[8] As a filly, Ina Scot was discovered and purchased by Swedish horseman Kjell P. Dahlström close to his farm, Hassangården, outside Tranås, Sweden.
[9] Dahlström was the mare's trainer during her entire career, and either he or his then-wife Helen A. Johansson drove Ina Scot in all of her 90 races.
Always the heavy favourite, she took prestigious trophies like Drottning Silvias Pokal, Stochampionatet, the Swedish Trotting Derby, Grand Prix de l'U.E.T.
[6][11] In her debut of 1994, in a minor race at home track Mantorp on March 7, Ina Scot's winning streak came to an end.
She finished outside the money in big events like Jubileumspokalen at Solvalla and Preis der Besten in Munich, Germany but won a couple of smaller domestic races.
In May, Ina Scot claimed the big international Italian event Gran Premio della Lotteria at Agnano, Naples.
Abroad, she raced at among others Norwegian racetrack Bjerke in Oslo, German track Gelsenkirchen, and San Siro in Milan, but none of these trips resulted in victories.
[6] After a rest period of a couple of months, Ina Scot returned in April and lost a minor race at home track Mantorp.
Her first offspring, Ambassadeur Brunn, was born in April 1998 before Ina Scot was purchased by German Michael Schröer.
[21][22] In August 2007, the Italian-born colt Michael November was the most expensive among 63 one-year-olds sold at a horse sale in the Netherlands, costing €66,000.
[23] At this time, it was reported that Schröer had sold Ina Scot to Dutch real estate broker Ger Visser.