LIZ FARMER
Daily Record Business Writer
February 3, 2009 5:45 PM
Maryland racing officials expressed concern Tuesday that if media coverage of the sport continues to decline, slot machines alone could not fill up the grandstands.
The issue came up at the Maryland Racing Commission’s first public meeting since the Washington Post announced in December it was dropping its regular coverage of horse racing at Laurel and Pimlico racetracks.
“We’re doomed to fail over time,” commission member John McDaniel said at the meeting, which was held at Laurel Park. “We see every other sport being covered and we’ll do whatever we can politically to launch a frontal attack with The [Baltimore] Sun and The Post, but we need to find a way to allocate some money for publicity. Nobody’s going to go to Laurel if it’s not in the paper and they don’t see some enticement to be there.”
McDaniel also said the decline in racing’s popularity in Maryland can’t be solved solely with bigger purses from slots revenue.
“This isn’t just about slots,” he said. “The long-term problem is trying to reinvigorate and get people talking about this sport.”
Daily Record Business Writer
February 3, 2009 5:45 PM
Maryland racing officials expressed concern Tuesday that if media coverage of the sport continues to decline, slot machines alone could not fill up the grandstands.
The issue came up at the Maryland Racing Commission’s first public meeting since the Washington Post announced in December it was dropping its regular coverage of horse racing at Laurel and Pimlico racetracks.
“We’re doomed to fail over time,” commission member John McDaniel said at the meeting, which was held at Laurel Park. “We see every other sport being covered and we’ll do whatever we can politically to launch a frontal attack with The [Baltimore] Sun and The Post, but we need to find a way to allocate some money for publicity. Nobody’s going to go to Laurel if it’s not in the paper and they don’t see some enticement to be there.”
McDaniel also said the decline in racing’s popularity in Maryland can’t be solved solely with bigger purses from slots revenue.
“This isn’t just about slots,” he said. “The long-term problem is trying to reinvigorate and get people talking about this sport.”