North America Cup Rewind: Betting Line

Betting Line winning at Woodbine Mohawk Park
Published: June 13, 2023 10:24 am EDT

In May 2016, Jonathan Drury drove Betting Line to a runner-up finish in his seasonal debut at Woodbine Mohawk Park. It was a standard early season overnight tune-up for a sophomore pointed at major summer stakes.

Afterwards, Drury told trainer Casie Coleman that he was upset because he was going to be the only driver to lose all season sitting behind Betting Line. Incredibly, Drury was correct. The son of Bettors Delight won his next 14 races, including the 2016 Pepsi North America Cup in thrilling fashion.

“JD drove him great that night and just got beat late,” said Coleman. “But to go on that win streak, in the three-year-old colt year, the toughest year, racing in all of those stake races, you think at some point he has to get beat. But the horse was just amazing.”

In his next start, Betting Line defeated conditioned foes, before winning the Somebeachsomewhere Stakes, a Pepsi North America Cup prep.

Drury sat behind him for both wins, but Coleman tipped U.S. Hall of Famer David Miller to drive the colt in the Cup eliminations. Miller had never driven the colt in a race, but he had trained him a few times. He thought Betting Line was a nice horse, but not quite at the level Coleman believed he was.

Casie Coleman and David Miller with the North America Cup trophy

“The first time Dave was ever sitting behind him in a race was in the elimination of the Pepsi North America Cup,” said Coleman. “This horse was a different horse from training to racing, and when he got the job done in the elimination and was in the winner’s circle, Dave was smiling ear to ear, and was like, ‘Oh my god, now I see what you’re talking about with this horse.’”

When the wings rolled in the $1 million final, Miller and Betting Line sat off an early pace set by Lyons Snyder and Control the Moment, who led the field through a half-mile in :53.4 and three-quarters in 1:20.3.

Around the far turn, Miller and Betting Line turned on the afterburners and paced home in :25.4 to establish a new stakes record and, at the time, a Canadian record of 1:47.4.

“I thought he was the best horse and so did the public. He was the favourite that night,” said Coleman. “But just the way it was all setting up, I went from thinking we’re the best, we’re going to win this, to at the [half-mile] thinking let’s get a good cheque. Then to end up winning, I think I was halfway standing on the racetrack by the time he was coming down the lane.”

The win was Coleman’s second in the Pepsi North America Cup and, just like her first one with Sportswriter, it was life-changing.

“For all the connections, you win the race as [a] colt, there’s a good chance you’re going to go to stud once you’re racing career is over and that obviously is awesome,” said Coleman. “Then as a trainer, to show you can train a stakes horse like that and win that type of race, it’s like winning the Stanley Cup.”

When asked what she remembers best from that night, outside of his charge down the lane, Coleman highlighted the crowd and energy at Woodbine Mohawk Park.

“There’s no feeling like that night,” said Coleman. “The way the crowd is that night, it’s standing room only Cup night. It’s a lot of fun and a great feeling.”

Betting Line in the winner's circle after the North America Cup

Over the course of his 14 sophomore wins that included the Pepsi North America Cup, Betting Line also picked up wins that year in the Little Brown Jug, Carl Milstein Memorial, Battle of Brandywine and the Ontario Sires Stakes Super Final, earning $1.6 million, Horse of the Year honours in Canada and a divisional Dan Patch Award.

Betting Line’s win in the Pepsi North America Cup was historic because it was Miller’s first Cup win and the first victory by a Bettors Delight offspring.

The perennial leading Ontario sire has shaped the Standardbred breed in Ontario, and around the world, and the win etched into the record books of Canada’s most prestigious race.

“It was amazing and a whole lot of fun,” said Coleman. "Every time you put that horse behind the gate, you knew he was giving you everything he had and I was always very confident in him.”

(OSS)

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