Double Market tops Inglis Digital Australia June sale at AU$200,000
Double Market led Inglis Digital’s June (Late) sale at AU$200,000, with Geoff Walsh already eyeing a spring cover by Anamoe.

Double Market headed the Inglis Digital Australia June (Late) Online Sale at AU$200,000, and the result pointed straight beyond the ring to her next chapter. The G2-winning Castelvecchio filly, offered by Lindsay Park, was bought by Victorian breeder Geoff Walsh, who expects she will be covered by Anamoe this spring.
That pairing carries immediate commercial weight. Darley describes Anamoe as a nine-time Group 1 winner and Horse of the Year, and his first crop has already been presented as a sales sensation. Walsh’s decision to back Double Market with a stallion of that profile shows how top-end buyers are using the digital market to position mares for breeding outcomes that can feed straight back into future racing stock.

Walsh also liked the mare’s physique and strength, which added to the appeal of a filly whose race record already included black-type value. Inglis previewed the catalogue around similar bloodstock hooks, including a three-quarter sister to the highest rated 2YO filly of the season, alongside quality offerings from Godolphin and Waikato Stud. The sale closed on June 24 and reinforced how quickly proven race form can be converted into breeding strategy.

The second-top lot, Takemine, made AU$160,000 to Michael Pitt. The winning three-quarter sister to Chayan, winner of the G2 Reisling Stakes and a AU$5.6 million Inglis Chairman’s Sale headline act, was another case of buyers paying for both pedigree and next-step potential. Pitt said Takemine would be retired for broodmare duties this spring, although he had not yet settled on a stallion, keeping her value tied to the same kind of future-facing planning that lifted Double Market.
Other results showed the same pattern across the catalogue. Dayeala sold in foal to The Autumn Sun for AU$120,000 to Mayfair Farm, while Godolphin’s draft of 10 racehorses returned AU$435,500 in total. The draft was led by Comedy, a three-year-old who went to Jack Bruce for AU$95,000.
Across the sale, Inglis Digital posted a gross of AU$3,125,450 from 292 traded horses, with a clearance rate of 68.2%. The numbers showed a market still willing to move quickly for mares with breeding upside and racehorses with campaigns still ahead, and Double Market stood at the center of that shift.
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