George M. Odom

George Odom

Odom, circa 1903.
Occupation Trainer
Born July 8, 1882
Columbus, Georgia
United States
Died July 29, 1964
Career wins 527 (as a jockey)
Major racing wins

As a jockey:
Champagne Stakes (1899, 1904)
Jerome Handicap (1899)
Advance Stakes (1900, 1902, 1903)
Gazelle Handicap (1901)
Matron Stakes (1901, 1902)
Metropolitan Handicap (1901)
Toboggan Handicap (1901, 1904)
Tremont Stakes (1901)
Brighton Derby (1902)
Brighton Handicap (1902, 1903)
Lawrence Realization Stakes (1902)
Saratoga Handicap (1903)
Withers Stakes (1904)

American Classic Race wins:
Belmont Stakes (1904)

As a trainer:
Test Stakes (1922, 1941)
Empire City Handicap (1926, 1927)
Toboggan Handicap (1926)
Belmont Futurity Stakes (1928, 1935)
Metropolitan Handicap (1928)
Manhattan Handicap (1929, 1949)
Tremont Stakes (1937)
Saranac Handicap (1942)
Arlington Handicap (1945)
San Pasqual Handicap (1945)
San Vicente Stakes (1945)
Santa Anita Handicap (1945)
Santa Anita Oaks (1945)
Santa Margarita Handicap (1945)
Washington Park Handicap (1945)
Travers Stakes (1947)
Arlington-Washington Lassie Stakes (1957

American Classic Race wins:
Belmont Stakes (1938)
Honours
National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame (1955)
Significant horses

As a jockey:
Africander, Banastar, Broomstick, Delhi,
Ethelbert, Gold Heels, Imp


As a trainer:
Busher, Chance Play, Nimba,
Pasteurized, Tippity Witchet

George Martin Odom (July 8, 1882 - July 29, 1964) was an American National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame jockey and trainer in Thoroughbred horse racing. He is only one of two people to ever have won the Belmont Stakes as both a jockey and a trainer.

A native of Columbus, Georgia, at age fourteen George Odom galloped horses for future Hall of Fame trainer, William P. Burch. He began riding professionally at age fifteen and in 1899 at age sixteen, won his first race. He quickly made such an impression that an April 10, 1899 article in the Chicago Daily Tribune referred to him as another Tod Sloan. In June 1899, the eighty-seven-pound Odom, who was an early advocate of the short-stirrup riding manner used today, signed a contract to ride for W. C. Whitney for a salary of $10,000 a year with additional compensation on a sliding scale for winning and finishing in the money.

He rode at tracks in New York, New Orleans and the Benning Race Track in Washington, D.C.. Among his major wins as a jockey, Odom rode Banastar to victory in the 1901 Metropolitan Handicap and won the Woodlawn Vase trophy on three occasions. The best known of his mounts was future Hall of Fame inductee, Broomstick.

After just eight years as a jockey, George Odom retired from riding in 1905 with a 17.2 winning percentage. Widely respected, he had earned a reputation as an honest jockey in an era when race fixing was not uncommon. Odom then made his home in Atlanta, Georgia and immediately turned to training horses.

As a trainer

Broomstick with George Odom up, circa 1903.

George Odom made his debut as a trainer on August 30, 1906 at Sheepshead Bay Race Track in Brooklyn, New York. He owned and trained a colt name Oraculum, who won the 1906 Hempstead Stakes for two-year-olds at Jamaica Racetrack. In 1907, Odom led all trainers in wins at Washington Park Race Track in Chicago.

During his career, George Odom operated a public stable whose clients over the years included Robert L. Gerry, Sr., Marshall Field III, and Hollywood film mogul Louis B. Mayer who owned Odom's most famous runner, Busher, a future Hall of Fame filly who was voted 1945 American Horse of the Year honors. Odom also trained good runners such as Nimba and Tippity Witchet, and in 1938 won the Belmont Stakes with Pasteurized, joining James G. Rowe, Sr. as the only ones to ever win that American Classic both as a jockey and as a trainer.

Following the formation of the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame, George Odom was part of the 1955 inaugural class of inductees.

Married to Julie Murtha in 1902, in later years the Odoms made their home in Jamaica, New York. A few weeks after his eighty-second birthday, George Odom died on July 29, 1964 at Roosevelt Hospital in Manhattan, New York. Their son, George P. "Maje" Odom, was also a trainer.

References

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