JC / Railbird

#delmarI met Marc Subia today and he told me the story of his amazing autograph jacket. "It's my most prized possession." Marc started coming to Del Mar with his dad in the 1970s. It's his home track. And he's been collecting jockey autographs for decades ...Grand Jete keeping an eye on me as I take a picture of Rushing Fall's #BC17 garland. #thoroughbred #horseracing #delmarAnother #treasurefromthearchive — this UPI collage for Secretariat vs. Sham. #inthearchives #thoroughbred #horseracingThanks, Arlington. Let's do this again next year. #Million35That's a helmet. #BC16 #thoroughbred #horseracing #jockeysLady Eli on the muscle. #BC16 @santaanitapark #breederscup #thoroughbred #horseracing

21st Century Racing Fans

Thursday night, I attended a book reading given by Kevin Smokler, editor of the recently published anthology, “Bookmark Now: Writing in Unreaderly Times.” The collection was put together partially in response to a report released by the NEA in June 2004, “Reading at Risk,” that basically claimed America was turning into a country of illiterates. “America can no longer take active and engaged literacy for granted,” wrote NEA chairman Dana Gioia in the report’s introduction. If something wasn’t done, he warned, a “vast cultural impoverishment” was sure to result. TV, the Internet, and video games received most of the blame for the encroaching idiocy. But something about the report didn’t sit well with Smokler. Something was wrong:

It made me sad. But something beneath that disappointment stunk up the joint, double-talk that proclaimed us to be living in a new kind of nightmare for American literacy while blaming the same old bogeymen. If online reading was eating away at book reading, how did we explain literary weblogs that commanded thousands of readers a day … If young people were reading less than any other demographic group, how did we dismiss the revolution in young adult literature … or the best-selling careers of twenty-something favorites like David Sedaris, Nick Hornby, Zadie Smith, or Jonathan Safran Foer?

Racing reminds me of reading: both are frequently proclaimed dying. But what Smokler argues is that the “same old bogeymen” and, specifically, the Internet, aren’t killing reading. If anything, the Internet is changing the nature of reading and possibly, creating new readers. As he said in response to a question from the audience on Thursday, “Reading as the [NEA] report writers understand it is dying. Reading is not.”

It’s a bit harder to argue racing isn’t dying — declining attendance numbers can’t be quibbled with, and where racing once claimed 40% of the betting market, it now takes only 3% (Star-Telegram). Dwindling coverage in the mainstream print media doesn’t help, either. What the racing industry needs to realize though is that the Internet can save it. Okay, maybe that’s a bit hyperbolic. But consider poker, as Steven Crist does in a new column:

The [World Series of Poker], which began in 1970 with a field of just 38 players, grew steadily through its first three decades, attracting 513 players by 2001. Then the numbers went through the roof: 631 in 2002, 839 in 2003, and 2,576 in 2004. This year, all but the final rounds of the event had to be moved from the traditional venue of Binion’s Horseshoe to the massive Rio Suites convention center to accommodate the 5,661 entrants who put up $10,000 apiece. (Daily Racing Form — sub. req.)

The growth can be largely attributed to the Internet. There are a couple of lessons racing can take from the poker’s success:

First, there is obviously a massive market of Americans interested in intelligent gambling, willing to read books, learn complicated rules, calculate odds, and bet accordingly. Second, the best way to reach those people and to facilitate that betting is through the Internet, which racing still embraces only awkwardly and tentatively.

“Awkwardly and tentatively.” That’s a nice way for Crist to put racing’s approach to the Internet.

Racing must recognize soon the power of the medium and figure out how to use it to the sport’s advantage. I’m talking about making more information easily available online (look at all the stats, summaries, and player biographies baseball provides on MLB.com), making it easier for new fans and the curious to find a way into playing the horses (this means going beyond just past performance chart tutorials and freeing the quantities of historic data hidden behind paywalls), and embracing blogs and RSS. As long-time observers keep saying, racing missed out on TV, and two generations later, the sport is paying the price in lost fans, particularly among the young. It can’t afford to do the same with the Internet.

I’ll be returning to this topic …

No Nostalgia … No Consideration

More reaction to the Hollywood Park sale …
Inglewood city leaders are looking to the future, and they don’t necessarily see horseracing there:

“As the city evolves, we’ve got to be prepared to capitalize on every changing situation and we can’t get caught up in nostalgia,” said Assemblyman Jerome Horton … “The track’s heyday is long since gone,” said Inglewood Councilman Curren Price. “We’ll miss the horse racing, but we’re confident there’s bigger things ahead. It’s time for new uses, and that land is more valuable as a development project than as a horse racing venue at this time” (KTLA).

Price’s comments hit home — the same things can be said about Suffolk Downs and most other minor tracks in urban areas.
Horsemen at the track are peeved by the timing of the sale announcement:

“No consideration,” a veteran trainer said of the way the owners, old and new, broke the news on a day when Hollywood Park should have made headlines with the naming of the lineup for Saturday’s $750,000 Hollywood Gold Cup (LA Daily News).

Noted: July 8

The New England Turf Writers Association named Senor Ladd 2004 Horse of the Year. The award was given out at NETWA’s annual dinner on Thursday night. Jockey Stewart Elliott was honored with a special achievement award; Winston Thompson earned the Eli Chiat Jockey Award. Horses honored included Milky Way Guy (Turf Male) and Lady Beezlebub (Three-Year-Old Filly).
– Saratoga season passes are on sale by telephone and mail. The passes are $35 for the grandstand and $75 for the clubhouse, and good for admission every day of the meet including Travers Day. Call 516-488-6000, ext. 4433 for more information.
Noble Threewitt is 94 and still training. “People are always asking when I’m going to retire, and I always tell them that they’ll have to close the track down first. I have no hobbies. I don’t play golf. I don’t even know how to play checkers.” The veteran horseman will receive the Laffit Pincay Jr. Award at Hollywood Park on Saturday for his service to the industry. (LA Times)
– Seriously? “I will ride your Thoroughbred, Quarterhorse, Arabian or even Mule, in any sanctioned pari-mutuel race in California this summer, for only 10 cents” (eBay). [Link via Oregon Racing News]

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