John Pearce placed eighth individually at the 2010 World Equestrian Games and was the Canadian team’s second-strongest finisher, helping them achieve a top-five result and a berth in the 2012 Olympics. Throughout a competitive career that has included the Olympics, World Championships, World Cup Finals and countless grand prix wins, John has been inspired to excel by his fellow Canadian show jumpers. “The other top riders all have qualities you can learn from,” he says. “We have team camaraderie, but we also push one another by being competitive among ourselves.”

But it was John’s parents, Bill and Penny, who have been his greatest source of inspiration. “My mom and dad were my biggest mentors. My father raised me to be the man I am today. My mother was a big part of the decision-making in our family. Nothing got past her.” It was Bill Pearce’s self-made, hard-working example that turned John into the athlete and businessman he is today.

Bill Pearce developed a passion for horses in his teens, when Thoroughbreds were the breed most commonly used for hunters, jumpers and hunting, all of which Bill did as a hobby. “He was an astute businessman, and he had a Harvard business degree,” says John. When he turned 58, Bill decided to take an early retirement from corporate life and launch a second career as a racehorse trainer. Bill started at the bottom. “Here was this corporate man in his late fifties mucking stalls,” remembers John. “He wanted to start from the ground up.” By the time he was 61, Bill had his trainer’s license and was training horses he bought at the Ocala breeders’ sales. “He galloped his own horses until he was 72, and he raced horses right up until the day he died,” remembers John. Bill’s daughter, Shelley, also became a trainer and worked at her father’s side as his assistant.

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