Meadowlands Sports Betting

Posted onby
Meadowlands Sports Betting 5,0/5 6862 votes

The Meadowlands Racetrack plans to bring legal sports betting to New York City's doorstep next month.

  1. Meadowlands Sports Betting Nj
  2. Fanduel Meadowlands Nj
  3. Meadowlands Sports Betting Odds

Jeff Gural, who manages the northern New Jersey track, told The Associated Press that he plans to begin offering sports betting on July 15. That's significantly earlier than a timetable the track laid out just over a week ago when a competing track in Oceanport and an Atlantic City casino became the first in New Jersey to take sports bets following its legalization.

The development came as New York state adjourned its legislative session Wednesday without adopting a sports betting bill.

'New York did me such a favor by not passing sports betting,' Gural said. 'That leaves me the entirety of New York City, Long Island, Westchester County. There are 15 million people that live within 20 miles of the Meadowlands. They gave me a tremendous gift.'

Bet, Watch, and Win. Spend gameday at the newest addition to the Meadowlands Racetrack— the FanDuel Sportsbook Lounge. Enjoy dozens of televisions, comfortable seating, food and beverage service, and live sports betting on almost any game in the world. December 1 - 3, 2020 Meadowlands Exposition Center, New Jersey IAGA is pleased to support the upcoming Betting On Sports America conference and exhibit taking place December 1 - 3, 2020 in New Jersey, just across the Hudson River from New York City. The Meadowlands sports betting begins Earlier this month, the Meadowlands Racetrack was the latest operator in New Jersey to begin offering sports betting services. Having launched on the 14th, the venue was able to take in close to $3.5m (€2.9m) over a nine-day time frame, even though there was little to bet on. There is no better place to watch and wager on the Big Game this Sunday, than at the FanDuel Sportsbook located inside Meadowlands Racing & Entertainment. Numerous HD TVs are spread.

It would be a gift for his New Jersey track; Gural also owns the Tioga Downs track in upstate New York and was counting on sports betting to help revive it.

New York's failure to act gives New Jersey at least a short-term advantage: Many of the customers expected to place sports bets at the track will come from New York, yet the tax money sports book operators are charged on those bets (9.75 to 13 percent, depending on where and how the bets are placed) will go to New Jersey.

New Jersey gambling regulators confirmed Gural's timetable to begin offering sports betting, calling it doable. So far, Monmouth Park racetrack in Oceanport, near the Jersey shore, and Atlantic City's Borgata casino are the only ones in New Jersey offering sports betting.

The Ocean Resort Casino, formerly known as Revel, will become the third on June 28 when it reopens on the Atlantic City Boardwalk. The Meadowlands would be next in line just over two weeks later.

Ironically, it was the failed pursuit of building a casino at the Meadowlands that led to concern for the track complex's future, and it will be sports betting that will ease those concerns somewhat. Gural and Hard Rock International proposed a casino at the track complex in East Rutherford, just over six miles from New York City, but the proposal was resoundingly rejected by voters and is unlikely to resurface anytime soon. New Jersey's Democratic State Senate President Steve Sweeney told The Associated Press in December that the political support for the casino project does not exist, and even Gural and Hard Rock say it could be five years or more before that might change.

New Jersey won a U.S. Supreme Court case in May clearing the way for all 50 states to legalize sports betting if they desire. Delaware was the first state to do so following the ruling; New Jersey was close behind.

The Meadowlands has partnered with Betfair US to offer sports betting at the track. It is a subsidiary of Paddy Power Betfair, one of the largest publicly traded sports betting companies in the world.

Gural said sports betting will help the track's bottom line, but added it will not, by itself, save the horse racing industry in New Jersey, which continues to struggle competing against neighboring states that subsidize their tracks. New Jersey's tracks used to receive $30 million a year from the state's casinos, but former Gov. Chris Christie, a Republican, ended those payments in 2011.

Without some sort of subsidy, Gural said, the track could be forced to just offer sports betting and simulcasting.

The track eventually plans to offer online sports betting, but will only offer sports betting at the track in the early going.

Meadowlands history in New Jersey

The Big M was an immediate hit, as an opening day crowd of 42,133 decorated the 1976 debut. Meadowlands Racetrack held its first-ever harness race on Sept. 1, 1976, while thoroughbred racing commenced on Sept. 6, 1977.

The track is a signature piece of the Meadowlands Sports Complex, giving New Jersey fans an identity as hosts for both two NFL teams and championship horse racing.

So high profile was the Big M, that the George Washington Bridge was once shut down to film a commercial of a harness racehorse trotting across the bridge into New Jersey.

Five years later, the Big M advanced beyond fan popularity to become a force in the harness racing industry. It gained a signature event — the Hambletonian — in 1981, securing a showcase that would compare with thoroughbred counterparts such as the Kentucky Derby, Preakness, and Belmont Stakes. The “Hambo” remains one of the prized jewels in the harness-racing business.

In the past decade, Meadowlands gave itself an upgrade. The New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority privatized the track to Jeffrey Gural in 2011. That privatization included $110 million of improvements including a new 2,250 seat grandstand.

The old Meadowlands grandstand closed for racing in 2013. The new one went up in 2015.

Leading drivers in recent seasons have included Ron Pierce, Brian Sears, George Brennan, Yannick Gingras, and Tim Tetrick.

In June 2018, after NJ sports betting became legal, Paddy Power Betfair partnered with Meadowlands to open a sportsbook at the track. FanDuel Sportsbook opened on July 14, 2018.

What is harness racing?

In harness racing, horses race at a specific gait, either a trot or a pace. The horses pull a two-wheeled cart called a sulky (or spider) with one driver. Standardbred horses are usually preferred in harness racing. They have shorter legs and longer bodies.

In a trotting race, the trotter moves its legs forward in pairs — right front and left hind, then left front and right hind. Both pairs strike the ground simultaneously. Pacing involves a horse moving its legs laterally — right front and right hind together, then left front and left hind.

Meadowlands Course and Track

The Meadowlands has a track length of 1 mile for harness racing and a distance of seven furlongs for the turf course used by thoroughbreds.

The 1-mile harness racing distance is considered ideal because it limits the number of turns in a race to two. This reduces traffic problems around the turns and lets the horses string out along a lengthy backstretch. It gives them a chance to settle into a nice riding stride without being hampered by constant turns.

A number of older harness racing establishments have distances of roughly half of the Big M and require two full laps around the track for a race.

That makes the turns — four of them — a heavily-weighted factor in the outcome. A horse unable to gain good position, for example, may race wide around all the turns and add at least a couple of hundred yards to his race distance. This will often make the difference between winning and finishing in the middle of the pack and will hurt a horse that draws the outside post position.

There is a secondary benefit to the one-mile distance for racing fans. They are consistent, unlike thoroughbred tracks that feature varied lengths between sprints and distance races.

Harness racing fans can compare the times of horses at a similar distance. That’s different from the thoroughbred world, in which one must speculate how a horse will handle either a new distance or one that is different than his last race.

The one-mile harness racing distance makes the sport easier to follow, and bet.

The track is equipped to race at night and most of its races are in the evening. One notable exception is Hambletonian Day, in which the first post time is at noon.

Meadowlands amenities

The Big M provides a state-of-the-art convergence of the live racing, sports betting, and dining worlds. It also capitalized quickly on the 2018 repeal of PASPA. It established the FanDuel sports betting presence to complement its horse betting and racing, simulcasting, and luxury skyboxes. The Meadowlands also features food and drink options.

The Big M is a sports, entertainment, and wagering package. It is a racetrack, sportsbook, simulcast wagering facility, sports bar, high-level restaurant, and a series of skyboxes, all under one roof.

The most recent addition is the sportsbook element.

FanDuel Sportsbook at the Meadowlands

FanDuel Sportsbook at the Meadowlands Racetrack includes a combination of sports betting and big-screen excitement. There are live tellers to take wagers, and the facility is open from 10 a.m-midnight, seven days a week.

There are dozens of televisions, seating, food and beverage service, and live sports betting on almost any game in the world. The Victory Sports Bar is located within the FanDuel sports betting facility at the racetrack.

Outdoor dining

West Deck Dining is primarily American cuisine including salads, burgers, steak, and fish.

The Backyard Grill has an extensive menu plus outdoor dining. The barbecue menu includes brisket, pulled pork, and baby-back ribs.

Indoor dining and skyboxes

Pink is a 300-seat tiered restaurant that overlooks the track through massive glass windows. It is a signature experience at the Meadowlands, offering dining options overlooking the live racing.

Meadowlands

Skyboxes are available by reservations to groups. This is a rare luxury item in the horse racing industry.

Signature events at the Meadowlands

The Meadowlands is the famed home for the Hambletonian and Cane Pace, valued jewels in the harness-racing Trotting and Pacing Triple Crowns. They are both showcased on the same day in 2021, Aug. 8.

Hambletonian

Meadowlands Sports Betting Nj

The $1 million Hambletonian is traditionally run on the first Saturday in August.

The format changed in 2020, as the Meadowlands opted to host elimination heats for the Hambletonian on Aug. 1 and the Hambletonian itself on Aug. 8.

The other Triple Crown Trotting events are the Yonkers Trot at Yonkers Raceway in New York and the Kentucky Futurity at the Red Mile in Lexington, Ky.

The Meadowlands began hosting “The Hambo,” now in its 95th year, in 1981.

Cane Pace

The Meadowlands also showcases the Cane Pace, one leg of the Pacing Triple Crown, on the same card as the Hambletonian. The other Pacing Triple Crown events are the Messenger Stakes at Yonkers Raceway and the Little Brown Jug at the Delaware County Fairgrounds Racetrack in Delaware, Ohio.

The Big M runs an extensive spring-summer harness racing season and a thoroughbred racing campaign in the fall. For 2020, the track will run exclusively harness, with a fall meeting set to continue the summer circuit.

2021 Meadowlands races and schedule

Sports

The Meadowlands has capitalized on a recent racing trend of placing several high-profile events on one card, maximizing the captive audience assembled for a mega-event like the Hambletonian.

This practice captivates the interest of big bettors, whose wagering mirrors the prominence of the entire card.

The Big M set an industry record of $6.4 million handle on Hambletonian Day in 2019 and carries the same philosophy forward in 2020. While the caliber of racing is always strong every Friday and Saturday, some weekends will reflect the track’s approach to present a high-profile extravaganza.

Key races at Meadowlands in 2021

Here are some “can’t miss” races at the Big M (schedule subject to change):

Aug. 8 RacesNov. 28 Races
HambletonianThree Diamonds
Hambletonian OaksGoldsmith Maid
Peter HaughtonValley Victory
Jim DohertyGovernor's Cup
Cane PaceTVG Free For All Trot
John CashmanTVG Free For All Pace
Sam McKeeTVG Free For All Mare Pace
Lady LibertyTVG Free For All Mare Trot
John Steele

Hambletonian highlights

2019 Forbidden Trail

The 15-1 shot Forbidden Trail made a sweeping move around the final turn of the 2019 “Hambo” and was about to be passed by 3-10 shot Greenshoe just before the wire. Only, it didn’t happen. Forbidden Trail found a small extra surge and prevailed at the wire in a thrilling Hambletonian finish.

It was one of those situations in which the outside horse takes dead aim in the middle of the stretch and everyone expects the horse to blow past the inside competitor. But in this case, Forbidden Trail forbade it.

2018 Atlanta

With an effort that defied belief — even for her connections — Atlanta proved she could be among the all-time great filly trotters when she stepped out to a 1:50.4 victory in the Hambletonian. Atlanta joined Duenna (1983) and Continentalvictory (1996) as the only fillies to capture the Hambletonian since the race moved to the Meadowlands in 1981.

Atlanta set record-setting fractions for the first three-quarters of the qualifying heat before coming in second. She adjusted in the championship race, winning in a little slower time.

2017 Perfect Spirit

What began as a perfectly normal, even routine, edition of the 92nd Hambletonian, transformed in the last few strides into an historic event. The horse first across the wire, What The Hill, was disqualified for interference with another competitor. Perfect Spirit became the first Hambletonian winner to be placed first because of an infraction.

2016 Marion Marauder

Marion Marauder captured his elimination for driver Scott Zeron in stunning come-from-behind fashion in 1:51.3 and then won the final by a nose over Southwind Frank and a neck over a late-closing Sutton in 1:51.4.

The three-way photo finish was the closest in the Hambletonian final since 2012 when Market Share edged Guccio and My MVP by a neck. Not including the historic 1989 dead heat between Park Avenue Joe and Probe, it was the eighth Hambletonian final decided by a nose and the first since Bonefish in 1975.

Fanduel Meadowlands Nj

The win by a nose became even more prevalent over time. Marion Marauder went on to capture the Yonkers Trot and Kentucky Futurity to become the last, and most recent, Triple Crown champion.

2015 Pinkman

Meadowlands Sports Betting Odds

The 2015 Hambletonian featured the elimination heat winners — Pinkman and Mission Brief — thundering down the homestretch together. Pinkman had gotten the early jump by making a move midway through the race and had enough to hold off Mission Brief, the 3-5 favorite.