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#1
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#2
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![]() I just don't see it. When my wife and I were dating, she had a great job and enjoyed to gamble. We both used to go to Atlantic City often. Then I started taking her to Monmouth in the summer and she liked it. But it was more of a day out type thing. She would look at a program and pick names. She wasn't spending minute's/hours capping races and sequances. She wanted to pick her horses and go back to her magazines that she used to bring. Even when we were home and I would bet by phone, she really couldn't care less about it. And she had the base as well. Meaning her father and brother played the horses and her mother works at OTB.
Now that I really think about it, I think the number is way under the 1/3rd that Riot is looking for.
__________________
Felix Unger talking to Oscar Madison: "Your horse could finish third by 20 lengths and they still pay you? And you have been losing money for all these years?!" |
#3
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The thought that woman are going to take a 1/4 of their paycheck, spend the night before handicapping, get to the track before the first race for their favorite area, get a voucher, send in some $24 P3 tickets, and focus all day at the track is absolutely nuts. Don't get me wrong, I love woman at the racetrack but 99% of them are there for one or many of the following reasons 1) Nothing to do in the area so they can go be outside and have some drinks 2) Their group of guy friends are going out there and they are tagging along 3) It is a 'big deal' day and they get to dress up and look all hot, thus gathering massive amounts of attention all day 4) They are taking their family out there to show the kids the jockeys and the ponies 5) They are getting dragged out there by their boyfriend 6) They are on a date out there (actually a great idea for anyone that hasn't tried this, just go to a different track then your local hole) 7) They are there because they actually like racing, and they are betting, but in small amounts I think even the girls on this board will admit they are not rolling to the track with $300 ready to go apeshit the whole day. I have been to the track with both Sightseek and Uncly. Sightseek was all dressed up and all about the horses, including repeativitly telling me how awesome She Be Wild was, when I didn't use her at all, and she maybe bet $50-$60 the whole day ![]() ![]() Both of these girls have decent jobs, can handle themselves in a horse racing conversation and are completely competent with a Form, more then probably 90% of the woman in this world, and they are still aren't firing away. |
#4
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![]() Repeativitly?
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#5
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![]() I am good at creating words that aren't words but people around me usually understand what I am trying to say
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#6
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__________________
You have your way. I have my way. As for the right way, the correct way, and the only way, it does not exist. - Friedrich Nietzsche on Handicapping |
#7
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But seriously, let me ask you this, how many other woman roll that way at your local OTB? I am not saying it is impossible, and matter of fact I know of one woman at Arlington that is in her late 30's that regularly is there with a brick of cash, but she is the ONLY one there. |
#8
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__________________
You have your way. I have my way. As for the right way, the correct way, and the only way, it does not exist. - Friedrich Nietzsche on Handicapping |
#9
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![]() But the above is not the only scenario that defines a gambler. Busy professionals may not gamble frequently, but they certainly have the income to gamble significant amounts of money when they chose to. And women are a large part of that group today. I know several women who spend a good amount of money ($1000 or more) monthly, and quite a few who spend a little here and there. As I said, ADW's make it easy. Keeneland is a boutique meet, certainly, but look at the numbers of women walking up to the windows there. Churchill, Turfway ... Women don't want to go to an OTB. I can't stand Keeneland in winter - drunk, swearing, loud guys rule the roost many days on the general open floors. But TV and an ADW make racing - and gambling - easily accessible. Women also don't generally feel the need to publically compare the size of their winnings thus I think fly under the radar more (look at this board). I know some like to picture themselves as hardened racetracker originals, big spenders and tough gamblers, etc - feel free to embrace that, but it's far from the only paradigm. Cigar-smoking college guys throwing away a couple hundred a day may rule the apron at Keeneland in spring, but upstairs - and at home - there are plenty of people quietly pursuing a more businesslike model to gambling, and that takes significant disposable income, and women are right there. Don't discount a huge potential audience of intelligent, risk-enjoying, high income people just because they don't have peni.
__________________
"Have the clean racing people run any ads explaining that giving a horse a Starbucks and a chocolate poppyseed muffin for breakfast would likely result in a ten year suspension for the trainer?" - Dr. Andrew Roberts |
#10
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#11
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#12
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#13
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You are a single, independent (i always spell that wrong) woman in your thirties on the cusp of your prime earning years. Flashback 30 years ago-how many of us were there? Scav- do you want to bet there are a LOT more today? and that being the case... |
#14
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![]() Just go to an OTB and count the number of women and men.
Then come back here and keep kidding yourself. |
#15
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I am bringing a $1000 to the Preakness on Saturday. Yeah, its not break the bank money but it will be enough to play pick 4's, three horse exacta boxes and maybe some tri's in the bigger fields and yes I will keep firing until the last race. Some of what you say is true. Book club is not exactly packed with horseplayers or girlfriends that would even know how to make a wager. At the same time, I run into plenty of women that are either into the sport in some fashion or would LIKE to be. I would love some demographic breakdowns on poker, table games or even lotteries. I would bet (more than $2 scav) that the percentage of females in these gambling endeavors is rising. Forget just gaming, look at the way the NFL markets to women. Is it just a coincidence that the meteoric rise of the NFL as the overwhelmingly dominant sport in the US coincided with the way the sport marketed to women? How about Nascar? How about professional poker? Look at what hockey is doing during this renaissance. Steve said it perfectly. Do you guys really think that the trends of women and minorities as sports fans and gamblers is going to suddenly begin to revert? |
#16
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I don't disagree what Steve has said from the start of this website, if you get people to the track, they will come back because they end up liking it. But to focus an entire or partial marketing push on 18-30 year old woman is absolutely a waste of money, in an industry that is already being bled dry. I am of the belief that you have to solidify your account base before you can attract new customers. Horse racing's 'base' is far from solid. They are losing big bettors daily to greener pastures. |
#17
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![]() It seems women like the slots so they can easily transfer some fun bets to horses at a racino. After all, the women can relate to the fillies, female jockeys, female trainers , female owners.
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Tom Cooley photo |
#18
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![]() I'd love to see a Scuds-style psychoanalysis of this thread.
Oh boy...
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please use generalizations and non-truths when arguing your side, thank you |
#19
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Its not the misogynist crap that really bothers me in this thread as much as the narrow 1950 view of the world. |
#20
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Racing needs to re-invent itself and it is refreshing that the powers that be are actually taking new ideas into consideration. Thinking about "big bettors" and solidifying a dying fan base is small thinking. Trying to put racing back to a national pastime is where we should be going. |