Saturday, June 27, 2026
Sabine Langvad scores with . . . Langvad...

    HALLANDALE BEACH - Sabine Langvad has been a frequent visitor to the Gulfstream Park winner’s circle after stakes as trainer Saffie Joseph Jr.’s longtime trusted assistant, but Saturday’s $100,000 Carry Back carried some extra special meaning.

    Steven Friedfertig and Shining Stables’ Langvad, named for the blond-haired native of Norway, jumped out to an early lead and never looked back, shaking off a challenge from One Hundred Kings and going on to a three-length victory in the seven-furlong race for 3-year-olds.

    Ridden by Micah Husbands for his third winner of the day, Langvad ($4.60) completed the distance in 1:23.23 over a fast main track to earn his third career win and first in a stakes after placing once in three prior attempts.

    “It’s pretty cool. You never know with any horse, but it’s pretty special when you have a namesake that turns out to be good,” Langvad said, flanked by her 4-year-old daughter, Savannah. “We’re so, so proud of him. I’m so happy.”

    Langvad broke alertly and outran program favorite Wayne’s Law to the front, quickly joined by One Hundred Kings through an opening quarter-mile in :22.41 seconds as Wayne’s Law settled in fourth behind 17-1 shot Sonic Surge.

    The half went in :45.10 as Wayne’s Law drew up alongside Sonic Surge on the far turn, but Langvad was too much as the Florida-bred son of Awesome Slew – sent off as the 6-5 favorite – opened up once straightened for home to register his second straight win. All three of his victories have come in front-running fashion.

    “He broke super sharp today,” Langvad said. “Sometimes he can be a little bit slow away from the gate, but Micah had a lot of confidence in him today.”

    One Hundred Kings stayed up for second, 1 ½ lengths ahead of Wayne’s Law, followed by Sonic Surge and Move Jesse Move. Moonstrocity, Ramajay and Demolition were scratched.

    Langvad graduated second time out against state-breds last November, then ran third to multiple stakes-winning stablemate and Fountain of Youth runner-up Solitude Dude in the Inaugural at Tampa Bay Downs. This year, Langvad was sixth in the Swale at Gulfstream and fifth in Tampa’s Sophomore Sprint before beating older horses in his prior start sprinting six furlongs May 23 in a Gulfstream allowance.

    Sabine Langvad joined Joseph’s stable as an exercise rider in 2017 and was elevated to assistant trainer in 2019. She spent some time working for trainer Chad Brown before rejoining Joseph in 2022
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Sunday, June 21, 2026
7 winners hit for $41,598 . . .

    HALLANDALE BEACH - A mandatory payout of the 20-cent Rainbow 6 jackpot pool yielded multiple $41,598.18 payoffs on Sunday’s Father’s Day program at Gulfstream Park.

    The popular multi-race wager had gone unsolved for two racing days following a $110,007 jackpot hit a week ago leading up to Sunday’s mandatory payout. At the start of Rainbow 6 wagering Sunday there was a carryover of $25,262. A Total of $406,266 was wagered on Sunday’s Rainbow 6 sequence that spanned Races 4-9.

    The winning combination was 4-6-2-8-7-6. There were seven winning tickets.
           

    There were three ‘singles’ heading into Race 9. A $350,256 jackpot score would have been produced had either 3, 9 or 10 prevailed in the final leg.





Friday, June 19, 2026
Medaglia d'Oro colt goes for $650,000 . . .
    As the last juvenile Marcial Galan will sell this year headed into the Ocala Breeders’ Sales Co. pavilion the afternoon of June 18, the veteran consignor stood in the back ring, eyes glued to the board that would determine what kind of note his season would end on.

    When the final number flashed after one last bid from agent Donato Lanni during the third day of selling at the 2026 OBS June Two-Year-Olds in Training and Horses of Racing Age sale, Galan began digesting the fact he could plan a well-deserved vacation for the purpose of celebrating a career pinnacle.

    From an all-time sale record price to setting new marks for gross and average, the OBS June Sale concluded its three-day run with no shortage of moments to put on a highlight reel. The final day of the last major juvenile auction of the year contributed to that run of milestones as Hip 824, Bulmaro, a dark bay or brown colt by pensioned Darley stalwart Medaglia d’Oro, sold to Lanni on behalf of Zedan Racing for $650,000 to lead the final session.

    Bred by Jason Hall, Herschel Martindale, Joe Wheeler, and David Branch, the Medaglia d’Oro colt was the second highest priced horse at this year’s OBS June exercise, behind only Hip 428, a gray or roan filly by Triple Crown winner Justify who became the highest priced horse to ever sell at an OBS June auction when she went for $1.4 million to Speedway Stables. Bulmaro also earned a place of distinction with Galan as he is the highest priced horse ever to come out of his consignment.

    “I’ve sold like 200 horses in my life, and this is the highest,” Galan said. “Me and my wife are about to cry. We work really hard, and when something goes wrong we feel like what did we do wrong? But as I told the owners, not everything goes the right way all the time. But we’re really happy with this. He gave us the result we wanted. That was the last horse and…we’re ready for vacation now.”

    The end result for Bulmaro was particularly satisfying for his connections given the setback the colt endured last winter. Out of the winning Desert Party mare Scarlet Emerald, he suffered a stall accident that left him with a hematoma on his foreleg that ultimately cost him three months of training time.

    When he showed up on the OBS grounds last week for the under-tack show, however, he showcased his rapid development with an impressive breeze in :9 4/5.

    “I have to pat the buying public on the back because they did a great job of taking (the missed training time) into account and seeing the horse for the athlete he is,” Hall said. “Marcial has just done an incredible job for us for 4-5 years now. Even when we had a situation like this, he rolled his sleeves up and got the job done. The process is long and can be filled with some peaks and valleys and we’re just happy that it worked out.”

    The Medaglia d’Oro colt is a half brother to stakes placed winner Naughty Lottie, an OBS graduate, and his dam Scarlet Emerald, another OBS graduate, was a winning sprinter for Hall during her racing days. He will now be stablemates with Zedan, who set an all-time OBS record when he was purchased by their owner for $10.5 million at the April auction.

    “He looks fast. He looks like one that will go on,” Lanni said of Bulmaro. “All year for the good horses, there have been a lot of strong bidders. Every year seems to get stronger and stronger. I think there is a lot of money out there and people want to have fun.”

    The money indeed showed up throughout all levels of the OBS June sale.

    Direct comparisons to the 2025 June sale are not applicable due to last year’s auction being condensed over two days, but this year saw the sale generate gross receipts of $28,528,500 from 559 head sold, setting a new June record for the 2-year-olds in training portion. The cumulative average of $51,035 was also a June record as of the close of business Thursday with the overall median of $25,000 equaling the record mark set last year. The cumulative RNA rate was 20.6 percent.

    Two horses of racing age sold Thursday for a total of $23,000, bringing the overall gross to $28,551,500 and average to $50,894.

    Last year’s sale sold 507 horses for $25,473,000 with an average of $50,243 and RNA rate of 15.9 percent. No horses of racing age were sold in 2025.

    Thursday’s final session generated $8,869,500 gross from 173 head sold with an average of $51,269 and median of $21,000.

    “I think it’s been a banner year for us with the records that we’ve set through all three sales and ending up on a high note with the June sale,” said Tod Wojciechowski, Director of Sales for OBS. “Very excited and very happy with the results on the year. I still think there were a lot of horses that got sold, period, and we sold a lot of horses at a lot of different price levels. I know sometimes you always want to see more at different levels, but there was plenty of trade of horses.”

    A total of 11 horses brought $300,000 or more during this year’s June auction, besting the eight horses who hit that threshold during the entirety of the 2025 edition of the sale. Two who added to that total were Hip 827, a dark bay or brown colt by Medaglia d'Oro, and Hip 876, a dark bay or brown filly by Vekoma, both of whom sold for $400,000 Thursday.

    Consigned by 30-30 Ranch, the Medaglia d’Oro colt breezed in :21 1/5 and sold to D. J. Stable LLC. He is out of the stakes winning Lemon Drop Kid mare Season Ticket.

    The Vekoma filly breezed in :20 2/5, adding to a tremendous week for Jesse Hoppel of Hoppel LLC, who also consigned the $1.4 million Justify filly. The Vekoma filly is out of the winning Discreetly Mine mare Sonora and sold to Kimmel & Sallusto, agent for trainer Miguel Clement.

    “I've done well here year after year. Hopefully, it will continue,” said Hoppel, who led all consignors with 18 head sold for $2,543,000.

    Another standout Thursday was Hip 995, a chestnut colt by Cyberknife consigned by First Call, who sold for $310,000 to MorPlay Racing. The colt, who breezed in :10 1/5, is out of the multiple stakes winning Pollard's Vision mare Vertical Vision and is a half brother to multiple graded stakes winner Vertical Oak.
Thursday, June 18, 2026
Sells for $1.4 million . . .
    Even before he left the sales pavilion the afternoon of June 17 amid well wishes and congratulatory declarations, consignor Jesse Hoppel carried with him a heightened level of sentiment where the results of the Ocala Breeders’ Sales Co. June Two-Year-Olds in Training and Horses of Racing Age Sale were concerned.

    “Growing up in this industry, there have been times where this sale is what turned our family from red to black for the year,” Hoppel said in the midst of trying to absorb his latest milestone.  “This sale is really important for all the 2-year-old consignors.”

    With one day remaining in the final major juvenile auction of the year, the 2026 edition of the OBS June Sale has already cemented itself among the most significant moments of Hoppel’s personal and professional life.

    The record-setting mantle that started with the OBS March and April auctions this season was picked up with aplomb by the three-day June sale, thanks to the appeal of a striking gray filly bred in the purple. After selling his first seven-figure juvenile during the OBS March Sale, Hoppel wrote his name into the history books of the sales grounds he grew up on when he sold Hip 428, a gray or roan filly by Triple Crown winner Justify, for $1.4 million to Speedway Stables, becoming the highest priced horse ever sold at an OBS June sale.

    The price for the Justify filly surpasses the previous OBS June record of $975,000 set just last year when Feminism, a chestnut filly by Curlin consigned by Caliente Thoroughbreds, sold to Gus King. For Hoppel, it was the latest achievement in a year that has seen his and his family’s horsemanship rewarded in the arena that has been paramount to his success.

    “We got really fortunate. I’m just grateful everyone believed in us enough to bid on our horses like that,” Hoppel said. “She exceeded our expectations by far. She’s a really nice filly, she’s got a really nice family. Hopefully she’s really successful on the racetrack and goes on to become a really nice broodmare. All those things are a possibility with that filly.”

    Out of the stakes-winning Rockport Harbor mare Harbingerofthings, the Justify filly is a half sister to graded stakes-winners Tell Your Daddy and Dynadrive, the former of whom is Gr. 1 placed. She would have likely commanded her share of attention had she been offered in either March or April but an injury sustained in a paddock accident led to her being pointed to the sale where she now stands alone in its annals.

    “She was turned out with a bunch of fillies in a big field just being a horse. We raise our horses natural… just let them be themselves. And she got a big old lump on her shin,” Hoppel recalled. “What happened, I don’t know. But she got kicked or hit it on something…and it set me back. She would have been here in April or March but that set us back a little ways.

    “Like so many things, it was definitely a blessing in disguise. Sometimes you feel like you’re being dealt a blow but you’re just setting up for a better outcome. It was good for me and the team and the investors, we had a great day.”

    When the filly breezed in :20 4/5 to tie for the fastest quarter during the third day of under-tack shows, Marette Farrell, advisor to K. C. Weiner and Peter Fluor’s Speedway Stables, went back to the barns and immediately pegged the daughter of Justify as one her team needed to pursue. Bidding via phone during a protracted battle that started with an opening bid of $20,000, Farrell ultimately stretched to the limits to secure what she hopes will be a future standout for Speedway’s broodmare band.

    “As soon as I saw the breeze, all I wanted to do was go to the barn to see her,” said Farrell, who also credited her team of Tescha Von Bluecher, Zoe Cadman, and Ashley Castrenze. “When I went to the barn, she was everything I could have hoped for. She had size, muscle, presence, a great sense of mind. She’s by a phenomenal stallion Justify who we’re real believers in. Then of course she’s a half to a Gr.-1 placed filly and it’s (Gr. 1 winner) Mindframe’s extended family. Speedway Stables has a broodmare band now and these are the fillies we want to add to the band, the ones who have brilliance.

    “You can’t walk away from a filly as phenomenal as her.”

    The juvenile market has been astounding in its own right with this year’s OBS March auction producing a record sale gross and the April sale establishing a record gross, average, and median, highlighted by the sale of Zedan, a son of Flightline who sold for an all-time OBS mark of $10.5 million. The sale of its first seven-figure horse signified a continuation of such strength during the June exercise.

    While session to session comparisons are not applicable due to the 2025 OBS June Sale being held over two days as opposed to this year’s three-day auction, overall figures through the first two sessions reflect a hotly competitive buying base. A total of 353 horses have been sold for gross receipts of $18,898,000 through the close of business Wednesday with the average coming in at $53,535 and the median $27,000. The cumulative rate of horses not sold is 26.7 percent.

    Wednesday’s session saw 173 head sold for gross receipts of $9,285,000 with an average of $53,671 and a median of $27,000. The session RNA rate was 28.8 percent.

    “Before the sale started, they asked me what I thought about June and I said we’ve had a great March and April and I don’t see that changing. Obviously, it didn’t change,” said Tod Wojciechowski, Director of Sales for OBS. “I said it last year, this isn’t your father’s June sale. It has become a sale in its own right and a number of consignors have said that they point horses to this sale.

    “Would I have predicted (the seven-figure horse)? I don’t know that I’d have predicted it, but I’m not surprised by it. The quality of horses these guys are bringing to the market…it keeps stepping up, so it’s not surprising to me.”

    A total of seven horses have brought $300,000 or more with one day left in the sale compared to eight horses who hit that threshold during the entirety of the 2025 OBS June auction. Contributing to that total Wednesday was Hip 433, a bay colt by Jackie’s Warrior who elicited the session’s second highest price when he sold to Greg Compton, agent for MAG Racing Stables for $300,000.

    Consigned by Tom McCrocklin, the colt is out of the winning, multiple graded stakes-placed mare Heavenly Hill, who is by OBS graduate City Zip and out of graded stakes-winner Pleasant Hill. He breezed in :20 4/5 during the under-tack show.
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
Sells for $410,000.. .
    Over the last handful of weeks, offspring by Early Voting who first made their mark in the Ocala Breeders’ Sales Co. pavilion have repeatedly signaled that the classic-winning Taylor Made Farms stallion is a veritable source of precocity and raw ability.

    During the opening session of the 2026 OBS June Two-Year-Olds in Training and Horses of Racing Age Sale, another representative of the first-crop sire turned heads on the strength of his obvious early talent.

    The positive talk that has been attached to the early results of Early Voting’s stud career spilled over into the OBS sales ring June 16 as Hip 168, a dark bay or brown colt by the son of Gun Runner, sold to trainer Greg Compton, agent, on behalf of MAG Racing Stables for $410,000, topping the first day of selling at the final major juvenile auction of the year.

    Currently third on the first-crop sire list, Early Voting has become the buzz horse over the last month with the likes of OBS graduates He Is No Lie and Balloteer, both of whom were purchased at the OBS March Sale, winning first time out. Consigned by Julie Davies, Hip 168 breezed in :10 flat during the under-tack show, further validating the high opinion Davies has held for his sire.

    “I have been a fan of Early Voting since the yearling sales. You can ask anyone who knows me, I’ve been harping on about Early Voting,” said Davies, whose past graduates out of the OBS June Sale include multiple Gr. 1 winner Adare Manor and stakes-winner Solitude Dude. “This is a nice horse. Obviously, he’s fast, he’s pretty. I think this sale if you bring the right horse here, if you bring a good horse here, then there are plenty of buyers.”

    The Early Voting colt is out of the winning War Front mare Cara Dura and is from the female family of graded stakes-winner and sire Exchange Rate. The next chapter in his story will include heading to Compton’s Delaware Park base where he will get a freshening before trying to add to his sire’s growing resume.

    “He’s a good looking individual, he had a great breeze, and the stud is off to a great start,” Compton said. “It’s pretty simple. He looks like he has a bright future. He might get a little break for 30 days and then get him back going again. (The price) was a little more than we thought, but he’s a really nice individual.

    “If you want a nice horse, you’re going to have to pay for it.”

    Healthy competition for standout individuals backstopped the OBS March and April sales to record results, and the initial returns for the June sale did nothing to dispel that market strength. The first day saw a total of five horses sell for $300,000 or more – compared to eight horses who hit that threshold during the entirety of the 2025 OBS June Sale - including Hip 93, a bay filly by Mo Donegal that elicited a final bid of $370,000 from agent Donato Lanni on behalf of Frank Fletcher.

    Consigned by Envision Equine, the Mo Donegal filly is out of the multiple stakes-placed Valid Expectations mare Bakken Baby and is a half-sister to stakes-placed winner Expect the Boss. The filly breezed in :9 4/5 during the under-tack show, tying for the fastest time at the distance.

    “She looks very fast,” said Lanni, who added the filly would head to the barn of Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert. “Frank (Fletcher) is an Oaklawn guy and he likes Churchill so we’re going to look at running her there.

    “We love the June sale. Every horse here has a story, that’s why they’re here.”

    The MorPlay Racing team has crafted plenty of success stories with OBS sale graduates, most notably with champion female sprinter Shisospicy. The team landed what they hope is their next stable star when they went to $330,000 for Hip 239, a chestnut filly by Practical Joke consigned by Caliente Thoroughbreds. The filly, who breezed in :9 4/5, is out of the winning Munnings mare Danceformunny, a daughter of stakes-winner Royal Song Dancer.

    “For us, this was the nicest filly on the grounds,” said Cam Dulgar of MorPlay Racing. “We didn’t really want to leave without her. She scoped clean, the physical was all there for us. Obviously, she laid down a pretty good breeze, but it was the way she did it, being the size she is. We think she could be a special horse. We knew she was going to be a standout here.”

    Other top prices during the session were Hip 192, Jamoca Shake, a gray or roan filly by Uncle Mo, and Hip 220, Global Leader, a daughter of Uncle Mo, both of whom were consigned by Tom McCrocklin and sold for $300,000.

    Jamoca Shake, who breezed in :21, is out of the multiple stakes-placed Cuvee mare Chocolate Pop and is a half-sister to multiple graded stakes-winner and OBS graduate Airoforce. She was purchased by Greenwell Thoroughbreds.

    Global Leader, who breezed in :20 2/5, is out of the winning, stakes-placed First Samurai mare Corey, a half-sister to graded stakes-winner and OBS graduate Happy Farm. She was purchased by Bill and Corinne Heiligbrodt.

    With the 2025 OBS June Sale behind held over two days as opposed to this year’s three-day auction, session-to-session comparisons are not applicable. Tuesday’s figures told a robust story nonetheless at the close of business with 163 head sold for gross receipts of $9,066,000. The average came in at $55,620 with a median of $30,000. The RNA rate was 31.8 percent prior to post sales.

    The opening session of the OBS June Sale will go down as one to remember for the father-son team of Fabian and Ruben Garcia of Fabian Sales. Hip 56, a dark bay colt by Charlatan from the female family of graded stakes-winner and sire Tale of the Cat, was hammered down to D.J. Stable for $195,000, making him the highest-priced horse ever sold by Fabian Sales and sparking an emotional outpouring from the younger Garcia.

    “I can’t believe it,” Ruben Garcia said, wiping tears from his face. “We bought him for only $1,000. Me and my dad just thought we would take a chance with the horse and if he didn’t make it (to the sale) we would probably race him. He just turned out to be a great horse. We were comfortable with $75,000 and at the last minute my father said to put a $100,000 reserve on him and he passed that easily. This is the first high-priced horse we have sold.”