Saturday, February 9, 2013

Mike Stevenson



 Mike Stevenson is in a good place.

The 48-year-old native of Fredericton is at a stage in his life where he is combining his cultivated driving and training skills for the successful Daniel Ross Stable of Belfast, Prince Edward Island.

This combination had produced some outstanding young horses over the past few years including full brother and sister, Pictonians Souwest (p.3,1:56.2h-$76,822) and Pictonian Amanda (p.2,1:57.4h-$57,203).

Stevenson has been honing his harness racing skills since he was a teenager at Exhibition Park Raceway in Saint John and today he is considered one of the most gifted and natural horsemen in the Maritimes.  Through 30 plus years in the sport he loves, he has distinguished himself as an elite horsemen that has seen him taken a career path through some of North America’s most storied racetracks.

*     *     *     *     *

If the Bishop family - who has had four generations involved with horses, from patriarch, Henry, his son, Clowes, Clowes’ sons, Donald and Gerald, and Donald’s son Michael – are considered Fredericton’s first family of harness racing then the Stevenson family, with Michael, his father, Robert, his mother, Diane, and his sisters, Gloria and Janet, may be the most complete.

Robert (Bobby) Stevenson is a legendary Fredericton horseman who began his career racing horses for the Williamson family back in the 1960’s and early 1970’s. 


He moved to Exhibition Park Raceway in Saint John for two years where he opened a public stable and campaigned many top horses, including 1974 Horse of-the-Year, sophomore Shawfield Bras Dor p.3,2:03.4h (40-21-9-4-$21,011) for owner Gordon Henderson of Saint John.  

In 1976 he picked up again and moved to the bustling Foxboro, MA racing scene.

“With the horses he had at the time, it was an opportunity for them to race for good money,” Stevenson said about his father relocating to the Boston area.  “Guys like him and Marcel (Barrieau) used to go down and travel that circuit for a while and return, but he liked it and decided to go stay there.   Racing was more prosperous there than at home.

“He had horses for the Williamsons and guys from here (Prince Edward Island) like Blois MacPhail and Walter Simmons.  He had a lot of horses from the Maritimes.”

Bobby Stevenson carved out the beginnings of a successful career and later became one of the top trainers at The Meadowlands.

Diane Stevenson spent many years in Maine working as a program director before taking a job as the Clerk of the Course and Program Director at The Meadowlands in 1993, a position that she held for almost 20 years.

“She is amazing,” gushed Stevenson. “She has more kids than anyone I have ever seen in my life.  I remember sitting in the office down there and everybody that walked through the door would call her ‘Mum’.  She was always looking after everybody.

“She was very well-liked wherever she was and very professional at what she did.  She claims to be retired but she still works at Rosecroft two nights a week when they’re racing and she has been doing her Colonial Downs thing every fall since they opened up.”



His sister, Janet, is actively involved in horse racing and married Eddie Davis Jr., who is part of the celebrated Davis family of Smyrna, Ohio.

“They are synonymous with racing down there,” said Stevenson.  “Big Eddie (Davis Sr.) has seven or eight thousand wins (8,631).  He has raced everywhere.  At one time he would race Brandywine in the afternoon, shoot up to the Meadowlands at night, drive back to Delaware and then get up the next day and do it all over again.”

His other sister, Gloria, has also worked in the office at The Meadowlands but has also made a mark for herself as an experienced groom, something she has been doing her whole life.  She was the caretaker of Nihilator during his sensational three-year-old season.  She is currently in Delaware, Ohio and is still involved in harness racing.

*     *     *     *     *

The move to the Foxboro-Rockingham circuit by Bobby Stevenson inspired and nurtured an impressionable young teenager in Michael.

Back in Saint John, he got his qualifying driving license at the age of sixteen and went his first official mile with Don Bickford’s veteran pacer, Hoot Dillon.  After completing high school he followed his father to the New England states and within a few short years he met up with a veteran horseman by the name of Peter Blood.

Stevenson credits the start of a long-term association with Blood with providing him the experience he would need to compete with the best trainers and drivers at some of North America’s greatest tracks.

“I trained horses for Peter off and on for ten or twelve years beginning in my early twenties.  He came up to me one day in the paddock at Foxboro and offered me a job as a second trainer.   We went to Pompano Park in 1986 and had unbelievable luck. 

“We had great horses like Particular (p.5,1:53.4m-$301,524), Williamsburg One (p.5,1:52.2m-$314,910) and Bo Scots Blue (p.5,1:56.1m-$120,372).  We had horses that, when we came back the next spring, we went straight to New Jersey with.”

Over the next five years Stevenson worked with Blood before coming back to Fredericton and by the early 1990’s had built up a stable of his own that included Trusty Bad Guy, Riverside George, Rhumb Line and Barely A Breeze, which he took to Foxboro in the fall of 1992.

“I’ll never forget the first weekend we were down there,” Stevenson said. “I won with Barely A Breeze (1:59.1) and he paid $122 ($121.40) to win.  (Owner) Pat Hill had $20 across the board and wheeled him in the exactor.  He must have cashed $2,500 that night. 

“The next night he bet the same with Rhumb Line and he won (1:59) and paid $16 or $17 ($16.10) to win.  We started off great and it just snowballed from there.”

*     *     *     *     *

Mike Stevenson gives credit to his trainer-father for giving him an opportunity to drive at the Meadowlands.

“When I first started driving he had an agreement with some of his owners to give me a chance,” he recalled.  “I drove some nice horses for some pretty great people.  Everybody in the barn didn’t seem to have any problem giving me the opportunity to drive.”

Mike and his father had decided to work together and he went to Garden State Park to race some horses when the annual meet opened each fall.   He gained a lot of experience racing on the one-mile track so when he finally started driving at The Meadowlands he felt comfortable.

“When it (Garden State Park) opened the main driving colony was racing in Lexington or Delaware so, for the first few weeks, I just got to drive against the same guys I would be driving against at Freehold, where I drove some to.  It made the transition, for a kid who had been racing on the smaller sized tracks, to a mile track somewhat easier, especially with the excitement and pressure you feel when you race at the Meadowlands.”

Stevenson said what may have been the highlight of his career was when he realized that he could drive competitively at The Meadowlands.



“I was doing well there when the track was in its prime.  I think it is every kid’s harness racing dream to want to drive there.  Here I was in my late twenties and on any given night I would go behind the starting gate and there would be legends like John Campbell on one side and on the other side there was Billy O’Donnell.

“The best part about it was I had respect from both.”

Stevenson said the other drivers had gotten to know him when he worked with Blood.

“We had a lot of Grand Circuit horses and a solid overnight stable at the same time.  They all knew I was second trainer for Peter so when I passed the lines to the drivers, told them how the horses were and they had some luck.  I already felt I had the respect before I ever went behind the gate at The Meadowlands.”

*     *     *     *     *

Jaguar Knight came to the Bobby Stevenson Stable at the Meadowland in the fall of 1993.  He was a $24,000 yearling purchase by Wayne Hill in 1991 and when on to be a multiple Atlantic Sires Stakes winner at two and three for trainer Sheldon Watts.   He counted the $20,000 Barrieau-McIsaac final among his accomplishments in the Maritimes.

He qualified on New Year’s Eve 1993 in a rather ordinary 2:00.2 and then proceeded to reel off six straight starts where he failed to pick up a cheque.

It was a rather inauspicious starts for a horse with pretty heady credentials but Stevenson said there was a simple explanation for that.

“I am a firm believer that when a horse leaves the half-mile tracks in the Maritimes it takes them a little while to adjust to the larger race tracks like a Meadowlands or Woodbine.  Horses have to get used to be rolling through all four quarters, not like in the Maritimes where you are always getting a breather for a quarter or half-mile.   On the larger tracks you don’t get that.  Instead of short bursts, they need to learn to carry their speed. 

“The horse was in great shape but he seemed to be going through the motions at first.”

Stevenson said one night his father told him to be aggressive with him and go just as far as he could go.

“Roll him,” he told me.  “Just send him.  I don’t care where you finish, just send him.  So I did.”

“It was a nasty night around the first of March (3) and I rolled him.  I was down to the half in 55 and a piece (55.4), the three-quarters was in 1:24 and change (1:24.1).  He finished sixth and paced in 55 (1:55.3) and he was tired puppy finishing.  Two starts later I took him off the gate and got caught in but he shook loose late and won (in 1:55.4).  After that win he was a different horse and I could drive him anyway I wanted.”

And he continued to win and go faster. 

On April 9 he lowered his record to 1:53.3 and a week later he lowered it another second to 1:52.3.  Two weeks after that he lowered it a full second again to 1:51.3 and on May 14 he became the fastest Maritime-bred horse and second fastest Canadian-bred of all time when he won in 1:51.2.  It was the first of four in-a-row (1:51.4 twice and 1:52.2) to complete a stretch of eight wins in 13 starts, all from off the pace.


“The horse literally loved racing first-over,” Stevenson said admiringly. “He would rather be without cover.  He preferred to come and look you in the eye.  The secret was to never let him clear until the stretch.  When he was at the top of his game, it took a good horse to go by him.”

*     *     *     *     *

Over a ten-year period beginning in 1992, Stevenson had an opportunity to drive some outstanding horses at many different tracks in the United States.

The richest and fastest horse he ever drove was the aged Abercrombie free-for-aller, Misfit (p.7,1:49.4m-$1,190,067), who he won a leg of The Graduate with at Foxboro in 1:53.1.  Other notable performers for Stevenson included J B Stena (p.4,1:51.1m-$372,212), Artist Stena (p.3,1:51.1m-$574,176), By A Length (p.4,1:50.4m-$683,960) and Klingon Hanover (p.3,1:51m-$718,671).

Bobby Stevenson had a powerful stable at The Meadowlands in the late 1990’s and that gave Mike an opportunity to race other Grand Circuit horses in some big races including Duke Of Abby (p.5,1:49.3m-$944,194) and Tune Town (p.5,1:49.1m -$1,098,140).

“Tune Town was one I drove for a while,” said Stevenson. “I won a couple of races with him including one night (January 9, 1999) in a leg of the Presidential Series when we beat Red Bow Tie.”


Tune Town finished second for Stevenson in another leg before finishing fourth to Red Bow Tie in the $100,000 final.

Stevenson considers that, and a win with Quality of Life (p.3,1:50.1-$335,851), as two career highlights that stand out.

 “I won with Quality of Life (1:50.1) in the Kentucky Sires Stakes and gave him his lifetime record.  That was pretty special.”

*     *     *     *     *

Stevenson returned to the Maritimes in 2003 and enjoyed immediate success with a colt named Elm Grove Action (p.4,1:53.3f-$189,273), owned by his cousin Bettina’s husband, Bob McNeil, and John Lavric.

“Bobby never had a yearling before and shortly after I came home (to Saint John) we bought one (for $2,400) and he was a Cinderella colt.  I think he made almost $30,000 as a two-year-old ($28,707) and $34,000 as a three-year-old ($33,528) and then we took him to Harrisburg and sold him for $42,000 American.”

But even with that success Stevenson wasn’t sure Saint John was the place to be.

“I was dealing with some personal demons at the time and I felt that I needed to get away and so I came here (PEI) to start over.

“Wade Sorrie helped me through the first winter I came here and by the next fall I was working for Dan Ross.  He gave me an opportunity to train some good horses and he has stood behind me and is a great guy to work for.  He wants to have quality horses and he does everything right.  He is an absolute great owner.”

Ross had been looking for a full-time driver and someone to help Sorrie train some of his colt back to the races.  It was an opportunity for him to keep some of his horses closer to home, when before they had been sent out to other trainers around the Maritimes. 

It has been a partnership that has excelled on all levels, highlighted by a big day at Charlottetown in the fall of 2011.

On October 9, the Western Paradise-Southview Sasha brother and sister combo, Pictonians Souwest (three-year-old colt) and Pictonian Amanda (two-year-old filly) won their respective $24,000 Atlantic Breeders Crown finals.

“I thought that was pretty cool.  That was a big day,” a satisfied Stevenson said. “Pictonians Souwest was always a very, very quick horse.  

PICTONIANS SOUWEST

“Pictonian Amanda was one of the fastest Maritime-bred horses I have ever sat behind.  She was meant to be an awesome filly.”

However, she cracked her knee late in that freshmen season and returned to the races last year but wasn’t the same though she did win five races and $26,439.

PICTONIAN AMANDA

Another successful horse for the Ross-Stevenson team was the Articulator colt, Mr. Thompson.  He was a multiple stake winner over the past two years earning over $72,000 and taking a record of 1:56.2h at Summerside.

“Mr. Thompson had been getting better and better throughout the year.  We brought him back slow because he was high strung and flighty.  He is a fast horse and is now racing at Woodbine,” said Stevenson.

Currently there are eight young horses in the Ross Stable including six 2-year-olds and two 3-year-olds including a full brother to Pictonian Souwest and Pictonian Amanda named Pictonian Storm. 

“They are all jogging good,” said Stevenson.

*     *     *     *     *

Asked whether he prefers driving or training the introspective Stevenson replied, “The competitive side of me – driving.  I do love training babies though but I am at the point right now where I feel like I can do both well.  I’ll give it another four or five years driving before I start to question myself.

“I pride myself on training the babies.  I give Peter (Blood) a lot of credit for the opportunities to train young horses.  When I was with Dad, we more or less raced overnight horses.  When I went to work for Peter he had some older horses too but we also had great luck with the younger horses and I loved it.  I always look forward to the fall to start with the yearlings.”

If you ask any knowledgeable horsemen they will tell you Mike Stevenson is also a natural in the bike.

“Most of time I try to drive horses to their individual style.  I let horses drive me to a certain extent.   I like to think I adapt to the talent of the horse and try not to force the horse to have to adapt themselves to me,” Stevenson said.

He is rapidly approaching 1,500 career wins, a milestone that should be easily attainable this year if he keeps up the pace of previous years.  Last year he surpassed $4 million in lifetime earnings to make him the richest driver to ever come from Fredericton, and scored 99 wins but still wasn’t satisfied with his year.

“Even with the success I thought it was somewhat of an off year (for me),” he said.  “I wasn’t where I thought I should be and I had put on a little bit of weight.   I didn’t feel fit so I joined the gym, started to eat healthier and just tried to do the right thing and look after myself.  By the time I get back driving this spring, I’ll feel better about myself out there (racing).”

Daniel Ross built a barn at the farm at the Pinette racetrack a few years ago and it is an ideal setting to train horses, according to Stevenson.

MR THOMPSON

“I can look down at the river on side.  The barn and the paddock are on the other side.  There is even an antique grandstand there.

“I have the dream job in the Maritimes.”

*     *     *     *     *


Mike Stevenson career highlights

$4,090,773 – Career earnings
1437 – Career wins

1981 - First three lifetime drives earning $185
1982 – First career win with Game Blast at Northfield Park, OH
1994 - Won with Jaguar Knight in 1:51.2 becoming the fastest Maritime-bred and second-fastest Canadian-bred
1994 – Most earnings in one season ($426,173)
1996 – Drove J B Stena to a third-place finish in a leg of the George Morton Levy series won by Riyadh
1997 – 500 lifetime wins
1997 – Drove Misfit to a win in a leg of the Graduate Series at Foxboro
1999 – Drove Tune Town to a win in a leg of The Presidential series at The Meadowlands defeating Red Bow Tie
1999 – Drove two-year-old By A Length to a New Jersey Sire Stakes win in 1:52.3 at Garden State Park
2001 - Fastest win with Quality of Life (1:50.1 lifetime record) at Lexington, KY
2001 - Won three in-a-row with three-year-old Klingon Hanover at Lexington, KY including 1:51 lifetime record
2004 – Won Governors Plate at Summerside with Igoddago in 1:55.3 equaling track record
2006 – 1,000th career win with My Buddy Mark on September 2 at Exhibition Park Raceway


2010 – Most wins (115) in one season
2011 – Won $24,000 Atlantic Breeders Crown events with Pictonians Souwest and Pictonian Amanda

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In our last blog we looked at some of Fredericton’s current drivers and some of their career stats.  Here is a list of some other Fredericton natives, some of whom now plying their skills elsewhere, some are inactive and some are deceased.  Certain drivers raced in era where driving stats were not accurately kept and probably their totals are much higher.  I would like to thank Patrick Eastwood for compiling this list.

Bobby Stevenson - 1531 - $2,092,045      
Mike Stevenson - 1437 - $4,090,773      
Lonny Stokes – 1228 - $1,060,595      
Philip Bo Sowers – 159 - $216,251      
Ned Lindon – 125 - $48,849      
Scott Forbes - 124 - $549,764             
John Tyler – 113 - $46,287      
Gordon C Collett – 112 - $44,116      
Kim Cameron – 81 - $45,139      
Clowes Bishop – 56 - $28,967      
Ed McCoy – 45 - $15,909      
George Woodside – 41 - $18,901      
Lloyd Denton – 23 - $8,437     
Mark Stevenson – 21 - $10,945      
Wade McCoy – 19 - $51,551      
Chester Eatmon Sr. – 17 - $5,911      
Doug Cameron – 15 - $8,016      
Todd Scott – 13 - $12,614      
Susan Downey – 10 - $2,673      
Ashley Sloat – 7 - $3,509      
George Spencer – 7 - $1,996      
Tony Decourcey – 4 - $1,841      
Brian Embleton – 3 - $983      
Winfield Scott – 3 - $1,794       
Paul Cooper – 1 - $321       
Tom Etter – 1 -$185
Jeff Trites – 0 - $811      


For more blogs on New Brunswick harness racing go to thefrederictonscene.blogspot.ca

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