As Raedler explained, training a trotter takes much more patience and time compared with preparing a pacer and McNeil laid the groundwork for trotting races to expand to this day.
It was a costly exercise at the time for McNeil but many of the trotters from New Zealand were gifted to people within the harness racing industry in Queensland to get the ball rolling.
As well as his initial investment in trotters, McNeil put large sums of money into the Albion Park Harness Racing Club through sponsorship.
As an owner, McNeil had most of his horses with legend trainer Graeme Bowyer, who was inducted into the Queensland Harness Hall of Fame in late 2017.
McNeil did not own huge numbers of horses, but he always had one or two in work at a time, his friends said.
He did own one champion mare in Smooth Leyenda.
Smooth Leyenda went on win the $150,000 Oceania El Dorado Final in NSW.
“She was a very good mare and won a quarter of a million dollars when that was a significant amount of money,” Smith (pictured) said.
“That was the best horse he had.”
As well as his racing interests, McNeil employed over 100 people through his business dealings, many of which became involved in horses through their boss.
“He was a very smart businessman, he owned a company called Wheels and Rims Engineering, which was a steel manufacturing company that made big wheels for mining vehicles and earthmoving equipment,” Raedler, who retired from his role as Albion Park chief executive around 12 months ago, said.
“He was a very busy man.
“We had a great friendship and he was a top bloke.”
Smith described his late friend as one of the hardest workers he had ever been around before he passed away in his 60’s around a decade ago.
“He was as good as they get as a person, he was so generous” Smith said.
“He was one of the blokes that should never be forgotten.
“He was a very good man that eventually got an interest in harness racing, which I do not actually know how he got that interest to start with.
“As soon as he had horses in work, he was then sponsoring races.”
Smith is proud that the memorial race is still being run in 2021 and hopes it can be continued for many years to come.
In November of 2020, Majestic Simon (pictured), trained by Chantal Turpin and driven by husband Pete McMullen, became the first horse to claim the two biggest trotting events in Queensland - the Jim McNeil and the Darrell Alexander Trotting Championships.
In the 2021 final this Saturday night, the leading Queensland stable of Grant Dixon looks to be in the box seat to take out the race with four chances, headlined by Aladdin Sane.
However, it should be a great race with chances to Orlando Jolt for Darrel Graham who won two of the heats, Unknown Son and Kraze for Graham Dwyer, both highly talented horses advantaged by the front row draw and Van Sank, who was a brilliant heat winner last week for trainer Shannon Price.