On July 31, MGM announced an agreement with the
National Basketball Association, with the league agreeing to
sell its official game data to the casino operator for
undisclosed terms.
The deals mark an evolving sweet spot in the emerging U.S. legal
sports betting market.
Casinos, racetracks, technology and data companies, fantasy
sports providers, sports book operators and others are looking
to team up following the U.S. Supreme Court decision in May
allowing states to legalize sports betting.
That ruling overturned a prohibition on the activity outside of
Nevada, so many states are now looking to regulate and tax the
wagers.
The MGM agreements also prove that some companies in the casino
industry are working behind the scenes with major sports
leagues, despite public rancor between the two sides over some
leagues' requests to receive a cut of sports bets.
The NHL had a longstanding relationship with MGM, which "in many
ways is already part of the NHL family," Commissioner Gary
Bettman said on Monday at a press event in New York.
MGM hosted a series of preseason NHL games for nearly 20 years
in Las Vegas before the league placed a team, the Golden
Knights, in the gambling mecca at the start of last season.
The multi-year alliance calls for the NHL to share its official
game data and intellectual property, including team logos, with
MGM. The data will not be exclusive to MGM, leaving the league
open to similar deals with other sportsbooks.
The deal also covers "advanced game data" that the league is
currently developing, intended to measure real-time action and
is not just static and finite, Bettman said.
"Data's the key," said MGM Chief Executive Jim Murren. The data
must be trusted, specific, endorsed and real-time, he said.
The monetary value of the deal was not disclosed. But it is a
fixed price, not any portion of betting activity, Bettman said.
(Reporting by Hilary Russ; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
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