For former jockey David Taggart, the transition to a life after racing came suddenly and painfully, and not in a way that he had ever expected.
The victim of a horrific race fall that changed his life forever, there were times when Taggart wondered if he had a future at all. Today, he is resurrected and has found a new life behind a microphone.
“When I think about the last 16 years of my life, it’s been an absolute roller coaster, one with a lot of dips to be honest. Gratefully, things are getting a lot better,” he said.
As an apprentice jockey Taggart had been part of a dream team group; Damien Oliver, Patrick Payne, Danny Nikolic, Brett Prebble and Taggart were the fresh young stars of the Australian racing scene and collectively they took the early 1990s by storm.
Taggart himself landed five of his six career Group 1 wins before he turned 22 years old. Lucrative contracts in Asia beckoned and the winners flowed freely, he was young, at the top of his game and on top of the world.
“We’ll never see a school like it again, think about what those jockeys went on to achieve. You’re talking about the cream of Australian racing for most of the next thirty years,” Taggart said.
“I rode my first Group 1 winner as an apprentice for Bart (Cummings) down the Flemington straight, it doesn’t get much better than that does it? But that was a long time ago.”
While most of his contemporaries were afforded the luxury of retiring on their own terms, Taggart’s career came to a crushing end in 2007 when a race fall at Stony Creek shattered both of his ankles. Ten separate operations over the next three years would send him plummeting into depression, battling mental demons as well as crippling chronic pain and wondering how it all went so wrong.
“I knew I was finished as soon as I hit the deck that day. The pain was unbearable. It was the worst time of my life. I was basically laid up in bed for six years. I lost my marriage, my family, it all just spiralled out of control,” he said.
“One day you're out there riding, doing what you do best, the next day you’re totally useless. It was very hard to deal with.”