Sierra Sue sells for year-high digital price of $1.55 million
Pearce and Kheir snap up Busuttin and Young-trained dual Group 1 winner in online auction
Victorian breeder Bill Pearce yesterday made his single biggest thoroughbred investment to date as he added to the depth his burgeoning Bromfield Park broodmare band by purchasing dual Group 1 winner Sierra Sue (Darci Brahma) for $1.55 million.
Acting in partnership with Ozzie Kheir, a co-owner of the Trent Busuttin and Natalie Young-trained mare, Pearce bought the rising six-year-old through the bespoke Inglis Digital online auction as the Sir Rupert Clarke Stakes (Gr 1, 1400m) and Futurity Stakes (Gr 1, 1400m) winner became the most expensive lot sold over the internet so far this year.
It is the second commercial mare acquisition in as many weeks by Pearce, who along with Rob Cummings and Group 1 Bloodstock’s Mathew Becker, bought Group 3-winning mare How Womantic (The Wow Signal) for $300,000 through the Inglis Digital July (Early) sale last Wednesday.
While How Womantic is booked in to be served by Yarraman Park’s I Am Invincible (Invincible Spirit), soon-to-be crowned this season’s Australian champion stallion, Becker said a decision on a maiden mating for Sierra Sue was yet to be made.
Also the selling agent for the Sierra Sue syndicate, Becker was aware that Pearce had expressed interest in the nine-time winning New Zealand-bred mare, but he was unaware the Bromfield Park principal had purchased her when bidding stopped at $1.55 million late yesterday with the breeder’s final bid, the 53rd of the two-day online auction.
Pearce and his son Chris have an established relationship with Kheir, the trio racing 2020 Cox Plate (Gr 1, 2040m) winner Sir Dragonet (Camelot) together.
“Obviously, I knew Bill was interested in the mare and, if he was to buy her, that it would be a partnership of him and Ozzie, but Bill was certainly driving that bus independently,” Becker told ANZ Bloodstock News last night.
“I wasn’t sure who was bidding and I didn’t know who had bought her until I got the phone call. It was a little bit of a strange afternoon as I was trying to urge the bidding along and hope that she got the best result for the ownership group who were selling out of her.
“The great thing is, she remains in the control of clients of mine and I get to continue the management of her career as she moves into her next phase as a broodmare.”
Pearce said: “I just loved her as a race mare, she was so honest and so talented and if she can bring those traits to her broodmare career, she’s going to produce some magnificent foals.
“We’ll sit down together in the next week or so and work out which stallion she’ll go to first up.
“I’ve bought five mares off Inglis Digital now and I really like the platform.”
By The Oaks Stud stallion Darci Brahma (Danehill), Sierra Sue retired as the winner of $1.731 million in prize-money from her 24 starts. She was initially passed in at the 2018 New Zealand Bloodstock National Yearling Sale with a reserve of NZ$30,000 before her first trainer Peter Lock paid a paltry NZ$2,000 for her at the following year’s NZB Karaka May Sale as an unraced two-year-old.
She trialled publicly twice for Lock, winning a heat at Te Aroha in December 2019, which prompted agent Phill Cataldo to sell the horse to expatriate Kiwi trainers, the Victoria-based Busuttin and Young. They in turn syndicated her to a group of owners led by Kheir.
She was immediately on the board for her new owners, winning three of her first five starts in the summer and autumn of her three-year-old season before returning as a four-year-old to win the Rose Of Kingston Stakes (Gr 2, 1400m) in the spring of 2020.
Last year, as a five-year-old, she came into her own, taking out the PB Lawrence Stakes (Gr 2, 1400m), the Sir Rupert Clarke Stakes and, earlier this year, she landed the Futurity Stakes defeating Group 1 winners Mo’unga (Savabeel) and Tofane (Ocean Park) in the process.
Tofane sold for $3.1 million to Yulong at the Magic Millions Gold Coast National Broodmare Sale in May.
“Sierra Sue came across as a trial horse to the Busuttin and Young stable without a lot of fanfare and she wasn’t an expensive filly,” Becker said.
“She’s taken them on the ride of a lifetime with two Group 1s and she’s put her name up as one of the best mares in this country. She deserves the best stallions that are available to her, which is what she’ll get, as she’s in the hands of two really good guys who will give her every opportunity [at stud].”
Te Akau’s champion mare Avantage (Fastnet Rock) sold for $4.1 million through New Zealand Bloodstock’s Gavelhouse online platform last year and fellow Group 1 winner Funstar (Adelaide) made $2.7 million through Inglis Digital a little more than 12 months ago.
Group 2 winner Every Rose (Choisir) sold for $1.3 million through Inglis’ online portal last year.
Sierra Sue is a daughter of winning New Zealand mare Centree (Centaine), who is a half-sister to the Listed-placed Kiwi mare Miss Puzzle (Citidancer) who was also Grade 3-performed in the US.
Miss Puzzle is the dam of Santa Anita Oaks (Gr 1, 8.5f) and Las Virgenes Stakes (Gr 1, 1m) winner winner Fashion Plate (Old Fashioned), the Grade 3-winning, Grade 1-placed Miss Bigly (Gemologist) and fellow US Listed winner Mr. Candy Bar (Candy Ride).
“There was significant bidding activity all the way through, as you would expect with a mare of Sierra Sue’s quality, by some of the racing and breeding industry’s biggest players,” Inglis Digital business manager Nick Melmeth said.
“She was an inexpensive young horse, won over $1.7 million in earnings on the track and now sells for $1.55 million, so it’s a phenomenal story.
“I’d like to thank Ozzie Kheir and all the partners in Sierra Sue and Mat Becker, who brought the idea to offer her online to life, for entrusting us with the responsibility of selling her.”