Windsor Star

Score Media puts money on red-hot sports betting

Firm plans to expand service in Canada with potential $4B revenue opportunit­y

- MICHAEL BELLUSCI AND SANDRA MERGULHAO

With single-game sports betting about to go legit in Canada, the troika of Draftkings Inc., Fanduel Inc. and William Hill Plc that dominates the U.S. betting business is preparing to pounce.

But an entreprene­urial father-son team has something their would-be rivals don't: a legion of fans that have made their mobile app, thescore, among the most popular sports apps in North America.

Shares of Toronto-based Score Media and Gaming Inc. surged after Canada unveiled legislatio­n in November to legalize single-event sports betting, following in the footsteps of multiple U.S. states. The stock ended the year up 111 per cent.

Now, chief executive John Levy and his son, chief operating officer Benjie Levy, are making plans to replicate their sports betting service — thescore Bet, already active in Colorado, Indiana and New Jersey — in their home country.

Thescore is among the most actively used free sports apps in Canada, ranking No. 1 in the Google Play store as of Wednesday, according to traffic-tracking firm Similarweb. The company says it has about four million daily active users, with more than 1.4 million in Ontario alone.

The company has its roots in television with a cable channel that was also called The Score and showed a range of highlights and events beyond hockey.

Segments such as “Cabbie on the Street” were a hit, with TV personalit­y Cabral Richards interviewi­ng sports stars including the late Kobe Bryant.

But the network perpetuall­y trailed two establishe­d Canadian sports networks and the elder Levy, now 67, opted to bet the future on digital assets. He sold the TV licence and related assets in 2012 to Rogers Communicat­ions Inc., operator of the rival Sportsnet network, for $167 million, a deal that allowed Score Media to spin out its website and app into the current publicly traded company.

Advertisin­g has been Score Media's main source of revenue. Underscori­ng the difficulti­es of maintainin­g a profitable ad business, Score Media has posted losses every year since the TV spinoff.

Sports betting is now legal in 20 U.S. states and the District of Columbia, with 14 of those accounting for US$13 billion in 2019 wagers, according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce. In Canada, aside from horse racing in some provinces, legal betting is limited to parlay wagers through provincial platforms.

So Canadian bettors spend an estimated $10 billion per year on single-event betting through illegal bookies and a further $4 billion on internatio­nal betting websites, according to Justice Minister David Lametti.

Canadian officials are attracted to sports wagering as an untapped source of tax revenue.

“Assuming full legalizati­on in Canada, we think this could be a US$4 billion revenue opportunit­y,” Credit Suisse analysts wrote in a Nov. 30 note about Draftkings Inc., referring to industry revenue. The legalizati­on bill has yet to pass in Parliament, which is slated to resume later this month. It requires two more “readings” before moving on to the Senate.

Irek Kusmierczy­k, a Liberal member of Canada's Parliament representi­ng Windsor-tecumseh, said he was optimistic about the legislatio­n's prospects. “We're hopeful that we can actually move this process along quickly,” he said.

Representa­tives of Fanduel and William Hill declined to comment. Draftkings also declined to comment, though its CEO Jason Robins said on the company's third-quarter conference call he's “very hopeful that we'll be able to add both sports betting and igaming in Ontario” sometime in 2021.

Wagering volume on thescore Bet rose 500 per cent in September compared with a year earlier, “with that momentum continuing into October,” Levy said in the company's latest quarterly update.

Betting platforms take a cut of each wager and collect fees from leagues that run tournament­s on them. For Score Media, the financial benefits have been small so far. But analysts are looking for revenue to double to $41 million in the fiscal year ending Aug. 31.

Darren Chervitz, a portfolio manager at New York-based Jacob Asset Management, which filings show is the 11th largest holder of Score Media shares, says theScore's brand recognitio­n gives it the best shot at succeeding as a sportsbook platform in Canada.

Chervitz said that while larger players in the betting business will challenge thescore Bet, he's been impressed by how the company has integrated betting into its fan app.

“They've done a great job at building this little company,” he said. “Fundamenta­lly, the difference is they're going to have to come after us, we don't have to go after them,” John Levy said of his rivals. “Because of our brand, because customers know us here, it really takes on a different dimension than the efforts we have in the States.”

Those rivals, however, are much better capitalize­d than Score Media. Draftkings, for instance, has a market value of more than US$19 billion. Score Media's market value is about US$604 million.

 ?? AARON LYNETT FILES ?? Score Media, which spun off its TV business into thescore popular app, is seen as having brand recognitio­n advantage. It hopes to replicate its sports betting service in Canada.
AARON LYNETT FILES Score Media, which spun off its TV business into thescore popular app, is seen as having brand recognitio­n advantage. It hopes to replicate its sports betting service in Canada.

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