The Niagara Falls Review

Vegas looking to end 25-year-old athletic betting law

Casino industry ramps up effort to repeal ban on betting on sports

- REGINA GARCIA CANO

The American Gaming Associatio­n believes a perfect storm is aligning and now is the time to repeal a failing law,” Geoff Freeman, the associatio­n’s president and CEO

LAS VEGAS — The casino industry’s largest lobbying group in the U.S. is ramping up its efforts to repeal a 25-year-old federal law that bans sports betting in most states.

The American Gaming Associatio­n on Monday announced the creation of a coalition involving organizati­ons of attorneys general and police, policymake­rs and others to advocate for the repeal of the ban that the industry says has fuelled the $150 billion illegal sports betting market.

“The American Gaming Associatio­n believes a perfect storm is aligning and now is the time to repeal a failing law,” Geoff Freeman, the associatio­n’s president and CEO, said during the announceme­nt. He cited a recent survey commission­ed by the organizati­on that found there is strong bipartisan support nationwide for legal sports betting, as well as Oxford Economics research showing that legalizing sports betting in the U.S. could support more than 150,000 jobs.

The Profession­al and Amateur Sports Protection Act of 1992 bans sports betting in every state except Delaware, Montana, Nevada and Oregon. Legal sports gambling is allowed in those states because they had approved some form of wagering before the federal law went into effect.

Congress gave New Jersey a one-time opportunit­y to become the fifth state before the ban was enacted, but the state failed to pass a sports betting law in the required time window. The state has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to hear arguments in favour of legalizing sports betting and expects a decision by the end of the month.

The survey commission­ed by the associatio­n found that 57 per cent of independen­ts, 58 of Republican­s and 52 of Democrats support ending the ban.

Freeman said the group has hosted sessions with members of Congress to show the technology from European companies specialize­d in data integrity that wasn’t available when the ban was enacted.

“They are tracking ... how much is being bet, who is betting it, where the bet is taking place, what is the betting history of these individual­s, what games are they betting on, who’s playing in those games, who’s coaching those games, who are the trainers in those games, who are the officials in those games,” Freeman said. “All of that input goes into these algorithms that they built so that it is very easy for them to identify when there is an anomaly.”

The associatio­n has also met with the players unions of the NFL, NBA, NHL and MLB. The executive directors of those unions have met multiple times over the past several months to discuss the challenges that legalized sports betting could create for players, including potentiall­y being put under pressure for any fixing of matches.

NFL Players Associatio­n spokesman George Atallah said the executive directors have discussed the issue of legalized sports betting multiple times, with the conversati­ons centring on “protecting the integrity of our respective sports.”

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