The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Troy native Lucas Stritsman finds ownership to be divine

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By Tom Pedulla SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. » Lucas Stritsman of Troy, New York, could hardly be described as a grizzled racing veteran. He is no corporate magnate, either. He and his brother, Evan, own Fire Hearth and Patio, a family business in Colonie, New York, that their father, Wayne, started in his garage more than four decades ago.

Stritsman, 42, offers a refreshing­ly fresh face on what thoroughbr­ed ownership can be. The financial stake he has in 12 horses leads him to spend valued family time at Saratoga Race Course with his wife, Erika, and their children, Klara, 7, and Evan, 5.

Stritsman gazed at the beauty of the Saratoga paddock as fellow owners assembled to watch their horses saddled for a recent race and said, “I always knew I would do this. I just hope I’m blessed enough to have the luck and success to continue.”

His passion for racing and Saratoga began the way it did for generation­s of local fans - with family trips to the track. He would study daily entries and results, take photograph­s of horses and run down trainers and jockeys for autographs. Once he grew older, he would slip over to the barn area whenever possible.

“I was always kind of a barn rat,” he said. He still is. Stritsman enjoys checking on his horses as often as possible at the barn of trainer Danny Gargan. He is a popular figure there for reasons that have nothing to do with his operation, Corms Racing Stable. He supplied the grill that Gargan uses to whip up meals for his staff.

Stritsman had dabbled in ownership without enjoying much of a result before he met Gargan at Gulfstream Park in 2013. They formed a dynamic combinatio­n.

“He’s a real laid back, really nice guy,” Gargan said. “Everybody who goes partners with him loves him because he’s got a great personalit­y and a great demeanor about him. For a young guy, he’s really levelheade­d.”

The admiration

“I can’t say enough about the way Danny trains horses,” Stritsman said. “He doesn’t push them, doesn’t drill them. He gives them time. You look at any of Danny’s horses in the paddock and they look beautiful.”

Gargan and Stritsman have excelled at finding buying opportunit­ies, often at the lower levels of the claiming game. They also are skilled at placing horses in races they can win - even if it does not always appear that way to others.

Stritsman continues to delight in telling the story of Good To Look, a New York-bred that went off at 34-1 in a Saratoga allowance race two years ago.

“When he got rolling on is mutual. the lead,” he said, “he was dangerous.”

Good To Look got rolling on the lead and he was, indeed, dangerous. The improbable longshot wired the field for the first of his two victories at that meet.

“That was one of the sweetest days of my life,” Stritsman said. “Not only did I have my picture taken, but I bet.”

As much as he relishes his memories of Good To Look, he will never forget the urgent phone call he received from Gargan in March, 2017. Gargan was thrilled to see Divine Miss Grey, a 3-year-old filly, available for $16,000 in a claiming race at Gulfstream.

Gargan told Stritsman he saw her as a rare opportunit­y, and he was right after winning a four-way shake for her. Divine Miss Grey continuall­y improved under the watchful eyes of her new connection­s, opening this year with consecutiv­e victories at Aqueduct in the seven-furlong Interborou­gh and the one-mile Heavenly Prize Invitation­al before she placed second in the Grade 3 Distaff Handicap at seven furlongs, also at Aqueduct.

“She’s kind of a one in 10year type of horse, maybe one in 15, maybe one in a lifetime,” Gargan said.

Stritsman could not be enjoying the ride any more with the hard-knocking daughter of Divine Park. “She’s turned into a super fun filly,” he said. “Super fun.”

She is the kind of filly that the late Matt Canfield would have appreciate­d. Canfield regularly accompanie­d Stritsman to the track. He was nicknamed “Corms” for reasons unknown. He was always known to be packing a cooler.

“Nicest guy. Greatest guy in the world,” Stritsman said. “He loved this sport.”

Canfield died on April 4, 2011 at age 35. He had been out late and was found at the bottom of a flight of stairs after he failed to respond to phone calls.

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