Envious is how Herb Riecken feels about Who Doctor Who.
At age 22, Who Doctor Who already has enjoyed more retirement time than Riecken, who trained the gelding and raced him with wife Nancy, knows he ever will. Who Doctor Who’s life of leisure started 13 years ago, when the Grade 3 winner and one of Nebraska’s all-time fan favorites wrapped up a racing career highlighted by $813,870 in earnings, 22 stakes victories, and a win in a memorable match race.
"He was about as popular a horse as there ever was in Nebraska. And he was a winner," said Terry Wallace, the announcer at the now-defunct Ak-Sar-Ben in Omaha, Nebraska. "It’s the normal regional thing, and he had a catchy name. There was just a whole series of things about him that people liked."
Success is one of the reasons fans still stop by Riecken’s farm in Fremont, Nebraska, to have their pictures taken with a gelding affectionately known as "The Doctor." Eighteen of Who Doctor Who’s 22 stakes wins were earned at Ak-Sar-Ben, and the gelding ranks second on the list of Nebraska-breds by earnings. Dazzling Falls, a son of Taylors Falls, tops the list with a bankroll of $904,621.
Every time Who Doctor Who ran, Riecken would hear fans shouting "Who, Who" as the gelding warmed up in the post parade. Jubilant fans wearing Who Doctor Who hats would celebrate as their favorite runner earned another win and added to his growing fan base.
"Don’t you think it was the way he ran?" Riecken asked. "He ran with them until the head of the lane. Then it was just like, ‘Well boys, I’ve had enough of this. Let’s go.’ "
Who Doctor Who earned one of his most memorable wins by outrunning the filly Explosive Girl by 31/2 lengths in a match race on July 23, 1988, at Ak-Sar-Ben. The $50,000 match race at one mile and 70 yards stands out in Riecken’s memory because of the pressure the trainer felt before it was run.
"Who Doctor Who was probably as fast a six-furlong horse in his prime as there was in the United States," Riecken said. "But when you go to a mile and seventy, that wasn’t quite his game. He could do it, but it wasn’t his best shot."
Explosive Girl and jockey Don Pettinger opened a 11/2-length lead over Who Doctor Who midway through the race. Just when Explosive Girl appeared that she would pull off a memorable upset for trainer Donnie K. Von Hemel, Who Doctor Who and jockey Tom Greer surged to the front and widened their advantage in the stretch.
The match race was run on the same card as the $200,000 Cornhusker Handicap (G2), a race that jockey Julie Krone and trainer Bill Mott teamed up to win with Palace March (Ire). Wallace remembers seeing fans leave the track after the match race--before the richest race of the day was run.
"Billy Mott came in and won the race. Julie Krone was riding," Wallace said. "Here you had all these [future Racing] Hall of Famers, and they were secondary on the card."
Bad ankles forced Who Doctor Who into retirement as a nine-year-old, and they have prevented the aging warrior who sports gray hairs around his eyes from being ridden. Today, the son of Doctor Stat out of the Barnstorming mare The Girl Who shares pasture space with yearlings and broodmares.
"Wherever I put that horse, he gets along with everybody like they respect him," Riecken said. "He walks up to the feeder. They get over and let him walk in. I’ve never seen him lay his ears back and charge another horse. It’s just like he’s the king of something. It’s been that way all his life."--Jeff Apel {Thoroughbredtimes.com}