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If you want to play overs in baseball...be prepared to lay -140several favorite sides in baseball today edged .30 beyond what's offered in Las VegasArena football playoff game tonight...fav is -13; dog is +10. somehwere in the back of a pork store or strip club in Bergen Co. the "boys" are laughing.PASS !!!
that arena football line had to be a teaser line of some kind.
Thanks for the review! If they are too small now, then something is wrong. Don't you think game day action for games at the Meadowlands complex are going to be huge for betting? Seems like they didn't play well.
The issue comes down to expenses. Both Monmouth and the Meadowlands have teemed up with a sports betting provider, which means they are sharing any revenue. I am guessing for their share that the PaddyPower/FanDuel and William Hill are providing personnel, betting lines, and most importantly risk assumption. The tracks are providing a physical location and low level personnel. Neither group has much of an incentive to put huge dollars into construction, especially considering William Hill etc would much prefer you to bet online or with your phone.If Monmouth and the Meadowlands had slots and a tone of cash I believe that even with the low level of return on sports betting, they would put serious dollars into a really nice race and sports book. just as a kick ass amenity, since far more people bet sports than horses nowadays, especially younger folks. But neither track has that kind of renovation cash. Monmouth at least has a whole empty grandstand area behind their sports book that they could upgrade...not sure about the Meadowlands.I think that I would go full out to get personable people unlike myself in the building, sell them hotdogs and beer and nachos at a decent markup and create some buzz. Make it a guy's day out thing. You do it right you will make more money from concessions than the share of the sports betting proceeds. And you cannot lose money on concessions like you can on booking sports bets.I took my 19 year old son to the runners at Saratoga last year, first time I had been their in ages after 30 straight years of attending starting when I was 5. Unlike me, who was reading the Daily Racing Form and Sports Eye daily starting at ten years old, and bet on sports since my early teens, he only has a casual interest in handicapping. What was most interesting to him that day was the twenty and thirty somethings drinking beer and smoking cigars in the paddock area. I think sports betting could, if made into a really appealing group experience, could draw in a demographic to the track that is currently missing.