U.S. football fans will have to
wait for official sports betting partners
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[August 28, 2019]
By Hilary Russ
NEW YORK (Reuters) - As football fans
get ready for the start of the National Football League season on
Sept. 5, they may think the league will finally endorse a legal U.S.
sports betting operator.
They would be wrong.
"We haven't opened up the category" in the United States,
Christopher Halpin, the NFL's Chief Strategy & Growth Officer, told
Reuters on Tuesday.
Although the NFL has an official casino partner with Caesars
Entertainment Corp and an official data provider to sportsbooks with
the Swiss company Sportradar AG, it has no official sports betting
partner as all the other major leagues do.
Halpin said the league may experiment with sportsbook partnerships
in a couple international markets before making any moves to do the
same in the United States.
"We're being thoughtful and continuing to expand," he said on the
sidelines of a media event to launch the NFL's 100th season.
Though the NFL is the most bet-upon professional sports league, its
die-hard fans are not the ones betting on the games. Only about
one-fifth of NFL fans place wagers, Halpin said.
The league does not want to "alienate a lot of fans needlessly" by
rushing into sports wagering too quickly, he said.
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view of the NFL 100 logo on the field before a game between the
Jacksonville Jaguars and the Miami Dolphins at Hard Rock Stadium.
Mandatory Credit: Steve Mitchell-USA TODAY Sports
Professional U.S. basketball, baseball, hockey and soccer leagues
have all named various sportsbook operators as official partners,
including Caesars, MGM Resorts International, Flutter
Entertainment's FanDuel, DraftKings and William Hill.
The partnerships, in which a league and sportsbook operator usually
agree to share trademarks and logos as well as betting data to
monitor integrity, have followed a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in May
2018.
That decision overturned a 1992 federal ban on sports betting in
most states outside of Nevada, opening the doors to other states
that wanted to legalize, regulate and tax the activity.
Currently twelve states are offering live sports betting, with more
expected to come online in coming months.
(Reporting by Hilary Russ; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)
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