When Did Horse Racing Start In Australia
Melbourne Cup at Flemington Racecourse, Victoria. Prize Pool: $6,200,000. Architects: Bates Smart. Beginning of Horse Racing The decade to 1810 saw an increase in the horse population to 1100 animals. Since the journey from England to Sydney was a long and hazardous one, most imports were from the Cape and from India. Few of these were thoroughbred though many contained thoroughbred.
Organized racing. Charles II (reigned 1660–85) became known as “the father of the English turf” and inaugurated the King’s Plates, races for which prizes were awarded to the winners. His articles for these races were the earliest national racing rules. The horses raced were six years old and carried 168 pounds (76 kg), and the winner was the first to win two 4-mile (6.4-km) heats. Horses Race on Grass in Australia. In Australia all horse racing is conducted on grass surfaces.
The Totalisator Agency Board, universally shortened to TAB or T.A.B., is the name given to monopoly totalisator organisations in Australia and New Zealand. They operate betting shops and online betting. They were originally government owned, but in Australia most have been privatised. In Victoria, for instance, the Victorian Totalisator Agency Board began operating in March 1961 as a state enterprise,[1] and was privatised in 1994.[2]
When Did Horse Racing Start In Australia
Australia[edit]
Most Australian TABs have been progressively privatised, beginning with Victoria in 1994.
TABs in Queensland, South Australia, Northern Territory and Tasmania were re-branded as UBET in 2015.[3]
The TABs have extensive radio networks in Australia, except in Victoria and Tasmania where other parties own equivalent networks. All these networks share the National Racing Service, a continuous broadcast of thoroughbred, harness and greyhound racing. This makes up the bulk of these networks' content. Collectively, these networks own more radio licences than any other group in Australia – however, their terrestrial coverage is less than the ABC as they generally have tiny wattages. The heir of the NSW TAB also owns a national racing subscription TV service.
New Zealand[edit]
In New Zealand, the TAB owns TAB Trackside, a former near-national free-to-air and national subscription TV service. In the analogue era, most New Zealanders could sit at their TV with a standard aerial and watch racing. This channel is now only on Sky TV.
The New Zealand TAB was replaced by the New Zealand Racing Board in 2003, however the physical premises have retained the TAB branding.
Radio TAB is also used to live sports coverage (including horse racing) in parts of Australia.
Australia Horse Racing Results
See also[edit]
Notes[edit]
- ^The Melbourne Cup Research Guide
- ^TABCorp historyArchived 24 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine
- ^TAB gets a makeover to UBET