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Born in Wisconsin, Linda Rice is a third-generation thoroughbred trainer who grew up in the business. She was active in the breaking, training and development of young horses for her father Clyde Rice even during the two years she attended Penn State. An exercise rider and assistant trainer for many years, her passion for racing led her to training thoroughbreds full time in 1987 when she was 23 years old. |
| In no small sense, Rice was born to the breed as her entire family has been active in the thoroughbred industry. Her brother Kent was the leading apprentice jockey in the U.S. in 1979, riding 311 winners. Brothers Wayne and Bryan are integral to the family’s considerable success in both the sales ring and in readying young horses for the races. The Rice family moved to Pennsylvania in the early 1970s where Clyde Rice became a leading trainer at Penn National. The elder Rice also became friends with now Hall of Fame horseman D. Wayne Lukas and Linda remembers watching Secretariat win the 1973 Kentucky Derby and race into legend on a black and white TV. |
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Linda cites two women, both now in the National Museum of Racing’s Hall of Fame, as inspiring her career. They are Janet Elliot, the first female trainer to be inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2009 after years of competing in the upper echelon of steeplechase racing in America, and jockey Julie Krone, still the only woman to win a Triple Crown race as she guided Colonial Affair to a win in the 1993 Belmont Stakes. Krone heads the list of the five female jockeys who have won 2,000 races with 3,704 and is by far the leader in purse money won of the quintet.
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