CANADIAN RACETRACKS LOSE CDN$ 200 MILLION TO ONLINE
GAMBLING
10 April 2009
But Woodbine spokesperson says there is
little they can do about it
Jane Holmes, a spokesperson for the Canadian horse
racing firm Woodbine Entertainment Group, outlined the
competitive impact of online gambling this week in an
interview with the Toronto Sun newspaper in which she
claimed that the racetrack is currently losing almost
Cdn$ 200 million a year to what she termed "illegal"
online gaming.
Whilst Ms. Holmes may need to
refresh her memory on the legality of online gambling in
Canada, it was an interesting interview giving an
alternative persepective to the impact of Internet
gambling in Ontario.
Holmes says there is very
little her company can do to compete: "It continues to
be a challenge," she says of the horse racing industry's
efforts to stay viable.
Perhaps unwittingly
admitting to one of the positive features of competition
from a player angle, Holmes told the newspaper: "The
illegal Internet gaming does have an impact. If we don't
offer customers exactly what they want, they have so
many opportunities to get around us and bet offshore. It
is a huge impact. It's not just horse racing wagering.
Some people have moved to online poker. Most people
think it is kind of legal here, but it isn't. It's just
that nobody enforces it."
Holmes argues that
part of any money wagered at her firm's racetrack goes
back into the industry. When it is wagered offshore,
"...the race tracks and horse people don't get any
revenue from that. It doesn't generate jobs here. It
doesn't contribute to the economy."
"Fifty
percent of the commissions we make is put back into
purses," she claimed. "If you start losing handle and
wagering, it affects the purses and the revenues the
owners make and it has a spin-off effect on the jockeys
and everyone else right back to the agricultural
community. We estimate illegal internet gambling takes
away about Cdn$ 200 million annually from our handle [Cdn$
866 million - ed] at Woodbine."
Holmes explains
why Internet gambling is such a formidable competitor,
saying that online betting can offer better takeouts to
customers because it does not have the huge
infrastructure that tracks such as Woodbine have to pay
for. Racetracks also can't do some of the things offered
on the Internet.
"We can't compete with them
because, if we did, we'd lose our racing licences,"
Holmes says. "It's illegal. We can't offer the same
opportunities."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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