Brown Feted For Reaching Career Milestone

Brady Brown honoured at The Meadows for reaching 1,000 driving wins

Hollywood Casino at The Meadows and the Meadows Standardbred Owners Association on Wednesday honoured driver Brady Brown, who collected career win 1,000 on Monday at the Clearfield County (PA) Fair.

“It’s always been a big dream of mine to get this,” said Brown. “It’s a big accomplishment to me. I always thought about it and, sure enough, here I am.”

Brown, 29, is a native of Slippery Rock, Butler County, about 70 miles north of The Meadows, and still resides there. He grew up around harness racing, as his grandfather, Robert Brown, his father, Terry Brown, and Terry’s friend, Bean Callahan, together owned Standardbreds that they campaigned from their base at the Butler County Fairgrounds.

“I took every chance I could get to go to the barns,” recalled Brown. “I started at the bottom, doing the stalls. My grandfather was a homicide detective and my father was a police officer in Slippery Rock. If I hadn’t gone for the horses, I would have been a police officer. But I got the bug.”

While he dropped out of high school to pursue a driving career, his sister, Ashley Brown, took a parallel path to racing, opting to get her nursing degree before settling into the sport as a trainer. She now operates a Meadows-based stable with her husband, trainer/driver Chris Shaw.

At the fairgrounds, young Brady was befriended by trainer Steve Schoeffel, who was a presence at both Pennsylvania’s pari-mutuel tracks and the PA Fairs circuit. It was Schoeffel who gave Brown his biggest career boost, naming him on many of his fairs performers — but all in due time.

“That relationship is very important to me,” said Brown. “Steve gave me my first drive when I was 16, but he didn’t give me the whole works. He had a barnful of 25 and I drove one horse for him. He definitely made me earn it. That’s the best way to learn.”

Fittingly, Brown’s milestone win came with Blue Ashes, a Schoeffel trainee.

Once Brown earned his spurs at the fairs and began picking up more pari-mutuel drives, he was still something of a mystery to local players, who often sent him off at monstrous odds. He brought home a steady stream of those longshots, earning him the nickname “Downtown Brady Brown.” He likes that sobriquet.

“Just about everybody I see calls me that,” he said. “I still have those longshots. They’re not always 3-5.”

This season, Brown ranks fifth (by wins) among all Meadows drivers. During his career, his mounts have earned more than $9.6 million in purses.

Among Brown’s favourite horses through the years has been the Schoeffel-trained Royalty Has Arrived; they all teamed to win a PA Fairs championship in 2015 when Royalty Has Arrived, now 10 and still competing, was three.

“That horse made me look good,” said Brown. “Age has gotten to him a little bit. He’s not quite the caliber of horse that he was, but he’s still a gutsy horse.”

Brown doesn’t anticipate making any major changes for the immediate future.

“I go day by day,” he said. “I don’t get too crazy looking ahead. If I can keep doing what I’m doing right now, I’m just fine with that.”

On Wednesday at The Meadows, Brown kept doing what he’s been doing, recording career wins 1,002 and 1,003.

(MSOA)

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