A Steadfast Steward
Veteran owner, breeder, and influential leader Lloyd Yother has dedicated decades to advancing the American Quarter Horse Racing industry.
Some people simply participate in the equine industry; others dedicate their lives to shaping it. Lloyd Yother unequivocally falls into the latter category.
As Western Region Vice President of the Horsemen’s Benovolent and Protective Association (HBPA), President of the Arizona HPBA, and President of the Arizona Quarter Racing Association, Yother has worn more hats than most, all while nurturing his own stable of Quarter Horses as an owner and breeder and partner with Garvan Kelly in EIRE Equine Nursery in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma.
Yother’s career is a testament to a life dedicated to the well-being of horses and horsemen, a journey marked by service as an industry leader, owner, breeder, and advocate.
For Yother, the path to cementing his place in the Quarter Horse business was anything but linear. With humble roots in rural Georgia to stints in the airline, wine and beverage, and construction industries, Yother’s early life laid the groundwork for the passion that would eventually define his career.
“I grew up in northwest Georgia in a little town called Dalton,” shared Yother. “I didn’t know anything but plow mules, which we had to borrow because we couldn’t afford our own. I got out of high school and went into the United States Air Force and served four years. Got out of the service and went to work for Continental Airlines. I lived in Midland, Texas, for a while and then transferred to their operation in Los Angeles. After a few years there, I moved back to Georgia and got involved in the construction business. Eventually, I went to work for a liquor company and worked my way up to sales manager. The company was buying a wholesale business in Phoenix, Arizona, and they offered me the position of vice president and general manager in Arizona. I came out here and did that for about five years and then went back into construction.
“With a friend of mine, I went to the old Yavapai Downs up at Prescott, and it was Prescott Downs back then, a half-mile bullring,” recalled Yother. “And I just fell in love with Quarter Horse racing. I love Quarter Horses. I had been venturing out a little bit on trail rides and riding groups since I moved to Arizona in ’79. I went to my first horse races at the county fairs and, of course, the track at Prescott, in ’82. After that, I went to a sale and bought my first horse and started racing. I bought a few…



