First trained by future Hall of Fame inductee
Woody Stephens, Bold Bidder did not run in the
Kentucky Derby. Instead, his Wheatley stablemate
Bold Lad, the 1964
American Champion Two-Year-Old Colt and 1965
Derby Trial Stakes winner, was entered. Sent off as the
betting favorite, Bold Lad finished tenth in an eleven-horse field. Neither horse ran in the
Preakness Stakes, but Bold Bidder finished eighth in the
Belmont Stakes. He was purchased by August Paul and trainer
Randy Sechrest in 1965 and then sold to Paul Falkenstein who leased him for five years to
John R. Gaines. Bold Bidder won the 1966
Hawthorne Gold Cup, the
Monmouth and
Washington Park Handicaps, and the 1966
Strub Stakes at
Santa Anita Park. In the Strub, he set a track record that stood until 1979 when his son,
Spectacular Bid, broke it. Bold Bidder's performances saw him named 1966
Champion Handicap Male Horse by the Thoroughbred Racing Association with the three-year-old
Buckpasser taking the rival
Daily Racing Form award. ==Stud career==