“Do I think the gaming market ever comes back to close to $6 billion in revenue? No. Not even close,” Hard Rock International CEO Jim Allen said of Atlantic City. “If a brand like Hard Rock fails
in Atlantic City, the interest in investing capital in that town is going to diminish significantly. However, if we are successful, then I think the future is very bright.” Allen and Ocean Resort owner Bruce Deifik are on the eve of reopening two properties. Allen has reinvented Trump Taj Mahal as Hard Rock Atlantic City and Deifik has revamped Revel into Ocean Resort.
New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy (D) was even more optimistic in a recent speech, saying, “Not long ago — it was not long ago at all — folks were writing Atlantic City off. It was past its prime. The
economy was dead. Now, when people speak of Atlantic City, they speak of renewal, they speak of opportunity.” The market that once was synonymous with Donald Trump may be the new music city, courtesy of Hard Rock and its 300-event lineup. The Washington Post diplomatically says Trump “withdrew from the business” but it would be more accurate that the business withdrew from him, as Carl Icahn gobbled up bankrupt Trump Entertainment Resorts, in which Trump had been a minority investor. (Probably the only time Trump’s been a minority anything.)
Deifik’s main man for gaming, Seth Schorr, is rushing to put a sports book in place, viewing sports betting as the big new draw on the Boardwalk. “Coming from Nevada, it’s hard to even imagine a casino without a sports book. You have to have an exciting environment to watch the game. Our goal is to create experiences,” Schorr told the WaPo.
If Atlantic City could rival Nevada’s $4.8 billion sports-betting market, that would be an additional $250 million in casino
revenue. (Moody’s Investor Service estimates the winnings at $125 million, projected.) That’s asking a lot but, unlike Las Vegas, Atlantic City has two major metro markets — Philadelphia and New York City — within a fairly short drive. (Yes, Vegas draws upon Los Angeles, San Diego and Phoenix, but none of those are as proximate.) New York‘s Legislature just whiffed on sports betting, so Empire State citizens have a special motivation to head on down. Said former state senator Raymond Lesniak, “During the NCAA Tournament, Super Bowl week, any big event, you can’t get a room in Las Vegas and Atlantic City is a ghost town. That changes with sports betting.”
Adds Deifik, “Instead of getting on a plane and going five hours to Las Vegas from the East Coast and New Jersey, people will stay
here.” We hope so. “We feel like the vibrancy this type of offering will create will extend beyond just the race and sports book and spill out onto the rest of the property,” adds Borgata President Marcus Glover, who oversees the only casino-based sports book in the market presently.
While both Hard Rock and Ocean Resort are banking on Atlantic City’s family trade, Deifik is also going for an adults-only vibe by reopening Ivan Kane‘s Royal Jelly Burlesque Nightclub. “There is no place like this in the world. It’s like a dancer’s playground. There’s tons of stuff to climb on and hang off of and swing on,” said dancer and Royal Jelly veteran Lindsey Dunn. Royal Jelly was one of the few Revel amenities to do well, so Deifik is embracing it,
compared to his hold-your-nose-and-accept-it situation Hard Rock faces with the Scores mega-titty bar, forced upon it in a legal settlement.
“I was afraid the place was never going to reopen,” Kane bellowed at a reporter. (He always speaks at the top of his lungs.) “For me to walk into this pristine $8 million to $9 million nightclub in a $2.4 billion building and to see it sitting there forlornly waiting for a crowd to energize it, that was truly sad.” Be sad no more, Ivan. The fun resumes tomorrow night.
* The American Gaming Association has formed up a search committee, to replace departed CEO Geoff Freeman. It’s headed up by Penn National Gaming CEO Tim Wilmott and includes executives from three other Las Vegas Strip companies: Las Vegas Sands, Caesars
Entertainment and MGM Resorts International. Unless you count Penn, regional casinos are only represented by Rush Street Gaming CEO Greg Carlin and, worse still, tribal gaming — which rivals the private sector in revenue and ubiquity — gets only a token presence, in the form of Chickasaw Nation Secretary of Commerce Bill Lance Jr. MGM CEO Jim Murren, who’s on the board, knows a thing or two about diversity. We say he should speak up about the Vegas-centric composition of the group, maybe even vacate his chair in favor of another tribal member. How about it, Jim?

” MGM CEO Jim Murren, who’s on the board, knows a thing or two about diversity. We say he should speak up about the Vegas-centric composition of the group, maybe even vacate his chair in favor of another tribal member. How about it, Jim?”
Your last 2 sentences made me LOL . . .
With both the Hard Rock and Ocean now open I think there is a good chance that more tourists will visit Atlantic City. Hard Rock is an experienced casino operator with several casinos throughout the country and they have booked a long list of headliners and will offer live music every day. Revel cost $2.4 billion dollars to build (and
unfortunately went bankrupt) so maybe new owner Bruce Deifik can turn the hotel-casino around after renaming it Ocean. Also there is close to 30 million people who live within a 3 hour car ride of Atlantic City.
Legalized sports betting should bring more people to Atlantic City. NFL teams the New York Giants, New York Jets, Philadelphia Eagles,
Baltimore Ravens and Washington Redskins are all pretty close to Atlantic City so on the weekends their fans might go to Atlantic City and bet on NFL (and college) football games. According to the UNLV Center for Gaming Research $4.9 billion dollars was wagered on sports betting in Nevada in 2017 and 36% of that was bet on football.
Until mobile betting is available, sports betting is still very burdensome for potential players. Live in N Jersey and want to throw down on Sunday football? Good luck getting to Meadowlands Racetrack, can’t enter the premises without a prepaid parking pass ($40+) because it shares the lot with Giants/Jets stadium. So an hour+ to Monmouth or 2+ to AC. Of course now you’re stuck watching the game there too, unless you want a 2nd roundtrip to collect. Even the rest of the week, majority of bettors will be 30-45 minutes minimum from their closest betting window.
There is no reason not to adopt the British/Irish model with local betting parlors on every corner and/or strip mall, and to open the industry to any entrepreneur. New Jersey complained federal law restricting sports betting was illegal, yet it is heavily restricting sports betting within the state and handing another monopoly (after online gambling) to established players while shutting out potential new entrants.
https://thehousesometimeswins.com/supreme-courts-gambling-case-has-exposed-states-hypocrisy-f8901208ad42
Hard Rock Casino Atlantic City is a real gem! It is a high quality total makeover, we stayed there last night, 7/3, and saw Howie Mandel’s show opening his comedy club, a funny and a very experienced entertainer. Hard Rock will be serious competition for MGM’s Borgata.