Practically from the moment he hung up his baseball cleats, former All-Star catcher Paul Lo Duca has become just as visible in his role as a horse racing analyst and handicapper.
Since his last dispatch from Oaklawn Park in December, Lo Duca’s absence from Saratoga Live on FOX has been conspicuous among horse racing fans on social media.
Wednesday, Lo Duca popped up on social media to explain the reason behind his time off.
I want to thank everyone for their thoughts and prayers. I was involved in a bad accident coming back home to New york from Oaklawn. I was not able to eat for the first couple weeks because of multiple fractures but I’m getting stronger! 💪🏻
— Paul Lo Duca (@paulloduca16) February 19, 2025
“I want to thank everyone for their thoughts and prayers,” Lo Duca wrote on his Twitter/X account. “I was involved in a bad accident coming back home to New york from Oaklawn. I was not able to eat for the first couple weeks because of multiple fractures but I’m getting stronger! 💪🏻”
Lo Duca, 52, is a Brooklyn native who played for the Los Angeles Dodgers, Florida Marlins, New York Mets and Washington Nationals from 1998-2008. Primarily a catcher, Lo Duca made four All-Star teams in 11 seasons at the major league level.
A longtime fan of the sport, Lo Duca found a second career as a horse racing analyst after he retired from baseball. He began working with TVG in 2009, just after his final season with the Nats. Since 2017, he’s worked as an analyst and handicapper with Saratoga Live.
Happy Holidays from @OaklawnRacing ! My best bet for today’s card. @TheNYRA @NYRABets pic.twitter.com/d0ZSlP3JFh
— Paul Lo Duca (@paulloduca16) December 27, 2024
Lo Duca gained stardom in baseball at Arizona State University, after which he was drafted in 1993 by Los Angeles. He played parts of his first seven big-league seasons with the Dodgers before being traded to the Marlins in the middle of the 2004 campaign.
Lo Duca was then traded to the Mets, where he backstopped the team to a 97-win regular season and an appearance in the National League Championship Series. He concluded his career with the Washington Nationals in 2008.
MORE TOP STORIES from The Big Lead
NFL: Shadeur Sanders’ favorite team in Madden is…
MLB: Steve Cohen gets roasted for out-of-touch quotes
NBA: Our first consensus 2025 Mock draft is here
NBA/SPORTS MEDIA: Stephen A. has absurd take on Wemby’s ceiling
California-based trainer Mark Glatt is among the Washington Racing Hall of Fame inductees for 2025, according to a release from Emerald
Thoroughbred racing fixes its followers in time. For that reason, I know exactly where I've been on certain days in early March for so long it's embarrassi
For the ninth year in a row, America’s Best Racing is challenging some of the brightest minds in horse betting to come up with their top three picks for key r
The road to the 2025 Kentucky Derby makes its way to New York when 10 horses battle on