Yours was more concise. I'm always rambling.Flanders wrote:Totally missed somehow that you posted this and I posted almost the identical thing.Rainyday wrote:Not many remaining with those names close up, but it's a fairly common combination of lines.Treve wrote:
Correcting myself, was a filly. But she was RNA (unsurprisingly). I was surprised by the lack of interest, I wonder what was wrong with her.
I just looked up the dam's pedigree wow!
http://www.pedigreequery.com/ask+me+no+secrets
Seattle Slew as a sire - dam sire is Secretariat and on the bottom she goes to Northern Dancer through Vice Regent as well as Buckpasser.
There must not be too many of these running around.
I was curious so I dug up that filly's page: http://apps.keeneland.com/sales/Sep15/pdfs/774.pdf
I think part of the answer is the dam's produce record. She's had 7 foals of racing age, which is plenty of chances to come up with something. However, only 4 of them raced, only 2 of them won, and there aren't any stakes placings (or even dams of stakes placed) to speak of. The best foal they can mention has won the grand total of $27,133. (And he's by Tapit, so it's not like she hasn't had chances.) Basically it looks like her dam either isn't passing down any talent, or her foals have physical issues. She's nicely bred but isn't producing anything.
The filly's page looks to have plenty of black type, but on a closer look, very little of it is recent, and much of it is in lesser leagues. The dam's one impressive sibling won his black type in Dubai. The third dam has the best produce record on the page, so it looks a bit like this branch of the family is declining. I think there's enough pedigree there that if this filly was quite impressive-looking, she might have sold decently, but not enough to carry her if she doesn't look great or has medical issues.
That said, I'm not a bloodstock agent; I'm just taking my best guess
Treve, I find some of the yearlings that sell for way less than I think they should have 'deceptive' pages like that--you glance at them when the horse is in the ring and it looks long and with lots of blacktype, and it's only if you have time later to look more carefully that you realize it's not nearly as good as you first thought!