The 2012 Breeders' Cup Mile (gr. IT) was everything we hoped it would be. We followed Wise Dan into the race with faith that Charlie LoPresti wasn't just full of trainer speak, that this horse was actually as brilliant as his conditioner said. We'd seen him win the Shadwell Turf Mile (gr. IT) at Keeneland, the Woodbine Mile (Can-IT) at Woodbine, the Fourstardave Handicap (gr. IIT) at Saratoga Race Course, the Ben Ali (gr. III) in a record-setting route back in Lexington at the beginning of the season. But the Breeders' Cup at Santa Anita Park would be his proving ground.
[image url="http://cdn.bloodhorse.com/images/content/WiseDanBC11012012AE225.jpg" alt="Wise Dan" credit="Anne M. Eberhardt"]Wise Dan checks out the Santa Anita turf course.[/image]
I'll always remember watching the Wiseman's Ferry gelding walk through the backside Nov. 1 en route to his first gallop on the California lawn. He took in new surroundings with a confident air, strolling quietly beside the pony as he made his way to the track. Charlie walked up into the grandstand and settled down—seat 9, row 2—to watch his racehorse jog on by. There was a little haze surrounding the San Gabriel Mountain range, but the oval itself was drenched in sunlight and Wise Dan's copper coat glinted in the beams. Anyone who watched him gallop that morning, neck bowed strong into the bridle, could see he was a force to be reckoned with.
Wise Dan wasn't the only one touting himself that week.
Animal Kingdom, the 2011 Kentucky Derby Presented by Yum! Brands (gr. I) winner, was training in flat-out beast mode. That was part of the intrigue, trainer Graham Motion sending the Team Valor runner off his only start of the year—a Feb. 18 turf allowance at
Gulfstream Park—straight into the game's stiffest competition.
Then there was
Obviously, the front-running speedster who set a still-standing course record of 1:32.14 on the turf in the Aug. 26 Del Mar Mile (gr. IIT) and finished just 0.06 of a second off the track record Oct. 6 in the Arroyo Seco Mile (gr. IIT), and there was
Excelebration, a highly regarded multiple group I winner who had the Europeans talking trash against America's top horses. Even before the race was run, you knew it was going to be something special.
Point of Entry was supposed to win the Breeders' Cup Turf (gr. IT). He didn't.
Game On Dude was supposed to win the Breeders' Cup Classic (gr. I). He didn't. But Wise Dan won the Mile and did so in a record-setting 1:31.78, with the gallant Animal Kingdom surging late between horses after traffic trouble to finish 1 1/2 lengths behind. Obviously was third, Excelebration finished fourth. The race lived up to all the hype, and from Morton Fink's lone remaining broodmare—$29,000 yearling purchase
Lisa Danielle—a champion was born.
I walked back with Wise Dan after the race, missing much of the Classic festivities, just standing there listening while he cropped at grass outside Barn 36. It was quiet and peaceful, and I felt the deep satisfaction that comes from knowing a horse is good, from knowing you've witnessed his best moments. The 2012 Mile was proof a great runner can come from anywhere.
Once in a while, this game actually does deliver on all its promises.