Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
2012-May-24, 06:24 PM

Login with username, password and session length

Racehorse TALK

Pages: [1]   Go Down
 
Author Topic: UK Racing - Floundering or Flourishing?  (Read 539 times)
0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
praiseworthy
Guest
Original Post 2010-Sep-23, 08:00 AM

Thought this was interesting and seems to put to rest the debate over whether UK racing is floundering or flourishing.........

16th September 2010: British Horseracing today launched a campaign calling on the Government and the Horserace Betting Levy Board (HBLB) to secure a fair return from the betting industry, after an unacceptable fall in the funding of the sport.

The Racing United: Campaign for a Fair Levy is based around a new Charter urging the closure of clear loopholes that exist in the current Levy system, which have allowed funding for British Horseracing to drop by more than a third in two years from £115m in 2008 to just £75m in 2010.

While continuing to enjoy gross wins of £1bn a year just from taking bets on British Racing, bookmakers are increasingly basing their online and telephone businesses offshore to avoid paying the Levy, in addition to exploiting threshold rules originally set up to exempt only small independent high street bookmakers.

Betting exchanges, which did not exist when the Levy was introduced, are also not providing British Racing with a fair return. Furthermore, no Levy is received from bets being placed in Britain on overseas racing, despite this being standard in several other parts of the world.

The Racing United Charter addresses such issues with the current system, while also making clear that if the vital modernisation does not take place, the whole sport is committed to the creation of a modern market in which betting operators wanting to offer a bet must enter into enforceable contracts to do so.

The Charter has been launched jointly by the British Horseracing Authority (BHA), and the Racecourse Association (RCA) and The Horsemen’s Group, which represent jointly the trade associations of racecourses, breeders, jockeys, stable staff, owners and trainers involved in British Racing. It is available for signing at a dedicated website, www.racingunited.co.uk.

-Despite the bookmakers’ claims, it is clear that the overall funding from betting to Racing has dropped considerably. The revenues British Racing makes from media rights – which have always existed separately from the Levy – fall a long way short of offsetting the sharp drop in Levy funding.

Two years ago, British Racing received £153m (2007/8) from Levy payments and media rights income. Today that combined amount has fallen by £22m (£131m 2009/10). This decline is also set against an expanded Fixture List, from 1,342 in 2007 to 1,420 in 2009.



Nic Coward, Chief Executive of the BHA, said:
“The launch of this public campaign is the latest step in pressing home Racing’s case, a comprehensive case that is built on rigorous analysis, and which we have been advocating on behalf of the sport. Our objective is to secure what is right for the future of the whole sport, and the campaign is intended to leave no-one in any doubt as to the strength of support for it across the whole of Racing and its followers.”

Stephen Atkin, Chief Executive of the Racecourse Association, said:
“British Horseracing generates substantial profits for the betting industry and taxes for Government.  It is a world leader and racecourses, training and breeding establishments form a vital part of many communities.  The Levy, in its current form, is failing to deliver a fair return to horseracing because it has not kept pace with the modern betting market.  It can and must be fixed.  We join together with our fellow stakeholders in the sport in calling the Government and the Levy Board to act now to right this wrong.”

Alan Morcombe, Chief Executive of the Horsemen’s Group, said:
“Today’s launch marks British Horseracing’s determination to ensure that, through the 50th Levy scheme, bookmakers make an appropriate contribution to the sport which underpins their profits. For most people, the importance of the Levy is symbolised by each raceday, but it has a far reaching but all too often hidden impact too. A proper return from betting through the Levy is critical in securing the future of the thousands of people employed in communities up and down the country who make British racing a truly
Logged
 
manikato1
Group 2
user 195
Online Online
Posts: 2159
2010-Sep-23, 09:11 AM

2 points.  Firstly, is this a true drop in income, or the by product of using bookmakers gross profit as the means of revenue, so if bookies have a bad year so does racing?  I know that the big 2 bookies have moved their phone/internet service off course so they don't have to pay, but is that all of the drop?

2 - A quick and dirty calculation

2008 153m in revenue - 115m in payouts = 38million
2010 131m in revenue - 75m in payouts = 56 million.

Just what are the BHA doing with the extra 18million?
Logged
Authorized
Steward
Group 1
user 18
Offline Offline
Posts: 19674
2010-Sep-25, 01:19 AM

British Champions' Series launched to broaden appeal

Ascot racecourse
Champions' Day at Ascot will provide the climax to the new series

A new initiative to broaden the appeal of British horse racing will be launched in 2011.

The British Champions' Series will feature 35 Flat races held at 10 racecourses across the UK and ending with British Champions' Day at Ascot.

It is designed to broaden the appeal of the sport and attract new audiences.

British Champions' Series chief executive Karl Oliver said: "We need to give our sport a major new platform to compete for the public's attention."

The new series will encompass British racing's key festivals, including the Guineas Festival at Newmarket, the Epsom Derby Festival, Royal Ascot, the Newmarket July Festival, Glorious Goodwood, the Ebor Festival at York and the Doncaster St Leger.

There will be five categories of races in the championship, named to make them easier to follow for a wider audience: Sprint, Mile, Middle Distance, Long Distance, and Fillies and Mares.

The total prize fund will be in excess of £13m, with British Champions' Day at Ascot offering £3m in prize money alone to become the UK's richest ever day of racing.

Champions' Day will include the Champion Stakes which switches from Newmarket and the Queen Elizabeth II Stakes which moves back from its usual September slot in the calendar.

Representatives from different areas of the sport put together proposals to modernise the image of the sport under the banner Racing for Change.

606: DEBATE

Flat racing jockey Frankie Dettori said: "This is one of the toughest periods that British horse racing will ever have to face. Our racing is the best in the world and Ascot is a world class venue at any level so it is fantastic that the industry is doing everything to help itself at this time.

"I congratulate everyone involved and look forward to racing at a world class event at my favourite track. This will equal the Melbourne Cup, the Breeders Cup and the World Cup in Dubai who have all led the way over the years with high class events."

The series will launch on Saturday 30 April 2011 with the 2,000 Guineas on Newmarket's Rowley Course and climax at the British Champions' Day at Ascot on Saturday 15 October 2011.

The terrestrial broadcast rights to all the races in the series are currently contracted to the BBC and Channel 4. Discussions are under way with broadcasters for the rights to televise British Champions' Day.

Oliver added: "Britain's richest ever day of racing is the opportunity to attract the very best British and overseas horses to compete at our top international racecourse. It will be the autumn climax British racing needs.

"By also introducing a series framework, we can highlight and use the best races throughout the Flat season to engage a much wider audience to our sport. In time, British racing can be proud that it backed British Champions' Series and British Champions' Day."

Logged
Pages: [1]   Go Up
 
 
Jump to:  

 - Links - Luxbet Horse Racing Betting - Racenet - Horse Racing - Noms and Acc - QTAB - TAB Horse Racing Betting - Racing and Sports - Horse Racing Only
Powered by SMF 1.1.15 | SMF © 2011, Simple Machines
TinyPortal v0.9.8 © Bloc | Adagio design by Bloc