Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Some hits, some brutal whiffs, but I’m back in the batter’s box

- RICHARD N. VELOTTA INSIDE GAMING Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjour­nal.com or 702477-3893. Follow @RickVelott­a on Twitter.

IN Major League Baseball, you’re considered a great hitter and could go to the Hall of Fame if you succeed one time out of three. By most standards, my gaming and tourism prediction­s for 2019 were passable, but I’m not expecting a call from the Hall anytime soon.

Now is the time of year when the faint of heart go out on a limb and suggest what could happen in the news in the year ahead.

First, a recap of 2019:

I accurately forecast that Wynn Resorts Ltd. would retain its gaming license in Massachuse­tts and have to pay eight-figure fines there and in Nevada. There was one swing-and-amiss in guessing that Encore Boston Harbor wouldn’t open on time. It did, on June 23.

I was right on predicting that the Nevada Gaming Commission would approve a new sexual harassment regulation. The commission did one better in banning all forms of discrimina­tion and not just sexual harassment in amendments to Regulation 5.

I had no problem predicting that the Raiders would play their home season in the Bay Area in 2019. You might recall that the team had a tiff with operators of the Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum, and the 2018 season finale, a win over the Denver Broncos, was stated as potentiall­y the last game in that stadium. It wasn’t. The team played the whole season at the Coliseum.

I sort of got the prediction that at least one major Las Vegas project would be delayed, but it wasn’t so much about lack of labor as I projected as it was a change in focus for Genting Group’s Resorts World Las Vegas, which now will open in 2021.

Prediction­s about new internatio­nal air service to Japan, the renaming of McCarran Internatio­nal Airport to honor former Sen. Harry Reid and the arrival of a Major League Soccer franchise to Southern Nevada? Complete whiffs on my part.

So what lies ahead in 2020? Try some of these prognostic­ations:

■ Allegiant Stadium will open on time, and the first season of the Raiders will be played there without having to move games elsewhere.

■ The first event at Allegiant Stadium won’t be a football game. It’ll be a concert. And every Raiders game will be sold out in the 2020 season.

■ When Nevada Gaming Commission Chairman Tony Alamo ends his second four-year commission term in April, he’ll be replaced by a woman, meaning that both of the state’s gaming regulatory bodies will be headed by women.

■ The NFL draft in Las Vegas in April will be deemed a huge success, but it won’t attract as many visitors as the number who went to Nashville, Tennessee, in 2019.

■ The Caesars Entertainm­ent Corp. buyout by Eldorado Resorts Inc. will be completed as expected, and the new Reno-based Caesars will sell Planet Hollywood to a gaming company that doesn’t currently have a presence on the Strip.

■ The Boring Company will complete its tunneling on schedule, and the opening of the people-mover system at the Las Vegas Convention Center will come down to the wire.

■ A major foreign gaming company will enter Southern Nevada.

■ The number of convention­eers coming to Las Vegas will break 2017’s meetings attendance record, but overall visitation will still fall short of 2016’s record. The number of passengers flying through McCarran will be higher than the 2019 record.

■ Maybe under the wishful thinking department: The Culinary union and Station Casinos will end their feud and Station will negotiate contracts at properties where votes have been taken and the union will acknowledg­e when it loses.

Are you ready for 2020? Ready or not, here it comes.

Here’s to a Hall of Fame year for all.

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