The Rock Hard Ten colt who led the California-bred portion of Monday’s Barretts March sale of 2-year-olds in-training in Pomona, Calif., is already at trainer John Sadler’s barn on the Santa Anita backstretch. The colt sold for $210,000 to Buzz Chace, agent for the West Point Thoroughbred syndicate. The colt was consigned by Ciaran Dunne’s Wavertree Stable, which purchased him last October at the California Cup yearling sale at Barretts for $40,000. Sadler said on Friday that he is in the process of evaluating the Rock Hard Ten colt and how to proceed with training in coming weeks. It is possible the colt could remain in training in coming weeks, or be turned out briefly with the goal of being ready for the start of the Del Mar meeting in July. “He came to me the next day after the sale,” Sadler said. “We haven’t been able to do much with him because it’s been pretty muddy.” Rain hampered training at Santa Anita late in the week. There was no training on the main track on Friday morning because of overnight rain. The Rock Hard Ten colt is out of Barbara Orr, who was second by a neck in the Grade 3 Rancho Bernardo Handicap at Del Mar in 2004. The Rock Hard Ten colt was the last of nine California-bred in the one-day sale, with all nine horses listed as sold, according to sale company records. The California-breds sold for a gross of $528,000, or an average of $58,667. The prices ranged from $210,000 for the Rock Hard Ten colt to $20,000 for a Purge filly and a Bertrando colt. Overall, the sale showed substantial increases in average and median. With a catalog 22 percent smaller than in 2010, the average rose 11 percent, to $100,709, while the median rose 17 percent, from $60,000 to $70,000. The buyback rate fell from 31 percent in 2010 to 24 percent this year. There were 55 horses listed as sold. “We had a smaller catalog and it was still full of quality,” said Barretts director of sales Kim Lloyd. “The Cal-breds sold in demand.” The Rock Hard Ten colt’s purchase price equaled the fifth-most expensive hip of the sale, which was led by a colt by Pomeroy who sold to Jess Jackson’s Stonestreet Stable for $625,000. Five of the nine California-breds had sold at the 2010 California Cup yearling sale, including a Bertrando colt, out of Shades of Chic, purchased then for $42,000 by Bruno de Berdt, agent, and sold on Monday for $87,000 to Japanese buyer Shigeru Morinaka. The leading California-bred filly at the sale was an In Excess filly out of Usual Lies who sold for $42,000 to Marco Antonio Gonzalez from the consignment of Andy Havens, agent. Rio Verde filly first 2-year-old winner in California Musical Miracle was the first juvenile winner of the year in Southern California in Thursday’s first race, a maiden race for California-bred $100,000 claimers over two furlongs. Trained by Walther Solis, Musical Miracle was timed in 21.50 seconds, winning by 1 1/2 lengths over Oh Righty. The first two finishers are by Rio Verde and were bred by Terry Lovingier, who stands Rio Verde at his Lovacres Farm, near Warner Springs, Calif. Musical Miracle, a filly, is owned by Lovingier. Oh Righty, a colt, is owned by a partnership. Rio Verde, by Nureyev, frequently has progeny in the two-furlong races at Santa Anita, and the early spring maiden races over 4 1/2 furlongs at Hollywood Park. Both Musical Miracle and Oh Righty are trained by Solis.