DAY 2 - SESSION TOPPER HITS $500,000

The session topper was Hip 197 Flashback Bi, a Greenshoe colt out of Dream Child that sold to Courant Inc. out of the Hunterton consignment for $500,000.
Sabine Kagebrandt, CEO for Courant Inc. said, “I loved all the four horses that we bought from Greenshoe. I loved them because they have so much of Greenshoe in them,” Kagebrandt said. “They have flawless conformation. They are very athletic and they are good technicians… very good. They are well balanced and I like that they have a good mindset.”
Hunterton also sold the two highest-priced yearlings on opening night — Hip 57 Epoch (f, Chapter Seven—Jolene Jolene) for $725,000 and Hip 70 Vic Zelenskyy (c Greenshoe—Mission Brief) for $550,000— and three of the top four, including Hip 63 Awaiting (f, Walner—Lonely Lady) for $525,000.
“It’s rewarding,” said Hunterton’s Steve Stewart. “People look at it and think that it just happens, but it doesn’t. There’s a lot of work involved… Forty years. After many years, you get better at it, I guess.
“The one thing that helps us a lot, as I’ve said in the past, is that a lot of the horses we’ve sold have raced very well – the expensive ones. That give a lot of confidence. As an example, last night Lovely Lady’s filly brings $525,000. She was bought by Ken Jacobs because he spent $510,000 last year on the full sister and they look very similar and she made $300,000 this year. They are coming back and that’s the most rewarding for us.
“We’re well-aware how important the sale prices are, but it’s even more rewarding when a good horse that we sell races. That’s the biggest reward for us.”
Through two days, Hunterton is neck-and-neck with Preferred Equine for the leading consignor title by gross. Preferred leads with $7,549,000. Hunterton has grossed 7,548,000.
“Success begets success. It’s the same thing if you’re a trainer. If you do really well and you’ve got a lot of good horses, guess what? People are going to send you more horses,” Stewart said. “So, our reputation of selling horses that race and do well comes back and rewards you. It’s the same thing if you’re a stallion. If you’re a stallion and you produce a lot of good horses… it kind of makes sense, but it’s still very rewarding. We do not take it for granted.”






