A pat for Dr. Bolt and win number 2,000 for Taylor Hole. Photo by Jim McCue, Maryland Jockey Club.

A pat for Dr. Bolt and win number 2,000 for Taylor Hole. Photo by Jim McCue, Maryland Jockey Club.

From a Maryland Jockey Club release

Veteran jockey Taylor Hole picked up his 2,000th career victory Friday, riding Dr Bolt to victory in the sixth race at Pimlico Race Course.

Dr Bolt, owned by Five Hellions Farm and trained by Donnovan Haughton, took the lead down the stretch from Puturseatbelton while covering six furlongs in 1:13.27. Dr Bolt returned $8.60.  It was Dr. Bolt’s third straight win, all with Hole in the irons.

After the race, Hole was joined in the winner’s circle by his fellow riders, friends and staff of the Maryland Jockey Club.

“It’s a little surreal,” said Hole after the race of his milestone. “I took my time getting here but it feels great.”

When asked if he was relieved to have victory 2,000 behind him, Hole replied; “It is but it isn’t. It’s very special. I just never focused on this one number. I just tried to do the best I could with every horse I rode. We’d get here eventually.”

 

A multiple stakes winner, Hole had single-season career highs of 198 wins in 2001 and $1.63 million in purse earnings in 2000. He ranked seventh at Laurel Park’s 2015 winter meet with 14 victories, and is among the top 10 riders at the current Pimlico meet.

Hole posted at least 100 victories in 10 of 12 years from 1994 to 2005.  Recent years have not been quite so productive, but Hole has 24 wins from 169 mounts so far in 2015, with earnings of more than $527,000 — his best year since 2009.

Hole, 43, captured his first black-type victory in Maryland on Rush to Glory following the disqualification for interference of favored Maysville in the $50,000 Marshua Stakes on Jan. 8, 2005.

He also rode Bo Badger to victory for Eighth Note Stable and trainer John Botty in the last race run before the closing of Suffolk Downs on Oct. 14, 2014.

Hole’s late father, Michael, was a British-born jockey who came to the U.S. in 1961 and rode 2,042 winners mostly in New York and New England before his untimely death in April 1976. Hole followed in the business working odd jobs as a Rockingham Park stablehand in the mid-1980s, then moved to the Maryland steeplechase farm of a family friend to learn professional riding.

On Jan. 17, 1992, Hole earned his first victory on his third career mount at Rockingham. Hole picked up win No. 1,000 aboard Salt State at Suffolk Downs on Jan. 14.