Thoroughbred Idea Foundation: Competition From Fixed-Odds Betting Good For Racing’s Customer

Legal, fixed-odds betting on horse racing in America, which has essentially been limited to big races offered by Nevada books, will take a big leap forward this summer when Monmouth Park, in partnership with Australian firm The Betmakers, will introduce a daily fixed-odds market for Monmouth's races and enable other bet-takers in the state to do the same. It is thought that fixed odds on simulcast races imported to New Jersey might be offered soon as well.

There should be little question that this is both a work-in-progress and a potentially massive step forward for racing, presenting customers with a new set of wagering options. Dennis Drazin, CEO of Darby Development, operators of Monmouth Park, has been the driving force behind the fixed odds play. He led a prolonged battle to overturn the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act (PASPA), which yielded legal sports betting in New Jersey and other states since.

Pari-mutuel betting has dominated the American landscape for decades. The only routine source of fixed odds betting for Americans on American racing is through “off-shore” options, which generally contribute nothing to tracks or horsemen. The evolution of regulated, fixed-odds wagering on racing in America will serve as a much-needed competitive volley against pari-mutuel options which have done little to modernize their product over the years.

As it grows, fixed odds betting on American racing should improve tote betting on American racing. It should inspire investment to modernize the tote system, to better serve customers and present a better betting experience. Without the competition, the American tote wagering experience has stagnated. Some examples

– Bet pricing is high.

– Tote breakage, the rounding down of tote dividends, is an archaic practice that has long-served as an additional tax on customers.

– Late odds changes make it near impossible for customers to know what they would expect to receive should they win.

– New bet types have favored higher takeout, lower-churn wagers.

– Markets are only visible for short periods, roughly only the 25 minutes between races. A majority of money wagered comes in the last minutes before a race is run.

– Projected payouts in exotic bets like trifectas, superfectas and pick “n” wagers (beyond doubles) are not offered.

In a more competitive landscape, bettors should expect service upgrades.

In Great Britain, a jurisdiction which has been dominated by fixed-odds betting for decades, pari-mutuel wagering (often called pool betting in the UK) has been a minor player. The UK Tote Group, a consortium of key owners and breeders in British racing, completed an acquisition and took-over pool betting in the country in late 2019.

Faced with a market that has been dominated by fixed odds betting, bolstered with a strong retail business through betting shops in nearly every British town and an online product supported by a near endless marketing blitz, the UK Tote Group had to devise a method to attract interest in a more sustainable source of betting for racing through pools betting.

Their idea – guarantee that the final tote win price at least match that of the final “starting price” offered by fixed odds providers on win bets (a single “starting price” is agreed upon for placement in the permanent record of the race). If the tote price falls short, the UK Tote Group will chip in to top-up the win dividend to winning customers, with protections in place to avoid manipulation.

Now, there are some very clear deficiencies with the British racing funding model.

Contributions from fixed-odds bookmakers represent a source of funding for purses, governed by the rules set out by the Horseracing Betting Levy Board (HBLB).

“The Levy on off-course betting…is collected from bookmakers as a percentage of the gross profit on their horserace betting business. The majority of Levy income is expended in direct support of horseracing.

“HBLB is among the most important contributors to horseracing's finances. The original intention of establishing the Levy, and therefore HBLB, was to provide a means of compensating racing for the loss of attendance that was anticipated when off-course betting shops were legalised in 1961. Today, HBLB applies Levy funds to a wide range of schemes in direct support of horseracing.”

Per-race prize money in the UK is some of the lowest in the world. There is no suggestion this funding model should be replicated in America, in fact, the funding model should be the opposite.

Establishing fair splits of existing tote betting and new fixed-odds betting on racing should be the key. New Jersey is seeking to prove and refine the model, the rest of the country should follow along enabling fixed-odds betting on racing.

It should be good for racing and the trickle down benefits felt by all of the sport's stakeholders.​​​​​

It's beyond time.

 

 

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$500,000 Rainbow 6 Jackpot Guarantee Saturday At Gulfstream; Mandatory Payouts Set For Tuesday

The 20-cent Rainbow 6 jackpot pool will be guaranteed at $500,000 Saturday at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla.

The popular multi-race wager went unsolved for the seventh consecutive racing day Friday, when multiple tickets with six winners were each worth $2,888.80.

The carryover jackpot is only paid out when there is a single unique ticket sold with all six winners. On days when there is no unique ticket, 70 percent of that day's pool goes back to those bettors holding tickets with the most winners, while 30 percent is carried over to the jackpot pool.

Saturday's Rainbow 6 sequence will span Races 7-12 and include the $60,000 Added Elegance in Race 11. Letruska and Nonna Madeline, who finished 1-2, respectively, in an Oaklawn Park allowance in April, will have a rematch in the mile overnight stakes for fillies and mares.

Letruska has won eight of her nine lifetime races on dirt, including the Copa Invitacional del Caribe on the Dec. 8 Clasico Internacional del Caribe program at Gulfstream. Nonna Madeline has placed twice in graded stakes, including a third-place finish in the Inside Information (G2) Jan. 25 at Gulfstream.

Mandatory Payouts for Tuesday's 9-Race Card
Tuesday's special 9-race program, which will feature mandatory payouts of the Rainbow 6, Late Pick 4 and Late Pick 5, was drawn Friday.

The Rainbow 6 sequence will begin with the fourth race, a maiden claiming event over a five furlong turf course. The sequence will have three races on the turf.

NOTES: Ron Paolucci Racing, LLC's Liza Star, a 6-year-old mare trained by Peter Walder and ridden by Miguel Vasquez, won Friday's feature, a $48,000 allowance optional claiming event. Liza Star, a winner of 11 of 31 starts and seven of her last 11, covered 6 ½ furlongs in 1:16.26…Hall of Fame jockey Edgar Prado scored a riding double on Friday, winning back-to-back in races 5 and 6 with Customerexperience and Sailing Solo for trainers Saffie Joseph Jr. and Louie Roussel III.

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Assiniboia Downs Pick 5 Jackpot Approaches $400,000; July 6 Mandatory Payout Set

The Jackpot Pick 5 bet offered at Assiniboia Downs in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, is now a staggering $392,927 going into Monday's and a mandatory payout date has been set.

“Our fans have been chasing the jackpot since the start of the season and are salivating at the chance to win it.”, said Darren Dunn, CEO.  “It is creating a lot of excitement and has people dreaming about what they would do with all that money.”

The Jackpot Pick 5 bet requires the selection of the winners of the last 5 races in the program.  Players with the correct selections share in the proceeds from the amount bet on that day.  The jackpot is a bonus that is paid if there is only one winning ticket. The cost of a ticket is only 20 cents.

The single winner jackpot pool will typically build to a point and then there is a mandatory payout day scheduled. A mandatory payout day requires that the entire jackpot and the current day's pool must be paid out to the winners that day. These events draw substantially more wagering as everyone is trying to win their share of the jackpot bonus.

The mandatory payout day for the Jackpot Pick 5 has now been set for Monday, July 6, 2020, if the bet is not won by a single winning ticket before that date.

“These pools create quite a buzz for players.”, continued Dunn.  “If a single winner wins it before that date, they will walk away with hundreds of thousands of dollars.  If it isn't won, we will be giving it away to all winners.  Either way is a great result!  This has the potential to be a record-setting event.”

The Downs also has a Jackpot Hi-5 bet with a carryover of $54,000. This pool requires the correct selection of the first 5 finishers of the last race of every racing program.

Racing continues every Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday through September 15 at 7:30 pm (Central Time).

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Stronach 5 Pays $4,165.20 Despite Wins By Two Heavy Favorites

Despite victories by two heavy favorites in Liza Star and Plot the Dots, Friday's Stronach 5 still rewarded bettors with winning tickets with a $4,165.20 payoff.

The national wager, with races from Laurel Park and Gulfstream Park, had a guaranteed pool of $100,000.

Friday's Stronach 5 began with Laurel Park's sixth race and an impressive victory by the 10-1 maiden Fiya, owned by The Orebanks, trained by Michael Merryman, and ridden by Feargal Lynch. The second leg of the sequence, run as Gulfstream's eighth race, was won by favored Liza Star while the third leg, run as Laurel's seventh race, was also won by the favorite, 4-5 shot Plot the Dots.

The 6-1 shot Rags for Britches won Gulfstream's ninth race, the fourth leg of Stronach 5, while the sequence wrapped up with the 7-1 shot Princess Killmain winning Laurel's eighth race.

Friday's races and sequence

  • Leg One – Laurel Park 6th Race: Fiya $22.40
  • Leg Two –Gulfstream Park 8th Race: Liza Star $4.20
  • Leg Three –Laurel Park 7th Race: Plot the Dots $3.80
  • Leg Four –Gulfstream Park 9th Race: Rags for Britches $14.80
  • Leg Five –Laurel Park 8th race: Princess Killmain $17.40

Fans can watch and wager on the action at 1/ST.COM/BET.

The Stronach 5 In the Money podcast, hosted by Jonathan Kinchen and Peter Thomas Fornatale, is posted by 2 p.m. every Thursday at InTheMoneyPodcast.com and is available on iTunes and other major podcast distributors.

The minimum wager on the multi-race, multi-track Stronach 5 is $1. If there are no tickets with five winners, the entire pool will be carried over to the next Friday.

If a change in racing surface is made after the wagering closes, each selection on any ticket will be considered a winning selection. If a betting interest is scratched, that selection will be substituted with the favorite in the win pool when wagering closes.

The Maryland Jockey Club serves as host of the Stronach 5.

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