Horse Racing
Boyd is home to some of the best racing facilities in the nation.
OHIO
Belterra Park
Originally opened in 1925 as Coney Island Racetrack and later known as River Downs Racetrack, Belterra Park Gaming is now home to the best racing facility in the region with a great stakes calendar across over 90 days. Located just east of downtown Cincinnati off I-275.
Louisiana
Delta Downs
A year-round schedule of regular races provides enough exhilarating, edge-of-your-seat action to please any serious race enthusiast.
Louisiana
Evangeline Downs
Evangeline Downs is known for having more horses per race than any other track in the country, and is located in the heart of Cajun country in south central Louisiana.
Racing 101
You can obtain a program specific to Belterra Park or a "Simulcast Program" that includes a variety of tracks we import from across the country during the afternoon or evening.
Whether betting with a teller or using an automated machine, you want to do the following:
- Identify the track
- Declare the race number
- Name the amount you wish to wager
- Name the type of bet you wish to make
An example would be "Belterra Park, race #1, $2 to win on the #3 horse." Before leaving the window or machine, check your ticket. If it is not correct, we can make it right before the race is run.
The options for placing a bet on the races have evolved over the years. At the heading of each program page, you can see what bets are available for every race.
- With a WIN, the horse you selected has to finish first, and you collect the top price at the odds established when the race began.
- For a PLACE, your horse only needs to "place" first or second, and you collect a price a little less than the win price in most races because you take less risk.
- A SHOW means if your horses finishes in the top three, you collect a profit, though usually less than the win or place payoff. It is the safest way to go to cash a ticket.
- A DAILY DOUBLE was the first of what is now commonly known as "exotic bets". Quite simply, you select horses to win in two consecutive races. You may pick multiple horses in each race.
- EXACTA: the name says it all! In any race, you place a wager to pick two horses to come in "exactly" in order. The payoffs are higher than a win-place-show wager.
- The TRIFECTA gives you another hint in the name of the wager. You need your three selections to finish 1-2-3 across the finish line
- The SUPERFECTA gives you a "super" payoff most of the time, but for this one, you have to pick the top four horses.
- You can always PICK THREE, an extension of the Daily Double to the winners of three consecutive races. The profits rise, and again you can play several horses in each leg.
- Or, you can PICK FOUR, which is the same as the Pick Three except it involves four races. The more races, the larger the payoff.
- Finally, you can PICK SIX, as long as you check your program to see what races start a Pick Six. If no one hits all six, the jackpot grows each day. The payoffs can be huge, and you can play several horses in different legs. As the number of horses you use goes up, so does the price of the ticket.
A Furlong is 1/8th of a mile.
Some horses do not concentrate on the task at hand. They look around or are bothered by the competition, so the blinkers keep them focused.
Track conditions can change by the hour.
- Ultimately you like to have a FAST track where the dirt track is level – with just the right amount of moisture that allows horses to get a good grip on the base of the surface. On a sunny day you will see our new water trucks working the track between races to help ensure the track's optimum safety and speed.
- MUDDY is the next level down from good, and most often the tractors will "float" the track with what is basically a huge squeegee to press the water toward the infield.
- A track rated GOOD means, for the most part, that some rain has added more moisture than the water trucks would.
- Sloppy conditions are when you get the umbrellas out, and water is still on the track before it can drain. Surprisingly, some horses love the "slop", and you can find that fact in the track program.