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Reddam puts study of knowledge to work in racing

Thursday - 6/7/2012, 3:57am  ET

By RICHARD ROSENBLATT
AP Sports Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - As a philosophy professor at California State University in Los Angeles, J. Paul Reddam dabbled in logic and epistemology, the study of knowledge.

As a horse owner, Reddam put his specialties to good use, buying horses, winning races and collecting prize money. To pull it all together, he started a lucrative mortgage lending company he sold for millions, and currently operates an unsecured loans business that rakes in enough dough to allow him to live in Sunset Beach, Calif., and have a membership in three private golf clubs.

Nothing, though, has prepared the 56-year-old from Windsor, Ontario, for a date with immortality at the Belmont Stakes on Saturday, when the colt he bought for $35,000 _ I'll Have Another _ attempts to become the first Triple Crown champion in 34 years.

"I won't let myself think about it," said Reddam, who bears a resemblance to the actor/comedian Mike Myers, a fellow Canadian. "If we cross the finish line first or not, my attitude is we're along for the ride. And where it goes, it goes. We're lucky enough to be living a dream, and let's see how it ends."

Reddam and his wife, Zillah, arrived at Belmont Park on Wednesday morning, and accompanied trainer Doug O'Neill to the track to watch I'll Have Another go for his morning gallop. It was the first time he had seen the colt he bought on the advice of O'Neill's brother, Dennis, since the morning after his Kentucky Derby winner had reeled in Bodemeister to win the Preakness on May 19.

So much has gone on since. Reddam got back to work at CashCall, Inc., his Fountain Valley, Calif., company that makes unsecured loans to high-risk investors. There was the 45-day suspension to O'Neill for a medication violation; a visa issue with I'll Have Another's exercise rider; a ban on nasal strips the horse wears; a near-collision with a runaway horse; and the hasty order by New York's racing and wagering board for a detention barn for all Belmont runners for security and safety measures.

Of course, Reddam took a philosophical approach.

"I'm not wondering what's next," he said. "In golf, there's a saying you play the ball where it lies, and that's what you do in horse racing. Basically, there is one day in a horse's life he can run in the Belmont Stakes and if you're ready you're ready and if you're not you're not. And if you're sick, too bad. So you've just got to go with it, whatever obstacles are put in the way."

Over these five weeks at Churchill Downs, Pimlico and now Belmont, Reddam has tried to minimize the issues, and accentuate the fun factor. He has spared no expense in allowing Team O'Neill to do right by his horses, and to enjoy a magical journey in their quest for the Triple Crown. In Baltimore, he put them up in condos on the waterfront at the Inner Harbor. In New York, he rented a 12,000-square-foot mansion in Old Westbury for the crew.

"Paul is awesome. A mentor in so many ways," Doug O'Neill said. "He has an unbelievable work ethic, and he's never had anything handed to him. He's the most loyal guy I've ever met. The way he's treated us ... there's no possible way we could have enjoyed our journey with any other owner the way we have with Paul. Everything's first class with him."

Reddam has a pretty decent racing record, too. He was a harness racing fan as a kid, and when he moved to California he was captivated by the thoroughbreds at Santa Anita Park in the 1980s. He started buying claiming horses, and as his business picked up he began buying more expensive stock. In 2001, Swept Overboard gave him his first Grade 1 win, an exhilarating victory over Breeders' Cup Sprint champion Kona Gold in the Ancient Title at Santa Anita.

It was Reddam's "aha" moment in racing.

"On the backside, we were 15 lengths off the lead, and I'm standing next to (trainer) Wally Dollase, who says `What's (jockey Eddie) Delahoussaye doing? He's got him in China!' `' said Reddam. "I said, `OK, let's just watch.' So he cuts the corner, flew by everybody and it was the most thrilling thing to have that experience. It's human nature to want to repeat it and chase it."

So he did. He won the 2006 Breeders' Cup Turf with Red Rocks, who also beat two-time Horse of the Year Curlin in the 2008 Man o' War; Square Eddie took the Breeders' Futurity in 2008, and Wilko won the 2004 Breeders' Cup Juvenile.

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