We've suffered in a couple of major ways during the pandemic.
On one, I'll speak about Ontario. Woodbine Entertainment generates approximately 95% of the wagering revenue in the province. There are 15 racetracks in the province, and most of the wagering is on the Woodbine Entertainment product, both harness racing and thoroughbred flat racing. We were shut down in March, April and May on the harness racing side. Our thoroughbred meet in 2020 was scheduled to start in April and it also did not start until the first week of June, concurrently with our harness racing product. We were down a couple of hundred million dollars of wagering during that period.
Across the country, racetracks did not operate and we relied very much on simulcast wagering on other racetracks in the United States, which did operate. However, we were hurt substantially by not having our own product, which, as Mr. Ford mentioned, generates about $1.2 billion for racetracks across the country.
Through a lot of hard work and marketing, we managed to convert a lot of people to the digital product. I say “convert” because, for most of the year, once we got started in June, we were not allowed to have spectators. That took a while, but ultimately we did catch up.
While we dug a huge hole for ourselves during the early months, our wagering through digital online wagering caught up, not on an annualized basis but on a year-over-year basis. We managed to end the year down. We didn't put a big dint in the hole that was created earlier in the year, but we're confident that, as we look to 2021, we can run racing, which we're currently doing at Mohawk in Milton, and can run it without spectators.