Family First
Two great Canadian harness racing families teamed up to post an emotional victory when Marion Marauder won the 91st Hambletonian and completed the mission started by Hall of Famer Bill Wellwood.
story by Dave Briggs, photos by Dave Landry
She waited patiently through the many presentations, but when it finally was her turn, Paula Wellwood was anything but her usual quiet, reserved self. Raising the Hambletonian trophy over her head, sweet euphoria swept over her face and spilled out of her for all to see.
Just a few minutes after Marion Marauder stuck a couple of nose hairs in front of favored Southwind Frank to win the $1 million Hambletonian Saturday afternoon (Aug. 6) at the Meadowlands, Wellwood, who cares for the colt and shares his training duties with her husband, Mike Keeling, was undergoing a complete transformation in the winnerâs circle.
It did not go unnoticed by the coupleâs 19-year-old son, Devin Keeling, who owns Marion Marauder with his grandmother, Jean Wellwood, the widow of U.S. and Canadian Hall of Famer Bill Wellwood.
âIâve seen (my parents) win big races their whole lives and be happy, but Iâve never seen the look in my momâs eyes that she had when she picked that trophy up,â Devin said. âSheâs been chasing it since she was a child, my grandpa was chasing it, and just the look in her eyes, was almost like my grandpa radiating through her. It wasnât just happiness, it was eternal bliss. It was just completeness,â Devin said.
Asked about it later, Paula said the magnitude of the moment, âwas finally sinking in. I was speechless through the whole race. I couldnât even cheer.â
Nearby, Jean was crying. Bill Wellwood died in 2003 without realizing a dream to win the Hambletonian, despite a number of attempts.
âWeâve tried a lot times. We really have tried, and this oneâs for William. Iâve got tears,â Jean said, pointing to the sunglasses hiding her red eyes. âWe finally got it done and you have no idea how happy I am because itâs been a long time coming. My daughter is an excellent horselady and Mike trains and they both are a good team and they really work well together.â
Meanwhile, 27-year-old driver Scott Zeron was kicking himself for not being emotional enough, but said it had more to do with not knowing whether he had won or just missed.
âI thought, âOh my God, did I win?â I wish I knew I won, because I wouldâve been a bit more excited and could have celebrated,â Zeron said. âI looked and (Southwind Frankâs driver) Yannick (Gingras) said, âHey, congratulations,â but some of us drivers will do that just to tilt it over, like âOh yeah, you got it, you got itâ and then when it comes around youâll be disappointed. So it was a long wait, but then I saw all my connections jumping up and then it hit me.â
Zeron is the eighth driver in the Hambletonianâs 91-year history to win the race in his first attempt. Paula Wellwood joined Linda Toscano as the only women to train a Hambletonian champion.
It was Jean that first zeroed in on Marion Marauder in the 2014 Lexington Selected Yearling Sale catalog while watching the sale on her laptop. She liked the pedigree (Muscle Hill out of Spellbound Hanover) and asked Paula to check out the trotter originally named Marion Monopoly. The colt was a little small, but Jean asked Paula to buy the colt anyway if the price was right, and it was at $37,000.
The family renamed the trotter Marion Marauder, âbecause Devin is going to McMaster University (in Hamilton, ON) and heâs a football player on the Marauders,â Mike said. âJeanâs name is Marion Jean Wellwood. It just kind of lined up.â
The victory improved Marion Marauder to 7-5-3 in 20 career starts and pushed his earnings over $1 million lifetime. Marion Marauder won the final in 1:51.4, just one-fifth of a second slower than he won his elimination four races earlier with a career-best 1:51.3 performance that was a half-length better than Southwind Frank.
But that elimination victory was anything but easy or pretty. Marion Marauder had traffic trouble early, leaving Paula wondering just where her colt was in the mile as she watched from the paddock.
âThe TV wasnât on when they were going behind the gate. So then I tried to watch the first heat out on the tarmac and he wasnât getting called. I couldnât see him. So I ran in and I saw Mike standing at the TV and I said, âWhere is he?!? Oh my God, whatâs happening?ââ
âIt was kind of a crazy trip, but he showed the kind of horse he is,â Mike said. âI donât think itâs a trip that either one of us envisioned, but thatâs horse racing and you take what you get and you hope youâve got the horse to do it.â
Bar Hopping handily won the first Hambletonian elimination by five-and-a-quarter lengths in 1:51.4 for trainer Jimmy Takter, driver Tim Tetrick and owners Christina Takter of New Jersey, Hatfield Stables of Columbus, OH, Marv Katz of Toronto and Al Libfeld of Pickering, ON.
In the final, Zeron said he âdidnât want to push my horse out of his comfort zone. Iâd love to just push to the front and try to sit two-hole to Bar Hopping or Frank, but it wouldnât have been that easy. So I elected to take back and I inevitably knew heâd be first up, but this horse is a grinder. He gradually picks up his speed throughout the race, so I was confident that first up wouldnât hurt him as long as it didnât turn into a third-quarter sprint. And it didnât. Bar Hopping was a little vulnerable when I got up to him, and I decided to pull the trigger and just try to sprint away on the field. God, he delivered.
âWhen I got closer to Bar Hopping I saw that Timmy was weakening. My horse started grabbing on, grabbing on so I couldnât help myself and I just let him go early. I let him go too early, which is why we only won by a nostril, but by the same token, he fought all the way down the lane.â
Zeron, the son of successful Woodbine circuit trainer/driver Rick Zeron, had his mother, Joyce, in the winnerâs circle, but Rick was at home in Oakville, ON, just as he was in 2012 when Scott also won the Little Brown Jug in his first attempt, driving Michaels Power to victory.
Earlier Saturday, Scott drove his fatherâs pacer Shamballa to an upset victory in the U.S. Pacing Championship over the Big Three of Always B Miki, Wiggle It Jiggleit and Freaky Feet Pete.
âFor sure, (dad) was crying and heâs going to say heâs proud of me. The last thing heâll talk about is (Shamballa). We have a great relationship and I wish he was here for that race and as well for the Hambo, but I know heâs crying back home,â Scott said.
Sure enough, Rick said âthe waterworks startedâ when Marion Marauder hit the wire a nose hair in front of Southwind Frank in the Hambletonian final. âItâs a big day. I was really happy with him winning with Shamballa, but I was more happy with him winning the Hambletonian.â
Scott, the leading driver at the Meadowlands, said he hopes winning the Hambletonian will be a further boost to his career. His parents couldnât be prouder.
Joyce said she is âso excited and so proud of (Scott). I missed the PEI Gold Cup and Saucer the first time he won that. I wasnât supposed to be at the Jug, but I had a feeling he was going to win so I went and he won. This time, I wasnât supposed to come⌠but I had a feeling he was going to win, so I said âIâve got to goâ. And Iâm so happy that I did come and Iâm so proud of him and grateful to the owners for believing in him and the connections.â
The driver said he was mostly thrilled for Paula and Mike, âbecause they have developed trotters their whole lives. Theyâve been in this race, finished third. Itâs their end-all, be-all race. And for me itâs the first time Iâve been in it. I havenât lost it 20 times or anything, but at the same time, I got it out of the way early and I donât know where I go from here.â
Scott Zeron may have a knack for winning big races the first time out, but before this yearâs race, Mike Keeling still was feeling the heartburn of Keystone Ludwig making a break in 1992 while poised to post a Hambletonian victory.
âHe was my horse. I took care of him. He was a big, beautiful horse. He was circling them around the last turn (in his heat) and he threw a shoe. It was back in the days of leather rim pads and the leather rim pad in the hot weather, the nails didnât stay the way they should have and the shoe came flying off and I was heartbroken⌠Ron Waples was driving him and he said, âI had so much horse.â He just blew up off the last turn.â
Twenty-four years on, Mike said Marion Marauder makes up for that day. Not that he had many doubts. He knew his family finally had karma on its side.
âI do believe in that,â Mike said. âYou put good out into the world and sometimes good comes back⌠and we work hard, you know.
âHe drew the four-hole, thatâs my favorite number, and it was the 13th race. Thirteen is a very lucky number for us. (Devin) was born on (March) 13th.â
Then, as if he was verbally pinching himself, Mike grinned. âI just won the Hambletonian,â he said, laughing. âNot many people get to say that.â
Especially not that many Canadians can say they have won a Hambletonian in its 91 years. Mike said it helped to have many Canadians cheering for them.
âThe good will from everybody at home, it wasnât fake, it was âWe really want you guys to go down there and win that.â We slayed some dragons today, too.â
Paula and Mike have a 12-horse stable in Cambridge, ON.
âIâm hoping that it brings a little bit of recognition for everybody to keep the hope and to keep involved. You can have the big dream. I hope people see that you can dream the dream and it can happen,â Paula said.
âIt sends a message that itâs not just the big boys that win all the races,â Rick said. âThe little people can win them, too.â
Devin Keeling, who is entering his second year of university, said he hopes some of the money will help him pay for his education, but âitâs not about the money anymore, itâs about so much more than money,â especially for his grandmother.
âI think itâs like an out-of-body experience for her,â Devin said of watching Jean light up the winnerâs circle. âI remember talking to her last night about all the other chances weâve had and how hard my grandpa worked at this and how he was devastated with the losses or even happy, but still not complete without the wins. Iâm just so happy for her and I can only imagine what sheâs feeling.â
What does it mean to have the Wellwood/Keeling names on the famed trophy?
âIt means a lot. It means the world, especially when you train trotters and thatâs all we train,â Paula said.
Not far away, her mother was swinging between elation and sadness as she dedicated the Hambletonian to her husband.
âI couldnât help but think about William today,â Jean said, crying.
Devin said winning the Hambletonian was as much about unfinished business, as anything.
âWhen (grandpa) didnât accomplish it then my mom basically took it upon her shoulders, and my grandma as well when he passed,â Devin said. âItâs that internal drive. Itâs not something that we wanted to do, itâs something that we had to do.â
Mike, the man who believes in karma, said he was struck with a strange, peaceful feeling all day.
âI just knew we had the right horse and it was out of my control at that point,â Mike said.
Divine intervention, perhaps?
âIâm sure he was the one that gave him that last push,â Paula said of her late father, adding that if William Wellwood was alive he likely would have been, âa little quiet at first, but then he would have had lots to say, you know that.â
Then Paula smiled â not as sweetly as when she radiated pure bliss picking up the trophy, but enough to suggest the familyâs long journey was finally complete.