Santa Fe New Mexican

New racetrack with ‘moving grandstand’ proposed in N.M.

- Associated Press

CLOVIS — A Las Vegas, Nev., casino executive is proposing a new racetrack and casino in Eastern New Mexico with a “moving grandstand” that will allow an audience to travel alongside running horses.

Daniel Lee, president and CEO of the Nevadabase­d Full House Resorts, is vying for New Mexico’s sixth racetrack/casino license and hopes his $200 million resort and racetrack with the shifting grandstand will set him apart.

Full House Resorts said the moving grandstand would circle the track, traveling at the same speed as the racehorses.

“In a typical race, spectators in the grandstand only see two brief moments of a race — its start and the closing seconds at the finish line,” Lee said in a statement. “Our moving grandstand changes that, allowing spectators to race side-by-side with the

horses for every dramatic second of the race.”

In addition to the racetrack, the proposed La Posada del Llano includes a casino, luxury hotel, 18-hole golf course, water park and other amenities near the New Mexico-Texas border in Clovis.

The developmen­t will also feature a premium RV park, a water park located in the track’s infield, and five miles of recreation­al riding trails, according to the company’s proposal.

La Posada is one of five groups in intense competitio­n to win the New Mexico racetrack/casino license.

New Mexico Racing Commission Executive Director Izzy Trejo said 11 groups submitted letters of intent earlier this month, but five tied to Raton and one from Las Vegas, N.M., failed to submit formal applicatio­ns by Friday’s deadline.

Three applicatio­ns from Clovis, one from Tucumcari and one from Lordsburg, near the southern Arizona border, remain.

The New Mexico Racing Commission will hold public hearings on the applicatio­ns and is expected to decide by the end of the year.

 ?? FULL HOUSE RESORTS/CANNONDESI­GN VIA AP ?? This undated artist rendering shows a movable ‘grandstand’ alongside a horse-racing track from a proposed racetrack and casino in Clovis. Daniel Lee, president and CEO of the Nevadabase­d Full House Resorts, is vying for New Mexico’s sixth racetrack/casino license and hopes the shifting grandstand will set him apart.
FULL HOUSE RESORTS/CANNONDESI­GN VIA AP This undated artist rendering shows a movable ‘grandstand’ alongside a horse-racing track from a proposed racetrack and casino in Clovis. Daniel Lee, president and CEO of the Nevadabase­d Full House Resorts, is vying for New Mexico’s sixth racetrack/casino license and hopes the shifting grandstand will set him apart.

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