Game On Dude, who was
retired from racing on September 18 as the only three-time winner in the
77-year history of the Santa Anita Handicap, will parade between the 6TH and 7TH
races on Saturday at Santa
Anita.
Trained by Bob Baffert, the beloved seven-year-old gelding thrilled fans for
the better part of five racing seasons through 34 starts and 16 victories — 14
of which were graded stakes.
“Dude,” as he was affectionately referred to by Baffert, will make his way
through Santa Anita’s Seabiscuit Walking Ring following the 6TH race, at
approximately 3:35 p.m. (PDT). Ridden by Dana Barnes, he will then head to the
main track, where he’ll make a right turn and proceed east to the track’s Eddie
Logan Suite on the Club House turn. From there, he’ll be turned around and
pointed to the Winner’s Circle where he’ll be honored with a brief ceremony that
will include a video tribute.
Owned by a partnership that includes baseball Hall of Famer Joe Torre’s
Diamond Pride LLC, the Lanni Family Trust, Mercedes Stable LLC and Bernard
Schiappa, Game On Dude made history in winning his first Big ‘Cap in 2011, as he
was ridden to a nose victory by Chantal Sutherland, who thus became the first
female jockey to win North America’s longest continually run hundred grander.
Under Mike Smith, Game On Dude won his second Big ‘Cap by a record 7 3/4
lengths in 2013 and he went on to register powerful front-running victories
later that year in both the Hollywood Gold Cup and the Pacific Classic at Del
Mar — becoming only the second horse in history to sweep California’s three
biggest added money races for older horses in the same year.
A Kentucky-bred son of Awesome Again of out of the Devil His Due mare Worldly
Pleasure, Game On Dude registered his 16th and final win in this year’s Big
‘Cap, winning gate to wire under Smith by 1 3/4 lengths. Pressed through
blistering fractions early, Game On Dude made the early lead in his final start,
the Pacific Classic, on August 24, but faded to fourth, beaten 5 1/4 lengths by
undefeated three-year-old sensation Shared Belief.
“He ran a great race in the Pacific Classic, but it’s gotten to the point
where there is always going to be some horse who is going to be sacrificed by
running with him and forcing him into ridiculous fractions, as was the case at
Del Mar,” Baffert said last week. “He’s gotten beat three races in a row and
it’s not fun for the horse. He’s been too good for us. When he was great, he was
great.”
In addition to his 16 wins, Game On Dude retires with seven seconds and one
third-place finish, and total earnings of $6,498,893.
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