Calder to become a Jai Alai fronton

blueline

EOG Master
MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. – Diligent won the final race at the track formerly known as Calder on Saturday, ending a half-century run of racing at the facility that was rebranded several years ago as Gulfstream Park West.
It was a fitting finish: Eddie Plesa Jr., a member of Calder’s Hall of Fame, was the winning trainer in the final race at the facility.
Plesa’s father, Eddie Plesa Sr., was one of the very first trainers at the facility when it opened in 1971.
There has been plenty of back and forth in the courts for Thoroughbred racing to be a thing of the past at the venerable Calder. Since 2014, horseracing and the track has been leased by Calder’s owner, Churchill Downs, to Hallandale Beach’s Gulfstream Park’s owners, The Stronach Group, which renamed the track Gulfstream Park West.
The lease expires at the end of 2020 and that is what essentially opened the door for the halting of horseracing. Churchill Downs wanted to switch from racing to jai alai and, after a number of legal battles with Florida’s horse-racing community, CDI won.

Those opposed to changing the Calder pari-mutuel license from horse racing to jai alai argued in court that the closing of the track adversely affects Florida’s Thoroughbred racing industry and that slot machine gaming at tracks, which was approved by voters, was intended to support horse racing.
According to Bill Finley of the Thoroughbred Daily News, Calder’s future changed course when it was purchased for $87 million in 1999 by Churchill Downs. Over the years, Churchill became less interested in racing and more interested in casino play.


In 2015, Churchill tore down the grandstand. Finley said that it left “little behind but the racetrack itself,” Finley wrote.
In February of 2018, Churchill Downs was awarded a pari-mutuel jai alai license from Florida’s Department of Business and Professional Regulation, Division of Pari-Mutuel Wagering. A Florida constitutional amendment was ratified giving pari mutuel venues in Miami-Dade and Broward counties the right to add slots. Pari- mutuel wagering activity is what qualified the venue for a slot machine license.

Finley explains it this way: “Florida law required Churchill to run a live racing meet of at least 40 days in order to keep its casino license, but Churchill found a loophole in the law and argued that any form of pari-mutuel wagering would satisfy the requirements for a casino.” He points out that operating jai alai is much less costly than a racetrack.
A Florida appellate court in September of 2019 agreed with Churchill saying that jai alai satisfies the pari-mutuel requirements for its casino gaming.
 

TheGuesser

EOG Dedicated
Isn't that 3 Jai Alai Frontons very close to each other? Dania, Miami, Calder. If they are all still running.
 
I don't know how many times I have to tell you all to stop giving money to these Churchill Downs asswipes. JK you keep doing it and you won't admit the folly of your ways. They are an absolute disaster for horse racing and I have heard as much directly from some of their people while doing project work for them. They privately will tell you about how much more profit they will have in 5 years because they can remove a percentage of their costs that support horse racing currently.
 

John Kelly

Born Gambler
Staff member
I don't know how many times I have to tell you all to stop giving money to these Churchill Downs asswipes. JK you keep doing it and you won't admit the folly of your ways. They are an absolute disaster for horse racing and I have heard as much directly from some of their people while doing project work for them. They privately will tell you about how much more profit they will have in 5 years because they can remove a percentage of their costs that support horse racing currently.


Add "Churchill Downs asswipes" to my EOG glossary.

I support Churchill Downs?

Come on now.

I've criticized them on several occasions and I recall my first criticism of the company.

I mocked the late John Asher when he applauded the NTRA racing slogan "Go Baby Go" in the late 1990's.

WildBill, if making a wager on the Kentucky Derby makes me a supporter of Churchill Downs, then I'm guilty.
 
Add "Churchill Downs asswipes" to my EOG glossary.

I support Churchill Downs?

Come on now.

I've criticized them on several occasions and I recall my first criticism of the company.

I mocked the late John Asher when he applauded the NTRA racing slogan "Go Baby Go" in the late 1990's.

WildBill, if making a wager on the Kentucky Derby makes me a supporter of Churchill Downs, then I'm guilty.

Do you uses Twin Spires?
 

Valuist

EOG Master
Stronach becoming lower and lower profile in racing. His Magna Int'l is making too much money in parts for electric vehicles. For years, Magna shareholders felt Stronach was wasting too much time on his racing interests.
 

alfie

EOG Dedicated
i believe he needs some pari mutual at the site to keep the casino running..

the surrounding neighbor hood is not exactly basque country...........i guess it's cheaper to run than the nags..........

stronach ruined racing in s fla... destroyed gulfstream park. no breeders cup since they took over.

hialeah should of been saved with a saratoga type meet in the winter.......stronach killed that......
 

Neveragain

EOG Dedicated
Since acquiring Turfway Park in October 2019, Churchill Downs Inc. has replaced the racing surface with a new Tapeta synthetic system very similar to the track at Woodbine.

They have also demolished the old grandstand and will replace it next year with a brand new slots building and grandstand.

Churchill also has a very nice (and free with no ads) Apple TV app for watching races at any of their tracks. HD Track feeds, commercial free and archived. I hated all the frequent TVG ads.

Horse cappers should take note that Mark Casse will have a string at Turfway. Casse’s stable at Woodbine this year was loaded.

With Woodbine’s truncated season ended by a government imposed Corona ‘Toronto’ lock down two weeks ago, look for Casse to have some live ones at Turfway this month and into the new year.
 

John Kelly

Born Gambler
Staff member
Some excellent notes, Neveragain.

Here are a few more horse racing notes:

Not a single horse on Wednesday's opening-day card at Turfway Park has a race over the track.

Ed DeRosa offered that observation on his Twitter feed.

I like to listen to the handicapping advice of Ed DeRosa.

His published selections struggled recently but I like the way he breaks down a race.

At the recently-concluded Churchill Downs meet, Ed's ROI was $1.30.

Not good, a loss of 35 cents on the dollar.

The Churchill Downs website offers this disclaimer: An ROI of more than $2.00 indicates profitable selections. The average horseplayer has an ROI of $1.60.

Scott Shapiro ended the meet with an ROI of $1.57 while Joe Kristufek finished at $1.54.

The average horseplayer defeated all three paid "experts."
 
Top