Jabez Johnstone’s path to Melbourne is a story that keeps coming back to the same theme: none of it was planned. He grew up in Hobart, no racing family to speak of, just a Shetland pony in the paddock and a childhood spent riding in the bush and at rodeos with his sister Taylor. It was Taylor – now an apprentice in Adelaide under Andrew Lewis – who inadvertently started the whole thing.
“She just said one day, come to trackwork tomorrow,” Johnstone recalls.
“I went, had a look around, and I haven’t missed a day since.”
He was in Grade 10 at the time, doing a workplace apprenticeship three days a week – school, by his own admission, was never really his thing. But horses? That was a different story. From the first thoroughbred gallop to the first jump-out to the first race ride, something clicked.
“I never actually decided on being a jockey,” he says. “It just happened.”
If Taylor set Johnstone on the path, it was Stephen Maskiell who built the road. Johnstone spent 12 months with the Hall of Fame jockey and now Apprentice Jockey Coach at Tas Racing before signing his apprenticeship with trainer Sarah Cotton. He couldn’t be more grateful for the support from both.