How Slot Machines Have Saved Racetracks

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    How slot machines have saved racetracks

    It's not the horses that draw crowds; Erie racino toopenSunday, February 25, 2007

    By Gary Rotstein, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

    Ray and Elayne Vasvari never saw a single horseduring their six hours at Mountaineer Race Track& Gaming Resort on Thursday, one of the threedays a week the thoroughbreds don't even run inChester, W.Va.

    But the couple from Struthers, Ohio, 50 milesaway, couldn't have cared less. They never play thehorses on their twice-weekly visits. They had their

    fun on the slot machines, lost some money, had ameal and headed home content.

    "I've got no faith in the horse racing system,"explained Ray Vasvari, 70. "I wouldn't have thepatience to figure it out. I don't have the knowledge."

    The Vasvaris are representative of America's decades-long shift toward wagers withimmediate gratification, a trend that has been accelerated by the "racinos" that aresweeping into Pennsylvania like so many thundering hooves across a finish line.

    Three racetrack casinos in Eastern Pennsylvania that have added slots in recent monthsall met or surpassed expectations in public interest and wagering on the machines.Western Pennsylvania gets it first taste this week, with Wednesday's 9 a.m. debut ofPresque Isle Downs & Casino in Erie County. Another slots parlor is to follow at TheMeadows harness track in Washington County in May.

    In most or all of these cases, racetrack operators will be getting at least 90 percent of theirrevenue from slot machines. The appeal of the absolutely random, quick-win-or-lose slotsexperience is propping up an industry that filled grandstands in the 20th century withsavvy, studious racing enthusiasts.

    The conversion to racinos is credited with saving the horse- and dog-racing industriesover the past decade in West Virginia, which was among the first states to add casinos toits tracks. Pennsylvania enters the field as a result of a 2004 law that was conceived withhelp from the racing industry, whose operators long complained they were losing out tothe pioneer racino competitors.

    Reasons for racinosWhile Pennsylvania is unique in adding five large stand-alone parlors to the slots mix,

    Greg Wohlford, Erie Times-News

    Patrons wait for the doors to openon the first of two test dates atPresque Isle Downs & Casino,yesterday, in Erie, Pa.Pennsylvania's newest slots parloris set to officially open for business

    next week.Click photo for larger image.Related Graphic

    Presque Isle Down revenueprojections

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    including the Majestic Star Casino to open on the North Side in 2008, a dozen states havechosen racinos over Vegas-style casinos since the mid-1990s. Several factors help drivethe trend:

    The gambling expansion takes place at locations with a history of wagering, minimizing

    the opposition from local anti-gambling groups.

    Buildings, parking and other infrastructure are already in place, usually on spaciousproperty, reducing development costs and enabling higher tax rates than is often the casein casino states.

    States can help areas around racinos with jobs and support for agricultural industries.The new gambling revenue will not only flow to state and local governments and trackoperators, but it will also increase racing purses to boost the livelihoods of horse owners,breeders, jockeys and trainers. In many cases, industry representatives and analysts say,the slots have been the only way to sustain tracks where public interest has sagged since

    the 1980s.

    "You could look at it as rewarding people for keeping racing going, but you can also lookat it as rewarding an industry that has essentially failed," said Bennett Liebman,coordinator of the Albany Law School Racing and Gaming Law program. "The fact isthese really are casinos or slot parlors with a side interest in racing."

    Thoroughbred racing won't even begin until around Sept. 1 at Presque Isle Downs, thenew facility a few hundred yards off Interstate 90 owned by MTR Gaming Group Inc.,which also owns Mountaineer. The company had to set construction priorities, saidPresque Isle Chief Executive Officer Richard Knight, and the preparations for 2,000 slot

    machines came ahead of those for the mile-long oval track. Projections from the racino'sconsultant are that the slots will bring in more than $140 million annually, once fullyoperating, and the horses less than $5 million.

    Presque Isle is one of the few new racetracks in America in recent years, with another,Harrah's Chester Casino and Racetrack outside Philadelphia, drawing as much as $6million weekly in slots revenue since opening in January.

    MTR President Edson "Ted" Arneault said he would have developed Presque Isle as atrack even without slots approval, but it would have been a much smaller investment --about $18 million instead of $250 million -- and it would not have been the "home run"

    he expects from the racino. He expects success even though it is not the full hotel-and-activities resort that Mountaineer is, and projected revenues are among the smallest ofany of the Pennsylvania slots parlors.

    West Virginia's legislature approved slots connected to its lottery system in 1994, adecade ahead of Pennsylvania. If that hadn't happened, Mr. Arneault said, Mountaineertoday would probably still exist, "but it would have been limping along, much like othertracks that don't have slots."

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    Delaware, Iowa, Louisiana, Maine, New Mexico, New York, Oklahoma and RhodeIsland also preceded Pennsylvania in providing slots at racetracks. The machines alsoarrived at tracks in Florida late last year, just as in Pennsylvania.

    West Virginia lawmakers are now debating adding table games at its four horse and dog

    tracks to offset the competition of Pennsylvania's slots parlors. In almost all other cases,however, operators are content to draw customers with only the slot machines, whichhave lower overhead costs and draw the majority of people anyway.

    Prairie Meadows Racetrack and Casino in Altoona, Iowa, outside Des Moines, beganoffering table games in 2004 after receiving legislative authorization. Its revenuebreakdown in 2006 from its three types of gambling: $163.8 million from slots, $18.8million from table games, and $4.6 million from pari-mutuel betting, or horse wagering.

    In some cases, the addition of slot machines has revived racing attendance, making itmore of a destination center, but that's far from general. More commonly, increases in

    wagering come from viewers in distant simulcast locations once the larger purses enabledby slots begin attracting better horses. Veteran horse players generally prefer betting onquality horses, as they have better odds of consistency.

    Better purses helpPrairie Meadows spokesman Steve Berry said of on-site track attendance: "That'ssomething we've come to realize was not the point. ...There's not much crossover withslot machine players and horse players."

    The Meadows has seen a 37 percent decline in wagering over the past decade, andattendance is about one-third of what it was, say track officials. The total purse handed

    out in a day, typically shared in descending order among the top five finishers in eachrace, has fallen to $45,000 or less from $60,000. At Mountaineer, daily purses averaging$22,000 in the pre-slots days are now $160,000.

    Pennsylvania purses will definitely change once the slots are installed. Twelve percent ofslots revenue in Pennsylvania will be used to boost the purses. If the slots at theWashington County operation can gross $200 million a year, as officials hope, that wouldbe an extra $24 million annually divided among those connected to the horses.

    Any surge of general interest in the sport of kings is less certain.

    Bill Paulos, a partner in Cannery Casino Resorts, the new owner of The Meadows, saidthe new facility being designed as a permanent racetrack-casino complex is intended tohighlight harness racing as a spectator sport, even for those coming for the slots. As atPresque Isle Downs, restaurant diners will look out through large glass windows onto thetrack.

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    "You'd like to get the popularity [of racing] back," said Mr. Paulos, whose background isin casinos rather than racing. "Certainly there's things you can do to try to do that, but ittruly is difficult.

    "If you look at the average age of a horse player, he's not a young fella. Slots will be a

    much broader spectrum."

    The data on the waning of racing's popularity is not all negative. Although the number ofthoroughbred races declined from 72,664 in 1990 to 52,257 by 2005, the amount wageredincreased from $9.4 billion to $14.6 billion, according to The Jockey Club, a racingorganization. Various forms of off-track betting represent all the growth in horsewagering, and now make up nearly nine of every 10 dollars bet.

    Even so, industry analysts say, simulcasting itself might not have sustained horse racingin many locations without the slots to prop up both operators' profits and track purses.Empire City at Yonkers Raceway, in New York's Westchester County, was on its death

    bed, with no one interested in buying it from Pittsburgh's Rooney family until slotsarrived last fall.

    Now it has 4,100 machines, with more planned, and it's on a six-day-a-week racingschedule instead of the three or four days it had been running. It's one example of arecently saved track, and probably the most notable.

    "What [the addition of slots] has done is buy time for the horse racing part of the industryto be viable, and to try to figure out new ways to attract customers," said RichardThalheimer, a Kentucky economic consultant on racing and gaming.

    But as a night out for entertainment or as a gambling hobby, people have morealternatives to enjoy themselves than during the tracks' heyday decades ago. Thoseoptions, of course, include the machines right next door.

    Newer forms of gambling, Mr. Liebman noted, "are simpler and more exciting and givemore immediate thrills. ... [Horse betting] takes a longer time, which requires asignificant involvement. It's just not the same as pulling a lever or hitting a button orscratching off a lottery ticket."

    There's one additional benefit to playing the slots instead of horses: The machinesgenerally return as prize money at least 90 percent of the amount risked, compared to 80

    percent for pari-mutuel wagering.

    That still averages out to a loss, as the Vasvaris were reminded last week at Mountaineer.Elayne Vasvari stressed, however, she's also walked out hundreds of dollars ahead plentyof times.

    "She's more likely to come down here and think she's going to get rich," the white-bearded Ray said with a smiling nod to his upbeat wife. "I come down to relax."

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    First published on February 25, 2007 at 12:00 amGary Rotstein can be reached at [email protected] or 412-263-1255.Read the PG's Casino Journal by Bill Toland

    Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/07056/764932-336.stm#ixzz0dFudJvQ6

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