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Post by BVADMIN on Oct 20, 2019 21:22:00 GMT
TAKEN FROM THE GREYHOUND STAR WEBSITE::
greyhoundstar.co.uk/boothby-signs-10-year-deal-re-open-towcester/BOOTHBY SIGNS 10 YEAR DEAL TO RE-OPEN TOWCESTER Henlow promoter Kevin Boothby has signed a 10 year lease deal to take over Towcester and expects to re-open for greyhound racing in March 2020 writes Floyd Amphlett of the Greyhound Star website.
He said: “The paperwork has been signed and I so excited about the future. I can confirm that greyhound racing will take place on Fridays and Saturdays, and hopefully increasing to a maximum of four meetings per week by next summer.
“The first thing to say is that greyhound racing will just be a part of what we are planning; we will not be relying on greyhounds to make it pay. I already have agreements in place to bring all types of other events there, starting in November with Winterland, which will be opened by the pop group E17.
“The place lends itself to so many different opportunities. We will have pop concerts, seminars, conferences . . , we have already spoken to a major caravanning society who literally turn up to weekend events in their thousands. There is another plan for drone racing. We have the TV studio, a great location and as much parking as y0u could possibly want.
“The great thing about Towcester is that everything is already in place. It is a fantastic facility waiting for the right person to promote it. I am working with a very bright young entrepreneur and am planning to employ up to five people to sell the place for a wide variety of uses.
“As far as the greyhound track is concerned, we will be moving the inside running rail outwards. The track is currently 11.5 metres wide. It will be reduced to eight metres, so it will create a bigger, safer circuit and we will adjust the distances according. The drainage wasn’t ideal, so there will be a new membrane and we may need to change the watering system. It will also be completely re-sanded using the same sand as Henlow.
“We will also be taking down the rails from the horse racing and putting down a new surface so greyhound spectators can get close to the action.
“The plan is for graded racing on Friday nights and major open race competitions on Saturday. A number of people have heard about our plans and have offered to sponsor events.
“I am absolutely determined that Towcester will be the premier greyhound venue and I intend that it will dominate racing; an English version of Shelbourne Park. We had over 1,000 through the gates for Saturday nights at Henlow and I would be confident that with similar marketing, we can at least double that at Towcester.”
In an industry already struggling for greyhounds, can Towcester will there be enough for potentially four more meetings?
Boothby said: “At Henlow, we race seven meetings per week, that is 82 races, and this week, 60 dogs didn’t get a race. That is the reason that we have cancelled our opens. There is also a waiting list of trainers who want to join us, with a combined kennel strength of somewhere close to 250 dogs.
“Henlow, which won’t be affected, though some kennels will want to be dual attached. Already though, trainers like Mark Wallis have mentioned that old owners have been on the phone looking to get involved again. Trust me, greyhounds won’t be a problem.”
And are there plans to bring the Derby back to Towcester?
Boothby said: “It will be at Nottingham next year, but if I can find the right sponsors for the following year, of course I would like to stage it at Towcester. I think it is the track best equipped to hold it.
“In my opinion, re-opening Towcester will give the industry a huge buzz. We are cracking on immediately and I really can’t wait for next March.”
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Post by BVADMIN on Oct 21, 2019 19:56:22 GMT
Towcester fireworks Kevin Boothby has exciting plans for Towcester next yearBoothby sees Shelbourne as the template for 'his' Towcester......BY JONATHAN KAY OF THE RACING POSTGREYHOUND racing will return to Towcester next spring according to Kevin Boothby who says he has put pen-to-paper on a deal to take over the operation at the Northamptonshire venue which collapsed into administration in August last year.
Henlow promoter Boothby issued a statement saying: “The paperwork has been signed and I'm so excited about the future.
“I can confirm that greyhound racing will take place on Fridays and Saturdays, and hopefully increasing to a maximum of four meetings per week by next summer.
“The first thing to say is that greyhound racing will just be a part of what we are planning and we will not be relying on greyhounds to make it pay as I already have agreements in place to bring all types of other events there.
“The place lends itself to so many different opportunities. We will have pop concerts, seminars, conferences - we have already spoken to a major caravanning society who literally turn up to weekend events in their thousands.
“The great thing about Towcester is that everything is already in place. It is a fantastic facility waiting for the right person to promote it.
“I am working with a very bright young entrepreneur and am planning to employ up to five people to sell the place for a wide variety of uses.”
Opened as a greyhound venue to much acclaim in late 2014, Towcester staged the Derby in 2017 and 2018 but the running circuit, designed with eight-runner racing and the foreign market in mind was the subject of criticism.
Boothby said: “As far as the greyhound track is concerned, we will be moving the inside running rail outwards.
“The track is currently 11.5 metres wide. It will be reduced to eight metres, so it will create a bigger, safer circuit and we will adjust the distances according.
“The drainage wasn’t ideal, so there will be a new membrane and we may need to change the watering system. It will also be completely re-sanded using the same sand as Henlow.
“We will also be taking down the rails from the horse racing and putting down a new surface so greyhound spectators can get close to the action.”
It was announced at the beginning of October that horse racing would not be returning to Towcester with its ten remaining fixtures sold to Arc, something Boothby said at the time he was aware of with his focus in other directions.
He added: “I am absolutely determined that Towcester will be the premier greyhound venue and I intend that it will dominate racing as an English version of Shelbourne Park.
“In my opinion, re-opening Towcester will give the industry a huge buzz. We are cracking on immediately and I really can’t wait for next March.”
Full story in Tuesday’s Racing Post
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Post by SALFORD GIRL on Oct 22, 2019 16:10:59 GMT
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Post by BVADMIN on Nov 6, 2019 8:09:28 GMT
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Post by BVADMIN on Nov 23, 2019 12:39:02 GMT
Towcester Racecourse officially re-opened as an entertainment venue on Friday evening with the launch of the Winterland event writes Floyd Amphlett of the Greyhound Star website. greyhoundstar.co.uk/towcester-re-opens-venue/
It is the first feature held on the site since its closure in August 2018 and the first venture hosted by its new leaseholder Kevin Boothby.
While the staging of a winter pageant will be of very limited interest to greyhound racing supporters, they would be impressed by a slick marketing operation that saw hundreds queuing when the gates opened at 6pm. The place was ‘rammed’ within a couple of hours.
It has been estimated that Boothby’s percentage from the estimated 250,000 expected through the gate during Winterland’s six weeks on site will go a significant way to paying his first full year’s rent on the 320 acre site.
The new promoter remains on course to have the racing circuit back in operation by March 2020......[/i]
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Post by BVADMIN on Jan 7, 2020 20:43:22 GMT
BOOTHBY NAMES TOWCESTER RE-OPENING DATE..... TAKEN FROM THE GREYHOUND STAR — JANUARY 7, 2020greyhoundstar.co.uk/towcester-name-re-opening-date/The answer to the question on every racing enthusiast’s mind since Kevin Boothby signed a ten year lease at Towcester can now be answered. Greyhound racing is scheduled to return on Saturday April 18.
It is the first stage of a whole new chapter for the Northamptonshire racecourse which will host a wide variety of new events and activities as the year wears on – plus, hopefully, the return of horse racing – writes Floyd Amphlett.
It was last October that Henlow promoter Boothby took over the 320 acre Towcester Racecourse estate. He has since spent hundreds of hours on-site drawing up strategies and appointing key personnel for what will be a very different operation to the business that went into receivership in 2018.
At this stage, GBGB are still to license the venue for greyhound racing though Boothby does not consider it to be a major issue.
He said: “I plan to contact Mark Bird (MD) next week and make arrangements. But there is no point in waiting until everything is in place before you call them to start to go through the process.
“Realistically, from a practical point of view, we could be racing again within six weeks. Most of the stadium, including the kennels and racing office, are as it was left.”
It has been suggested that GBGB may demand that Boothby pays a bond as a security following debts incurred by the previous management.
He replied: “I don’t anticipate any major problems. The Board licences the individual, not the premises, and I don’t owe them a penny. We will open for racing, one way or another.”
From a racing perspective, the heavy machinery needed to effectively rip up the racing circuit and start again, is due on site next week.
Boothby said: “All the sand will be dug up and a new membrane laid. Basically the previous membrane was a pile of big stones that the water just ran through.
“We found some paperwork which said it was impossible to keep the track in racing condition for more than 14 minutes in the height of the summer, before you needed to re-water. All the sand will be dug up and replaced with the same stuff as Henlow.
“As everyone accepts, the Towcester circuit is far too wide. At the bends they are eight and a half metres wide. The design was set up for eight dog racing which was a waste of time.
“We still have the traps, though they will be cut down and upgraded to six-runner boxes.
“We will push out the inside rail until the track it is around five and a half metres in width which will increase the size of the circuit. We may also need to reposition the hare rail.
“I have spoken to Gavin Smith who I am trying to get here as soon as possible but I can also call on Gordon Bissett (SIS), who is extremely knowledgeable. We are also having advertising boards fitted along the backstraight which will help protect the track from the wind.
A regular visitor to Romford, Boothby is a fan of their latest tote technology and has placed an order for the identical equipment. He is also hoping to trial an alternative to the Formnet racing system.
Later in the year, he plans to resurrect Towcester TV and directly control the content himself.
The opening meeting will be for a full card of sponsored open races (Winners £500, others £100) and then switch to a Friday/Saturday format. Saturday night meetings will be followed by live music.
Boothby said: “I haven’t decided on the prize money for the Saturdays but it will be decent. A lot of greyhound people have said that they want to support us and I would hope to stage one Category One competition every month.
“To be begin with, we may be looking to people within the industry, but I would hope that other corporate sponsors can be attracted from events we plan to stage here.
“We don’t have an SIS contract, but we don’t need one. Greyhound racing will probably account for less than 30% of our income when we are fully trading.
“The Friday nights will be for graded racing. We have plenty of trainers asking to join us, but at the moment we have around 85 dogs at Henlow that aren’t getting a race every week.
“You have to laugh at the irony. Towcester nearly closed us at Henlow when they took our dogs. Now the boot is on the other foot. The plan is for trainers to become dual attached though we will soon be finished on two ranges of kennels on-site.
“They are converted stables, great buildings with plenty of room in each. Between them, they will use 50 of the 100 stables so we still have another 50 for other uses.
“If at some stage SIS approached us with a contract, of course I would consider it, but it isn’t necessary in our business plan. In fact, if there was a spare meeting going at the moment, we could add an eighth meeting at Henlow overnight.
“Both our meetings will be £10 admission. Greyhound racing undersells itself all the time but we won’t, particularly for the product we will be offering. If people don’t like it, they can stay at home and watch RPGTV.
“We will also have deals for £20 including admission, free drinks, racecard, tote bet and hog roast. I want to move away from the standard ‘burger and chips’.
“In the longer term, I am planning a bid to stage the 2021 English Derby.”
Visitors to the updated Towcester website will notice greyhound racing joined by a growing menu of events that are being expanded virtually daily, with much more currently being finalised.
Boothby said: “Until I took over, I had no idea what Towcester Racecourse meant to the locals. It is huge for the local community and brings jobs and business to the town and surrounding area.
“Horse racing has always been popular and for that reason, I am meeting the secretaries of the point-to-point hunts. I don’t know whether there is time to fit in a meeting before the end of the season, but I would plan to hold some later in the year.
“Among the bigger projects are pop concerts. I had no idea just how big the site is until I drove to the far end and could see what a great venue it would make for a pop concert/music festival.
“We are also planning to purpose built marquee for 600 people on a piece of land behind the main grandstand. The people who ran the Winterland event are specialists in that type of structure.
“We have already been talking to people about opera nights and film festivals. We are also in discussions with Country (& Western) promoters. There are plans for food festivals, plus other things that I have spoken about previously.
“On a smaller scale, we have the opportunity for weddings and social events and the Spring and Summer Balls are already scheduled.”
As a site, Towcester has natural advantages and disadvantages. On the plus side, it has unlimited parking, soon to be updated with more hard-standing. The negative is the limited amount of local accommodation.
Given the expanded plans for the site, Boothby is considering investing in glamping pods. In fact, the pods may also be of interest to Silverstone which is around three miles away and are already in discussions over park and ride options.
There would also, presumably, be a few greyhound folk eyeing up a pod following a late night in the grandstand.
Towcester also has another great natural advantage not shared with most other greyhound tracks – flexibility in both size and facilities.
Boothby said: “We can cater for something as big as a music festival or as small as a private function. You can have racing taking place using the main grandstand, and something completely different in the smaller grandstand at the same time. You might even have a third event going on in the marquee and they wouldn’t affect each other.”
To make it all happen, Boothby has been building his sales and marketing team.
One of the first arrivals was events director Luke McLaren. His career began working as researcher on local BBC radio for Liz Kershaw. Reared locally, he has extensive knowledge of the Northamptonshire leisure scene.
He was followed through the door by the new media editor and strategist Anna-Louise Dearden. A journalist by profession, until recently ‘Anna Lou’ has been editing the Northamptonshire section of the hugely successful national lifestyle website Muddy Stilettos.
The racecourse have most recently appointed a new website and SEO provider and have two new marketing staff starting at the beginning of February.
While the return of Towcester will be generally warmly received by the greyhound industry, Boothby accepts that the response will be slightly cooler from some of his fellow promoters.
He says: “What do you want me to say? I don’t go to the promoters meetings because my voice won’t be heard. I do my own thing. When Henlow struggled after Towcester opened, nobody gave a damn about us.
“But having said all that, I think Towcester re-opening is good news for most people in the industry. I am not chasing a betting contract, we already have most of the dogs we will need, and at a time when people are questioning whether to carry on, a flagship track like Towcester only gives encouragement to owners and trainers no matter where they regularly race.
“We don’t ask for any financial assistance with our welfare and we will bring new people and new money into the game. Towcester will be a track that everyone can be proud of.”
There will be further updates including notification of the commencement of trials, planned for early March. In the meantime, here is a reminder of what you have been missing.
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Post by BVADMIN on Jan 18, 2020 9:07:41 GMT
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Post by SALFORD GIRL on Mar 5, 2020 13:33:19 GMT
Towcester Racecourse has relaunched!.....Come down on the 13th of April for our open day event - starting at 2pm.
Hosting food & drinks and featuring a live performance from Toploader. For tickets call us on: 0800 304 7700 or Visit our website: towcester-racecourse.co.uk
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Post by SALFORD GIRL on Mar 5, 2020 23:19:26 GMT
THE NEW TOWCESTER RACECOURSE WEBSITE towcester-racecourse.co.uk/Contact the Racing Team on 0800 304 7700 or email info@towcester-racecourse.co.uk
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Post by SALFORD GIRL on Mar 6, 2020 23:23:43 GMT
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