Beyond Luck
Mark & Annette McCloy’s Winning Formula
Mark and Annette McCloy entered the Quarter Horse racing industry with little fanfare, but with a quiet determination to succeed. Although relative newcomers a little over a decade ago, the McCloys have defied conventional wisdom to achieve a level of success typically reserved for generational operations. Since becoming racehorse owners in 2011, the McCloys are proof that passion combined with a healthy dose of luck can be just as formidable as pedigree in reaching the upper echelons in horse racing.
The rapid rise of the McCloys, who met while attending Texas Tech University, is marked by a string of high-profile wins. The couple initially got involved in Quarter Horse racing when they lived in Jal, New Mexico.
“We met in Lubbock at Texas Tech University,” Mark said. “She was a year or two behind me. After I graduated, I took a job teaching junior college. We got married that summer. I taught school and she worked in a bank in those early years.”
“When we lived in Jal, we would go to the races at Ruidoso Downs, and I thought that I would like to own a racehorse one day,” Mark continued. “So, we first got involved in the horse business by buying a Thoroughbred filly; she wasn’t any good. Then we bought part interest in Lotta Love Robyn, who was in the All American Futurity-G1 in 2011. We bought a very small part of her, and it kind of grew from there.
“Then the next fall at the sales we bought a filly, and later, I bought a mare at a sale as I was thinking about getting into raising them. That horse was Easeful Dinastia, a half-sister to FDD Dynasty. She produced a Grade 1 winner.”
Early Success
For many involved in horse racing, breeding and owning a Grade 1 winner is the ultimate dream. The McCloys realized that dream with homebred MM Fourinthemorning. A sorrel son of Mr Jess Perry out of Easeful Dinastia, MM Fourinthemorning won the 2018 Rainbow Futurity-G1 for the McCloys and trainer Blane Wood. MM Fourinthemorning won the $1 million event in front-running fashion, defeating Lethal Lil by 3/4-length in a fast final time of :19.537 for 400 yards. All told, MM Fourinthemorning racked earnings of $608,366 in a racing career that saw him win 4-of-12 lifetime outings.
“He was a big, stout, stand-up colt,” recalled Mark of MM Fourinthemorning. “He was a blast to watch on the racetrack. His first out was in the trials for the Ruidoso Futurity. He didn’t do much that day. He didn’t get out of the gate. He came back in the Rainbow Futurity trials and blew them away, qualifying for the Rainbow. I thought that was the greatest thing that ever happened. I always wanted to qualify for one of those Grade 1s. He brought a heck of a race to the finals and won it.
“He was the top two year old in the nation at one time,” Mark continued. “And then he won his All American trial, running another big race. We had some bleeding problems with him, and that’s what got him beat in the All American. He bled. He broke and was in the lead, and that blood hit him, and he kind of held up and slowed down. Then he really came running again at the end. That horse had such a big heart and a lot of try. We had some success with him as a three year old, but nothing like what he did at two. We retired him. I gave him to a good friend of ours who picks up broncs at rodeos, and MM Fourinthemorning is a pick-up horse now. He has another career.”
Mister Riptide, a talented New Mexico-bred, earned $748,298 for the McCloys before his life was tragically cut short in the 2020 Texas Classic Derby trial at Lone Star Park. Before the fateful injury…



