Churchill Downs Picks Up Kentucky Track

Jack Entertainment continued its inexorable exit from the gaming industry last week when it sold Turfway Park in Florence, Kentucky to Churchill Downs for $46 million. Jack has recently sold its Greektown casino in Detroit to Penn National, and its Jack casino in Cincinnati to Hard Rock.

Northern Kentucky’s Turfway Park will be completely renovated by Churchill Downs. It’s grandstand will be demolished and replaced with a historical racing machine facility featuring up to 1,500 machines, a state-of-the-art clubhouse, more food and beverage venues, and a new inner dirt track to complement the existing one-mile synthetic main race track.

Churchill Downs had previously bid on the winter racing dates traditionally reserved for Turfway Park it would have used for new racetrack at New Latonia. With the Turfway purchase, Churchill dropped that request and welcomed Turfway Park to the company.

“We are thrilled to welcome Turfway Park to the Churchill Downs racing family,” said Kevin Flanery, president of Churchill Downs. “Our team is poised to restore Turfway to its former glory, anchored by northern Kentucky’s first historical racing machine facility. The result will be a first-class racing product fueled by increased purses that keeps high-quality horses in Kentucky year-round and appeals to horseplayers nationwide.”

The full cost of the new facility would be in the neighborhood of $150 million (including the purchase price).

Recent Articles

History Playbook

On This Day In Sports History

On May 25, 1935, Ohio State sophomore Jesse Owens delivered arguably the greatest 45 minutes in sports history at the Big Ten track meet in Ann Arbor. Owens broke three world records and tied a fourth, setting new marks in the long jump (26′81/4"), the 220-yard dash (20.3 seconds), and the 220-yard low hurdles (22.6 seconds), while equaling the 100-yard dash world record (9.4 seconds). Despite his individual brilliance, Michigan narrowly edged out Ohio State for the team title, 48 to 43.5.

On This Day In Sports History

On May 24, 1918, Cleveland outlasted the Yankees 3-2 in a 19-inning marathon at the Polo Grounds. Stan Coveleski pitched a remarkable complete-game victory, but the hero of the day was Joe Wood. Having converted from a pitcher to an outfielder after his arm "went dead," Wood launched a game-winning solo homer into the left-field bleachers—his second home run of the afternoon—to finally seal the win for Cleveland.