Yes Yes Yes is commanding huge dollars at stud as a stallion on the rise, which means the race might not need the official elite status it craves.
In the week leading up to the country’s first referendum this century, the Australian Electoral Commission ran an advertisement reminding people to vote before heading to watch a horse race only in its seventh year.
Yes Yes Yes is now standing as a stallion at the prestigious Coolmore Stud property in the Hunter Valley where the owners of each mare served by him pay $33,000 for the privilege. The organisation has been dysfunctional ever since, and The Everest still waits for its stamp as an elite event despite its prize purse lifting to $20 million this year. But it hasn’t deterred buyers when it comes to evaluating a stallion prospect.
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