Las Vegas Review-Journal

Mass. Senate pulls sports betting bill

MGM Resorts lobbied for provision passage

- By Richard N. Velotta Las Vegas Review-journal

The Massachuse­tts Senate has put the brakes on a sports-betting bill, but an analyst still believes it’s not a matter of if but when the Bay State will allow wagering on sports.

Lawmakers attempted to place a sports-betting provision in an economic developmen­t bill that was debated last week, but it was pulled from the legislatio­n.

That means Massachuse­tts will not become the 19th state to enable some form of sports betting in the United States.

Still, Chris Grove, managing director of sports and emerging verticals for Eilers & Krejcik Gaming, a research company, said he expects

Massachuse­tts will someday authorize it.

“File this under when and not if,” Grove said. “When you’re looking at comments coming out of Massachuse­tts from the Legislatur­e, I think the reality is there are a lot of stakeholde­rs that believe they deserve a seat at the table when a sports-betting bill is under considerat­ion and getting consensus from those stakeholde­rs is a complicate­d process that is highly unlikely to happen overnight. Fast-tracking sports-betting bills is going to be a pretty tough hill to climb.”

Grove is confident that Massachuse­tts will embrace sports wagering because one of the nation’s leading

daily fantasy sports providers — Draftkings — is based in Boston.

Representa­tives of Draftkings, rival fantasy sports operator Fanduel, MGM Resorts Internatio­nal and the Boston Red Sox lobbied to include the sportsbett­ing provision in the economic developmen­t bill.

But ultimately, it was removed. “As it relates to sports gaming, sports wagering, I believe that certainly, the time is close when we are going to be tackling this issue, but the time is not now,” State Sen. Michael Rodrigues, chairman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee. “Nor is this the proper vehicle to do so in.”

The Massachuse­tts Gaming Commission stood ready

to regulate sports betting if lawmakers provided the go-ahead, spokeswoma­n Sarah Magazine said Monday.

Two Las Vegas gaming companies stood to benefit from an affirmativ­e passage of the bill. Wynn Resorts Ltd. operates Encore Boston Harbor Everett, Massachuse­tts, and indicated it planned to develop a sportsbook if authorized to do so. MGM Resorts Internatio­nal operates MGM Springfiel­d in western Massachuse­tts.

Representa­tives of both companies did not comment on the Legislatur­e’s action.

Had the sports wagering provision been a part of the legislatio­n, the leading proposal included an applicatio­n fee of $250,000 covering the first five years of operation with a $100,000 renewal fee for the second five

years. The state had proposed a 15 percent tax on adjusted gross sports wagering receipts with an additional 1 percent for events taking place in Massachuse­tts.

But Grove is convinced the “local hero” Draftkings’ presence in the state will make sports betting a reality.

“The presence of a local hero as one of the leaders in the national sports-betting market calling Massachuse­tts home and Massachuse­tts not authorizin­g sports betting, that’s an aggressive dissonance and it’s one of the key reasons why we think Massachuse­tts will move a bill sooner rather than later,” Grove said.

Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3893. Follow @Rickvelott­a on Twitter.

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