reported.

The leading consignor Wednesday was Vinery Sales, which sold 30 horses for a total of $646,000.

Wednesday's leading buyer was Richard Barton Enterprises, which spent a total of $149,000 on six horses. 

"It's a big improvement from Book 5 in previous years," Bradley Purcell, farm manager of Claiborne Farm, said of Wednesday's session. "There are a lot of people in the back ring here and a lot of people willing to spend and buy some nice mares."

Bradley Purcell with Claiborne
Photo: Anne M. Eberhardt
Bradley Purcell at Keeneland

Book 5 continues through Friday, the final day of the sale, which will end with a consolidated horses of racing age session.

"I think it'll really help, actually," Derek MacKenzie, co-owner of Vinery Sales, said of the Book 5 restructure. "I've always been a supporter of leaving (horses) in on the last day and we've done well doing that. When everybody else pulls out, we stay in and do well. I think this will be even better with those horses (of racing age) there. It should keep the last day really strong, I hope."

Weanlings Lead the Way

The session-topping colt was one of six weanlings sired by Spendthrift Farm's young sire Maximus Mischief Wednesday, with the group achieving an average price of $38,500. A son of leading general sire Into Mischief  , Maximus Mischief's 16 weanlings sold throughout the Keeneland November sale have averaged $46,250. 

Wynnstay Sales consigned the $75,000 colt as Hip 2804. The March 11 foal was bred in Indiana by Deann and Greg Baer and is the first foal out of the Uncle Mo   mare Andapinkcarnation. The mare is a half sister to two black-type horses and a black-type producer.

The only weanling by Ashford Stud's Mendelssohn  , whose first crop are yearlings, to be offered Wednesday brought $70,000 from Ron Shon to be the sale's second highest-priced horse of the day. 

The Mendelssohn weanling, a filly, was consigned as Hip 2997 by Little's Bloodstock, agent. Bred in Kentucky by Little's Farm and Pat and Gerald Cundiff, the filly is out of the winning Stephen Got Even mare Miss Vindictive. Her dam is a half sister to 2006 Del Mar Derby (G2T) winner Get Funky. 

Mares Remain Sought After

St. Simon Place and Machmer Hall teamed for the day's top-priced mare, going to $65,000 for Chelsea Road . The mare is an 11-year-old daughter of Speightstown   and was sold in foal to Gift Box  . She was consigned as Hip 2846 by Buckland Sales, agent. 

Chelsea Road's first foal, the 4-year-old Animal Kingdom  filly Go Big Blue Nation , was third in the Sept. 12 Kentucky Downs Ladies Marathon Stakes.

Bred in Ontario by Eugene Melnyk, Chelsea Road is out of the Charismatic mare Lambert Point and from the immediate female family of Horse of the Year and dual classic winner Point Given. On the racetrack, Chelsea Road earned $153,248 from a 4-4-5 record in 24 starts while racing for multiple ownerships.

Derek MacKenzie with Vinery Sales
Photo: Anne M. Eberhardt
Derek MacKenzie at Keeneland

Shared Empire, a broodmare prospect consigned as Hip 2689 by Vinery Sales, agent for Myracehorse.com and Spendthrift Farm, sold for $62,000 to McMahon & Hill Bloodstock, agent. The 3-year-old daughter of Pioneerof the Nile  was bred in Kentucky by Three Chimneys Farm out of the Indian Charlie mare Sapucai. Her female family includes Canadian champion female sprinter Moonlit Promise and 1992 Broodmare of the Year Weekend Surprise, dam of classic winners A.P. Indy and Summer Squall. 

"She's beautiful," MacKenzie said of Shared Empire. "She had the half brother by Gun Runner   that brought $775,000 (at the Keeneland September Yearling Sale), but she's just so beautiful. I guess the buyers couldn't help themselves wanting her.

"Most of the time (mares are exceeding their reserve), but there has been a few slippery spots," MacKenzie added. "I do a lot of homework in appraising them and there's always some that surprise you when they didn't make their reserve."

While strength was expected to carry over into the weanling market after a strong yearling sales season, the mare market has proven to be strong in November.

"We've been very pleased. It's been a very strong market for mares, especially young mares, and then the weanlings as well," Purcell said.