Anamoe Breeding Right Offered in Inglis Digital Sale After Stellar Results
Anamoe breeding right offered in Inglis Digital sale after stellar yearling results; strong demand for his first crop could lift his commercial and sire value.

After his first crop of yearlings attracted intense buying on the Gold Coast, Darley will offer a breeding right in Anamoe through the Inglis Digital February Online Sale running January 30 to February 4. The decision follows a powerful market validation for the nine-time Group 1 winner, whose progeny fetched impressive returns in their initial commercial run.
Anamoe, by Street Boss, saw 31 of his yearlings sell for a combined A$14.5 million at the Gold Coast catalogue, producing an average of A$469,000 and a 100 percent clearance rate. The top lot reached A$1.1 million, numbers that underline both commercial appeal and breeder confidence in his bloodlines. Darley has moved to capitalise on that momentum by making a breeding right available on Inglis Digital, signalling a business strategy that links racetrack performance to immediate stud-market opportunity.

Darley's bloodstock team framed the offering as a response to market demand. Alastair Pulford noted the strong reception for Anamoe’s progeny and indicated the stallion could be a major commercial and sire success. That endorsement ties directly to the figures from the Gold Coast sale, where buyers paid strong premiums for yearlings carrying Anamoe’s name, a reflection of the stallion’s elite race record and the pedigree cachet of being a Darley sire.
The move also reflects broader industry trends. Digital platforms such as Inglis Digital have become mainstream avenues for high-value bloodstock transactions, expanding buyer pools beyond traditional ring bidders and international agents. Offering a breeding right online allows Darley to reach a wider commercial audience at a time when demand for proven sprint and middle-distance sires remains robust across Australasia. For buyers, a breeding right in a nine-time Group 1 winner represents both a prestige asset and a calculated investment in stallion potential.
Culturally, Anamoe’s transition from champion racehorse to commercially attractive stallion captures how modern racing blends on-track heroics with breeding economics. The Gold Coast market’s willingness to pay strong averages for first-crop yearlings reinforces the appetite for horses that combine Group 1 credentials with commercial conformation. For breeders and owners, the availability of a breeding right provides a direct route to participate in the next chapter of a high-profile sire’s legacy without the immediate need to secure a mare for a private service.
What comes next is the Inglis Digital sale itself, where the breeding right will be offered alongside other commercial lots. For owners, breeders, and bloodstock investors tracking sire markets, the sale will be a bellwether for how Anamoe’s early commercial demand translates into longer-term stud value and how digital marketplaces continue to reshape the economics of thoroughbred breeding.
Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?
Submit a Tip
