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					2022-11-25 
				
					Inside the Mind of Jimmy Takter 
				
					MILLENIUM FARM, EAST WINDSOR  
					One week from today, perhaps the greatest trainer in history will retire. HRU examines what makes him tick, his Zen-like connection with horses and why he’s walking away at the top of the game.
 
										
				
					 Under battleship gray 
					skies, a squadron of geese is bugging out over rust-dusted 
					trees. A chilling November wind indicates a sea change, but, 
					for the moment, Jimmy Takter is passively sitting in a jog 
					cart, waiting on Tactical Landing to decide when it is time 
					for work. 
					 
					“If you’re not patient in this game you’re never going to 
					make it as a trainer,” Takter said as the majestic trotter 
					stood statue still for the better part of 10 minutes on the 
					path to the track, staring at God knows what in the vast 
					panoramic at Takter’s Hightstown, NJ private equine heaven. 
					 
					It is exactly one week since Tactical Landing’s Breeders 
					Crown victory added another chapter to Takter’s thick tome 
					of accomplishments, but the trainer is counting the days 
					forward, not backward. 
					 
					The night before, over a bottle of wine, Takter turned to 
					his wife Christina with a grin and said simply, 
					“Twenty-eight days.” 
					 
					Christina beamed. 
					 
					More than a year ago, Jimmy announced he would retire from 
					training at the end of 2018 (full story here). The date he 
					has circled on his mental calendar is Dec. 1. 
					One week from today, one of the greatest trainers to ever 
					sit behind a standardbred will wake up with no fixed plans 
					for the first time in about 40 years. 
					 
					Skeptics, who should have learned long ago never to doubt 
					anything Jimmy sets his mind to, should know he has already 
					made an appointment for he and Christina to get their Global 
					Entry cards to expedite the clearance process through 
					customs and they have already booked flights to New Zealand 
					for February with no return tickets. 
					 
					“I’ve never done that,” Jimmy said of leaving a trip open 
					ended. “That’s how I wanted things to be. I’ve lived by a 
					schedule all my life and I don’t want to have a schedule. I 
					want to get out of the schedule.” 
					 
					He is only 58, but horse racing years are not the same as 
					normal years. 
					 
					The job, he said, is filled with incredible highs and lows 
					and even a man that has accomplished as much as he has 
					starts thinking he’s a terrible trainer when his horses 
					don’t race well. 
					 
					“That’s how the game is,” Jimmy said. 
					 
					On this night, his horses were racing poorly at Hoosier Park 
					and the Meadowlands. Neither the wine, nor the fact he and 
					Christina are watching from their cozy American room — 
					everything in it festooned in red, white and blue to 
					celebrate their deep love of their adopted country — did 
					much to soothe the blow to his ego. 
					 
					Losing gnaws at his soul, even with 33 perfectly displayed 
					and illuminated Breeders Crown trainer trophies on a high 
					wall nearby — with one more to be added soon. 
					 
					“If you try to satisfy every person, you can’t do that. But 
					that’s what your goal has to be. Every owner buying a horse 
					— whatever they’re paying — you want to see those guys be 
					happy with your job, but it’s impossible,” he said. “I’ve 
					been batting close to a 25 per cent win percentage in my 
					career. That means that you’re losing 75 per cent of the 
					time. It’s a tough life. It’s not a normal life. I grew up 
					with it. I’ve worked in the barn since I was 7 or 8 years 
					old.” 
					
 
							
								
								 
								Ariana G wins Graduate Finalen at The Meadowlands 7 july 2022
								 
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					About two or three years ago, Jimmy said he started feeling 
					burned out. Though he still had his usual red-hot motivation 
					to win every time out, the highs weren’t as high. 
					 
					“It just became a job,” he said. 
					 
					A man known for his youthful energy started to look tired 
					and — as Jimmy is fond of punctuating his sentences — 
					“bap-bap-bap” he was determined to do something else with 
					his life while he still could. 
					 
					“I’ve had insomnia all my life. I have big problems 
					sleeping,” Jimmy said, explaining that he can’t slow his 
					mind down from trying to solve the latest horse problems. 
					“My brain is going a million miles an hour all the time. You 
					get tired. I can think about this and this and what I’m 
					going to do with that — bap-bap-bap. 
					 
					“I told my doctor, ‘My brain is going too fast. I really 
					feel exhausted and I don’t feel good.’ So, he put me on 
					something to quiet my brain down a little bit. I took them 
					and it got quiet. It got like this.” 
					 
					He imitates the feeling with a bemused, glazed smile and 
					eyes that slowly scan the room like a Felix the Cat clock. 
					 
					“I said, ‘Wow. This is how normal people think.’ But you 
					know what happened? I wasn’t creative. I had no ideas. I 
					couldn’t function. I had no vision. So I stopped.” 
					 
					ZEN-LIKE CONNECTION WITH HORSES 
					 
					The next morning, Jimmy is doing what he has done thousands 
					of mornings before. He makes the drive from his beautiful 
					house to the barn he built directly behind it, parks in the 
					spot marked “Mr. Takter” — adjacent to the one marked “Mrs. 
					Takter”— and practically bounces into the barn. Walking the 
					shedrows to visit his horses and staff is one of his 
					favorite parts of his routine. 
					 
					“I’m good with animals and I love my animals. Horses for me 
					are like a gift from God,” he said. 
					 
					One of his first stops is to visit Tactical Landing. 
					 
					“I just love great horses,” he said. “Most of the great 
					horses have charisma, not all of them, but most of them do. 
					It’s like when I’m buying a horse, too many people are a 
					little too focused on conformation and things like that. I 
					agree (conformation is important), but, to me, I try to look 
					for charisma. I’m trying to see something in their eye.” 
					 
					He opens Tactical Landing’s stall and walks in. 
					 
					“How are you doing, buddy? Come on big boy.” 
					 
					The trotter is reluctant at first and then approaches. Jimmy 
					gives a deep Santa-like belly laugh, “Ha, ha, ha” he said as 
					he rubs the horse’s neck vigorously. “There is my big boy. 
					Always has to bite. What happened that you have to bite? 
					What happened? Now you’re in the history books, buddy. Bob 
					Heyden said you are the most expensive yearling, ever, to 
					win a Breeders Crown.” 
					 
					Not only did Tactical Landing cost $800,000 as a yearling, 
					Jimmy said the full-brother to Mission Brief knows he’s 
					special, despite a bumpy road getting to prominence. 
					
 
							
								
								 
								Manchego wins Hambletonian Oaks 2018
								 
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					“That freakin’ horse knows he’s good,” Jimmy said, which is 
					why he lets Tactical Landing take his own sweet time getting 
					to the track. After all, the horse has been something of a 
					personal project for the trainer since arriving in his barn 
					in June after limited success elsewhere. 
					 
					“I’ve seen a lot of great trainers, but (Jimmy’s) 
					understanding of horses is just second to none,” said 
					longtime friend, assistant and world-renowned farrier Conny 
					Svensson. “The way that he communicates with horses on the 
					track is just tremendous.” 
					 
					Svensson tells the story of his own trainee Brind’Amour. 
					When the trotter was returning to the races at three, 
					something was wrong and Svensson was struggling to 
					straighten Brind’Amour out. Svensson wanted Jimmy to try his 
					hand with the horse, but was reluctant to ask. 
					 
					“I always took him out there when Jimmy was on the track so 
					he could see him. One day, I told my wife, ‘Walk next to 
					Jimmy back to the barn.’ And Jimmy said, ‘Don’t take the 
					harness off, I’ll go a trip with him.’ He goes one time 
					around, turns him and he trots like a million bucks. He 
					trains a mile in :58 and comes off the track, happy as can 
					be. The horse was proud of himself. God knows what (Jimmy) 
					did. I have no idea… I don’t think he knows. For him it’s 
					just so natural and simple.” 
					 
					Perry Soderberg, another longtime friend and assistant — and 
					the man that has picked out many of Jimmy’s champions — said 
					Jimmy has an incredible ability to read horses. 
					 
					“When he sits behind horses, he gets a feeling for what’s 
					going on with the horses and he starts to check them out. 
					You can stand on the side and see nothing wrong, but he will 
					feel that something is coming. He always checks them out 
					before it goes bad. He does his own checking, has his 
					acupuncture points. He does flexion on the joints. He checks 
					everything. Conny works with the feet and they are on top of 
					it before (something bad) happens,” Soderberg said. 
					 
					Through a full day’s worth of conversations, Jimmy remains 
					remarkably humble, but this is one of only a handful of 
					areas that he admits to having above-average ability. 
					 
					“You know what I’m good at, extremely good at? I’m very, 
					very good at locating where your horse is hurting,” Jimmy 
					said. “Ask my veterinarian, I am really, really good at 
					that. When I go through a horse, I know exactly. It’s one of 
					my biggest strengths. If you can keep a horse sound all the 
					time and see lameness before it’s actually visible to 
					everyone — like when it’s just maybe three or five per cent 
					lameness — we’ll pick it up and fix it, but it will never 
					become a (big) deal.” 
					 
					Jimmy’s top assistant, Per Engblom, said Jimmy excels at the 
					fine details. 
					 
					“Are we going to push on or back off? Are we going to train 
					hard today or train soft? That’s really what it comes down 
					to with him. I can prepare everything for him and have 
					everything ready, but that’s where, I think, we’ve been 
					successful. I’ve been helping him to have everything 
					prepared, ‘Here’s the training list… everything is 
					organized’ and then he comes in and does his thing and 
					that’s been great,” Engblom said. 
					 
					Owner Frank “The Elder” Antonacci said Jimmy has, “a great 
					sixth sense about the horses.” Jimmy trained Moni Maker for 
					Antonacci and his partners. When the trotting mare retired, 
					she was the richest standardbred in the world with earnings 
					of nearly $5.6 million. 
					 
					“He really understands the psyche of the horse. When he sees 
					a problem with one horse and fixes it a certain way, he’s 
					smart enough to understand that maybe that same change won’t 
					work on another horse with a different mental capacity,” 
					Antonacci said. 
					 
					This morning, on his tour of the shedrows, Jimmy stops in to 
					visit Moni Maker’s son, International Moni. The trotter 
					recently came into his operation. 
					
 
							
								
								  
								Tactial Landing wins Hambletonian elimination 2018
								 
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					“Hey, buddy. Hey, buddy. Come,” Takter said, as the trotter 
					obediently approaches. “How are you doing, buddy? Have you 
					seen your mother’s name on you? Have you seen your mother’s 
					name, huh?” 
					 
					With that, he slaps International Moni’s neck 
					enthusiastically and laughs. 
					 
					Jimmy said perhaps his favorite horse, ever, was world 
					champion pacer Always B Miki — not because Miki set a 1:46 
					all-age world record, but more for the horse’s personality. 
					The trainer used to go to the barn at night just to visit 
					Miki. 
					 
					“Every night I walked into the stall to pat his head and I 
					loved it,” he said. 
					 
					That deep and abiding love of horses didn’t come instantly. 
					Though he was 7 or 8 when he began working with his father 
					Bo’s horses 50 years ago back in Norrköping, Sweden, Jimmy 
					said he was more enamoured with his father’s used car 
					business than the horses his father trained. 
					 
					“When I grew up, it was a Mickey Mouse game what we were 
					doing,” Jimmy said. “We were struggling. My father was a 
					good businessman, but he couldn’t make any money training 
					horses. We were poor back then. We had no money at all. So, 
					I didn’t understand why he was working with horses when he 
					could sell cars and make more money. But, he was passionate 
					about it. He didn’t care about the car dealership.” 
					 
					Jimmy didn’t fall in love with horses until he made his 
					first trip to the United States at age 17 and worked for 
					Swedish legend Hakan Wallner. 
					 
					“I took care of a horse called Saint Francis and one named 
					Keystone Patriot. When you take care of two horses, you 
					become very attached to them,” Jimmy said. 
					 
					From that moment on, he was determined to be successful in 
					the United States; all the while his mind was churning as he 
					searched for angles to profit from his God-given talent to 
					comprehend horses. 
					 
					How he would solve the puzzle and become one of the greatest 
					trainers in history is the story of a powerful work ethic, a 
					fearlessness to never stop changing and a business savvy 
					worthy of a CEO. 
					 
					It isn’t always easy living in Jimmy Takter’s world. One of 
					the challenges of dealing with the trainer’s brilliant, 
					hyperactive mind is rolling with all the changes. 
					 
					Many times, Perry Soderberg — Takter’s longtime friend, 
					former assistant and yearling-picking master — admits he has 
					“freaked out” mentally when horses would win a major stakes 
					race and Takter would change everything about their 
					equipment and routine. 
					 
					“He’ll have a great year, win six Breeders Crowns, and 
					change everything,” Soderberg said. “His thought process is 
					energized. He needs to think about new things, likes to 
					improve things. It’s how he is. 
					 
					Today, Soderberg can shrug about it. Takter’s unparalleled 
					success long ago earned the trainer the benefit of the 
					doubt. 
					 
					“I think he wants the horses to think about where they are 
					putting their feet all the time, going forward, not just 
					going like zombies straight forward. It’s got to be the 
					right combination, the mental thing. I get nervous every 
					time, ‘Why did you change this?’ but then it turns out to be 
					even better,” Soderberg said. 
					 
					Adapting to Takter’s decision to retire on Dec. 1 at age 58 
					is no different. Some people are struggling to understand, 
					others are skeptical. 
					 
					Takter just wants a change — something he said is both 
					inevitable and necessary. 
					 
					“You’ve got to change… I change everything,” he said 
					emphatically, explaining that, when it comes to horses, you 
					simply can’t train them in 2018 the way you did in 1980 and 
					hope to have success. 
					
 
							
								
								 
						       Bar Hopping wins Breeders Crown 2016
								 
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					As for going against conventional wisdom and advice, Frank 
					“The Elder” Antonacci, one of Moni Maker’s owners, said the 
					reality is Takter has considerable strength of conviction… 
					and stubbornness. 
					 
					“He doesn’t like to take ‘no’ for an answer. ‘No’ just means 
					there’s a different way,” Antonacci said, laughing. “No 
					matter what he does, he’s just that kind of person. ‘No’ 
					just means… if he sees a horse and it’s not working, he’s 
					trying to figure out a different way. It takes a lot of 
					different ways for the wheel to go around.” 
					 
					Takter uses the straight track on his 100-acre farm as an 
					example of his fixation with change. 
					 
					“My straight track is finally awesome. Do you know how many 
					times I changed it? Rebuilt it? Like six or seven times,” 
					Takter said. “I had to find the right material. It has to be 
					material that holds (a horse’s footing) because it’s deep 
					sand. It’s deep and it’s very tight.” 
					 
					Conny Svensson, another longtime lieutenant in the Takter 
					army, said that just speaks to Takter’s, “tremendous work 
					ethic. He doesn’t skip work. He comes to work and does what 
					needs to be done. He doesn’t shortcut anything… He’s very 
					focused, very driven… He has certain goals for each horse, 
					whether it’s a horse that he may think he can make $100,000 
					with, or one that can win a big race. He wants every one to 
					reach their peak ability.” 
					 
					FROM TRAINER TO CONSULTANT 
					 
					Takter said it is all about helping his owners — most of 
					whom are dear friends — recoup as much money from their 
					investment as possible. 
					 
					It also explains why he has decided to transition into being 
					a consultant overseeing his clients’ investment in horses. 
					Though Takter is retiring from training next weekend, many 
					of his owners are staying in the operation he built. Most of 
					the horses are being split between his daughter, Nancy 
					Johansson, and his top assistant trainer, Per Engblom. Both 
					trainers will work out of Jimmy’s farm. 
					
 
							
								
								 
						       Father Patrick wins Breeders Crown 2014
								 
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					“(My owners) got very excited when I said this is what I 
					want to do, that I want to be involved for Nancy and Per. I 
					want to see them do well. I’m not going to interfere and 
					tell them what to do. I want them to be independent, but, by 
					the same token, I’m going to come in and if I see a horse 
					that my clients own is on the wrong track and not doing 
					well, bap-bap-bap I can say, ‘Nancy, I think you should give 
					that one to Per’ or the other way around and see if we make 
					progress,” Takter said. 
					 
					“I’ll say, ‘What are you doing with this horse? I want to 
					see progress.’ Owners give a horse to a trainer and trainers 
					often say, ‘Oh, he’s doing okay. He’s doing all right’ and 
					blah-blah-blah. Don’t bulls— me. If it is a bad horse, it 
					should go out, because the biggest thing that kills an owner 
					is expenses. Buying a horse is as big an expense as could 
					be, but also keeping a bad horse, that’s expensive. If we 
					buy a horse for $100,000 and I see in February that (it 
					can’t compete), I’d rather see them take that horse and get 
					rid of him, maybe sell him for $15,000 or $20,000 to 
					somebody and concentrate on the ones that are possibly good 
					horses.” 
					 
					It’s one of many examples that Takter truly cares about the 
					people in his life and wants them all to succeed. Takter 
					said not everyone sees the compassionate side of his 
					personality. 
					 
					“People don’t know me,” he said. “Mostly when people see me, 
					they see me at the racetrack. At the racetrack, I’m not the 
					same guy. I’m more serious… Maybe people think, ‘That guy’s 
					cocky.’ I’m not, actually. I’m totally opposite. I’m more 
					caring. But I always say what I think and a lot of times 
					that backfires, too. 
					 
					“Harness racing is a competitive business. Maybe they have a 
					little jealousy, but when it comes down to it, really, we’re 
					a little family. You saw what happened with that (barn fire) 
					disaster up in Canada. People are really very good in 
					harness racing to stick together. Nobody wishes any bad, 
					really. Maybe they’re happy that I’m (retiring) bap-bap-bap. 
					There’s always some people that want to see me and (fellow 
					top trainer Ron) Burke get a positive, or are wishing us bad 
					luck. But when it comes down to it, really, that’s not what 
					they’re wishing for. It’s just that they want to get you out 
					of the competition. 
					 
					“I want to see everybody do well… I’ve never had jealousy 
					towards anybody else.” 
					 
					TAKTER TEXTS INSPIRATIONAL MESSAGES 
					 
					This partly explains the genesis of a daily inspirational 
					message Takter started sending out to his friends via text 
					about three months ago. 
					 
					“All my owners are on my daily quote list. They get a text 
					every day,” Takter said, adding that the list is growing. “I 
					write about half of them and some I get back from people 
					that are on my list and I reuse them. All of the ones I send 
					come from how I feel that day. I do this because we all need 
					support in our lives and we get stronger together. 
					 
					“My faith is very big, and, lately, I’ve become more and 
					more about caring about others… I’m very emotional. I’d 
					rather get disappointed at someone than I disappoint 
					somebody.” 
					 
					With that, he recommends a book that really spoke to his 
					creative mind. 
					 
					“Rhonda Byrne wrote a book called The Secret. The Secret is 
					a little bit how I am. When I’m going into big races, I see 
					it exactly… I know when I’m going to have a good day. I feel 
					it around me. Then she wrote another book called The Power. 
					It’s very good. It’s basically, love is the most powerful 
					thing in this world. You give love and if you’re coming in 
					with a loving attitude to something, people will respond 
					back.” 
					
 
							
								
								 
						       Always B Miki wins Breeders Crown 2015 
								 
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					These days, doing good things for other people makes Takter 
					happy. Sometimes, he’s a bit like a mother hen — refusing to 
					take no for an answer, as is his wont. Like the time he 
					insisted a visitor that struggled with a horse allergy try 
					Flonase nasal spray and then drove that person to the local 
					pharmacy and insisted they go across the street to buy some. 
					 
					Trying to do the right thing matters deeply to the man. 
					 
					When he was given Always B Miki to train, Takter asked to 
					buy a share of the horse, but was told only a five per cent 
					piece was available and the cost was $80,000. He agreed to 
					buy the share without telling his wife, Christina, who looks 
					after the stable’s books. About a week later, Always B Miki 
					broke down for the second time in his career. Jimmy was 
					training the pacer on his sand track when he felt something 
					give way with a whap! Instantly, Always B Miki had a foot in 
					the air. 
					 
					“It’s the worst feeling in the world when a horse breaks 
					down, especially when they break a bone like that. I saw the 
					pain in the horse’s eye… and I was standing there holding 
					him. I started walking him and he started walking on three 
					legs. It was heart-breaking,” Jimmy said. 
					 
					They rushed Always B Miki to equine surgeon Dr. Patty Hogan, 
					who operated and put four screws in the pacer’s leg. But 
					there was still the issue of Jimmy’s ownership share in the 
					horse. The trainer had not sent a check prior to Miki 
					breaking down, but didn’t think about backing out of the 
					deal even though the situation looked dire. 
					 
					“I talked to Christina, and I said, ‘By the way, Christina, 
					you have to send them a check for $80,000.’ That’s a lot of 
					money for five per cent in a horse, especially when he’s 
					broken down. Christina said, ‘What!’ I said, ‘I know.’” 
					 
					Always B Miki not only recovered, he went on to record the 
					fastest mile in the history of harness racing, a 1:46 
					performance in October of 2016 at Red Mile en route to the 
					Horse of the Year Award and a stallion career. 
					 
					“See how karma works when you do the right thing? The horse 
					made that money back, plus,” Jimmy said, smiling. 
					 
					TAKTER’S LONG LEGACY 
					 
					Always B Miki is one of about 50 stallions, worldwide, that 
					Jimmy said he has helped create in his career. Soderberg 
					confirmed the number. 
					 
					“I looked at the sales catalogue in Indiana, recently. They 
					sold 450 babies. Over 60 per cent of the babies in that sale 
					are out of my sires,” Jimmy said. “That’s Indiana. In 
					Canada, we’ve basically now just have Kadabra that we 
					trained, but, before, we had quite a few of them. 
					Pennsylvania we have a bunch. But stallions, that’s where 
					you make money. You buy Father Patrick for $100,000, 
					syndicate him for $9.6 million. The highest syndication, 
					ever, on a 2-year-old.” 
					 
					Though creating some 50 stallions would be impressive enough 
					for one trainer, Jimmy said the statistic he is most proud 
					of is the one in which his horses have earned more than 
					$13,000 per start over 26 years (ever since trainer stats 
					were first kept in 1991). 
					 
					“I’ve been extremely consistent for the last 25 years. 
					Everybody can get good horses and have a good year and 
					bap-bap-bap, but we’ve been very consistent,” he said. 
					 
					Through Nov. 22 — and remember, the eight years between 
					1983, when he started training, and 1991, when they started 
					keeping trainer records, are not accounted for — Jimmy is 
					credited with 9,956 starts, 2,154 wins and earnings of 
					$129,769,939. As a driver, he has won 822 of 4,368 starts 
					and posted earnings of $24,445,651 in 35 years in the sulky. 
					 
					Assembling a crack team — Christina, Svensson, Soderberg, 
					Engblom, Johansson and many talented caretakers — has been 
					key to his success. 
					 
					In his blacksmith shop in the main barn, Svensson proudly 
					shows off a photo of Team Takter in 1993 — six caretakers, 
					plus Jimmy and Christina. 
					 
					“When I first started shoeing for Jimmy, Perry (Soderberg) 
					was working for Jimmy helping in the barn for a little 
					while,” Svensson said. “We didn’t have a big stable when we 
					started. I think the first year I worked for Jimmy we had 11 
					babies, but that was a good group of babies. There was Mr 
					Lavec, Gleam, Whiteland Image, Do It With Style. 
					
 
							
								
								 
						       See You At Peelers wins Fan Hanover 2011
								 
								  | 
							 
						 
					“I’m very proud, absolutely, that I’ve had some small part 
					in the whole operation. In 1993, we had our first 
					million-dollar year and it’s just been going up from then.” 
					 
					Ten years earlier, when Jimmy started out on his own, it 
					wasn’t as glamorous. Soderberg was along for the ride and he 
					remembers Jimmy’s first horse was a pacer that won something 
					like 26 or 27 races that was key to supporting Jimmy’s young 
					family. 
					 
					“Then they had a seven-year-old gelding with suspensory 
					problems that he was given to train. Jimmy and his partner, 
					I think, spent $4,000 on a Speedy Somali gelding at a sale 
					and the first time they hooked him up he took off. I don’t 
					know if he has come back yet. He was crazy. Those three 
					horses were, to my recollection, what he started out with. 
					Nothing else. People think he goes and buys all the 
					expensive horses and it’s easy to do that way, but when he 
					started out he definitely started out from scratch or below. 
					He wasn’t given anything. You’ve got to build your name and 
					fight through the ups and downs and that’s what he did.” 
					 
					Jimmy soon learned that it was best to hire Soderberg to 
					inspect yearlings — the first horse he told Jimmy to buy was 
					Gleam — and leave Svensson to work his magic with horses’ 
					shoes. 
					 
					One of those times, Svensson was asked to save the day with 
					Kadabra when the trotter went lame just before heading off 
					to check into the detention barn at the Meadowlands for a 
					major stakes race. 
					 
					“They called and said, ‘He’s dead lame. What are we going to 
					do?’ They were all ready to load their horses and there were 
					lots of people around. Jimmy just told them, ‘Hey, leave 
					Svensson alone.’ He looked at me and said, ‘You fix him’ and 
					then he left. He just said ‘fix him, do the best you can’ 
					and then he walked away. It felt like he trusted my judgment 
					on it. I did the best I could and it worked out, so that’s 
					one really good memory,” Svensson said, smiling. 
					 
					Caretakers are just as important, of course. Jimmy said he’s 
					been lucky to have many talented ones, but few, if any, can 
					equal the work of Anette Zackrisson, a 10-year veteran at 
					Takter Stables whom Jimmy calls the best caretaker in the 
					business. 
					 
					“She is the best. There is nobody better… Her horses are her 
					babies,” Jimmy said. 
					 
					Strolling through his shedrow on his morning rounds, Jimmy 
					kids with Zackrisson about where her new horses will be 
					located — either in the main inside barn or one of the 
					outdoor shedrows. 
					 
					“I know Anette doesn’t like to be outside,” he said. 
					 
					“No, I want my horses inside and I want my corner. That’s 
					it,” Zackrisson said, matter-of-factly. 
					 
					“She has a corner,” Jimmy said, smiling. “She’s been here 
					long enough and can have her demands.” 
					 
					Then, with a wink, he shouted down the shedrow, “Best boss 
					you ever had, right?” 
					 
					Zackrisson rolled her eyes and walked away. 
					 
					Outside, Greg Harrison — son of trainer Kelvin Harrison — is 
					singing Elvis tunes while doing his work. 
					 
					“Nothing wrong with a little Elvis in the morning,” Greg 
					said with a big goofy grin. 
					 
					“He’s actually a very talented singer,” Jimmy said. “We have 
					wanted to sign him up for America Idol many times, but I 
					would be scared that Simon (Cowell) would say that had Greg 
					lived 200 years ago they would have stoned him to death.” 
					 
					In the barn entrance way, blankets celebrating victories in 
					the Hambletonian, Jug, World Trotting Derby — and one 
					celebrating Always B Miki’s retirement — are displayed on 
					railings. The horse statue in front of Jimmy and Christina’s 
					house — the one that always touts the latest Team Takter 
					triumph — is covered with Tactical Landing’s Breeders Crown 
					blanket that is rippling in a stiff breeze. 
					 
					There’s no horse photos in his house, but in the barn 
					office, framed photos of Jimmy’s many champions hang on the 
					wall. 
					 
					“If I just train a horse, it’s not that fun, really, 
					especially when you don’t own then. I own most of these 
					horses,” he said, pointing out a few of the stars that are 
					far too numerous to mention. “To make money in this game, 
					you have to also be a good businessman. I’m also a pretty 
					good businessman.” 
					 
					BUSINESS, BUSINESS, BUSINESS 
					 
					Technically, it is Christina that is the owner. But since 
					they share everything, Jimmy said the arrangement has been 
					an essential part of the operation. 
					 
					“That’s how I made money. You could be a great trainer, but 
					you’re sitting there getting your little percentage. You’re 
					going to be just making a decent living at best. You’re not 
					going to make any money. You do the math. If you do $100 
					million you get five per cent. $5 million in your lifetime, 
					you blow that easy. It’s not that much money.” 
					 
					Keeping in mind that Jimmy is just the second trainer in 
					history to reach $100 million. 
					 
					Moni Maker’s part-owner David Reid said, “Jimmy is a very 
					smart guy, in addition to being one of the most talented 
					trainers that our sport has ever seen.” 
					 
					“He’s a salesman,” adds Antonacci, “and has the ability to 
					get along with people. He’s a salesman and a good horseman.” 
					 
					Jimmy said he gets both his business savvy and training 
					acumen from his father, Bo. 
					
 
							
								
								 
						       Moni Maker and Jimmy Takter at Vincennes racetrack in Paris/France
								 
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					“He was a businessman. He sold cars. He sold everything. He 
					was a real hustler,” Jimmy said. 
					 
					When Bo was 27, he fell in love with horse racing on his 
					first visit to Stockholm’s famed Solvalla Racetrack. At that 
					moment, Bo had an epiphany. This is what he wanted to do 
					with his life. 
					 
					Not long after, when Mantorp Race Track opened near where 
					the Takters lived in Norrköping, Bo enthusiastically jumped 
					into the horse racing business. When Jimmy was 7 or 8, the 
					family moved to a small farm. The hours both before and 
					after school, and on weekends, were consumed with working in 
					the barn. Meanwhile, Bo, a fitness nut, kept a scale in the 
					family living room and every day had Jimmy and his brother, 
					top European driver Johnny Takter, weigh in to make sure 
					they were staying fit, too. 
					 
					“He took horses from good trainers — bap-bap-bap — and 
					turned them over. He never, ever worked for anybody. Still 
					today, I’m not sure he ever cleaned a stall,” Jimmy said of 
					his father. “My father worked with horses that he traded for 
					nothing — $500 horses. It’s a different game now.” 
					 
					Though Jimmy rose to become one of the top trainers in the 
					world and his brother one of the best drivers on the planet, 
					Jimmy said Bo never told them how proud he was. 
					 
					“My father is a very tough guy like that. I know he’s very 
					proud of both me and my brother, but he kind of has a hard 
					time showing it,” Jimmy said. “He’s not that type of guy, 
					really. He’s a warm guy, but not like that. He should have 
					been more like that.” 
					 
					Jimmy’s voice falls to a whisper for a second before 
					repeating, softly, “He should have been more like that.” 
					 
					TURNING IT OVER TO PER AND NANCY 
					 
					Now the legacy falls, partly, to the next generation. 
					 
					Johansson is slated to train 23 babies this winter, while 
					Engblom, Jimmy’s main assistant, will get an equal number. 
					 
					“We’ve been doing so well for so many years and now it’s 
					going to be a bit turned upside down, but with Jimmy’s help 
					and the owners’ support, I think we’re going to do pretty 
					okay,” said Engblom, who has worked off and on for Jimmy for 
					11 years, including the last six. 
					 
					“To be able to stay on the farm and train at this facility, 
					that’s big,” Engblom said. “For 90 per cent of it I’m sure 
					we can handle it just as well (as Jimmy), and sometimes 
					change is good… Maybe I will be a little bit motivated, 
					maybe I can get the staff a bit more motivated when Jimmy 
					doesn’t have to help every day.” 
					 
					Jimmy said he is already looking forward to May when he will 
					personally oversee both operations for the month. He said 
					working with the babies is his favorite time of year. 
					 
					“It’s not my stable, I’m just a consultant,” he said. “They 
					can call me up and say, ‘We have this horse here and it’s 
					doing this and that — bap-bap-bap — any suggestions?’ It 
					will keep me a little bit day-to-day, a little bit involved 
					if I want to. In May I’m going to be here, but in June I’m 
					going to be in Sweden.” 
					 
					Svensson said he expects both Engblom and Johansson to do 
					well. 
					 
					“Nancy has already proven herself and, whatever comes her 
					way, I’m hoping if she starts continuing on and does great, 
					(people won’t say) it’s because daddy retired, because she’s 
					already established and had a tremendous year this year on 
					her own,” Svensson said, adding an important caveat. 
					“There’s never going to be another just like (Jimmy), 
					because he’s such a character. There’s going to be 
					successful trainers, but it will be hard to put together a 
					career like he did. That’s very difficult.” 
					 
					Owner Marvin Katz said Jimmy is, “a unique master of his 
					craft. That, to me, is an important designation. He’s not a 
					trainer, he’s a master of his craft. He’s become 
					acknowledged and respected as one of the very, very best in 
					the world at his craft. When you think about people in any 
					endeavor — whether it’s the arts or sport or science, 
					academia – to be ranked among the very best of your craft, 
					that is such an enormous accomplishment and it takes every 
					aspect of a human’s skill and talent. You have to be 
					intelligent. You have to be thoughtful to consider and 
					re-consider decisions you have made. You have to be 
					disciplined. You have to be strong-willed. You have to be 
					confident.” 
					 
					WILL RETIREMENT STICK? 
					 
					Some suggest Jimmy is just too talented, too successful and 
					too young to be retired from training for long. 
					 
					Yet, on a bit of test run last January he took the entire 
					month off and spent it in Florida with Christina and a 
					magical thing happened. 
					 
					“I never felt better. I felt so good in February,” he said. 
					“First of all, I was training hard. Christina and I did hot 
					yoga three times a week. Then I was running twice a week — 
					five, six miles. Every night we took at least an hour walk. 
					I was feeling good and I slept.” 
					 
					His hyperactive brain needed no medication to quiet it. But, 
					long term, Jimmy said he’s not sure how he will fare. 
					 
					“I know myself. I cannot go from 180 miles per hour down to 
					three. If I do, I swear I’m going to be an idiot. I’m going 
					to most likely lose it… but the first two months, maybe, is 
					easy because it’s like you’re having a long vacation.” 
					 
					For now, Jimmy Takter is embracing retirement with all of 
					his energy and spirituality. 
					 
					“When you’re coming closer to 60 you see it a little bit 
					differently. What’s the purpose of life? Before you know it, 
					you are 75 and then you’re tired,” he said. “I’m looking 
					forward to going to New Zealand or being in Paris in April.” 
					 
					NEW ROLE IN THE SPORT? 
					 
					He insists he is not walking away from harness racing 
					entirely. 
					 
					“I’m going to keep an eye on the sport. Actually, you never 
					know what it’s going to bring me,” he said. “I like 
					challenges. I think I have great ideas. I don’t mind giving 
					my input into how to make the sport great again… I think it 
					would be really, really interesting to manage a racetrack. I 
					think it would be challenging.” 
					 
					Reid laughed when he heard that line, but not because he 
					doesn’t think Jimmy is up to the task of making a positive 
					impact on the sport in a different way. 
					 
					“He’s not short on self-confidence. He’s not short on 
					salesmanship, so if he’s the CEO of Goldman Sachs in five 
					years, I won’t be surprised,” Reid said. 
					 
					“He’s a great ambassador for the sport. Between (John) 
					Campbell and him, they could probably talk anybody into 
					doing anything,” Antonacci said. 
					 
					“I think (Jimmy’s) greatest strength is his curiosity and 
					his greatest weakness is his curiosity, in that now he’s 
					curious to do other things with his life. You saw it with 
					Michael Jordan. He was the greatest, but when he retired he 
					wanted to become a baseball player… It’s part of what makes 
					(Jimmy) great.” 
					 
					Meanwhile, those that know Jimmy best are happy for him. 
					 
					“I think (his retirement) is an excellent thing, because I 
					know how hard he has worked. People don’t understand… other 
					top trainers do of course, but he’s special and it’s been 
					24/7 for 35 years,” Soderberg said. “It wears on you and I 
					think he needs to enjoy his life a little bit with his 
					wife.” 
					 
					Svensson said maybe after some time away Jimmy will realize 
					“that what he wants to do is train horses. Who knows? He’s 
					deserves (a break), no doubt — both him and Christina. She 
					has been carrying a big load as well (as the office 
					manager).” 
					 
					When you get right down to it, Jimmy said retirement is more 
					about Christina than himself. 
					 
					“She’s a wonderful person,” he said of the woman he fell in 
					love with when they were just teenagers in Sweden and 
					Christina worked every other weekend at a grocery store to 
					afford the train ticket to come visit him. 
					 
					Christina smiles sweetly at the memory, though it’s a 
					lifetime ago. 
					 
					Just a week earlier, the morning after winning the Breeders 
					Crown with Tactical Landing, her husband was more fixated on 
					the Crowns he didn’t win with the 13 other horses he had 
					entered. 
					 
					“I care and I felt like s— over it and I said to myself, 
					‘Can you imagine waking up and just worrying about what 
					you’re going to have for breakfast?’ How nice and relaxed 
					that’s got to be. It takes a special woman to be my wife and 
					put up with it. 
					 
					“I owe it to my wife to spend a little time with her.” 
					 
					For the man with the creative mind that is always racing, 
					always changing, never satisfied, this is one thing he knows 
					for sure. 
					
  
				
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