Texarkana Gazette

Meadowland­s initial sports bets total $3.5 million

- By Wayne Parry

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J.—The Meadowland­s Racetrack in New Jersey took in nearly $3.5 million in sports bets during its first nine days of accepting such bets.

And most of that came from two weekends that sandwiched a dead period for major profession­al sports caused by baseball’s All-Star break, when there was little to bet on, with basketball and soccer World Cup over, and football and hockey months away from beginning their seasons.

Meadowland­s operator Jeff Gural told The Associated Press it accepted just under $3.5 million worth of sports bets since it began taking them on July

14.

“We did OK,” Gural said Monday. “Our goal the first weekend was to exceed $1 million, which we did. The next four days were quiet with nothing to bet on due to the All-Star break.”

This past Saturday, with baseball having resumed, the track took in over $650,000, and additional bets on baseball and other sports came in on Sunday.

Gural said he is pleased with the track’s initial performanc­e “despite the fact that we are not at full strength and only have 10 live tellers windows open.”

The FanDuel Sportsbook at the Meadowland­s will be expanded. It is located in East Rutherford, in the same sports complex six miles from New York City where the NFL’s New York Giants and Jets play.

So far, two tracks, the Meadowland­s and Monmouth Park, and two Atlantic City casinos, the Borgata and Ocean Resort, offer sports betting in New Jersey. But many others have applied for permission to begin offering sports betting, in person and online, before the start of the NFL season in September.

Monmouth and the casinos reaped $16.4 million in the first two weeks of June.

New Jersey won a U.S. Supreme Court case on May 14 clearing the way for all 50 states to offer legal sports betting should they so desire. It began offering sports betting on June 14.

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