Emoticon Legacy Shatters Records in Canadian Trotting Classic

MILTON, September 20, 2025— Emoticon Legacy ruled over the Woodbine Mohawk Park surface again when beating his own track and Canadian record with a stakes-record performance in the Grade 1 $615,000 Canadian Trotting Classic on Saturday while also becoming the first trotting sophomore to eclipse the 1:50 barrier in Canada.

Driver Louis-Philippe Roy sent Emoticon Legacy towards the top against Happy Jack B in a charge to the first turn. Roy cleared command after a :25.4 first quarter and coasted for a slight reprieve up the backside to a :54.3 half. Maryland, racing in fourth, pulled off the pegs and loomed along the rim towards Emoticon Legacy, though Roy promptly notched his charge into another gear off three-quarters in 1:22.1 and scampered away. Emoticon Legacy sealed the race by the eighth pole as Roy raced purely against the clock, nursing the emboldened colt on loose lines to register a 1:49.4 mile. Maryland gave pursuit in second, beaten three lengths, with Gap Kronos S taking third and Fadeaway Hanover rallying for fourth.

“That was the first time this year that leaving the gate he was a little hot,” Roy said after the race. “He wasn’t giving me the option, so I was just sitting on him waiting. I was just letting him trot – once he was on the front, I could do what I want. But I saw Maryland coming first up at the half and I said ‘I don’t think it’s a good time to take a break and get him close to us.’ I feel like he never gets tired. I hope he doesn’t get me wrong, but I think he’ll be pretty hard to beat.

“The first quarter took a bit more stress than last time,” Roy also said, referencing the colt’s 1:50.3 Simcoe win on Aug. 30. “You ask a trotter to go a first quarter in :25.4, for sure he’s going to get a little tired. But he keeps trotting and comes a last quarter in :27 or something. Tonight was probably all he could go, and I still believe that [in the Simcoe] he had at least a full second under his seat. He loves to fight a horse, so once he’s on the front and gets one coming to him I think that’s what would’ve pushed him to go faster. Right now he’s hard to beat that way.”

The 1:49.4 mile lowers the 1:50.2 mark that Emoticon Legacy established earlier this season in winning the Goodtimes Stakes final on Pepsi North America Cup night. It also matches the all-age mark of 1:49.4 set by stallion Aetos Kronos S when winning his Maple Leaf Trot elimination this year, but comes shy of the fastest trotting mile ever in Canada of 1:49.1 set by aged gelding Lexus Kody in this year’s Maple Leaf Trot final.

Luc Blais trains Emoticon Legacy, a homebred Walner colt out of the Kadabra mare Emoticon Hanover, for owner Determination. ​ 

“He learned how to deal with the pressure this year,” Blais said after the race. “I think he’s more mature, that’s it. He’s a real athlete. He recuperates fast after each race, he’s never sick. That’s easy for me to deal with. It’s an incredible feeling. Emoticon Hanover gave us a big thrill and that guy gives me the same feeling.”

Emoticon Legacy has now won 10 races from 15 starts and entered millionaire status with $1,178,770 in the bank. Off the 1-5 favourite, he paid $2.60 to win. 

By Ray Cotolo, for Woodbine Communications

Grace Martin

Grace Martin

Communications Manager, Woodbine Entertainment

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Woodbine Entertainment is the largest horse racing operator in Canada, with Thoroughbred horse racing at Woodbine Racetrack in Toronto, and Standardbred horse racing at Woodbine Mohawk Park in Milton. Woodbine Entertainment also owns and operates HPIbet, Canada’s only betting platform dedicated to horse racing. Woodbine and Mohawk Park are host to several world-class racing events including The King’s Plate, three Breeders’ Cup Challenge Series races, and the Pepsi North America Cup. Run without share capital, Woodbine Entertainment has a mandate to financially invest all profit back into the horse racing industry and the 25,000 jobs it supports across Ontario.

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