Dayton: Curtain drops on record-setting 2023 racing season
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The curtain has fallen on Dayton Raceway's 10th racing season, with records all around. Five track records were tied or broken, a repeat driving champion was crowned, the all-time single day handle record was set, and 2023 saw an increase in total handle for the fifth straight year.
Starting off with new track records, the track crew, led by Track Super Jim Shelton, had the racing surface extremely sharp all year, and it didn't take long into the meet to start setting new marks as the first three fell on Dayton Derby night. Tattoo Artist set a new mark for aged horses at 1:48 while winning the Dayton Pacing Derby, and Hillexotic would set a new mark for aged geldings by winning the Dayton Trotting Derby in 1:51 1/5. In the Buckeye Stallion Series final for filly trotters, Justasiam As would shatter the old mark in crossing the line in 1:54 4/5. In December, not exactly a well-known track record-breaking month, we saw two records tied. Art Scaping tied the aged gelding mark at 1:49 and Dover In Motion tied the 4YO gelding mark of 1:52 1/5.
Jeremy Smith picked up where he left off, defending his driving title from 2022 by repeating in 2023. Smith, who was sidelined the first five weeks of the meet while recovering from surgery, spotted his rivals nearly 150 starts. On December 7th, he still trailed by 14 wins, but by December 29th, he had clinched the title, being 22 wins ahead at that time. He won at nearly a 30 percent clip in December to accomplish that feat. He finished the meet with 143 wins, 25 wins clear of second-place Dan Noble. On the training side of things, the Burke Brigade finished out the meet with 37 wins to edge out last year's training champion, Jason Brewer, by just two wins. It's the second title for the Burke barn in the last three years. Burke's $713,455 in earnings also topped the meet.
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Handle at the track saw an increase for the fifth straight year. In 2018, all source handle checked in at $18.3 million. This year, a new record of $33.5 million was achieved for an increase of 83 percent over 2018 and 9.4 percent over 2022. Dayton also saw a single-night record fall, handling $1.286 million on December 28th, just one year after setting the previous mark of $1.272 million.
Dayton Raceway would like to thank all the drivers, trainers, owners, fans, bettors, and staff for helping make our 2023 meet the most successful yet! We look forward to seeing everyone next year!
--press release (Dayton)--

