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Hastings Racecourse

Coordinates: 49°17′12″N 123°02′22″W / 49.28667°N 123.03944°W / 49.28667; -123.03944
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hastings Racecourse
Location188 N. Renfrew St., Vancouver, British Columbia V5K 3N8
Coordinates49°17′12″N 123°02′22″W / 49.28667°N 123.03944°W / 49.28667; -123.03944
Owned byGreat Canadian Entertainment
Date opened1889
Race typeThoroughbred racing
Course typeFlat five furlongs
Notable racesLieutenant Governors Stakes, British Columbia Derby, British Columbia Premier's Handicap, Ballerina Stakes, British Columbia Oaks, Fantasy Stakes, Ascot Graduation Stakes
Official website

Hastings Racecourse is a horse-racing facility at Hastings Park, four miles from downtown Vancouver. Originally called East Park, it opened for business in 1889, making it Vancouver's longest continuously used professional sports facility. The racing operation is currently a wholly owned subsidiary of the Great Canadian Gaming Corporation, which acquired the lease of the city-owned track in 2004.[1]

History

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The track was originally known as Exhibition Park Race Track,[2] but has always been referred to by the public and the media as Exhibition Park.[3] July 1, 1939 marked the first time thoroughbred racing used an electric starting gate, the invention of Texan Clay Puett.[4]

Following Canada's declaration of war on Imperial Japan in 1942, Hastings Racecourse was used to house and process Japanese Canadians before being sent to internment camps in the interior of British Columbia.[5]

On the first Monday in August, a public holiday, the track hosts BC Cup Day that features a series of six races for top Thoroughbreds in various classes. In September, the two most important races for three-year-olds in British Columbia, the British Columbia Oaks and the British Columbia Derby, are run at Hastings Racecourse.

On May 18, 2011, the course was reported to be closed at the end of its 2012 lease due to low profits from wagering revenue and slots, as well as difficulty reaching an agreeable new lease with the city. A decision by Great Canadian had to be made by October 31 of that year.[6] The result of those negotiations was that the track remained open and running.

In 2012, Hastings Racecourse made international headlines when little-known Mexican-born jockey Mario Gutierrez (who had emigrated to Canada in 2006 and begun riding at Hastings, winning the track's riding titles in 2007 and 2008), won the Santa Anita Derby, the Kentucky Derby, and the Preakness Stakes aboard I'll Have Another.[7][8]

Graded events

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These Grade III events were held at Hastings Racecourse in 2019:

References

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  1. ^ Bob Mackin (May 19, 2012). "Winning Jockey Came From a Struggling Track". The New York Times.
  2. ^ "Horse Racing at Exhibition Park Race Track". City of Vancouver Archives Item : CVA 180-3864. 1972. Retrieved November 12, 2018.
  3. ^ "Bower collection to support jockeys at Hastings Racecourse". Vancouver Sun. July 30, 2014. Retrieved November 12, 2018.
  4. ^ "Clay Puett Gate Makes Hit: New Starting Device, Closed Fore and Aft, Works to Perfection at Canadian". Daily Racing Form at University of Kentucky Archives. July 14, 1939. Retrieved November 12, 2018.
  5. ^ "History". Hastings Park 1942. June 23, 2016. Retrieved January 12, 2022.
  6. ^ "Hastings Racecourse could close - News1130". Archived from the original on March 22, 2011.
  7. ^ Yvonne Zacharias (May 5, 2012). "Mario Gutierrez takes unlikely path from poverty to Kentucky Derby win via east Vancouver racecourse". Vancouver Sun.
  8. ^ Cam Tucker (May 19, 2012). "Mario Gutierrez, I'll Have Another wins 137th Preakness Stakes". Vancouver Sun.
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