WITH attendances reaching four million a year, £1.6 billion wagered on and
off course, £11 million in prize money and customer facilities envied by the
rest of the entertainment industry, greyhound racing has seen a modern day
transformation – a ‘Night at the Dogs’ has become something to do.
Quality restaurants, corporate entertainment facilities, private boxes and
clean, well run bars is the face of greyhound racing in the new millennium. The
sport now attracts a wide ranging clientele searching for creature comforts and
the thrill of the race. Greyhound Racing has it all.
For many years, the sport was seen as the Trap 1 poor relation to horse racing, but
those times have changed and visitors to tracks up and down the country are
likely to be rubbing shoulders with film stars and sports personalities.
But the real stars are out on the track, night in and night out. Six sleek and
beautiful greyhounds make up each race, and the speed at which they travel is
quite breathtaking - they cover 500 metres in roughly 30 seconds and, with races
taking place about every 15 minutes at most tracks, it’s non-stop action.
Trying to pick the winner just adds fun to the evening.
The sport in began at Belle Vue, Manchester, in 1926 and became hugely popular
as it spread the length and breadth of the British Isles. Royalty, Lords and
Ladies were bitten by the bug as much as anyone and it was much in vogue to be
seen greyhound racing in the days leading up to the second world war.
The sport went through a lean period in the late 1960s and 70s. But the tracks
that invested in facilities for the public survived and, in the 1990s, the sport
went through an amazing resurgence. A new generation is now enjoying the thrills
that greyhound racing offers.
Walthamstow, Romford Greyhound Racing
Poker Online poker
For all betting queries Bookmakers