A
stud tour around the Hunter Valley is always interesting and enjoyable and
invariably gives me food for thought on many topics with the conundrum fourth
season sires pose for broodmare owners an obvious place to start.
A fourth season sire in terms of the breeding shed is a first season sire in
terms of the racetrack and this is where it gets interesting.
For the first three seasons a stallion is at stud there is no real way of
knowing whether that stallion will ultimately be successful so the studs can
spin the fairytale of how good and wonderful the stallion is and there is
absolutely no hard evidence to suggest otherwise.
Come the fourth season and these stallions have had their first yearlings
offered and sold and many of those youngsters are now broken in and have been
tried to some an extent on the track.
In another month or two their progeny will be out there racing and in the next
12 months will need to make some sort of impression if their sire is to gain any
traction in the marketplace going forward.
This is a time of year when research and the ability to discern fact from
fiction may bring you to a smart choice or allow you to avoid an expensive
mistake.
It's time to go through those sales results and see just who bought the progeny
of these sires and for how much and who is training them.
Good trainers get results and some trainers are very good at getting two
year-olds up and running, others less so. If you expect a stallion will get two
year-old winners make sure they are in a stable that can achieve this!
If you were in the Hunter in the past week you will have heard all the stories
of how well this horse's progeny have broken in and what the trainers are
saying…. take it with a grain of salt.
All breakers send back good reports, it's their job to put the basics in place
- steering, starting and stopping - most horses can do this pretty well so will
be the subject of glowing reports, make of that what you will.
"They move well,"- here's another old chestnut that comes up in the early
reports and one I know quite a bit about.
Back in my days as a work rider I have ridden some beautiful movers, that
couldn't go quicker than a working gallop and some of the best horses in the
country that shuffled around like cripples until they hit three-quarter pace at
which point they found light speed and showed why they were superstars.
Moving well often means nothing in terms of moving fast – two very different
things!
Collective thinking in the early spring often means some fourth season
stallions become popular based on some very sketchy evidence and others are
dismissed out of hand.
Nearly always there will be discounts on fourth season sires, so if you can
make a good decision the dividends can be impressive as by the time you go to
the marketplace with your foal, judgement will be well and truly in on the sire
and that can mean a massive bonus if your choice is a winner.
The leading first crop sire by winners for 2016/2017 was Widden Stud's Your
Song and he's a stallion that was dismissed this time last year by the
'collective thinking' and as a result covered just 46 mares.
12 months on and his fee is back at $22,000 after dipping to $16,500 last year
and his book is full.
Antony Thompson was pro-active at the Widden Stud stallion parades in
addressing the fourth season issue for his Cox Plate winner Shamus Award, a son
of reigning champion sire Snitzel.
He told the crowd he was offering the best deal on any fourth season sire in
the Hunter Valley and it's a good one.
For any suitable mare booked to Shamus Award this spring, Widden Stud will not
charge anything for the service fee until the resulting foal is sold and when
that occurs the breeder takes the first $30,000 of proceeds, Widden Stud take
the second $30,000 and any additional funds go to the breeder.
A champion son of a champion sire, there is every reason to believe Shamus
Award can be successful.
Going to a stallion in their fourth season that does ultimately find fame and
fortune is often the last time you can go to them at a modest fee, so is
another great reason to take the gamble.
I Am Invincible was priced at $11,000 in his fourth season and he now stands at
$110,000, while Snitzel was $22,000 in his fourth season and now stands at $176,000.
Sometimes broodmare owners identify a left field fourth season stallion based
on the early evidence and get it right as happened with Written Tycoon.
He stood at a fee of $8,250 for his first two seasons then dropped to $6,600
for seasons three and four and in that fourth season covered a whopping 198
mares.
That fourth crop produced five stakes-winners headed by Group I winner Music
Magnate, Group II winner Rich Enuff and Group III winner Written Dash.
Written Tycoon now stands at a fee of $88,000.
Click here for the full list of sires whose first progeny will race this season
making them fourth season sires if you have a mind to send them a mare.