Wednesday, 12 December 2012

Horse racing live

Horse racing live biogoraphy

Wagering for other tracks across the country is usually done at the track.  That's where last year’s Kentucky Derby winner first trained.
Hundreds of people lined the rails Tuesday and headed to the ticket counter, hoping to cash in on horses with names like “Call Me Easy Money.”
“The more the merrier. More horses, more jobs, it’s supposed to be the horse capital,” Jerry French said, holding a winning ticket for the second and final race of the day. Call Me Easy Money proved a victor for him.
But longtime handicappers like Marc Robinson said the smart bet would be that something else is in the cards for the track other than racing. The former lobbyist helped draft the original version of the law that now allows racing facilities with pari-mutuel betting to also open a card room.
“We’ve had live racing before in Orlando, we’ve had it in Jacksonville, the areas won’t support it,” Robinson said.
After the horses crossed the finish line, many of the people cashing in felt the horse racing industry was the day’s champion.

Horse racing live
Horse racing live
Horse racing live
Horse racing live
Horse racing live
Horse racing live
Horse racing live
Horse racing live
Horse racing live
Horse racing live
Horse racing live
Horse racing live
Horse racing live
Horse racing live
Horse racing live
Horse racing live
Horse racing live
Horse racing live
Horse racing live
Horse racing live



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