Jump to content
NOTICE TO BOAY'ers: Major Update Coming ×
Bit Of A Yarn

BOAY Racing News


36,477 topics in this forum

      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 94 views
      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 90 views
      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 96 views
      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 94 views
      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 103 views
      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 98 views
      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 119 views
      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 114 views
      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 231 views
      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 179 views
      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 110 views
    • Journalists

    Geelong Gold Cup Heats Preview

      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 82 views
      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 171 views
      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 215 views
      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 90 views
      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 102 views
    • Journalists

    Sunset to shine in Galaxy

      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 110 views
    • Journalists

    ‘LITTLE SHIMA’ TO SHINE!

      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 91 views
    • Journalists

    ‘REAL DEAL’ RADEK

      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 98 views
      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 88 views
      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 91 views
      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 98 views
      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 125 views
      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 99 views
    • Journalists

    Duke Of Cornwall hard to catch

      • Journalists
    • 0 replies
    • 95 views


  • Posts

    • Does anyone know who the black arm bands were for early in the programme either Thursday or Friday?
    • the original plan was to lease the complex back for a time from the original buyers, while they built a new training complex,with auckland suggesting HRNZ would chip in a few million for that new complex. Which HRNZ never denied. But with that sale falling through, you would think auckland would want the next buyer to just sit on their 60 million dollar investment for a couple of years ,so auckland  trainers can still train.   that pukekohe complex ,according to some reports, was supposed to need a lot of money spent in remedial work to keep it going until it closed down. Bub of course,where was that money supposed to come from. So,reality that work won't be done either ,which  makes  sense, although some are complaining about that...  so,it all seems pretty obvious to the casual observer whats going to happen. But currently auckland are publicly still saying ,it will all work out in the end.nothing to see here. In fact auckland even spun it to say they had exciting news.. And hrnz are saying,onwards and upwards. really you have to laugh.Theres an obvious lack of communicating a vision for a viable/realistic future is non existent and just undermines the inability of those in charge at hrnz to grasp reality. That may seem harsh,but its blatantly true. if you want proof of that comment,just look at the number of topics started on this forum and other harness racing forums about auckland. the only ones who agree with HRNZ's public comments and plans, are those from auckland,or ex aucklanders or those in the media. previously i refered to mr wonderfuls comments about restructering the business he has taken over. And the smart people in charge of DOGE,in the usa say the same thing. Eion MUsk said the same thing this week in an interview. You go in hard and you do it only once. tjhe worst thing you can possibly do,is make small changes time after time. Its a receipe for failure . why that hasn't happened already? it smells a bit to me of self interest groups again having the ear of those in charge. Again.. What other reason could there be. Maybe,just bnot too clever perhaps.
    • Anyone else get this or something like it?   Only have the one TAB Tab open and always getting an error. It is bloody annoying.
    • View From The Eighth Pole: An Obligation To Horse Racing - Paulick Report paulickreport.com He told you so. Thirty-one years ago, Thoroughbred owner and breeder, John Ed Anthony, predicted what would happen if racetracks joined up with casinos. “In the same location, under the same ownership and management, either casino gambling or live racing will die,” Anthony said, “and we know which it will be. “Casinos are our competition – poison to racing,” he added, calling them “the greatest threat to our industry in modern history.”   Anthony made those remarks at the 1994 Jockey Club Round Table on Matters Pertaining to Racing in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. This was before casino gambling or slot machines became prevalent at many racetracks throughout North America. In the wake of efforts by Belinda Stronach and her 1/ST Racing company to pass a law in Florida allowing Gulfstream Park to end live racing while keeping their slot machine license, Anthony is frustrated that his prediction is beginning to come true. He worries that Florida will be just the first domino to fall if decoupling legislation passes in the Sunshine State.   Companion Decoupling Bill Passes Florida Senate Committee 5-2 “Casinos have been wonderful for racing – the revenue sharing has been the lifeblood of purses – but it doesn't take a very smart fella to understand that racing is a whole lot more trouble than a casino and not nearly as lucrative,” he said. “And now we're being discarded. I can't think of how to combat it, other than to argue the point that they used racing to get their licenses, and now they're discarding racing. “The facts are that the tracks used pari-mutuel wagering and the logic of having gambling in the states as a catalyst to get their casinos,” he said. “And now, as projected, you're beginning to see the separation – now that they have the casino licenses, they don't need racing anymore.” Anthony worried in 1994 that many racetracks would add casinos with good intentions and then be bought out by casino companies. “How long will live racing exist when Vegas corporations own the tracks?” he said. Even if the tracks weren’t sold to gaming companies, Anthony said during his Round Table speech, racing would suffer. “Most available capital will be invested in the construction and development of casinos,” he predicted. “This will inevitably result in the decline of racing facilities.” While that may be true at many “racinos” in operation today, he said that is not the case at the Cella family’s Oaklawn Park in Anthony’s home state of Arkansas. “The Cellas are certainly the exception to the rule,” he said.   “The writing is on the wall,” he said. “If Gulfstream can do what they want to do, the die is cast. I think there will be a surge of similar moves.” In his Round Table speech, Anthony said the move toward casinos would cause horse racing “significant grief,” forcing it to downsize and adjust. One comment from his talk that stood out was what Thoroughbred owners might have to do if racetracks close. “In some areas,” he said, “we may have to race in an open field and view the events from tailgates and the back-end of pickup trucks. But we will control our industry. And we will be free to go forward in ways we believe are in our best interest.”   That comment is particularly relevant in connection with the potential closure of Gulfstream Park. Maybe future racing in Florida won’t take place in open fields with people watching from pickup trucks, but I can envision a more modest facility operated by a group led by horsepeople who are committed to the continuation of Thoroughbred racing. If it comes to pass that Belinda Stronach’s company succeeds in closing Gulfstream Park and keeping a casino that would have never existed without horse racing, she owes it to the sport and all who depend on it for their livelihoods to help fund and build a replacement track. And that should be the case in any other state that goes down a similar path. If horse racing played a part in getting someone a casino license, they have an obligation to horse racing. That’s my view from the eighth pole.     Veteran horse racing journalist Ray Paulick launched the Paulick Report in 2008 after spending more than a quarter century covering the sport for daily and weekly publications, including Daily Racing Form, Thoroughbred Times, and Blood-Horse.
    • I think Seymour would run a mile if he saw the state of the situation they are in.
  • Topics

×
×
  • Create New...