Laurel’s Safely Kept Stakes all Hot City Girl

Jim McCue/Maryland Jockey Club[1]

Jim McCue/Maryland Jockey Club

By Sarah Mace

Following a summer freshening and the addition of blinkers this fall, 3-year-old Hot City Girl is going from strength to strength, capping a three-race winning streak on Saturday at Laurel Park by toying with the field of the $100,000 Safely Kept Stakes for 3-year-old fillies on her way to an eight-plus length frontrunning victory.

Trained by Linda Rice for Sheila Rosenblum’s Lady Sheila Stable, and a half-sister to La Verdad, who is enjoying such success for the same connections, Hot City Girl posted a breakthrough graded stakes victory by open lengths in the Charles Town Oaks on September 19. Then, just 16 days before shipping to Laurel for the Safely Kept, she trounced open company in a sprint allowance at Belmont for a career-top Beyer of 92.

Hot City Girl was reunited with Cornelio Velasquez on Saturday for the first time since the filly broke her maiden in state-bred company in her second start a year ago almost to the day. Bet down to a formidable 1-2 in the field of 10, and drawn mid-pack in post four to go seven furlongs, Hot City Girl weathered a slight bump at the break with Gypsy Judy in the stall to her inside, but it was all smooth sailing from there.

Leading at every point of call while racing just off the fence, Hot City Girl extended her lead over pace-presser Eloquent Tribute from a half-length to four lengths, while ticking off a sizzling half-mile in 45.49 and completing six furlongs in 1:09.97. Despite drifting some in the stretch, she finished straight and true under a vigorous hand ride 8 1/4 lengths in front of runner up and 5-1 second choice Stroke Play. Paulassilverlining completed the trifecta. The final time was 1:22.70.

From her fifth career win and second stakes victory, in addition to two second-place finishes, Hot City Girl’s earnings stand at a robust $455,150.

Bred by Eklektikos Stable LLC, and foaled, like La Verdad, at Chester and Mary Broman’s Chestertown Farm in Chestertown, Hot City Girl is another feather in the cap of her dam Noble Fire, a stakes-placed runner bred by Chester and Mary Broman also trained by Rice.

Rice bought Noble Fire for Eklektikos for $115,000 at the 2007 OBS Spring sale of 2-year-olds in training. In addition to multiple graded stakes winner and $1.6 million earner La Verdad, who most recently finished second in Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Sprint, and Hot City Girl, Noble Fire is the dam of eight-time winner N. F.’s Destiny, has earned over $300,000. Altogether, the mare’s progeny have earned over $2.4 million.

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/Hot-City-Girl.jpg

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2015/11/14/safely-kept-hot-city-girl/


New York-breds match Keeneland November buybacks, median

keeneland-logo[1]By Sarah Mace

This year’s 12-day Keeneland November Sale, which was held November 2-13, immediately following Keeneland’s successful inaugural hosting of the Breeders’ Cup World Championships on October 30-31, posted increases in gross and average, but a decline in median, signaling a strong but selective marketplace. New York-breds fit squarely into this picture of solid results in the context of selectivity.

Of 115 New York-breds offered, 86 sold resulting in a 25.22 percent buyback rate, identical to the general population of the sale, where the cumulative buyback percentage rose this year to 25.2 percent from the 21.8 percent in 2014.

The New York-bred average of $50,716, as is typically the case for this sale, did not match the cumulative average of the sale, which was $85,033, the highest since 2007 and up 3.74 percent from last year’s $81,966. The New York-bred median matched the sale median at $30,000.

Predictably, the top New York-bred sellers changed hands early in the sale, with One Time Only and Harbor Mist, a pair of accomplished race mares in foal to commercial sires, bringing $410,000 each in Books 1 and 2 respectively. The top New York-bred weanling, a filly by Tale of the Cat, who sold in the fourth session of trading, realized $175,000. (Read more[2].)

John G. Sikura of Hill ‘n’ Dale Farm, who led the consignor rankings by gross, reflected on the results of the sale in an industry wide-context. “The underpinnings and stabilizing force of the business is the breeding industry, because we supply the product that people buy to be racehorses,” Sikura said. “That’s too simplistic, but without that supply of horses you don’t have the business. The foundation of the business starts with the breeders, and they express confidence in the marketplace by buying new stock and they find out if that confidence was well placed depending on the future yearling sales.

Sikura continued, “The criteria are the same in Books 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6; the only difference is price level,” he said. “With the obvious flaws or negatives – like very late cover dates or spotty produce records or middle-aged mares that haven’t produced yet – you’re severely punished. The barren mares no longer in foal are tough to sell because people want to get an immediate return.”

Keeneland Director of Sales Geoffrey Russell added, “I think the fact is that buyers are very critical and have a very tight criteria. If the mare meets the criteria, they’re happy to take good money for them and if it doesn’t, they’re not interested. The criteria are getting tighter and tighter every year.”

Gross sales of $218,959,400 for this year’s November Sale increased 6.34 percent over 2014, surpassing last year’s 11-day auction total of $205,899,500 on the ninth day of selling. This is the highest gross since the November Sale record of $340,877,200 set in 2007.

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/keeneland-logo2.jpg
  2. Read more: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2015/11/06/kee-nov-books1-2-wrap/

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2015/11/14/ny-breds-kee-nov-15/