From the TIF: The Future of Derby Futures & Modernizing Betting

The speed of legal sports betting's expansion across America in the last four years has surprised even the most bullish advocates. On any given day in a majority of states, Americans can bet on just about any outcome in the world of sports.

The next point in a game of tennis. The total runs in the next inning of a baseball game. The number of corner kicks for a team in a soccer match.

But if you legally wanted to bet on the Kentucky Derby other than the day before or day of the race, you have but a few weekends to place pari-mutuel bets, in limited pools, and through underdeveloped advanced deposit wagering.

Churchill Downs offered five opportunities to bet Derby futures for its 2022 edition, to be run this coming Saturday. Win and exacta pools were available, as well as a bet on the winner's sire and the sires of the exacta finishers. Total handle across all of the Derby-only pools was $1.88 million. An Oaks/Derby double future was offered and handled less than $85,000.

Roll back the clock to 2002 and Derby future betting was just three pools over three weekends with win betting only. Total handle that year was a combined $1.5 million which when adjusted for inflation, equates to about $2.36 million today. Despite additional pools and dates, interest measured by inflation-adjusted handle is down about 20%.

Sports betting is not legal in Kentucky at present, but that would not preclude Churchill Downs from striking future deals with operators in states that permit fixed-odds betting on racing.

The opportunity for the Kentucky Derby and its qualifying series to dominate the landscape in coming years is strong. While pari-mutuel futures on the big race have stagnated, a far more diverse market of fixed-odds opportunities should be within reach.

Click here to read the rest of this piece from the Thoroughbred Idea Foundation.

The post From the TIF: The Future of Derby Futures & Modernizing Betting appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Bettor-Friendly Legislation Passes Kentucky Senate

By a vote of 33-1, the Kentucky State Senate has given their stamp of approval to Kentucky House Bill 607, which modernizes the taxation of pari-mutuel wagers and, in a major victory for horseplayers, eliminates the dime breakage than has been the standard for many years in favor of penny breakage. The change in the breakage will put more money into the pockets of horseplayers and is the first such measure to be introduced in the United States. The lone dissenting vote came from Republican Senator Whitney Westerfield.

“For more than a century, horseplayers have never received a full winning dividend and today the General Assembly in Kentucky affirmed that it is beyond time to change that and respect horseplayers anywhere betting on races from Kentucky,” said Patrick Cummings, Executive Director of the Thoroughbred Idea Foundation (TIF), which has championed the cause dating back nearly four years.

“Across just the last three decades or so, approximately $1 billion has been retained from winning bets across America. The passage of HB 607 will put some of this money back in the pockets and accounts of winning bettors from future bets.'

“We are thankful for the leadership of bill's House sponsors, Representatives Adam Koenig and Al Gentry, and Senator Damon Thayer in guiding its passage.

In addition to the favorable breakage rules, HB 607 calls for taxation on pari-mutuel wagers at 1.5%, the same rate assessed on Historical Horse Racing (HHR) machines. The standardization of taxation means that bets made through and ADW by Kentucky residents will be taxed at 1.5%, up from 0.5 %.

“Horse racing must relentlessly pursue every method to make its product as competitive as possible,” said Bernick. “The market pressure on racing is stronger than ever with the rapid legalization of sports betting across the country. We hope that operators realize the importance of retaining all customers and driving their participation through the presentation of competitive racing with competitive pricing.”

HB 607 was sponsored by Representative Adam Koenig. A house committee approved the legislation Mar. 16 before referring it to the Senate for its consideration. The bill now returns to the House for concurrence, but it is expected to sail through and head to the desk of Governor Andy Beshear for his signature.

The Kentucky Equine Education Project (KEEP) released a statement Tuesday, applauding the General Assembly for the passage of HB 607.

“A tremendous amount of work went into crafting this new tax policy and KEEP is grateful to the legislators who served on the Pari-Mutuel Wagering Taxation Task Force for the time and effort they put into fully understanding the economic structure of Kentucky's horse industry,” the statement read. “We would also like to applaud Senate Majority Floor Leader Thayer and Representative Koenig for their leaderships as co-chairs of the task force. The resulting legislation was able to strike a delicate balance between increasing revenue for the state, while at the same time not arbitrarily raising tax rates in a way that would damage the economic success of the industry.

“The entire horse industry was engaged in this process and KEEP was proud to work closely with legislators to ensure that they had access to the full picture of what economic benefits the industry has on the Commonwealth.

“KEEP will continue working on behalf of Kentucky's entire horse industry and community to advocate for policies that benefit everyone within the industry's economic ecosystem. Growing the success of the industry's more than 60,000 jobs and $6.5 billion economic impact on the state benefits all Kentuckians.”

Once signed off on by Beshear, the provisions of the bill are due to take effect come August.

The post Bettor-Friendly Legislation Passes Kentucky Senate appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

KHRC Considering ‘Claiming Jail,’ Additional Workout Reporting Rules

The Kentucky Horse Racing Commission's Rules Committee has approved recommending a Kentucky “claiming jail” rule and additional workout reporting regulations during the next KHRC meeting on Feb. 15, according to bloodhorse.com.

If approved, a horse claimed in Kentucky will not be able to race outside the state for 30 days from the end of the meet at which it was claimed.

Many states already have a “claiming jail” rule on the books, though Kentucky had previously faced court challenges from owner Jerry Jamgotchian over a similar regulation. KHRC general counsel Jennifer Wolsing was confident that the new rule would pass legal scrutiny.

Additionally, horses starting after lengthy layoffs could be required to have additional workouts prior to those starts, an idea initially proposed by the Thoroughbred Idea Foundation on behalf of bettors.

The committee suggests that a horse entered off a 90-day break be required to show two reported workouts (one within 20 days of entry), and a horse off a 180-day break be required to show three reported works (one within 20 days of entry). Current regulations require horses entered off a rest of 45 or more days to show one work within 20 days of entry.

The rules committee will recommend the new rules during the Feb. 15

Read more at bloodhorse.com.

Source of original post

Thoroughbred Idea Foundation: What Needs To Change After Modern Games Fiasco?

Full fields. Harmonized rules. Modernized wagering systems and protocols. Transparent officiating.

Can these be the future of North American horse racing, and of the greater sport around the world?

“Our customers, the bettors, must be at the center of everything we do,” Hong Kong Jockey Club (HKJC) chief executive officer Winfried Engelbrecht-Bresges told the Thoroughbred Idea Foundation (TIF) last week.

“This approach applies to everything we do as a sport. Customers must be satisfied with our approach to horse welfare, to harmonizing betting rules, interference rules, the race schedule we offer and presenting races with full fields of competitive horses.”

What bettors want should drive how racing evolves. But that has not been the case in North America.

Customer centricity has not been a focus.

Hong Kong finds itself at the heart of a customer-friendly approach to racing and Engelbrecht-Bresges is the new chairman of the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities (IFHA). While he acknowledges the IFHA is not a rule-making body itself, the push for harmonizing the global racing experience for customers is moving beyond just recommended best practices.

“We can talk about the importance of a customer-centric approach and harmonizing rules all we want, but with the global commingling business – through World Pools – we are proving the commercial value of it. World Pools is creating the financial incentive to change.”

The World Pools concept is simple.

Instead of having separate pari-mutuel pools for major race days in America, Great Britain, France, Ireland, Hong Kong and South Africa, just to name a few, one massive pool can be created, maximizing liquidity and financial interest for all participants. On 17 days of commingled World Pools run across Britain and Ireland in 2021, total handle eclipsed the equivalent of $481 million.

Hong Kong is a major cog in the process, with bettors in the region often comprising roughly 60% of the liquidity in World Pools offerings, according to Engelbrecht-Bresges. In November, the HKJC provided its local customers simulcasts of two Breeders' Cup races for the first time since 2014, and the hope is to offer more later.

“I really commend the Breeders' Cup and their global vision. It was important for us to recognize the steps that have been taken to adopt racing free of medication and I hope we can expand wagering opportunities over the next three to five-year period.”

While U.S. customers have been participants in World Pools offered on key race days, such as Royal Ascot, Glorious Goodwood and other major race days, American races have not yet been chosen as targets for World Pools.

The Modern Games fiasco sharpened attention on America's lack of a customer-centric focus, exhibited through disparate rules which disproportionately disadvantage betting customers.

BRITISH TOTE CUSTOMERS PAID AS WINNERS ON MODERN GAMES

For those betting the Breeders' Cup in Great Britain, the experience was a bit different, even though their customers' money was commingled to the main Breeders' Cup pools.

Pari-mutuel betting there is run through the UK Tote Group, which took over tote betting across Britain in late 2019 via an investment from major horse owners and breeders.

After witnessing the scratching, un-scratching and eventual running for purse only, the UK Tote Group decided to pay-out win and place bets for customers who backed Modern Games.

“Our decision was not a difficult one,” says Susannah Gill, communications and corporate affairs director for UK Tote Group.

“We paid out on two winners – the actual winner of the race Modern Games and then the result on course, which was Tiz The Bomb, but we dipped into our own pockets for the Modern Games result because it's the expectation of our customers.”

UK Tote Group competes for customers with a plethora of corporate bookmakers offering bets at fixed-odds. When the bookmakers witnessed the Modern Games fiasco, many made the decision to pay out on both “winners” nearly immediately.

“Decisions such as these are obviously made by the competitive position in the market,” said Jon Knapman, UK Tote Group's chief commercial officer.

“Whatever it be – a goodwill payment, a 'justice-for-punters' payment – sometimes things just go wrong and we don't want our customers to be left hurting.”

Tote chose not to leave its customers behind, a decision which is part of their overall strategy to make pari-mutuel betting in Great Britain as competitive as possible. While it is undoubtedly the most sustainable source of betting revenue for racing, one of the greatest hindrances to pari-mutuel betting is the lack of price certainty – customers do not know the final odds of horses until after the last bets have been added to the pool, normally a few seconds after the start of a race.

Recognizing the chasm between British customers' experience with fixed-odds price certainty and pari-mutuel uncertainty, the UK Tote Group decided to bridge the gap to better serve its customers, launching a “tote guarantee” in early 2020 and in-place ever since, matching the fixed odds starting price if it happens to be higher than a winner's final pari-mutuel price.

Unsurprisingly, Tote's business is growing.

[Story Continues Below]

WORLD POOLS FUTURE FOR AMERICA(S)?

UK Tote Group is a major partner with the Hong Kong-dominated World Pools where rules and betting protocol harmonization is a business necessity.

“World Pools don't just seek to provide a mechanism only for more prize money, but they are creating a path to improve critical business and industry infrastructure,” said Engelbrecht-Bresges, adding that several days of Hong Kong-hosted, commingled pools on some of South Africa's biggest race days are driving key investment to a jurisdiction in need of it.

“I hope we can bring it to South America in the future too.”

But until rules and protocols change in the favor of customers, the Americas may be left out of the World Pools boat.

“A cornerstone of global commingling is that all of the jurisdictions have some semblance of the same rules,” said UK Tote's Jon Knapman.

It is clear that America remains behind the curve to this point.

There are many examples for North America to follow and the Breeders' Cup may be a catalyst for operators and regulators to take notice and make needed adjustments.

For Engelbrecht-Bresges, who has served as the Hong Kong Jockey Club CEO since 2007, the choice is obvious.

“A customer-centric approach is a path to good business and future sustainability.”

The post Thoroughbred Idea Foundation: What Needs To Change After Modern Games Fiasco? appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights