Case Bets: Chicago, Wyndham, Harrah's

Anybody who still frets about "criminal elements" in Las Vegas casinos ought to turn their gaze toward Chicago instead, where such issues continue to dog the state's 10th casino license. The citizens of Waukegan lost their shot at a casino because the would-be owners had juiced an indicted businessman into the deal, despite representations to the contrary.

And the winner is … Des Plaines.

Also, the amounts of the various bids have been revised. Favorite son Neil Bluhm's winning offer was $272 million (quite a bit more than previously reported), while Waukegan Gaming brought up the rear with $216 million. Alex Yemenidjian's bid has been revised slightly downward, to a still eye-popping $406 million. Maybe Yemenidjian, who made one previous run at Tropicana Entertainment, ought to take that $406 million check to Scott Butera's office and ask for the Tropicana Las Vegas in return. And if were Butera, I'd have that check to the bank as fast as my legs could carry me.

Wyndham's latest Las Vegas project, just up the block from LVA HQ, has ground to either a halt or an extremely slow crawl. But Wyndham is going great guns in the Bahamas, where its Wyndham Nassau Resort & Crystal Palace Casino opened yesterday. Assuming Harrah's Entertainment can ever pull the trigger on a sale of The Rio, the latter has quite a bit of acreage (36.73 acres, to be pedantically precise) out back that's being underutilized as surface parking. Any prospective owner ought to consider cannibalizing that for additional casino/restaurant offerings, piggybacked onto the rear end of the existing Rio. It could synergize quite nicely with the Wyndham's timeshares, once they're eventually up and running just across the street, and capitalize on a steady stream of Twain Avenue traffic.

(Just for perspective, El Ad Properties only has clear title to 18.4 acres for its Plaza metaresort, although it may hold options on adjacent land; there's still $615 million in that acquisition that hasn't yet changed hands, judging from property records.)

Speaking of Harrah's, whether due to its new bean-counting ownership or a surfeit of other pressures, its media site has fallen into a state of semi-neglect. For instance, Harrah's southern Indiana casino hasn't been Caesars Indiana for some time now. The newly Caesar-ized Casino Windsor doesn't even merit a Web page of its own, nor do the oft-disrespected Imperial Palace and Bill's Gamblin' Hall on the Strip. The former Barbary Coast would have been a prime spot for reintroducing the Horseshoe brand to Las Vegas, but exploiting the power of the Horseshoe name is one of many ideas that have fallen victim to Harrah's ADD-afflicted corporate style in the post-Phil Satre era.

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