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PRIVACY
Opinionopinion

Peter Sharkey: Football is the market mover in a changing industry

Millions of viewers watching this week's European contests consider it an invitation to have a flutter before the second half kicks off.

Horse Racing(Image: Action Images / Julian Herbert)

Autumn: the ‘season of mists and mellow fruitfulness’ capable of inspiring classical poets from Keats and Shelly to Robert Browning and Robert Louis Stevenson.

A season more recognisable by the day as morning chills hover for longer than expected, leaves change colour before your eyes and Ray Winstone’s gravelly, pre-match command to “get yer mobiles out” establishes itself once more as a regular feature of midweek Champions League football.

We’ve had 16 such fixtures over the past two days and seen Ray nodding with a contented air as he confirms that the recently-calculated odds displayed on your screen during half-time are “tasty”.

But ‘Carlos Kickaball to score next: 7/1’ is not just an additional opportunity for Mr Winstone to look and sound like a poorly-attired cockney gangster. Millions of viewers watching this week’s European contests consider it an invitation to have a flutter before the second half kicks off.

There’s nothing wrong with this at all. For centuries, sport has provided a platform for people to enhance their enjoyment of a well-balanced duel by having a bet on the outcome.

However, while punters are presented with a staggering variety of markets upon which to stake a few quid, such an array of regular options is sucking stake money away from one sport and thereby making bookies’ margins on football considerably more attractive than say, those offered by horse racing. The longer-term commercial implications for the latter could be significant as income from bookmakers accounts for a sizeable proportion of the racing industry’s turnover. More wagers were placed on racing outcomes than on any other sport. They still are – and by some distance – but live television coverage of football, spread over two or three hours, coupled with the availability of high-speed internet access, offers bookies the chance to dramatically broaden their spread of betting opportunities.

The almost inevitable consequence of this shift in betting habits is a thinly-veiled warning to racecourse owners, breeders and trainers that betting on horse racing is nearing the point where bookies are beginning to question its commercial viability.

“Demographics play a huge part in this shift,” says Chris Hutcheon, of Betrescue.com, one of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s leading odds comparison companies. “Younger people, those with iPhones, iPads, tablets and the like, are much more inclined to have a bet on a football match than on a horse race.