T H McMurry gives Taylor dream night at Woodbine Mohawk Park

Toronto, ON — Last week Ontario’s top 2-year-old male pacers were at Woodbine Mohawk Park for two C$100,000-plus Ontario Sires Stakes Gold divisions. That’s business as usual at Ontario’s premier racetrack but for Jeff Taylor the evening was anything but typical.

Taylor, a long time industry participant, has 245 career training starts. The biggest purse in any of his ten starts in 2023 was a C$22,000 OSS Grassroots division, the rest have ranged from C$5,000 to C$8,000 in overnight races at Rideau Carleton Raceway.

T H McMurry paced a mile in 1:51.4 on July 10 to win by a length. New Image Media photo.

The purse in the first Gold division that night was C$103,100 and T H McMurry, a colt Taylor co-owns with Siobhan Andrusek and Graeme Mitchell drew the eight hole. From that outside post he paced a mile in in 1:51.4 to win by a length and give Taylor the biggest win of his life.

“I didn’t know how to react to it, I was so happy, I couldn’t believe it,” said Taylor. “It’s sunk in a little bit now and I feel really lucky to have an animal like him. I know how hard a lot of people work for a long time and some of them never get to this point. I’m just appreciating every minute because it’s been so fun so far.”

Those watching the Woodbine Mohawk Park broadcast on July 10 heard trainer Dave Menary praise Taylor, a Gloucester, Ont. resident, and his role in training down T H McMurry. But from Taylor’s point of view the win was a team effort.

“Dave’s done an excellent job,” said Taylor. “He had a great week (at Woodbine Mohawk Park) in the Sires Stakes, and I wouldn’t pick anybody else to trust him with. Dave’s been one hundred percent. He’s a class act.”

The road to T H McMurry’s Gold win began at the 2022 London Classic Yearling Sale. Taylor was attending with Mitchell, and he had his eye on the son of McWicked after reviewing online videos prior to the sale.

When he entered the ring as Hip 183, the bidding went to C$21,000 before stalling short of the C$22,000 Taylor signed for. A few days later he sold 25 percent each to Andrusek and Mitchell.

“I looked at the mare (Waasmula) and I got looking at her record and what she did, and I thought, she’s got to throw something with the talent she had,” said Taylor. “I loved the look of the other McWickeds in the sale and I put my hand up, I guess the rest of it’s kind of history.”

McWicked is a Hall of Fame racehorse who needs no introduction, and T H McMurry’s dam Waasmula is a Canadian millionaire who won the 2011 OSS Super Final as a 3-year-old.

So, he has pedigree, and when he shipped to Ottawa to begin his training to become a racehorse with Taylor, he showed he had the potential to follow in his parents’ footsteps.

“I gave him a day off and just put him in the paddock the first day he was here,” said Taylor. “The first day we put the harness on I line drove him out the door. We put the cart on him, and he was pacing walking up to the track. There was no bucking. There was no kicking. He walked up to the track, took a little look around, not out of panic or anything, and he just took off pacing.”

As T H McMurry continued to progress, Taylor found himself racing the colt off a helmet as he trained his yearlings alongside Robbie Robinson’s. But it didn’t surprise Taylor that in his win T H McMurry cut the mile from the middle of the second quarter onward.

“Training I liked to get him kind of in the middle of the pack or on a helmet. I found he was a little racier off a helmet,” said Taylor. “Then one day I cut the mile and he was a gentleman on the front. Nice hold on the bit, but when another horse came up to him, he wanted to hit another level. It was like he found a gear where it kind of surprised you. It brought a smile to your face.”

Taylor is a lifelong horseperson. His first exposure to racing came in his native province of Prince Edward Island through his grandfather Glen Taylor’s horses, and continued with his father Kevin Taylor and his Uncle Kerry Taylor.

Then nearly two decades ago, Taylor accepted a job working track maintenance at Rideau Carleton, a role he is still in today. It wasn’t the job he envisioned in racing when he moved to Ontario, but it gave him stability as he raised young children.

Now his kids are more grown up, and he has ramped up his involvement in the game. In racing, the horse of a lifetime can come at any moment, and for Taylor with T H McMurry that moment appears to be on the horizon.

“I feel really privileged for him to have done what he’s done so far,” said Taylor. “The number of calls, texts and messages I got; it was really humbling just how nice people were. I can’t stress enough how much I appreciate all those kind words and everything.”

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