High Quality Additions to Inglis Chairman's Sale

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Photo: Courtesy of Inglis/Ashlea Brennan Photography
Shout The Bar tops the 2022 Inglis Chairman's Sale

The Chairman's Sale saw a surge of high-class entries March 9 on the eve of its close-off date for submissions into the Inglis Breeding Stock Sales Series.

Thai Noon, the dam of dual group winner and group 1-placed Steinem, will be offered in foal to Frankel , while the dam of group 1 winner Roch 'n' Horse, Rochfort, will be sold in foal to Per Incanto .

Paredo will be offered in foal to Extreme Choice, making the resultant foal a three-quarter-sibling to Blue Diamond Stakes (G1) runner-up and Golden Slipper Stakes (G1) contender Don Corleone, while Peron, the dam of group 3 winner Juan Diva, will be sold in foal to Snitzel .

Stakes-performed mares including Tricky Gal, Splendiferous, Elizabeel, Amasenus, Charleise, Tralee Rose, Joviality, La Rocque, and Get In The Spirit, as well as So You Assume, in foal to Bivouac, will also be offered at the sale.

These new additions will join group 1-performed mares like Icebath, Nimalee, Montefilia, Graceful Girl, Swats That, and Electric Girl already confirmed—plus mares in foal to the likes of Gun Runner   and champion European sire Frankel —that have already been confirmed for the Chairman's catalog.

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"This will be the best catalog we've ever assembled for the Chairman's Sale, there's no doubt about that,'' Inglis Bloodstock CEO Sebastian Hutch said.

"We're receiving extraordinary support across each of the breeding stock sales for which we are hugely grateful."

To discuss or submit an entry, contact a member of the Inglis bloodstock team or click here.

During last year's offering, Coolmore's Tom Magnier saw the bidding to AU$2.7M (US$1,920,808) to acquire the twice group 1-winning mare Shout The Bar from the Glenesk Thoroughbreds draft. Magnier was the sale's leading buyer with his single purchase, with Sheamus Mills Bloodstock, Longwood Thoroughbred Farm, and Peter Morgan sliding in second after purchasing two horses to the tune of AU$2 million. Segenhoe Thoroughbreds from Scone sold 11 of their 14 entries to be the leading vendor with an aggregate of AU$5,210,000.

At the conclusion of the sale, Inglis reported 71 horses traded hands of the 84 horses through the ring for gross receipts of AU$33,430,000 ($23,782,438), at an average of AU$470,845 ($334,963) and a median of AU$350,000 ($248,993). There were 13 horses who failed to meet their reserve representing an RNA rate of 15%.