San Francisco Chronicle

Sports leagues cash in on betting they once fought

- By Wayne Parry Wayne Parry is an Associated Press writer.

Profession­al sports leagues, which once vehemently fought the prospect of legal sports betting, are now scrambling to get in on it.

In a pact announced Wednesday morning, the National Basketball Associatio­n is teaming with Sportradar and Genius Sports to distribute NBA betting data to sports betting providers in the U.S.

It came a day after Major League Baseball said that MGM Resorts had become an official gambling partner in the U.S. and Japan. MGM Resorts previously reached similar deals with the NBA, WNBA and NHL, and has a deal with the NFL’s New York Jets to promote its properties and mobile app to fans.

FanDuel joined with the NHL and its New Jersey Devils franchise this month for sports betting and fantasy sports play.

“It definitely feels like a gold rush — the new industry with everybody trying to get a piece of it,” said Sharon Otterman, chief marketing officer of bookmaker William Hill.

“As the sports betting landscape continues to evolve at a rapid pace, these new partnershi­ps will provide robust and reliable data to ensure the best possible gaming experience for our fans in the U.S.,” said NBA Commission­er Adam Silver.

Scott Kaufman-Ross, vice president and head of fantasy and gaming for the NBA, said the league has recognized the changing landscape.

“We’re going to have better results in a regulated market than an unregulate­d market,” he said.

New Jersey won a U.S. Supreme Court case in May that cleared the way for all 50 states to offer legal sports betting. So far seven states have: Nevada, New Jersey, Delaware, West Virginia, Mississipp­i, Pennsylvan­ia and Rhode Island.

But to win that case, New Jersey had to overcome fierce resistance from the four major profession­al sports leagues.

Speaking Wednesday at a sports betting conference in New York, MGM CEO Jim Murren said the gambling company and the sports leagues know they need each other in the rapidly changing sports betting environmen­t.

The sports leagues still have not given up on the idea of gambling companies paying them an “integrity fee,” consisting of a piece of the sports betting action ranging from a quarter of a percent to 1 percent.

“We’re not interested in paying an integrity fee. We’re actually offended by that concept,” Murren said. “But we are willing to pay — and pay well — for data and sponsorshi­ps and co-branding. In-game betting is going to be so popular that to have league-endorsed data, the most relevant and current, is going to be critical.”

But Otterman is concerned that gambling companies have access to betting data from more than one source, fearing that leagues could have a monopoly on their informatio­n.

The company that owns the Devils, the Prudential Center where the Devils play and the NBA’s Philadelph­ia 76ers struck deals in October with bookmaker William Hill and Caesars Entertainm­ent for sports lounges at the New Jersey arena, as well as marketing and promotiona­l benefits.

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