Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Could sports betting come to Florida?

NJ court case may throw open doors to $3B a year biz

- By Wayne Parry

If Supreme Court OKs New Jersey request, state could allow it within 7 years.

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Legal sports betting could be offered in 32 states within five years if the U.S. Supreme Court rules in favor of New Jersey’s quest to offer such gambling, according to a new report.

Eilers & Krejcik Gaming LLC, which tracks stateby-state gambling legislatio­n, says a new market would be worth more than $6 billion. If all 50 states got on board, legal sports betting could be worth $7.1 billion to $15.8 billion, they estimate.

Americans are already betting up to $60 million annually using offshore sites and bookies, said Chris Grove, managing director for the firm. It’s an industry that generates some $3 billion in revenue each year from U.S. customers.

“We estimate that a properly regulated market could be worth nearly five times that amount, resulting in a financial windfall for sports betting operators, sports leagues and media and state government­s alike,” Grove said.

His estimate of the illegal market does not include office pools and “social” or “casual” bets among friends that are included in some other estimates of illegal gambling that peg the market two or three times higher.

Grove said the exact size of the opportunit­y hinges on how many states decide to offer sports betting, and how willing they are to offer a product that can compete with the sizeable, well-establishe­d black market for sports betting.

Responding to the report, David Schwartz, director of the Center for Gaming Research at the University of Nevada Las Vegas, estimated a smaller potential market of about $1.4 billion, assuming each state that currently has casino gambling opts to offer sports betting as well. He also said he does not see all 50 states offering sports betting, at least anytime soon due to entrenched opposition to gambling in a handful of states.

Assuming the high court rules in New Jersey’s favor, Grove’s firm predicted 14 states would offer sports betting within two years: Colorado, Connecticu­t, Delaware, Indiana, Massachuse­tts, Michigan, Mississipp­i, Montana, New Jersey, Ohio, Nevada, Pennsylvan­ia, Virginia and West Virginia.

Within five years, it predicted 18 more would join: Arizona, California, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Missouri, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Vermont, Washington and Wyoming.

And within seven years, another dozen could offer it as well: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Dakota and Wisconsin. The remaining states might never offer sports betting, the Eilers & Krejcik report predicted.

New Jersey is taking aim at a law called the Profession­al and Amateur Sports Protection Act of 1992 that forbids state-authorized sports gambling in all but four states that met a 1991 deadline to legalize it: Delaware, Montana, Nevada and Oregon. Nevada is the only state to allow singlegame wagering.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP ?? Fans bet on the Black-Eyed Susan horse race at Pimlico race course in Baltimore. Legal sports betting could be offered in 32 states within five years, according to a new report.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP Fans bet on the Black-Eyed Susan horse race at Pimlico race course in Baltimore. Legal sports betting could be offered in 32 states within five years, according to a new report.

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