Betting News

More BetMGM betting violations revealed in Massachusetts

An external audit commissioned by BetMGM in Massachusetts revealed multiple potential violations of state wagering regulations. The Massachusetts Gaming Commission (MGC) decided on Wednesday (2 October) to handle the newly found violations and two existing ones in a single adjudicatory hearing.
After BetMGM allowed banned prop bets on college football games and professional soccer matches, the operator hired Gaming Laboratories International (GLI) to audit its books. That company found additional potential “non-compliant” bets, including:

Forty-one more college-player props on college football;
Thirteen college-player props on college basketball;
Twelve college-player props on two women’s Elite Eight college basketball games on 1 April 2024; and
One hundred-and-six bets placed between 8 June 2024 and 17 June 2024 on Glory Kickboxing events.

College-player prop bets are prohibited in Massachusetts. And Glory Kickboxing is not an approved betting market. MGC staff revealed the add..

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Jaguars’ ex-employee sues FanDuel, others in hopes of reversal of fortune

A former NFL Jacksonville Jaguars employee who embezzled $22m to bet on sports is now suing FanDuel, his platform of choice, for $250m (£188.4m/ €226.4m). Amit Patel claims the company took advantage of his blooming addiction.
Patel, who is serving a six-and-a-half-year term at the Williamsburg Federal Correctional Institute Satellite Camp in South Carolina, filed his lawsuit against Boyd Gaming, FanDuel, Flutter and Fox Corp in federal court in New York on Tuesday (1 October).

He contends that not only did FanDuel employees know he was an NFL employee and should be excluded from betting, but also that the company ignored its own internal controls. Sports betting companies have internal controls and house rules that should guide them in dealing with bettors who may display signs of problem gambling.

In the lawsuit, Patel’s lawyer argues that “defendants knew and/or took intentional steps to avoid knowing that the money gambled by the plaintiff was stolen or otherwise not from a leg..

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US August revenue round-up: Sports betting in Virginia, Colorado and Rhode Island

Rounding up some of the latest monthly sports betting results in the US, iGB take a closer look at how the markets in Virginia, Colorado and Rhode Island performed during August.
Virginia handle rockets 30.6% in August
Starting in Virginia, monthly handle in Old Dominion hit $416.7m (£313.8m/€376.6m). This is 30.6% more than August last year and 10.4% ahead of July of this year.

Figures from the Virginia Lottery show players spent $414.8m betting online and $1.9m at retail sportsbooks inside casino.

Players won $376.5m, while the Lottery accounted for $6,057 in promotions and bonuses and $5.2m in other deductions. As such, adjusted gross revenue for August amounted to $35.0m, up 24.1% year-on-year but 10.7% lower than July.

Online betting accounted for $34.6m of total revenue in August, with the other $415,139 coming from retail sportsbooks. Overall operator hold percentage for the month stood at 9.63%.

The Virginia Lottery does not publish a breakdown of individual operators. Howe..

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Sweden channelisation rate at 86% according to Spelinspektionen report

Sweden gambling regulator Spelinspektionen has placed the country’s online channelisation rate at 86%; higher than operator estimates and some way above the previous year’s figure.
Detailed in a new report, the Sweden channelisation rate applies to the online gambling market in 2023.

The latest rate surpasses the 77% Spelinspektionen reported for 2022. It is also above forecasts from several operators local including Aktiebolaget Trav och Galopp, which in March estimated a rate of between 69% and 82%.

Unlicensed turnover hits SEK2.5bn
The regulator estimates black market sites generated SEK2.5bn (£183.5m/€220.2m/$243.3m) in turnover in 2023, compared to SEK17.3bn for licensed operators.

However, estimates are based on the assumption that players are wagering the same amount per visit across both unlicensed and licensed operators, which the regulator itself said may not be the case.

The regulator used several methods to come up with the channelisation rate, with 86% representing t..

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Pete Rose bet on his own team. But he also embodied baseball for generations. That’s worth remembering

Baseball legend Pete Rose died on Monday (30 September). But you already know that. And if you're like me and grew up watching Rose play, you're left with a host of complicated feelings.
Since that fateful day 35 years ago, when Pete Rose accepted a spot on baseball’s “permanently ineligible” list, his legacy has been fraught. Unquestionably one of the best ballplayers who ever lived, Rose broke sports’ cardinal rule. He bet on baseball and, not only that, on his own team.

Rose died in his home on Monday of causes yet unknown, a spokesperson for the Clark County office of the coroner/medical examiner in Nevada told CNN. He was 83.

On 23 August 1989, then-Major League Baseball commissioner A Bartlett Giamatti banned Rose from the game. Forever. Rose didn’t think it would stick. But Giamatti died of a heart attack just a week after penalising Rose. Since then, no other MLB commissioner has seriously considered reversing the ban, which means Rose could very well be the best..

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Episode 34: Football returns, DC gets in the game and more

Welcome back to the World Series of Politics! This week Brandt Iden and Brendan Bussmann guide you through the early weeks of the NFL’s $35bn season and Washington DC sports betting finally getting competitive.

If that’s not enough we’ve also got Missouri sports betting confirming its place on the ballot and some rumblings about Arkansas igaming. Arkansas sports betting – limited to one casino and two racinos – hasn’t quite hit the numbers so will replicating that model work for online casino?

Listen to the World Series of Politics on Apple Podcasts

We’ve got all the latest regulatory wranglings in this episode. Brendan even finds time to solve a Rubik’s cube live on air.

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A look at all DraftKings regulatory penalties this year

The online gambling giant has now been hit with over $300,000 in penalties across four states
DraftKings keeps rolling the dice with various authorities, from state regulators to the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The result? The online gambling operator is repeatedly crapping out.

Casino Reports counts four instances in this year alone in which DraftKings has been hit with fines by regulators. Included is a pair of six-figure wallops.

Here they are, in order from largest to smallest:

X’d out
Last week, the SEC hit DraftKings with a $200,000 (£149,251/€178,756) fine over the company’s public relations team’s posts on the X (formerly Twitter) and LinkedIn accounts of founder and CEO Jason Robins on 2 July.

The posts in question stated that DraftKings was experiencing “really strong growth” in states where it was operating.

The problem? According to the SEC, those posts violated Section 13(a) of the Exchange Act and Regulation FD. In short, the company was telling tale..

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Not much to like about SAFE Bet Act, say industry insiders and addiction advocates

It turns out that no one – not even problem and responsible gambling advocates – are embracing the SAFE Bet Act, unveiled at a press conference earlier this month by US Representative Paul Tonko and Senator Richard Blumenthal. It's already been publicly called “obnoxious” and “insulting”.
The SAFE Bet Act attempts to reverse the 2018 Supreme Court decision to make legal sports betting a states’ rights issue. It does not yet have a bill number and has not been filed. UCLA clinical professor of psychology Dr Tim Fong said the current version of the bill would “do more harm than good”.

Jeff Ifrah, a gaming lawyer and a founding member of iDevelopment and Economic Association (iDEA), told iGB that the bill is a lot to process because “the first suggestion out of the gate [is] to include an unconstitutional registration requirement”. He also said the bill sponsors appear to be trying to “fill some sort of need that doesn’t exist”.

There is much not to like about SAFE Bet Act, say t..

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Influx of Brazil betting licence applications as enforcement deadline passes

With the deadline for licence applications from operators wishing to be active in Brazil during the transition period closing at 11.59pm yesterday (30 September), a late flurry has taken the total of requests to 182.
In mid-September, the Brazil government published Normative Ordinance No 1,475. This set out plans to launch enforcement action against operators that failed to submit a licence application by 1 October.

Only companies that were both already active and that had applied for a licence would be allowed to continue operating in the transition period between 1 October and 31 December. This counts down to the legal online market launch on 1 January 2025.

This is the second key licensing deadline in Brazil. The first passed on 20 August when the initial 90-day window of preference shut. The 113 operators that applied during that period ensured their applications will be processed by the Secretariat of Prizes and Bets (SPA) ahead of the legal market’s launch date.

The announcem..

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Weekend Report: DraftKings penalty, former deputy PM talks UK election betting, David takes over at Entain

Welcome to the Weekend Report, where iGB looks at the news that you may have missed over Friday, Saturday and Sunday. This week, DraftKings agrees to pay $200,000 over disclosure violations, former British deputy PM speaks to the regulator about election betting probe and Stella David takes the helm at Entain.
DraftKings faces $200,000 penalty
First this week, DraftKings has agreed to pay a $200,000 (£149,251/€178,756) penalty for selectively disclosing certain material non-public information on social media accounts, instead of all investors.

In July last year, DraftKings’ public relations company published posts on LinkedIn and X, formerly Twitter, about “strong growth”. This was despite DraftKings having not released its Q2 2023 financial results. DraftKings asked for the posts to be removed but did not distribute information to investors for another week.

The US Securities and Exchange Commission hit out at DraftKings. It said such information must be made available to all inves..

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How to sustainably engage sports bettors

Simon Trim, 10star strategic advisor, on how innovation in trading, risk management and data usage can unlock a sustainable and harmonious relationship between the customer, supplier and operator.
In the world of sports betting the ecosystem comprises three main participants – those of the bettor, the operator and the supplier. However, unlike the many symbiotic connections in nature, the relationship between the “three sisters” of sports betting is often ugly and characterised by parochial and adversarial behaviours, rather than sustainable and cooperative ones.

The United Nations first defined “sustainability” as “development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs”.

In the natural world, this refers to the ability of ecosystems to remain diverse, productive and resilient over time, but it is often overlooked that these themes are just as important in the business world too. Sustainable industry practices ..

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Brazil bills call for spending caps among various vulnerable groups

Two new bills in Brazil aim to curb addiction and prevent gambling harms by limiting how much vulnerable groups can bet. These include the elderly and those receiving financial benefits. President Lula is expected to address these measures later this week.
Ahead of the licensed betting market’s launch on 1 January 2025, various government officials have raised concerns about the harmful social and fiscal impacts gambling could have on Brazilians.

PL 3,718/2024, presented by Senator Alessandro Vieira, and Congressman Elmar Nascimento’s PL 3,745/2024, both seek to limit how much various vulnerable members of society can gamble. Both bills were presented late last week on 26 and 27 of September.

PL 3,718/2024 would limit betting among the elderly, those registered in the active debt or credit protection registry and low-income families on the government’s CadÚnico social welfare programme.

Spending caps would be enforced once a certain amount of money is lost via betting. Additional ..

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