An
overall increase in handle (total money wagered) and seven track record
performances marked a successful 2014 season at Tioga Downs, which concluded on
Saturday, September 13.
Overall handle on the 61-day meet was considerably
improved in comparison to the 2013 season, with all-sources handle showing a
5.4% increase. This increase was largely due to a more involved simulcast
audience, whose handle was 13.4% higher than in the previous season.
"We
thank our customers and horsemen for their support of our 2014 racing
season," said Jason M. Settlemoir, Regional Vice President of Racing at
Tioga Downs. "We are proud of the great competitive racing on our
5/8 mile track, and that it continues to be well received across the North
American harness racing audience."
With
respect to the record books, four-year-old distaff trotter Charmed Life and
driver Jody Jamieson established a new overall record for trotters on New York
State's only 5/8-mile track, winning their Miss Versatility preliminary in
1:52.2 as part of the Cane Pace undercard on Monday, September 1.
Trotting geldings Datsyuk (three-year-old, Charlie Norris), Obrigado
(four-year-old, Aaron Byron), and Traverse Seelster (older, Brandon Simpson)
also turned in track-record performances through the season, scoring in 1:53.1,
1:52.3, and 1:52.4 respectively. Two-year-old trotting filly Jolene
Jolene (David Miller) equalled You Want Me's mark of 1:55.2 as well, completing
the quintet of record established on the trotting side of the ledger.
Additionally,
a pair of pacers entered the Tioga record books, with Sweet Lou's 1:48.3
triumph in the Roll With Joe on Sunday, June 1 (Ron Pierce aboard) equalling
Shark Gesture's past mark for older pacing entires. Mosquito Blue Chip
(Jim Morrill, Jr.) set a new record outright for two-year-old pacing fillies,
proving victorious in 1:52.1.
Jim
Marohn, Jr. claimed his third consecutive driving title with 91 wins on the
meet, 13 more than runner-up Aaron Byron. Top training honors went to
Mike Deters, who took his second training title and first outright with 33
wins. Normand Fluet and Gail Wrubel finished in a dead heat for second
with 20 wins apiece.