Taylor won the 400 meters at the 1924 United States Olympic Trials in Cambridge, Massachusetts; he ran his lifetime best, 48.1, in the heats and repeated that time in the final, defeating the eventual Olympic silver medalist Horatio Fitch.[7]: 56–57 [note 1] At the Olympics in Paris Taylor qualified for the final; he remained in medal contention until his sore ankle gave way just before the finish. He eventually crawled across the finish line and placed fifth; the injury ended his athletic career.[7][9][10]
In 1926 Taylor joined the Ethyl Gasoline Corporation; he was named the company's general sales manager in 1931 and vice president in charge of sales in 1937. Still working for Ethyl, Taylor died of a heart attack in New York City on June 25, 1946; he was survived by his wife and three sons.[11][12]
Notes
^Taylor's 48.1 was a world best for the metric distance, but inferior to Ted Meredith's 440-yard (402.3 m) time of 47 2⁄5 seconds. At the time, a better mark over a longer distance was not automatically a world record for the shorter event as well; this was changed in 1926.[8]
^"J. Coard Taylor, Official of Ethyl; Vice President in Charge of Sales for Oil Firm Dies--Track Star at Princeton". The New York Times. June 26, 1946.