Sports Betting in the News — Weekly Round-up for September 7, 2018

West Virginia Becomes The Fifth U.S. State To Legalise Sports Betting

Enabling legislation implemented Thursday

On Thursday West Virginia became the fifth US state to legalise intrastate sports betting following the implementation of the enabling legislation, with the Hollywood Casino at Charles Town Races taking the first wagers.

State lawmakers earlier this year correctly anticipated that the restrictive federal Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act would be struck down by the US Supreme Court in May this year, and had made contingency arrangements which enabled rapid implementation.

Hollywood Casino’s sportsbook is powered by the US division of UK bookmaker William Hill, and is part of the Penn National Gaming group.

Although West Virginia licensing permits online and mobile operations, Hollywood has not yet launched these facilities, although it has revealed that there are plans for a mobile app in the near future.

InfoPowa readers will recall that the FanDuel Group-powered Greenbrier Resort sportsbook is also well advanced with its launch plan.

In the state of Mississippi, Thursday was launch day for the sportsbooks of two further land casino operators – Pearl River Resort and Island View Casino Resort. They follow earlier launches in the state this month by Churchill Downs’ Riverwalk Casino and two land casino in the Caesars Entertainment group.

Big Money In Sports Betting For U.S. Sports Leagues

Research commissioned by AGA shows annual revenue may increase by $2.3 billion a year

The US sports leagues have put up a strong resistance to the striking down earlier this year of the federal PASPA by the US Supreme Court, but they stand to benefit significantly from the newly liberalised market, according to a new Nielsen Sports study commissioned by the American Gaming Association (AGA).

The study found that the National Football League’s (NFL) annual revenue may increase by $2.3 billion a year due to widely available, legal, regulated sports betting, following an analysis of the revenue streams that legal sports betting could generate for the NFL: revenue as a result of spending from betting operators on advertising, data and sponsorship, and revenue generated as a result of increased consumption of the league’s media and purchasing of products.

According to Nielsen Sports, greater fan engagement and viewership could boost the NFL’s total annual revenue from media rights, sponsorships, merchandise and ticket sales by 13.4 percent, producing $1.75 billion in new revenue from increased consumption of the league’s products.

Legal sports betting could help the NFL generate an additional $573 million in revenue as a result of spending by betting operators and data providers.

The study projects that gaming operators may spend $451 million on advertising, which will directly increase the league’s rights fees by the same amount. An additional $92 million in sponsorship revenue and $30 million in data is also projected for the league and its teams.

“Legal, regulated sports betting will create huge new revenue opportunities for sports leagues – and the NFL could be the biggest winner of all,” said Sara Slane, senior vice president of public affairs for the American Gaming Association.

“Once legal sports betting expands across the country, the NFL could take in more than $2 billion a year, reinforcing how much sports leagues stand to gain from increased viewership and private partnerships with sports betting operators.”