Frosty Margarita leads every step in Jack Betta Be Rite Stakes

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SV Photography

By Sarah Mace

Frequent Saratoga invader Frosty Margarita made relatively short work of a competitive six-horse field in Monday’s featured race at Finger Lakes Gaming and Racetrack, the $50,000 Jack Betta Be Rite Stakes for New York-bred fillies and mares. When she cruised unchallenged to a front-running 2-length victory in her 30th start, the 5-year-old daughter of New York sire Frost Giant[2] (Irish Hill & Dutchess Views Stallions[3]) added a fourth black type score to her career tally.

A Gabrielle Farm homebred trained by Rudy Rodriguez, Frosty Margarita has been working regularly at Saratoga, but for her two most recent starts has shipped west to Finger Lakes for a pair of conditioned allowance races.

The mare won a 6-furlong contest by three lengths on June 20 and suffered just a neck loss to Frostie Anne going one mile at the same venue on July 17. Frosty Margarita was flattered when Frostie Annie came back to win an open Saratoga allowance race on Sunday by nearly five lengths as the even-money favorite.

Away alertly from her rail post under John Davila, Jr. as the odds-on favorite, Frosty Margarita out-sprinted Pride of Saratoga to the lead and established a half-length advantage by the first point of call. Pride of Saratoga at the rail and Rosyjersey in the two path chased through opening splits of 24.22 and 48.33.

Extending her lead to 1 1/2 lengths along the backstretch, Frosty Margarita only improved her position from there. Set down for the drive fully in command of her destiny, the dark bay drew off without a serious challenge to win by two lengths in a final time of 1:44.75. [VIDEO REPLAY[4]]

Rosyjersey, who shook off Pride of Saratoga in the turn, finished a clear second followed five lengths back by Pride of Saratoga in third. Completing the order of finish were Beyond Discreet, Satin Frost and Amanda Lane. Super Nova was scratched

Frosty Margarita waged outstanding campaigns at two and three, collecting runner-up finishes in the Joseph A. Gimma and Maid of the Mist as a juvenile in 2015, before breaking through with her first pair of stakes wins in the Key Cents and Fifth Avenue division of the New York Stallion series, both run at Aqueduct.

In January of 2016, Frosty Margarita won the Maddie May. Since she has added steadily to her earnings bankroll but her form has been a little bit in and out. She is experiencing something of a resurgence this summer, however, capped by this breakthrough Jack Betta Be Rite victory. Overall in four seasons of racing she has recorded eight wins, seven seconds and two thirds and earned $576,176.

Frosty Margarita, who was foaled at Saratoga Glen Farm[5] in Schuylerville, is out of Mango Margarita, an unraced New York-bred daughter of Not For Love also bred by Gabrielle Farm. She has four winning siblings but only she has earned black type. Mango Margarita’s most recent reported foal is a juvenile colt by New York freshman sire Central Banker named Mr. Muy Bien, who has posted a steady series of works at Saratoga this summer.

 

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/8-13-18-R7s-Frosty-Margarita-300.jpg
  2. Frost Giant: http://www.bloodhorse.com/stallion-register/nytb/stallion/119287/frost-giant
  3. Irish Hill & Dutchess Views Stallions: http://ihdvstallions.com/
  4. VIDEO REPLAY: http://www.nytbreeders.org/includes/video-player.cfm?date=20180813&track=FIM&race=7
  5. Saratoga Glen Farm: http://www.saratogaglenfarm.com/

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2018/08/13/frosty-margarita-jack-betta-rite/


NY-bred yearling sale concludes with record-setting top-seller, posts first six-figure average

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Fasig-Tipton photo

By Sarah Mace

Fasig-Tipton’s annual preferred New York-bred yearling sale in Saratoga, the New York breeding program’s premier auction, has grown by leaps and bounds since 2011, toppling records each succeeding year and setting new benchmarks.

Each year it has been natural to wonder whether the auction has reached its ceiling. As the 2018 results show, the answer is, “Not yet.” By the time trading wound down at Sunday’s second and concluding session, another set of records had fallen by the wayside.

This year’s New York-bred yearling sale saw a record-setting top-seller bring $600,000 and posted a new record average price of $107,512. This marks the the first time in the sale’s history the average has topped six figures. The average was also 20.7% higher than the 2017 average of $89,088.

The median price, too, closed in record territory at $76,000, up 9.3% from $69,500 in 2017. Total sales were a record $18,492,000 for 172 yearlings (including six private sales to date) up from $16,214,000 last year for 182 individuals. In all, 30 horses sold for $200,000 and up, and seven went for $300,000 or more.

Fasig-Tipton President Boyd Browning, Jr raved, “The last half of the session tonight was just electric. Obviously, that’s reflective of how the horses happened to fall in the catalogue, but we had a run of horses that were just one beauty after another beauty after another beauty that sold remarkably well.”

Browning also observed that he has seen an expansion of the customer base in the New York-bred yearling market. “I think you saw tremendous diversity among the buyers tonight. There were certainly some new names on the results who haven’t been active previously in the New York-bred marketplace. I think that’s a direct result of the quality and the success New York-breds are achieving all over the world.”

The single qualifier for the sale’s across-the-board success was an increased buyback percentage. At the end of the first session, RNAs came in at a very high 41.2%. The figure moderated to 34.6% after Tuesday’s session with a total of 91 horses going unsold. Last year the RNA rate at the sale was 25.4%. As Browning pointed out after the first night of trading, the large numbers of RNAs may be a function of the lucrative racing options open to owners and breeders if they do not get what they consider to be a fair price at auction.

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Jonathan Thorne (Fisig-Tipton photo)

The record-setting sale topper was Hip 588[3], a bay colt by Pioneerof the Nile bred by Jonathan Thorne’s Thorndale Farm in Millbrook and hammered down for $600,000 to John Ed Anthony’s Shortleaf Stable.

Thorndale Farm purchased the colt’s dam Score for $120,000 at the 2016 Keeneland November sale in foal. An unplaced daughter of A.P. Indy, Score has already produced three winners, including one graded stakes performer and one stakes performer. The colt’s second dam is multiple Grade 1 winner and million-dollar earner Educated Risk, who is also a multiple stakes producer.

Thorne said, “The [record-setting colt] is an incredible horse. He’s been a beautiful horse since he was born, and he’s just gotten better and better. He’s a very intelligent and honest horse. I’m proud of my horse and I’m proud of my team at the farm to get him to this point. It’s special. I think he’s got a great future, so I can’t wait to watch him.”

“[The achievement of setting this record] feels great,” added Thorne. “All of us around here have been doing this for a while and everyone has stepped up their game as the quality of the New York-bred crops continues to rise every year. We are all trying to up our game and keep producing high-quality horses. This is a great sale and it continues to get better and better every year. I don’t see that stopping.”

Thorne resold Score in February for $45,000. “She did not get in foal last year, so I thought it might be an ok idea to sell her in Fasig February,” Thorne explained. “Some good friends bought her from me, Alex Solis and Jason Litt, so they have the mare and they bred her back to Classic Empire. She is a lovely mare and a pretty good buy, so I hope for the best for them as well.”

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Fasig-Tipton photo

Following a pair of yearlings who brought prices in the $300,000s Saturday, three more met that threshold on Sunday, led by Hip 573[5], an Into Mischief filly out of talented New York-bred race mare Risky Rachel (Limehouse).

The bay March 17 filly, who went to Jeff Drown’s Kindred Stables, LLC for $350,000 as the top filly of the session, is a third-generation product of Sanford Bacon’s breeding program and issues from his most successful family.

The filly’s third dam Lolli Lucka Lolli was a multiple winner campaigned by Bacon’s Bacon Barn. After retiring to the breeding shed, the mare was twice honored as New York Champion Broodmare (1997, 2001) for producing two legendary Empire State breds. Her 1992 foal Dancin Renee was voted the 1997 New York-bred Horse of the Year, Champion Sprinter and Champion Older Female. Two years later Lolli Lucka Lolli produced eventual $2-million earner and sire and Say Florida Sandy, voted New York-bred Champion Sprinter and Horse of the Year in 2000 and 2001.

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Sanford Bacon (Fasig-Tipton photo)

Risky Rachel, the winner of six stakes races for Bacon is out of the champion Dancin Renee. Her first foal, a juvenile by Scat Daddy, now named Yale, sold for $1,000,000[7] to Todd Pletcher for Coolmore Stud’s M. V. Magnier at the Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream sale this spring.

Hip 604[8], a bay colt by Into Mischief bred by Mrs. Joanne Nielsen and consigned by Francis & Barbara Vanlangendonck’s Summerfield went to Michael Neatherlin for $320,000. His dam Silken Lily is an unraced half-sister to multiple graded stakes winner, millionaire and sire Upstart. Earlier in the week at the Fasig-Tipton select yearling sale Silken Lily’s yearling half-brother by American Pharoah brought $1,000,000[9].

Hip 590[10], a dark bay/brown colt by the late City Zip was purchased by Randy Bradshaw, Agent for $300,000 from the Indian Creek consignment. Bred by James Lamonica, Lee Sacks & Soave Stables, the youngster is out of Nick’s Honor, an unraced Jump Start mare who has produced four winners including New York-bred stakes winners The Lewis Dinner (Posse) and Kelli Got Frosty (Frost Giant).

“I liked everything about him,” Bradshaw said. “He’s a June foal, but he has plenty of size. He’s by City Zip and the mare has done nothing wrong. She’s a very good mare. We are just hoping down the road we can make a little money with him. We’ll probably put him in the April sale at OBS and see if we cando well with him.”

Lamonica said, “We love the New York program and we had the farm up here, Empire Stud, for a long time. This mare started out as a product of that. We bought that mare with a partnership as a 2-year-old in training and she was very talented. She’s a huge mare, she’s 17.1h. She fractured a hip before her first start, so we just bred her to the house stallions. And then she kept having stakes horses, so we decided to go to Tale of the Cat and City Zip. Actually, it’s a little sentimental because this yearling was the last City Zip ever born. City Zip was very good to me over the years. So, this was important.”

Endnotes:
  1. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Hip588FTSNY8-18FTK78.jpg
  2. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/ThorneJonathanFTK31.jpg
  3. Hip 588: http://www.fasigtipton.com/catalogs/2018/0811/588.pdf
  4. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Hip573FTSNY8-18FTK.jpg
  5. Hip 573: http://www.fasigtipton.com/catalogs/2018/0811/573.pdf
  6. [Image]: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/BaconSanfordFTK73.jpg
  7. sold for $1,000,000: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2018/03/29/scat-daddy-rachel-million-f-t-gp/
  8. Hip 604: http://www.fasigtipton.com/catalogs/2018/0811/604.pdf
  9. brought $1,000,000: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2018/08/07/half-brother-upstart-seven-figures-saratoga-select/
  10. Hip 590: http://www.fasigtipton.com/catalogs/2018/0811/530.pdf

Source URL: https://www.nytbreeders.org/news/2018/08/13/ft-nyb-yearlings-18-final-wrap/