
Adding more and more casinos isn’t ‘growing the pie’ in Pennsylvania. Instead, the bottom fell out of September’s numbers, which were 8% below 2019 ones (i.e., the good old days). Against last year, they were 1% lower, for a tally of $280 million. Parx Casino, the Keystone State’s only smoke-free gambling den, was 5% off last year’s pace but still was rolling in dough to the tune of $49 million. Next best in the Philadelphia market was Philadelphia Live, having picked itself up off the canvas, posting a 1.5% gain to $18.5 million. Rivers Philadelphia (above) fell 10% to $17 million, Harrah’s Philadelphia slid 11% to $13 million and Valley Forge Resort brought up the rear with $11 million, a 5% slippage. Outstate, the runaway winner was Wind Creek Bethlehem, up 2% to $43 million and a great success story for tribal gaming.
In the Pittsburgh area, Rivers Pittsburgh clobbered the competition with $30 million (-3%), as Hollywood Meadows also ceded 3% to hit $16 million and Pittsburgh Live gained 1.5% for $9 million. Smokers flocked back to Mount Airy, which jumped 9.5% to $17 million, whilst Penn National tumbled 11.5% to $14 million. Presque Isle Downs was down 4% to $10 million, Lady Luck Nemacolin plunged 17.5% to $2 million, Hollywood York vaulted 20% to $9 million and newbie Hollywood Morgantown contributed $5 million. Returning to Philadelphia Live for a moment, since 2019 it has cost Harrah’s 34% of its revenue and Rivers Philadelphia 28%, while leaving Parx unaffected. Really, how wise was it to site five casinos in the greater Philly area? Not very.
Continue reading Saturation in Pennsylvania; Makeover for Venelazzo








