Dayton Daily News

Archdeacon

- Contact this writer at tarchdeaco­n@coxohio.com.

“At first they weren’t taking off and I was frantic,” Mary said. “That’s when I found out they first had to give his heart a jump to keep him alive. And I learned later they had to shock him again later.”

Bruce Ryan wasn’t expected to live, but, as Mary said quietly, “God was looking down on him that day.”

They both say they were “blessed” that Bruce ended up in the hands of one of the area’s top neurosurge­ons, Dr. Norberto Andaluz, who, Mary said, was conducting a three-year study on new cognitive treatments for brain injuries.

Mary said Bruce’s skull cap was removed to deal with the hematoma. It would take three surgeries to cobble together the crushed portion of his skull with a titanium plate and strips, as well as mesh and fat tissue taken from his thigh.

“Most people die from an injury that severe,” Mary said. “Something like 10% live, but they can have real cognitive problems, infections and other issues.

“But Bruce always has been Mr. Beat the Odds.”

He came home from the hospital after a month — some 30 pounds lighter than when he went in and wrestling with his mental reset — and he needed 24/7 care.

Mary, who’d been dating Bruce a few years (they’ve now been married 2½ years), quit her insurance job to care for him. It wasn’t an easy task dealing with Bruce’s health needs and moods — “I’ll admit I soured on things for a year or so,” he said — but he got better and better.

“It took me a year, maybe a year and a half to get it all back together,” he said. “They say I’m in the top 10% of that 10% who survive.”

While he gained a faint scar that now creeps from his silver hairline down his temple, he never lost his acute horse sense.

And that brings us back

to Taiba.

The chestnut colt is proof.

From Gunny to Taiba

Bruce grew up in Mount Washington on Cincinnati’s east side.

Every morning before classes at McNicholas High School — where he played three sports — he said he’d run to River Downs to muck stalls and tend to horses.

After a back injury cut short a walk-on role with the Notre Dame football team, he transferre­d to the University of Cincinnati in the late 1980s and started the successful commercial glass company, Ryan All Glass.

Soon after, he bought the 1860s farm in need of real repair. He did much of the work himself and launched

his horse business, first with quarter horses, then thoroughbr­eds. He partnered with trainer Tim Hamm of Blazing Meadows Farm in northeast Ohio and they had a string of winning horses.

In 2014, Ryan was named Ohio’s breeder of the year.

He and Hamm eventually went their separate ways, but Bruce kept Needmore Flattery, who twice won Ohio horse of the year honors.

A master of bloodline pairing, his best breeding effort came when he sent Needmore Flattery to Kentucky to mate with Gun Runner, the 2017 American horse of the year who had retired with nearly $16 million in earnings and was early in his stud career.

Their son arrived April 13, 2019, at Millennium Farm outside of Lexington.

Soon mother and son returned to the Ryans’ farm.

They named the new arrival Need More Guns, not only a play off of his parents’ names, but a reflection on his size and seeming need to add some “guns,” as athletes refer to their sculpted biceps.

They nicknamed him Gunny and though they kept him separated from the other bigger yearlings, he did have an arthritic pasture mate and later was put in with the fillies.

He was especially engaging, whether it was horses in adjacent fields, the Ryans themselves or even their family dog, a Great Dane named Roscoe who he’d race along the fence line.

They eventually sold him in October 2020 at the Fasig-Tipton sale in Kentucky to Hartley DeRenzo Thoroughbr­eds for $140,000. The new owners pin-hooked him — the practice of buying a young horse, training it and reselling it — at the Fasig-Tipton 2-year-old sale at Gulfstream in Florida.

That’s where bloodstock agent Gary Young — seeing the great confirmati­on and sensing the gutsy attitude and raw ability — bought him for Saudi Arabian businessma­n and horse enthusiast Amr Zedan for $1.7 million.

Zedan changed Gunny’s name to Taiba.

Last year Zedan’s Medina

Spirit, trained by Bob Baffert, won the Kentucky Derby, but soon was disqualifi­ed when the colt tested positive for betamethas­one, a corticoste­roid not permitted in a horse’s system on race day.

After a nine-month investigat­ion by Kentucky racing officials, Baffert was suspended for 90 days, an exile that began April 3. He was banned from this year’s Derby and next year’s, and horses he trained weren’t allowed to run at Churchill Downs.

Last year Baffert decided not to race Taiba as a 2-yearold and instead develop him more. The colt finally debuted March 5, winning a six-furlong race at Santa Anita.

After the race Zedan moved Taiba to trainer Tim Yakteen, a former Baffert assistant.

Yakteen planned to run Taiba in the Grade III Lexington Stakes on April 16 in preparatio­n for the Preakness later this month. West agreed with the cautious approach, as did the Ryans.

But Zedan insisted Taiba skip Lexington and run the more challengin­g Santa Anita Derby April 3. A win there — as improbable as it seemed — would qualify the horse for the Kentucky Derby.

“I think Zedan wanted payback, a chance at retributio­n and redemption,” Mary said.

And with Hall of Fame jockey Mike Smith in the irons, Taiba came from behind — a stalker just like Needmore Flattery — and roared past Messier to win by 2 1/4 lengths.

The precocious colt’s victory stunned the horse world.

“It takes a different kind of horse to do what he did,” Smith said afterward. “This is like Kobe Byrant coming out of high school and scoring 50 points in his first NBA game. It’s pretty incredible.”

Chasing history

When Taiba — given 12-1 odds by Churchill Downs odds maker Mike Battaglia — breaks from the No. 12 post today, he will try to become the first horse to win the Derby with two previous* starts since Leonatus did in 1883 against a field of six other horses. He then distinguis­hed himself by eating the presentati­on of roses given to the winner.

While Taiba comes into the Derby with the fastest speed times in the race, he will have a lot more to chew on than Leonatus.

Instead of racing against just four other horses as he did at Santa Anita, he’ll be in the middle of the Derby’s cavalry stampede, 20-horse field. And then he’ll be surrounded by the cacophony from 150,000 cheering fans.

Simon Bray, a former trainer and current analyst for the racing network TVG, told the Wall Street Journal: “If he pulls that off, I think it’s going to be one of the most magnificen­t events in the Kentucky Derby.”

The Ryans won’t be at Churchill Downs. The daughter of one of Bruce’s longtime friends is getting married in a black-tie affair that starts in the late afternoon.

“They said they’ll have a TV set up,” Mary said.

As the Ryans watch, they may get a similar feeling to the one Dr. Andaluz had when they returned to see him 18 months after the accident.

As Bruce talked, the doctor just sat there and listened.

“We were like, ‘Dr. Andaluz, you don’t have to stay. We understand you’re busy,’” Mary said. “But he had tears in his eyes and he was like, ‘No, I just want to take this in. I don’t get to see this.’”

Bruce understood: “Most people who have my type of head injury don’t come back to normal. A lot of them die.

“So for him to see someone come back like this has got to be something like Michelange­lo felt, lying on the floor, looking up and saying, ‘I can’t believe how beautiful this is!’”

And Saturday the Ryans will feel the same about the two beautiful miracles that got Bruce and their beloved Gunny to this race day.

 ?? TOM ARCHDEACON / STAFF ?? Bruce and Mary Ryan at their 130-acre horse farm east of Morrow in Warren County. Eight years ago Bruce survived a severe head injury from a horse that reared up and slammed a hoof down on his right temple. He was not expected to survive.
TOM ARCHDEACON / STAFF Bruce and Mary Ryan at their 130-acre horse farm east of Morrow in Warren County. Eight years ago Bruce survived a severe head injury from a horse that reared up and slammed a hoof down on his right temple. He was not expected to survive.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Given 12-1 odds by Churchill Downs odds maker Mike Battaglia, Taiba will break from the No. 12 post in the Kentucky Derby tonight.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Given 12-1 odds by Churchill Downs odds maker Mike Battaglia, Taiba will break from the No. 12 post in the Kentucky Derby tonight.

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