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the voters overwhelmingly voted NO on any casinos in the last referendumto get the legislature to pass this and send it to voters again in 2026 would be virtually impossible...NJ doesn't work that wayAtlantic City has a very strong hold on Trenton--something Gural learned the hard wayI would say maybe 5 years away from another referendum headed to the votersall of this "NYC casinos will force NJ to react ASAP" is nonsenseNJ doesn't react ASAP to anything-it takes years
I agree with pretty much everything you said, I just thought it was an interesting read. The fact is with the exception of a few cards a year, The Meadowlands has pretty much become a "B" track. It's sad to see. The quality of horses is poor, the racing product stinks,the on air "talent" sucks, Warkentin is past his prime if he ever had one, the purses are bad, the post drag is horrible, and their promotions director should be fired. Other than that it's great LOL!!
I don't see the smart money in building the mega casino. The kind built just a few years ago, The trend is in online sports wagering. Unless your casino is a destination like they would be in NYC, big brick and mortar will struggle. Also, to attach a 10% tax on the wagering net to support harness racing is also seen its day.
Excellent point. The Revel in AC wasn't a very good deal for the guy who built it. But it could have been an even better deal for the guy who bought it from the guy who built it, LOL. Why pay $5B when you can buy it for $1B. LOL. I guess maybe the new casino model, unless as you said you're a destination attraction, is just like the new racetrack model-----smaller, different offerings for wagering, gambling, and so forth. I just say no chicken races! LOL.