Derby Day a dud; Bank cools on Resorts World LV

Seems that Churchill Downs was blowing smoke up Wall Street‘s keister about how well a delayed, spectator-less Kentucky Derby would perform. Last weekend’s Run for the Roses saw betting handle of $79.5 million, down 49% from last year. All races run on Sept. 5 saw an aggregate handle of $126 million, half of 2019’s $251 million. TV ratings were also in the tank. 8.8 million viewers tuned in, compared to double that last year. JP Morgan analyst Daniel Politzer blamed a heavy slate of sports competition: “we attribute this decline to the shift in timing from the first Saturday in May to Labor Day weekend, the Derby being the second leg of the Triple Crown this year (Belmont ran June 20th), as well as competing programming (i.e., college football, U.S. Open Tennis, NBA playoffs, etc.).” However you slice it, CHDN predicted that Coronavirus would be no big thing for the race, a forecast that came up short by several furlongs.

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