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Coronavirus

Betting volumes soar as punters and ITV4 viewers savour escapism at Thurles

Thurles: ITV Racing followed the action from an off-course studio
Thurles: ITV Racing followed the action from an off-course studioCredit: Patrick McCann (racingpost.com/photos)

Betting volumes on Saturday's racing at Thurles, broadcast on ITV4, rose significantly compared with the previous year in an indication of the value to the industry of Ireland continuing to race behind closed doors.

On the Betfair exchange there was a 192 per cent increase in betting volume in the win markets alone, with over £8 million staked over the course of the seven-race card. People were also keen to watch, with healthy viewing figures on ITV4, which showed five races.

The average viewing number for Saturday's coverage was 434,000 with an audience share of 4.5 per cent and a peak audience of 544,000.

On the same day in 2019 when seven races were broadcast on ITV4 – four from Kelso and three from Newbury – the average number was 428,000, with a share of 6.2 per cent and a peak of 577,000.

As a more direct comparison, the viewing numbers for Saturday at Thurles were reported to be double those recorded when the channel broadcast five live races from Naas on February 9 last year, when British racing was halted by the equine flu crisis.

Friday's decision by government to close leisure outlets, including betting shops, in an effort to control the outbreak of the Covid-19 virus meant British-based customers had to bet on Thurles remotely.

But betting data from the meeting showed there is a healthy appetite to enjoy the sport, even if it is pared-back for the foreseeable future.

Four races from Thurles broke the £1m mark and Betfair spokesman Barry Orr said: "The numbers show people are engaged with racing and want that distraction.

"It was the only show in town and being on ITV is a massive help. It was light relief and offered a thread of normality and something for people to look forward to."

Orr also reported trade on Friday's eight-race all-weather card at Dundalk was up 55 per cent, compared to the same fixture in 2019 when there was one race fewer.

Paddy Power also reported strong business, and spokesman Paul Binfield said: "As the racing was mostly competitive, it proved an attractive betting proposition for punters even considering it was the only meeting on. With our retail estate not being open, it’s hard to gauge how much more we would have turned over.

"But in the end we turned over four times the amount we did on the same meeting last year with the 4.10 topping it turnover-wise [five times more than last year]."

It was a similar story for Ladbrokes Coral, and the firm's PR director, Simon Clare, said: "We are really encouraged, and not entirely surprised, by what were really strong turnover levels on the Thurles meeting on Saturday across both Ladbrokes and Coral digital channels.

"We took as much money on Thurles as we would on a televised UK feature race meeting on a Saturday, and the number of active Ladbrokes and Coral racing customers betting on Saturday was also healthy given Thurles was the only show in town.

"The value of Irish racing each day this week cannot be underestimated either. Even without the terrestrial coverage, the popularity of bet and watch enabled all our customers to watch the Irish action at Downpatrick on Sunday, and a terrific Flat card at Naas tomorrow. Irish racing is proving an oasis in the desert for racing fans and punters."

Read more

Irish racing to continue behind closed doors after crucial Wednesday meeting

Bookmaker body gets behind 'historic national effort' despite closure of shops

All UK betting shops to close as part of mass shutdown of premises


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David BaxterReporter

Published on 22 March 2020inCoronavirus

Last updated 20:59, 22 March 2020

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