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As we anxiously await the first sanctioned racing of the season, let us meet a Legend who has invested much in to the sport - as a rider, breeder, owner and so much more.
George Strawbridge Jr. – With his horses, and himself, he stays the course
Augustin Stable's stamina-laden breeding program gives him an edge on the competition
You can't argue with success: He's got a unique insider view of what it takes to breed a good racehorse ... because he's been there. George Strawbridge Jr. has looked between the ears of a dozen champions and felt the coiled energy of the stride that keeps extending when others around him are folding.
By Betsy Burke Parker
The odds of Berlin Tango winning the group 3 Classic Test at Kempton on Wednesday were 7-1.

The odds of owner-breeder George Strawbridge Jr. winning a major English Derby prep on the first post-COVID day since racing shut down in March at the exact same time as his Legends of Steeplechase interview weren’t much higher than that.  (©Milton C. Toby)

Bottom line: it’s not a surprise when a Strawbridge horse wins.  

Breeder of 2019 Horse of the Year Bricks and Mortar, winner of two steeplechase Eclipse Awards and scores more accolades, as of press time, Strawbridge’s Augustin Stable had won more than $50,000,000 and nearly 1,000 races – double it counting European earnings.

At 82 some 60 years into the game himself, and the third-generation involved in horse racing, Strawbridge has more than $9 million in NSA earnings from 1966-2018, the sport's all-time leader.
Strawbridge doesn’t have any jumpers now, but he doesn’t rule it out. Still, he’s happy to have thriving flat strings in the U.S. and in Europe – about 20 horses each, since purses at the racetrack are driven by wagering. Largely non-betting, steeplechase purses rely on spectators and sponsorships, both notably absent right now.

“It’s a shame about the shutdown,” he says of the corona-crisis. “Look at the enormous entries at Middleburg Spring,” rescheduled from their normal April date to June 13 – 220 horses overflowed the entry box, expanding the seven-race card to 11. “Talk about a hunger. This has been much worse on steeplechasing. And, my god, they’re trying to make it up with two meets. Imagine having a jump horse and nowhere to run. You’d feel like you’re beaten with a stick.”
George Sr.'s father, John Strawbridge, had been a horseman so bold they called him “The Iron Duke,” a nickname he’d earned as an athlete at Trinity College. “I loved my grandfather. He was a true sportsman and a real gentleman,” Strawbridge says. He inherited his distinctive green-and-white silks from John.

“He was one for giving advice, his whole life. When I was about 18, he was trying to put me up for membership in the Philadelphia Club. I told him I had no use for that.

“He was insistent. ‘The point is, George, when you get older, you may not get asked to join.'

“I did not understand.

“He said ‘the older you get, the more enemies you might have, and they might not invite you then.'

“Did I join? Of course I joined. I don’t think you had any choice with The Iron Duke.
Strawbridge was NSA president 1979-1980, and he’s served as chairman and chairman emeritus and was a member of the board of directors of the National Steeplechase Museum in Camden, South Carolina. He won the Ambrose Clark Award award in '79.

Since 1976, Strawbridge has been a member of the Jockey Club and along with Ogden Phipps is one of only two Americans to be members of the Jockey Club of Canada.

The next generation

Youngest of Strawbridge’s three sons, Stewart, 45, carries the family tradition into a fourth generation. Stewart rode Irish-born Thari to win the 2005 New Jersey Hunt Cup, almost 100 years after the first of his grandfather’s three wins.

Stewart was first in the family to ride a Maryland Hunt Cup winner – The Bruce in 2007. John Strawbridge’s Coq Bruyere won the 1941 running with R.P. Hamilton; Stewart’s Guts For Garters won in 2014 with Jody Petty.
Stewart Strawbridge and The Bruce at the 13th fence of the 2007 Maryland Hunt Cup. The Bruce was owned and ridden by Strawbridge, and trained by Sanna Neilson.
©Douglas Lees
“George is a traditionalist,” says long-time friend and contemporary Dr. John Fisher. “He’s passionate about so many things, about horses, about bloodlines, about conservation, about his wife Julia.” Julia Strawbridge is the active competitor in the family these days – she’s a show jumper and eventer, currently training and competing on the Wellington circuit near their Jupiter home.

Even there, though, there’s a deeper family tie.

Julia is showing homebred Ascot Girl in the thoroughbred jumper division. “God, I remember her first race,” George Strawbridge says, maiden special at Gulfstream March 15, 2015 for trainer Michael Matz.

"She won going away and paid $99.
“She’s always been a little loopy. But I get a kick out of watching her come along and progress in her second career. I love the process, everything about it. The racing and the breeding, and deciding what to do with them after their racing career.

“Some of the 2-year-olds go to my (Cochranville, Pennsylvania) farm, the ones that need time to develop” after initial training under saddle with Jonathan Thomas at Bridlewood Farm in Florida. “They’re out in our 100-acre field, running and playing.

“When they go back to Jonathan, he says it saves him a month of training because they’re fit from ‘being horses’ turned out in a big field with hills. I’m convinced that develops their stamina better than anything. They get the opportunity to grow up.

“The reason I’m in it is because of this noble animal. The progression, the sport. I just love it.”
WHOA back

Strawbridge is an outspoken proponent of the “hay, oats, water” theory of horse racing without race-day medications, with Stone Farm’s Arthur and Stacy Hancock and Roy and Gretchen Jackson helping found WHOA – Water, Hay, Oats Alliance.

“The thoroughbred game also is an industry,” Strawbridge acknowledges. “The horses are, to a greater or lesser extent, commodities to the people who breed, own and train them. We agreed there are way too many drugs in American racing, masking pain and other conditions and causing a high fatality rate. Some of the drugs are also (slight) performance enhancers, so you’re screwed if you aren’t using (Lasix), even if your horse isn’t a known bleeder.

“We all thought it would be best to use the international model – no race-day drugs at all. WHOA tried to influence the market to agree to drug-free racing, but it didn’t work. It’s a drug culture.

“Emulating the success model of the rest of the world would be a big start toward respecting the star of the show – the horses. The public and our fans (need to know) that we care and are a clean and legitimate sport.”
Conservation-minded
Nearly 1,000 acres in southeast Pennsylvania will remain open space in perpetuity, thanks to a gift to the Conservation Fund, Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, Mt. Cuba Center and Chester County.
Featuring rolling farmlands, open grasslands, wooded terrain and stream corridor, a 978-acre Strawbridge property adds to a contiguous block of open recreation space of nearly 8,000 acres – one of the largest in the region. The acquisition came 11 years after the protection of an adjacent 735-acre Strawbridge property. The Big Elk Creek section of the White Clay Creek Preserve contains two miles of the Mason-Dixon line along the Pennsylvania-Maryland state border, joining the 5,300-acre Fair Hill Natural Resource Management Area in Maryland. Together, the three areas make up one of the largest conserved spaces in the Mid-Atlantic.

“Large tracts of open space like this are extremely rare and valuable, especially in such a highly developed and populated area,” said Blaine Phillips, Conservation Fund’s Mid-Atlantic director, in a release. “As pressure from development, climate change, and other threats pose unprecedented risks for biodiversity, one of the most important things we can do to support flora and fauna is to conserve open space and the habitats it comprises. The Strawbridge property extends an important wildlife corridor and provides refuge for a wide array of rare and threatened species.”
The property Strawbridge donated in Pennsylvania. ©Jerry Monkman
Good sport

Strawbridge was co-owner then majority owner of the Tampa Bay Rowdies indoor soccer franchise of the old North American Soccer League from the team's founding in July 1974 until he and later partners Lamar Hunt and Bill McNutt sold it after the 1983 season to investors Stella Thayer (also an owner-breeder that owned Tampa Bay Downs with George Steinbrenner), Bob Blanchard (who briefly hosted a hunt meet in Tampa) and Dick and Cornelia Corbett. The Rowdies won the NASL championship in 1974.

Strawbridge was director of the Buffalo Sabres NHL hockey club and a member of the team's executive committee for more than 30 years. In 2004, he was inducted in the Buffalo Sabres Hall of Fame.
Foxy

George Strawbridge has been joint-master of the Andrew’s Bridge Foxhounds since 1970.

“It’s a pack of wonderful, very accomplished hounds,” he says. “Marvelous sport.

“There was a day – I remember it like it was yesterday, maybe 50 years ago. The Kirkwood fox gave us a five-mile point, if you can imagine that. This fox would just tease the hounds, watch them struggle to follow his line. It was such an interesting thing to see him enjoy the chase.

“By the time we called it, it was late afternoon, getting dark and we were, literally, five miles from the vans.”

Strawbridge hasn’t ridden for five years, and says he misses it, hunting especially. “Those are some of my most specific memories. Very fond times.”
Notable names
Jumpers
Cafe Prince (b. 1970) – Champion ’chaser 1977, 1978. Inducted in Racing and Hall of Fame in 1985

(Douglas Lees photo from the 1977 Essex Race Meeting. Jerry Fishback rode Cafe Prince to the win)
Double Reefed (b. 1976) – Champion ’chaser 1981

(Douglas Lees photo from the 1980 Rolling Rock Races, with John Cushman up)
Wustenchef (b. 1965) – Multiple stakes-winner on the turf and over hurdles, including both one memorable month, July, 1971

(Douglas Lees photo of Wustenchef on June 11, 1971 winning the Indian River Hurdle Handicap at Delaware Park. Michael O'Brien rode him for Augustin Stables.)
Other standout stakes winners – Tall Award, Mabrouk, Gateshead, Summer Colony, Jamaica Bay, Irish Approach, Praise The Prince

( Tod Marks photo of Praise the Prince jumping the last fence in the 2001 A.P. Smithwick Memorial, with Gus Brown up. Praise the Prince won multiple Grade 1 hurdle races in the early 2000's, including the Hard Scuffle hurdle stakes, the Meadow Brook hurdle stakes, and the Turf Writers Cup. Later in his career Praise the Prince switched to timber.)
On the flat
Waya (b. 1974) – 1979 Eclipse as champion older female
Treizieme (b. 1981) – In France, won the group 1 Grand Critérium
Silver Fling (b. 1985) – won group 1 Prix de l'Abbaye
Turgeon (b. 1986) – named for Buffalo Sabres player Pierre Turgeon, won group 1 races in France and Ireland
Tikkanen (b. 1991) – named for NHL hockey player, Esa Tikkanen, won 1994 Turf Classic and Breeders' Cup Turf
Lucarno (b. 2004) – Won the 2007 St. Leger Stakes
Rainbow View (b. 2006) – 2008 European champion 2-year-old filly
Selkirk (b. 1988) – Pennsylania-bred, raced in England and France; champion miler of Europe in 1991 and 1992, champion 3-year-old colt and older male in England, champion older male in France. Leading British sire.
Collier Hill (b. 1998) – Won major races in Ireland, Sweden, Germany, Canada and Hong Kong
With Anticipation (b. 1995) – Won the 2002 United Nations Stakes and back-to-back runnings of the Man o' War in 2001-2002. Namesake of the With Anticipation Stakes.
( Tod Marks photo of Strawbridge leading With Anticipation and jockey Pat Day to the winners circle after the 2001 Sword Dancer)
Rochester (b. 1996) – Career earnings topped $1.2 million. Raced 51 times, from 1998 through 2006 as a multiple graded stakes winner. One of the oldest horses in the U.S. to win a graded stakes – at 9. Returned as a steeplechaser in 2008 and won twice.
( Tod Marks photo of Rochester driving to the win at the Winterthur Races in 2008, with Jody Petty in the irons)
Forever Together (b. 2004) – Won the 2008 Breeders' Cup Filly Turf
( Tod Marks photo of Forever Together and Julien Leparoux after a third place finish in the Diana Stakes in Saratoga in 2010)
Informed Decision (b. 2005) – Won the 2009 Breeders' Cup Filly Sprint
( Tod Marks photo of Informed Decision in 2010 in Saratoga)
Bricks and Mortar (b. 2014) – 2019 Eclipse Horse of the Year (breeder)
( Tod Marks photo of Bricks and Mortar winning the 2017 National Museum of Racing Hall of Fame Stakes (Gr. 2) with jockey Joel Rosario)
A 1979 drawing of Strawbridge from artist Peb. (NSA Archives)
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