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Sunday's UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400 is expected to draw nearly 160,000 people to Las Vegas.

Vegas not worried about another 'layered' weekend

'Business as usual' after scrutiny from NBA All-Star Game

By David Caraviello, NASCAR.COM
March 9, 2007
10:48 AM EST
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LAS VEGAS -- The eight teams in the Mountain West Conference are holding their annual basketball tournament at the Thomas and Mack Center. A photo marketing convention brought 25,000 people to Las Vegas, a retail design convention another 20,000. The executive council of the AFL-CIO labor union is in town for a summit. And on Sunday, nearly 160,000 thousand race fans will converge on Las Vegas Motor Speedway.

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The Neon Garage, the centerpiece of Las Vegas Motor Speedway's multi-million-dollar renovation project, is ready for the track's annual Cup race.

It's called a "layered weekend," the stacking of multiple events on top of one another in the same time frame, the kind of thing for which Las Vegas is famous. The confluence of convention season, March Madness and the UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400 is nothing new in a place with more than 135,000 hotel rooms. But it's the first weekend this big since the NBA All-Star Game arrived in February, bringing a new definition of Sin City along with it.

Several reports from that weekend focused not on the game itself but the chaotic atmosphere surrounding it -- interminable flight delays at McCarran International Airport, standstill traffic on Las Vegas Boulevard, and a sense of lawlessness on parts of the city's prime tourist area, The Strip. "Vegas screwed up," wrote ESPN columnist Bill Simmons, who took the city to task for not putting enough police on the streets.

Columnist Jason Whitlock of AOL.com agreed, calling All-Star weekend "an unmitigated failure." The Las Vegas Review-Journal reported 403 arrests over the long weekend, with 231 of those arrested coming from outside Southern Nevada, and 239 for prostitution-related crimes. And now here comes NASCAR, which according to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority brought 94,875 people and a non-gaming economic impact of $129.3 million to town last year.

Las Vegas mayor Oscar Goodman isn't worried. The All-Star Game situation was the product of another "layered" weekend, that one also including the President's Day holiday, the Chinese New Year and a huge men's apparel convention. While the city may take a closer look at those layered weekends, there's no slowing a place that bills itself as the entertainment capital of the world. (Continued)

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