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Plus, go to a casino on a Sat. night and you see a lot of young people. Not so much at the track. You need a future base if you are going to have a future.
If dog fighting can rear it's ugly head from the depravity of the human soul, horse racing which celebrates life will always be with us.
The guys who gamble on horses are the only losers in horse racing.
Illinois has been the poster child for what not to do regarding gaming, horseracing and funding schools and education for the last six years. It's time we do something right.
Nothing against thoroughbred racing but they represent a tiny fraction in comparison to other equine activities.
The bulk of the Horse industry in Illinois (and across the nation) is comprised of recreational breeds (mostly Quarterhorse, but also Paint, POA, and numerous other breeds including yes, even mules and donkeys.)
Illinois state government has failed miserably in supporting the non-racing horse industry. Other states get it. Ohio has built the Quarter Horse Congress into a month-long cash cow for the state. While Illinois let a comparable event -- The International Livestock Exhibition -- whither away.
Again, nothing against the tracks, but if you take an objective view,the best return on investment for the state would be to put more emphasis on breed and open show events.
Horse racing is a shrinking niche market. There is a place for it and it needs reasonable support, but from an economic standpoint, the better investment is in other equine events.
Horse racing is filled with wealthy owners, both horse and track. Let them figure out how to make the spectacle become appealing to the younger set. (I would also like to see some reform on the workers who work at the track and barns tending to these fancy animals... minimum wage, betterworking condition etc.....)
However it we are to use public dollars to save declining industries, I have a few suggestions...Whale oil lamp suppliers. the US domestic auto industry, most every live theater performance. The list of deserving elements goes on.
If we want to benefit from capitalsm, then lets act like capitalsists. Othewise who is going to pay those pesky taxes?
It's pretty simple, get bigger name horses get bigger coverage, more people, more dollars.
Racing did well in Chicago in the 70's based on no other gambling venues, the size of the race tracks, and the midwestern and country roots of harness racing.
In the mid 70's, Sportsmans Park held arguably, the preeminent meet in North America. Often the best horses were stabled here and ran here regularly. The fact that both major New York Tracks were half mile ovals limited them, despite the fact that their purse structure was higher than ours. Half mile tracks emphasizes speed on the turns, not the straightaways, a different kind of racing. Most horses prefer straightaways. When the Meadowlands, a mile track opened in 1976 in New Jersey, the beginning of the end of first class racing in Chicago began. While in New Jersey, it was minutes from Manhatten and the mile configuration made for times that rivaled Springfield and Duquoin who together with the Red Mile in Lexington were the three fastest tracks in the world.
It took about a decade, but serious horseflesh moved east and the gap in quality by the early 90's started to become insurmountable and to my mind embarrassing.
Even under so called racing friendly Jim Edgar, who does own serious horses, the racing board has been overly political and tilted toward track owners over the horseman. Quality racing can bring out extra fans, but the racing here which was arguably as good as there was, would have to improve to become 2nd rate. Illinois bred horses do quite well in major venues, but many almost never run here.
On yesterday's webcast, Kurt Becker asked State Rep. Lou Lang to stand and take a bow and said that no one works more tirelessly for horse racing than Lang.
Unfortunately that is probably true. I like in his district and there are years when we rank last in the Northern half of Illinois in state funding. If he is the true horse racing champ, that same ineffectiveness is surely not helping their industry.
Thanks for the harness racing question Rich. It is my favorite sport but it is pretty much down the toilet here. The better drivers that were, Tetrick, Morgan, Andy Miller and more are gone. The same with the stables.
I could go and on, but that is more than enough.