Many famous racehorses died and early death. Such as Seabiscuit, Secretariat, Ruffian, and many others.
sea biscit
Secretariat grossed $59,699,513 in the domestic market.
No, Seabiscuit was a thoroughbred race horse.
Secretariat never ran a match race. You may be thinking of Seabiscuit, who defeated War Admiral.
As with the match race between Seabiscuit and War Admiral in 1938, Secretariat ,ol;kghdawould be the odds-on favorite. He was bigger, had no visable conformation faults, and a trainer that was successful and had many wins under his belt. Obviously Seabiscuit had something in him to allow him to run like he did. So there is really no way to answer this question.
secretariat
Secretariat/Red
"There never lived a horse that was more horse than he that afternoon. He was so beautiful that it almost made you cry, and so full of fire he made you thank your God that you could come close to him. No horse ever lived who could have beaten him that afternoon."
Uh, definitely not. Secretariat is much younger than Seabiscuit. Secretariat was born in 1970. Seabiscuit was born in 1933. That's nearly a 40 year difference. Horses rarely live to be 25. Seabiscuit was not successful as a sire. Secretariat's descendants, however, turned out to be descent racehorses, and some of his descendants include Storm Cat, Terlingua, Weekend Surprise, Elusive Quality, and Smarty Jones, among others. They were related, however, through Fair Play. Fair Play is the sire of Man o War, who was Seabiscuit's grandsire. Secretariat is related to Fair Play through his sire, Bold Ruler. Fair Play is his great-great-great-grandsire. So they are related, but not very closely at all.
No, Seabiscuit was a Thoroughbred race horse.
Seabiscuit was a race horse.