Los Angeles Times

MLB in partnershi­p with gambling firm

Deal with MGM Resorts is a response to ruling that legalized sports betting.

- BY BILL SHAIKIN

If you are a Major League Baseball player, you cannot bet on your sport’s games. But, now that states can legalize sports gambling, the league has accepted $80 million from a company that is betting it can lure fans to gamble on these players’ games.

MGM Resorts is the first “official gaming partner of MLB,” the league announced Tuesday. The fouryear deal identifies MGM as an “MLB-authorized gaming operator,” grants the company the right to use an official statistics feed and provides exclusive access to what the league called “enhanced statistics.”

For almost a century, baseball stood firm against gambling. Two of the game’s greatest players, Willie Mays and Mickey Mantle, were banned for years — in retirement — after making promotiona­l appearance­s for casinos. Pete Rose, the game’s all-time hits leader, was banned for life after betting on baseball as a player and manager.

In 1921, the first commission­er banned eight players for life amid a gambling scandal. Commission­er Rob Manfred has refused to reinstate Rose, but Manfred has reinstated pitcher Jenrry Mejia, who was banned for life after three positive tests for the use of performanc­e-

enhancing drugs.

The league’s stand against gambling has slowly eroded. Many teams have struck sponsorshi­p agreements with Native American tribes that run casinos, including the Dodgers with San Manuel, the Angels with Pechanga and the San Diego Padres with Sycuan. The league itself invested in Draft Kings, a daily fantasy game, in 2013 and later expanded the partnershi­p to a sponsorshi­p agreement.

In May, when the Supreme Court ruled that any state could offer sports betting, MLB and other leagues initially demanded a share of the proceeds. After sports books refused, the leagues settled on selling bookmakers the same kinds of partnershi­ps and sponsorshi­ps offered to beer makers and carmakers.

In the six months since the Supreme Court ruling, MGM has struck deals with the NBA, the NHL and now MLB. The terms of the MLB deal were disclosed to The Times by a person familiar with the deal but not authorized to discuss it publicly.

In a statement, the league said it would join with MGM on “comprehens­ive responsibl­e gaming measures and work to protect the integrity of the game both on and off the field.”

Said Manfred: “Our partnershi­p with MGM will help us navigate this evolving space responsibl­y, and we look forward to the fan engagement opportunit­ies ahead.”

The league eventually could make an estimated $154 million per year in selling sponsorshi­ps, television advertisin­g and statistics to gambling companies, according to a Nielsen study commission­ed by the American Gaming Assn. and released last month.

The league could make an additional $952 million per year if what the AGA calls “widely available, legal, regulated sports betting” broadens the baseball audience and thus drives increases in ticket sales, merchandis­e sales, and broadcast rights fees.

Sports betting currently is legal in a handful of states: Delaware, Mississipp­i, New Jersey, New Mexico, Nevada, Pennsylvan­ia, Rhode Island and West Virginia.

How broad that audience might be depends on how many fans are willing and able to bet on baseball games and, perhaps more importantl­y, how many might make prop bets during a game, on a mobile phone or even at a ballpark betting window.

If betting becomes sufficient­ly popular, fans could bet not only on whether the Dodgers win but on whether Justin Turner hits a home run, Clayton Kershaw strikes out 10 or Yasiel Puig wags his tongue during the game.

The gambling money is sure to attract attention from the players’ union, whose members see management revenues soaring at a time when even large-market teams are using the luxurytax threshold as an unofficial salary cap.

Fox last week agreed to pay a reported $5.1 billion to keep national MLB broadcast rights from 2021 through 2028. By then, if the AGA estimates turn out to be realistic, every team could make $60 million per year from the Fox deal and gambling revenue, above and beyond what each team could make in ticket sales and local radio and cable television rights.

 ?? Seth Wenig Associated Press ?? MLB COMMISSION­ER Rob Manfred, right, announces baseball’s new gambling partnershi­p with MGM Resorts Chief Executive James Murren in New York.
Seth Wenig Associated Press MLB COMMISSION­ER Rob Manfred, right, announces baseball’s new gambling partnershi­p with MGM Resorts Chief Executive James Murren in New York.

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