Capo Kane Back for More in Withers

Bing Cherry Racing and Leonard Liberto's Capo Kane (Street Sense), a romping 6 1/4-length winner of the one-mile Jerome S. at Aqueduct Jan. 1, will look to add a furlong and a graded race to his resume in the GIII Withers S. at Aqueduct Saturday. Trained by Harold Wyner, the bay colt was runner-up in his seven-furlong debut at Parx Oct. 28. He graduated by a front-running 4 1/2 lengths going one mile and 70 yards at Parx Nov. 25 and had everything his own way when loose on the lead in the Jerome last time out.

Chad Brown sends out Klaravich Stable's Risk Taking (Medaglia d'Oro). Off the board sprinting over the main track at Belmont and over the Aqueduct lawn to open his career last fall, the bay colt graduated over track and trip Dec. 13.

Trainer Todd Pletcher sends out a pair of maiden winners in the Withers. Repole Stables, St Elias Stables and Michael Tabor's Overtook (Curlin), a $1-million KEESEP yearling, was a two-length winner while shedding blinkers in a one-mile special weight at Aqueduct in his third start Dec. 20.

“I think he's learning,” Pletcher said of the son of Grade I winner Got Lucky (A.P. Indy). “He's gained some confidence with the experience and we felt like the blinkers needed to come off. He got a nice hot pace to run at which helped. He's an improving horse who is bred to get better with more distance and more time. We've seen him making progress throughout the fall and winter. This is a big step up, but hopefully he's up for it.”

Pletcher also saddles Donegal Racing's Donegal Bay (Uncle Mo). The bay gelding opened his career with a sixth-place effort going 6 1/2 furlongs at Saratoga last August and was last seen romping to a front-running 4 1/4-length maiden score going one mile at Gulfstream Dec. 12.

“I think it was the additional time, having a start under his belt as well as having some good works leading into that,” Pletcher said of that graduation effort. “He also got a better start, which a lot of horses do in their second race. He has a pretty high-cruising speed. Pedigree-wise, he's bred to go that far. It's a big step up from a maiden race, but we're hoping for a big run.”

Donegal Bay has been prepping for his stakes debut at Pletcher's winter Florida base in Palm Beach Downs where he worked four furlongs in :49 flat (1/16) last Friday.

“It's a bit of a tricky race,” Donegal Racing's Jerry Crawford said. “This is the time of year where some horses get better and some don't, and he needs to get better on Saturday if he can turn himself into a contender. Obviously, there's a fair amount of front-end speed and they'll be asked to go a mile and an eighth at the same time. Donegal Racing has always been treated exceptionally well in New York and have had some good success up there.”

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‘Unique And Exciting Entertainment Experience’: Parx Joins Forces With Virtual Live Racing

Parx has become the biggest US casino and racetrack operator so far to partner with tote-enabled virtual racing pioneers Virtual Live Racing.

Parx Casino – Pennsylvania's number 1 casino and racetrack – offers state of the art gaming, thoroughbred racing, and exciting entertainment events. The 260,000 square foot Parx Casino and the 280,000 square foot Parx East (home to Parx Racing) are both located 20 minutes north of Philadelphia. Since Pennsylvania launched sports betting in November 2018, Parx has grown rapidly and now handles around $30 million per month with around 67 percent of that total being online (for example, the November 2020 total handle was $28.59 million, with $19.3 million online). Parx is the fifth US track to go live with products from Virtual Live Racing which is the brand created by developers Virtual Software Limited (VSL).

Joe Wilson, COO, Parx Racing, commented: “Parx Racing is happy to be participating with Virtual Software Limited in this new and groundbreaking wagering product. VSL's impeccable attention to detail in creating Parx Virtual, coupled with our race data, guarantee the customer a truly unique and exciting entertainment experience.”

Joey D Michaels, VLR's Business Development Consultant for the US, commented: “It's fantastic to see Parx live. We're continuing to expand our jurisdictional footprint and our unique product suite. The deal with Parx is the latest evidence of the huge interest we're seeing in the US and internationally. Our next goal is to put 12 products up which would enable us to run 87,600 races a year. The goal after that is to get the wagering on each race to $3,500 per race, which would generate over $306million in wagers on our products in a full year.”

In addition to Parx, VLR's suite of games are also live at Hawthorne in Chicago, plus Florida tracks Derby Lane, Tampa Bay Downs and Palm Beach Kennel Club. VLR have also partnered with the world famous Ascot Racecourse in England – when that product is launched it will signal the company's entry into the UK market.

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Pennsylvania Casinos Reopen Monday

Pennsylvania casinos have been greenlighted to reopen as of Monday, Jan. 4, rekindling revenue streams that fund Thoroughbred purses in the state.

Governor Tom Wolf announced Dec. 30 that because COVID-19 mitigation efforts have been working to tamp down the spread of the pandemic, he will allow more stringent safety restrictions that went into effect Dec. 12 to expire as planned.

But that doesn’t mean a full-blown opening for the 13 casinos in the state: Mitigation efforts will roll back to what they were on Dec. 11, which still caps casinos at 50% of occupancy. Similar restrictions were also eased for other social activities, like indoor dining, gyms, theaters and high school sports.

Parx and Penn National are the only two Thoroughbred tracks operating in Pennsylvania at this time of year.

“I think that’s really good news. We can go back to getting monies from the casinos, and that’s very important to us,” said Pennsylvania Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association President Sal DeBunda in a video message posted to the organization’s website Dec.31.

DeBunda noted owners will still not be able to enter the winner’s circle to pose with their horses, “so it’s not a total open situation, but it’s back to the old rules before the mitigation rules were put in.”

Earlier this week, Penn National had announced a contingency plan to stay open through the month of January based on maintaining a nightly handle benchmark of $1.4 million in the event that Wolf had decided to extend the casino shutdown.

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Thoroughbred Idea Foundation: Casinos Are Evolving, Racing Is Not

As the winner of last week's Pennsylvania Nursery returned to Parx's weather-protected winter “winner's circle” – a side of the track's covered paddock – a banner was easily noticeable taking up key space in the frame of the track's broadcast feed.

“Online Casino – Now Live”

Adjacent to that, though covered to some degree by the winning connections, was another banner touting the Parx mobile app for sports betting.

Here was the casino side of the business marketing quite obviously to anyone who happens to be watching racing, a certainly less productive side of the Parx business.

It's more than just marketing – it is a sign of a business that is evolving.

Parx, and other Pennsylvania racetracks, have housed slot machines since they were legalized by the state's legislature in 2005. Table games followed, with poker. And sports betting. And fantasy sports. And video gaming terminals (basically, machines at truck stops in rural Pennsylvania). And most recently, something called “interactive gaming.”

Interactive gaming is the so-called “online casino” – slots and table games with real money wagering on mobile devices – being advertised in the Parx winner's circle. After more than a decade of just traditional land-based casinos, Pennsylvania took legal gambling to the mobile device space, into your hand, anywhere within the well-populated state.

As it relates to racing, the sport receives purse supplements from land-based slots only, nothing from any of the other non-racing wagering platforms, which notably includes interactive gaming.

In February, before the pandemic-related closures hit state casinos, the total from all slot machine play in the state's casinos was $2.499 billion, with $20.2 million designated to the Pennsylvania Race Horse Development Fund (PRHDF). Interactive (mobile) slots play, from all sources in the state, totaled $254 million, equating to just 10 percent of all land-based slot play.

By October, interactive slots handled $1.114 billion, up more than four times the handle from eight months earlier, while land-based play had dropped to $1.937 billion, down 22 percent, while the total cut to the PRHDF dropped to $15.9 million, a 21 percent fall.

In total, slots play in Pennsylvania, via land-based machines or interactive play, grew from $2.753 billion in February to $3.051 billion in October, up nearly 11 percent.

This has been bad news for racing, in that not only has land-based play declined, directly impacting the size of contributions to purses from slots, but customers have flocked to mobile play in droves. Land-based casinos are shuttered until after New Year's Day, potentially helping the interactive push even more.

While it is possible post-pandemic mobile play will decline sharply, betting against mobile play seems an odd choice considering the way our lives are impacted by mobile technology and its simplicity. Give customers several months to acclimatize to the comfort of mobile slots play, and they might be gone from land-based play for good.

As troubling as this is for Pennsylvania racing purses, the key point is that Parx has greatly developed their gambling options and technology over time. The market evolved and Parx Casino evolved with it.

What about racing?

The evolution of racing's wagering product over the same period has been negligible. Those who benefit directly from wagering – horsemen – have accomplished little in terms of convincing management to focus on improving or modernizing racing's wagering product.

Pennsylvania accounted for 10 percent of all Thoroughbred races run in America in 2019. For 2021, the state's racing commission has awarded 20 percent fewer race days than 2020, though the number of races may not fall that dramatically. Regardless, the question should be how Thoroughbred racing can evolve wagering, most notably in light of this incredibly competitive wagering marketplace.

Pennsylvania is hardly alone in this battle.

Racing in Delaware and West Virginia, both which share borders with Pennsylvania, are in similar straits: highly evolved and competitive betting markets, both with online play permitted, racing purses benefit exclusively from land-based play, all while their racing wagering products have generally withered.

Maryland has yet to embrace interactive wagering, but it will surely do so at some point in the future, a move which could hamstring horsemen, who are on the hook for more than $140 million in debt repayments which is to come from their share of land-based video lottery terminal revenue, should the tracks redevelopment plan there take off.

New Jersey, however, has not shared revenue from the state's casinos with horsemen…ever. The horsemen have had to get more creative, leading the multi-year lawsuit which successfully enabled the widespread legalization of sports betting, and are plotting steps to serve greater American racing as a test case to evolve fixed odds wagering on racing.

New Jersey racing has also been directly subsidized by the state, a subsidy which was cut 25 percent for 2021.

The “industry” has ignored the sport's wagering future for decades. If it does not evolve and modernize, the business will shrivel. It has to change in order to have a hope of succeeding. The livelihoods of tens of thousands of dedicated horsemen hang in the balance as time passes. The representatives of those horsemen must pursue aggressive modernization of wagering to remain competitive.

Horsemen don't often see their role as one of being an advocate for wagering advances, but as the casino business modernizes away, the horsemen have little choice but to get involved…finally.

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