Online Betting on the Kentucky Derby in Ontario Has Changed. Here’s How.

Adding horse racing to a betting app seems like such a small and natural thing, but the recent changes to legal sports betting in Canada made it much more complicated.

Geoff Zochodne - Senior News Analyst at Covers.com
Geoff Zochodne • Senior News Analyst
May 3, 2024 • 11:15 ET • 3 min read
Kentucky Derby
Photo By - USA TODAY Sports

There is a major change this year to how online betting on the Kentucky Derby will work in Canada’s most populous province. 

While horseplayers in Ontario have and will still be able to legally place pari-mutuel wagers on the “Run for the Roses” via Woodbine Entertainment Group's HPIbet and Dark Horse Bets, they can also use bet365 for the first time since the bookmaker became provincially regulated. 

That's because one thing that happened between the 149th Derby in May 2023 and the 150th Derby this weekend is a partnership was formed between bet365 and Woodbine that allows the former to offer wagering on horse racing that is processed by the latter.

This means bet365 users in Ontario can log onto the operator’s app or site on Saturday and find the Derby Day races at Churchill Downs. No other operator in Ontario's competitive iGaming market can do the same, at least not at this point.

Users will also see on the app or site that while these markets may appear on bet365, they are operated by Toronto-based Woodbine Entertainment, as the company is the only holder of a federal pari-mutuel betting license in Ontario. Offering fixed-odds wagering on horse racing remains illegal in Canada. 

"It's been less than a year since horse racing was integrated into the bet365 Ontario app and we have seen continued growth in both new customers and betting handle, which is encouraging," said David Vivenes, executive vice president of brand and experience for Woodbine Entertainment, in a press release. "Now with the Kentucky Derby on Saturday, we have our biggest single day opportunity to further engage with sports bettors and grow."

Adding horse racing to a betting app seems like such a small and natural thing, but the recent changes to legal sports betting in Canada made it much more complicated. Indeed, the launch of a competitive market for internet casino gambling and online sports betting in Ontario in 2022 has led to an explosion in choice for provincial punters, but it also had some side effects, one of which concerned horse racing

Ontario long had a robust “grey” market for online sports betting, wherein residents could access offshore and out-of-province sites that also offered horse racing. When those operators joined Ontario’s regulated market, they dropped horse racing from their sites in the province to comply with Canadian law. 

That left longtime users of those sites wondering where horse racing went, especially around the Kentucky Derby, arguably the biggest race of the year. Ontario-regulated online sportsbooks were unable to take action on the Derby over the past two years, leading to a fair amount of irritation, even with Woodbine’s sites still open for business.  

We're so back

Now, though, Ontario sports bettors who want to dabble in horse racing have bet365 available to them again as well.

Although horse racing isn’t quite the draw for bettors as it is overseas, North American bookmakers have increasingly embraced it as another way to draw in customers and keep them wagering. Similar to its Woodbine deal, bet365 recently struck a partnership in the U.S. with the Stronach Group’s 1/ST Technology to provide horse racing.

Timing is everything, however. And a well-known event like the Kentucky Derby is arguably the biggest day of the year for that horse racing-related engagement. 

Woodbine, meanwhile, is eyeing partnerships with sportsbook operators such as bet365 to attract new fans and bettors to the sport

“Over the longer term, we see an unprecedented opportunity to engage this audience, acquire new customers, and drive handle that will increase our overall wagering revenue to support and grow horse racing and the nearly 25,000 jobs it supports here,” Vivenes said in the release.

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Geoff Zochodne, Covers Sports Betting Journalist
Senior News Analyst

Geoff has been writing about the legalization and regulation of sports betting in Canada and the United States for more than three years. His work has included coverage of launches in New York, Ohio, and Ontario, numerous court proceedings, and the decriminalization of single-game wagering by Canadian lawmakers. As an expert on the growing online gambling industry in North America, Geoff has appeared on and been cited by publications and networks such as Axios, TSN Radio, and VSiN. Prior to joining Covers, he spent 10 years as a journalist reporting on business and politics, including a stint at the Ontario legislature. More recently, Geoff’s work has focused on the pending launch of a competitive iGaming market in Alberta, the evolution of major companies within the gambling industry, and efforts by U.S. state regulators to rein in offshore activity and college player prop betting.

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