Gate Dancer

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Gate Dancer
Sire Sovereign Dancer
Grandsire Northern Dancer
Dam Sun Gate
Damsire Bull Lea
Sex Stallion
Foaled 1981
Country United States Flag of the United States
Colour Bay
Breeder William R. Davis
Owner Kenneth Opstein
Trainer Jack Van Berg
Record 28: 7-8-7
Earnings US$2,501,705
Major Racing Wins, Awards and Honours
Major Racing Wins
Super Derby (1984)
Omaha Gold Cup (1984)
Cornhusker Handicap (1985)

American Classic Race wins:
Preakness Stakes (1984)

Honours
Gate Dancer Street in Elkhorn, Nebraska
Infobox last updated on: May 16, 2007.

Gate Dancer (1981-1998) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse best known as a winner of an American Classic Race and for his part in a thrilling three-horse finish in the inaugural running of the Breeders' Cup Classic.

Bred in Florida by William R. Davis, Gate Dancer was a son of Sovereign Dancer, in turn a son of the great Northern Dancer. He was out of the mare Sun Gate, whose sire was Bull Lea, a five time Leading sire in North America. Trained by Jack Van Berg, on the racetrack the high-strung colt became distressed from the sounds of the crowd until his trainer eventually devised a hood for his head with earmuffs that minimized the noise.

In June of 1983, Gate Dancer won his two-year-old racing debut Ak-Sar-Ben Racetrack in Omaha, Nebraska. He would race once more in Omaha then compete twice in California. Of his four starts that year, he ended up with two wins and two seconds. In his three-year-old season, Gate Dancer was aimed towards the Kentucky Derby. Staying in California, in February of 1984 he ran second in the El Camino Real Derby at Bay Meadows and two weeks later at Santa Anita Park won an allowance race. In March he finished second in the San Felipe and third in the Santa Catalina Stakes. Gate Dancer then had another third in April's Arkansas Derby behind Althea whose winning time equaled the Oaklawn Park track record for 1⅛ miles. Althea, the 1983 U.S. Champion 2-Year-Old Filly, then became the heavy betting favorite going into the Kentucky Derby.

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[edit] 1984 U.S. Triple Crown

Ridden by Eddie Delahoussaye in the Kentucky Derby, Gate Dancer was sent off at longshot odds of 19:1. Starting at the far outside in post position twenty, he immediately ran into difficulty but by the mile pole had managed to move up to ninth place with race favorite Althea tiring badly and dropping out of contention. Gate Dancer tried in vain to catch the leaders down the homestretch but veered in, bumping another horse several times. He ended up finishing fourth behind Claiborne Farm's winning colt, Swale. Following an interference complaint over the bumping incident, Churchill Downs stewards set Gate Dancer back to fifth place.

For the Preakness Stakes, jockey Angel Cordero, Jr. was aboard Gate Dancer. This time, the colt had a clean start in the much smaller field of nine and set a new track record in winning the second leg of the Triple Crown series. Swale, the heavily favored Derby winner, finished well back in seventh place. However, in the grueling 1½ mile Belmont Stakes, Gate Dancer moved into contention as they headed into the homestretch but after making a charge at the front running Swale, he tired and dropped back to finish sixth.

[edit] Breeders' Cup Classic

Following his loss in the Belmont Stakes, Gate Dancer's handlers brought him back to his first home at Ak-Sar-Ben Racetrack in Nebraska where in August he won the 1984 Omaha Gold Cup. In his next start in September, he set a new track record for a mile and a quarter in winning the 1984 Super Derby at Louisiana Downs. In November he was shipped to Hollywood Park Racetrack for the inaugural running of the Breeders' Cup Classic. In a titanic duel, Gate Dancer, Wild Again, and Slew o'Gold battled head to head through the stretch and all the way to the finish line with Wild Again coming out on top and Gate Dancer second. At the end of 1984, trainer Jack Van Berg was voted the Eclipse Award for Outstanding Trainer.

In 1985, Gate Dancer started ten times, winning once and capturing second and third place on three occasions each. Back for his second attempt in the Breeders' Cup Classic, he made a determined effort but finished in second place once again to the Darby Dan Farm colt, Proud Truth. Raced three times in 1986, Gate Dancer earned a fifth place finish in the Santa Anita Handicap and a third in the Widener, and in the final race of his career, he came in second in the Oaklawn Handicap.

[edit] Career as a sire

Retired to Florida, Gate Dancer initially stood at stud at owner Kenneth Opstein's Good Chance Farm near Ocala in south Marion County, Florida and eventually ended up at Silverleaf Farm near Summerfield. Although he sired 27 stakes winners, none achieved the same level of racing success as Gate Dancer. On March 6, 1998, after a long struggle with laminitis, Gate Dancer was humanely euthanized. He was buried at Johnson Hollow Farm, near Oxford, Florida.

A portrait of Gate Dancer was painted by Nebraska artist, Gwen G. Sides.

[edit] References