"Another one bites the dust"

That’s how a reader informed me of Las Vegas-based Golden Gaming‘s decision to bail on Wyandotte County in Kansas. Considering that you’ve got Harrah’s Entertainment, Ameristar Casinos, etc. firmly entrenched across the state line in Kansas City, Mo., and Isle of Capri making a comeback over there, I don’t blame Golden for its hesitation.

Penn National remains in the Wyandotte running but it found no support for its last bid and previous winner Cordish Co. withdrew amicably from its Kansas Speedway project so that it could be downsized. Casino-enabling legislation in the Sunflower State didn’t allow Cordish to revise its proposal once it had been accepted by the Lottery Board. But Cordish promised it would be back, and it was.

Lottery Executive Director Ed Van Petten told media Golden wanted to conserve its assets, adding, “They are being conservative and playing it smart. I hate to see it, but I fully understand.” Golden executive veep Rod Atamain‘s diplomatically phrased withdrawal alluded to preserving liquidity, among other motives:

“While we believe in the long-term viability and appeal of our site and project, we are not confident in making such a commitment on our own in the current environment.” That’s tantamount to an admission that Golden couldn’t find lenders, especially considering Atamain’s previous reference to “ongoing turmoil in the financial markets.”

It would have been a tough call for Kansas. The Cordish and Golden projects were comparable in budget ($700 million vs. $662 million). As appealing as a Tom Watson golf course might be, Cordish’s promise of a 50% larger slot base than Golden’s would have been sweet music to state officials weathering a deep recession and counting the gambling receipts before even one handle is pulled.

In the meantime, Golden still has that liquidity it wants to preserve — and its cash flow will improve this summer as liberalized casino rules in Colorado (Golden’s primary market) take effect. It could always spend some of that dough close to home: Golden CEO Blake Sartini is the brother-in-law of Frank & Lorenzo Fertitta. What are the odds the Fertitta clan might try to spin off assets to Golden? It would enable Station Casinos to sweeten the offer it’s making to bondholders and keep Boyd Gaming at bay, all in one fell swoop.

Just a thought.

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