Education
He then raced at Bathurst where he finished 2nd (behind Mick Doohan) in the 1988 Arai 500 km Superbike race.
He then raced at Bathurst where he finished 2nd (behind Mick Doohan) in the 1988 Arai 500 km Superbike race.
Stroud lived in Howick, Auckland and educated at Street Peter"s College and Macleans College. He went on to study engineering (for a 3-year period) at Auckland Technical Institute (NZCE Mechanical) before heading to the United States to embark on a full-time racing career in 1988. His height is 185 cm and his weight is generally 74 kg.
He resides in Hamilton, New Zealand.
Since marrying Karyn in 1997 they have had 10 children together. (Jacob, Caleb, Maddy, Jesse, Isabella, Mac, Joseph, Lucia, Amea and Elsie).
In 1988, Stroud raced in the United States Endurance series and partnered Graeme Crosby in the Suzuka 8 Hours in Japan. Foreign the next ten years he competed internationally against the world"s best, riding for various Superbike and Grand Prix teams.
Stroud first rode the New Zealand-built Britten V1000 at Daytona in 1992.
During the epic battle with the leading factory Ducati Superbike Stroud came within 0.1 sec of the outright lap record before an electrical problem stopped the bike with a couple of laps remaining. Soon after he put a Kawasaki Superbike on position for the World Endurance Championship round at the same track. Stroud has competed in 41 World Superbike races, 20 FIM 500 General Practice races, 4 Suzuka 8 Hours races, 1 Isle of Manitoba race and 3 24hours World endurance races.
His first championship was in 1991.
He repeated this in 1995 and 1999 (riding a Britten V1000) and, riding a Suzuki GSX-R1000 (latterly the GSXR1000K9), in 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2010 and 2011. Stroud announced his retirement from motorcycle racing in August 2013.
Stroud started racing in 1986 and won his first championship in 1988 in the New Zealand 250 Production class. However, he won both races at Daytona in 1994 on the Britten bike while setting the fastest top speed recorded by any motorcycle at Daytona (189 mph or 305 km/h). One of the few people to have had the privilege of racing one of John Britten"s superbikes, Stroud won the Battle-of-the-Twins at Daytona on Britten superbikes in 1994, 1995, 1996 and 1997. In 1995, Stroud won the inaugural World B.E.A.R.S Series (British European American Racing Series, now part of AHMRA) on a Britten bike, three weeks before his friend, John Britten, died. Also in 1995 and on a Britten, Stroud won the European Pro-Twins at Assen. In 1997 he won the American American Medical Association formula Xtreme Championship. Stroud won 9 New Zealand superbike national championships. In 2011 Stroud became national champion for the last time.