Wednesday, November 20, 2019

A Greyhound Track Closes Up to Save Money


Greyhound racing in Florida remains legal until the end of 2020, but the economics are so bad that tracks are folding under their own debt weight -- a phenomenon that has been occurring for about 30 years.

Sarasota Magazine writes of the last days of the "Sarasota Kennel Club":


In 1944, the Sarasota track burned down, and a car salesman and sheriff’s officer named Jerry Collins bought the place for $5,005 worth of back taxes. Collins was a model of the enterprising entrepreneur of the early 20th century. He had moved to Sarasota in 1919, and then became a sheriff in Fort Myers, where he was a bodyguard for Thomas Edison and Henry Ford. He was a gambler, too, and he frequented the tracks in Tampa and St. Petersburg. At one point he owned 12 tracks throughout the country.

Now Collins’s grandson, Jack Collins Jr., owns the Sarasota Kennel Club. He was at the track nearly every day I visited, sitting in a dark corner of the poker room bar, sipping bottled water. Under the new law the place could have stayed open until Dec. 31, 2020, but Collins Jr., 55, decided to rip off the band-aid. “The only weird part is knowing you’ve done it for 75 years, and after this year you won’t,” he said. “Back in the ’80s, live racing could bring in a million a day here. For the past few years, we were lucky if we got $200,000.”

Collins Jr. says the business changed when the state changed the lottery laws in 1986. “Before that, we were the only place where you could gamble legally,” he says. “Once the lottery came in, it took a lot of money out of circulation.”

But dog racing had been declining in popularity around the country for three decades. In 1991, the total amount of money gambled on dog races in the U.S. was $3.5 billion. By 2014, it had dropped to $500 million. In Florida, between 2007 and 2017, the amount wagered dropped from $406 million to $226 million. During that same period, card table receipts increased from $91 million to $157 million.

For a while, dog racing was kept on life support by a 1997 state law meant to reduce the number of gambling facilities in the state. The new law required card-room licenses to be tethered to existing pari-mutuel betting facilities—jai alai, horse tracks and dog racing. To make matters more complicated, the legislature tacked on the “90 percent rule.” That meant that in order to keep the profitable poker tables, the tracks had to run at least 90 percent of the live races they ran in 1996. When Amendment 13 passed, the track owners got to keep the cards and get rid of the money-draining races.

“Personally, I’d hate to say it, but for us owners, we are going to be financially better off, no doubt,” Collins Jr. told me. Collins employs more than 300 people at the track. The vote will cut that down to 60.

None of this is news to readers of this blog.

In the past I have detailed the history of on-track grayhound racing in a post entitled 100 Years of Electric Rabbits.

Five years ago I wrote a piece entitled Guess Who Wants to End Greyhound Racing?


A year ago, I detailed the legislative demise of the Florida Greyhounds industry, and what it would mean (and NOT mean) for greyhounds in general.


  • Greyhounds are over 4,000 years old but these mechanical rabbit races are only about 100 years old.  Mechanical rabbits are not necessary for the greyhound's existence.
  • Commercial greyhound racing has already been banned over most of the world because the sport inevitably leads to thousands of abandoned dogs, dogs shot in the head and buried in farm fields after they lose their first few races, and dogs drugged to slow them down or speed them up. In the US, forty states have already banned commercial greyhound racing as a consequence.
  • This is not the "slippery slope" of the “AR people”. I've been listening to this nonsense for 30 years, and I live in Virginia where PETA is actually headquartered. Here in Virginia, where we banned greyhound racing in 1995, the state dog is the Fox Hound, we shoot over 200,000 deer a year, we shoot over 3,000 bear a year, and local bounties on coyotes are still offered. Geese and ducks are hunted with abandon, along with raccoon and rabbit, falconers fly on squirrel and rabbit, and leghold traps are both legal and used. Chicken and steak places are on every corner, and no one I know has seen a PETA protest in their life. You know who fans “the fear of AR” flames? The Kennel Club pretenders; the frustrated hair dressers cranking out diseased, deformed, and dysfunctional dogs for green cash and blue ribbons. The AKC “sport” is separating people from cash, walking dogs around a ring on a string leash, and looking the other way when deformed dogs are in distress and diseased dogs collapse at age 5. Listening to AKC pretenders talk about hunting and working dogs is a bit like getting a cooking lesson from Jeffrey Dahmer; you might want to check on what's being served!
  • America is not going soft. We still sell guns at Walmart and cases of ammunition without identification at Dick's Sporting Goods. We’re a meat-eating and hunting people who cheer at MMA fights and who rip children from their parents as we throw them into ICE cages. We invade countries for no reason, refuse to provide clean water to our citizens, and jail millions on petty charges. I’m pretty sure we’re not “going soft” as a nation because we’ve decided drugging greyhounds and shooting them in the head in South Florida is a practice that we’d just as soon stop. We’ll survive this, I promise. Forty other states already have.
  • Running dogs are chasing rabbits and hares all over the world. That’s not going to change and neither is any other normal dog activity. Dogs are still going to herd sheep, move cattle, rat barns, pull carts and sleds, guard stock, and chase fox and raccoon. Flyball is not going to be banned, and neither are for-fun terrier races or plastic bag lure coursing events.  To refresh; greyhound racing had already been banned in 40 other states and no one even noticed. 
  • Most greyhound track owners want to get rid of the dogsbecause slot machines (put in to subsidize failing greyhounds tracks) are more profitable and less hassle.  Greyhound racing has been an economically dying sport for decades.
  • The Florida law is clear that the intent of the law is to ban greyhound racing associated with commercial betting. The ballot summary was: "Phases out commercial dog racing in connection with wagering by 2020. Other gaming activities are not affected." Amendment 13 added a new section to Article X and a new section to Article XII of the Florida Constitution. The following text was added:
    New Section of Article X
    Prohibition on racing of and wagering on greyhounds or other dogs.—The humane treatment of animals is a fundamental value of the people of the State of Florida. After December 31, 2020, a person authorized to conduct gaming or pari-mutuel operations may not race greyhounds or any member of the Canis Familiaris subspecies in connection with any wager for money or any other thing of value in this state, and persons in this state may not wager money or any other thing of value on the outcome of a live dog race occurring in this state. The failure to conduct greyhound racing or wagering on greyhound racing after December 31, 2018, does not constitute grounds to revoke or deny renewal of other related gaming licenses held by a person who is a licensed greyhound permitholder on January 1, 2018, and does not affect the eligibility of such permitholder, or such permitholder’s facility, to conduct other pari-mutuel activities authorized by general law. By general law, the legislature shall specify civil or criminal penalties for violations of this section and for activities that aid or abet violations of this section.

    New Section of Article XII
    Prohibition on racing or wagering on greyhounds or other dogs.—The amendment to Article X, which prohibits the racing of or wagering on greyhound and other dogs, and the creation of this section, shall take effect upon the approval of the electors.
    The amendment is written to allow greyhound tracks to continue as slot machine and off track betting establishments, but without dogs, and it clearly allows all dog activities provided there no wagering being done. In short, fun trials and timed trials in which wagers are not being made are perfectly legal.

So now the few remaining Greyhound tracks are starting to close down because gambling and slot machine licensing no longer requires the dogs to be run.  The dogs have been losing money for years, and the track owners are happy to be free of them.

3 comments:

tuffy said...


the thing that is unusual, and good about grey hound racing though, is that at the very least, these dogs are being bred for health and great function, not a ''look'' dictated by the AKC...and, they are being USED for these puposes...it's one of the few breeds left in the USA, the world even, who still can say that...i guess that is going to change now... :(

Anonymous said...

In response to what Tuffy said: Greyhounds are not bred for health. They are bred for one thing only and that is to win races. They are just as inbred as any AKC dog. It is common for people to adopt ex-racers that are related (like half siblings) because everyone wants to breed their bitches to the top winning dog. People once thought greyhounds were one of the healthiest breeds because most of them were killed before they were 3 years old, so we never had a chance to see what health issues popped up later in life. Now that greyhounds are popular pets and living normal lifespans, we can see what diseases they suffer from. The diseases I personally hear about most often on greyhound forums are bone cancer, bloat, SOL, dental problems, deafness, tick borne diseases and pannus. It's actually the reason I decided to not adopt one. Sorry, but I'm not going to pay $400 for what is basically a puppy-mill bred dog that has a good chance of dying from bone cancer. I'll stick with cheap dogs off craigslist.

Here is what Embrace pet insurance has to say: "Greyhounds suffer from the highest rate of bone cancer (osteosarcoma) of any dog breed, usually in one of their legs...Dogs from track lines are currently thought to have higher rates of bone cancer than dogs from show lines. If this is true, it may be related to track injuries in combination with an underlying genetic susceptibility, or entirely genetic."

PBurns said...

You are correct that greyhounds have a very high rate of bone cancer and that this fact has been obscured by early death (bullet to the brain) at the track.