The Commercial Appeal

New Jersey sports bets surpass $1B mark again

- Wayne Parry

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. – New Jersey’s robust sports betting market broke the $1billion mark for the sixth time last month in terms of the amount of bets taken.

But the news was bad in March for seven of the nine casinos that continued to lag behind their in-person gambling revenue levels from before the coronaviru­s pandemic hit, according to figures released Monday by state gambling regulators.

The New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcemen­t reported the state’s casinos and three horse tracks that take sports bets handled more than $1.12 billion worth of such wagers in March, aided by the March Madness college basketball tournament.

Yet out of that total, only $66.4 million was kept as sports betting revenue by the casinos and tracks after paying off winning bets, third-party partners and other expenses.

The casinos and tracks made $423.6 million in gambling and sports betting revenue in March, up nearly 18% from a year earlier.

However, that comparison is flawed because in March 2021, Atlantic City’s casinos were still operating under state-imposed pandemic-related restrictio­ns. Going back two years is also an invalid comparison because the casinos shut down in the middle of March 2020 as the pandemic surged.

Casino executives say 2019 is the most telling comparison, looking at the period before the pandemic began. The casinos won $382.9 million in total gambling revenue in March, including sports betting and internet gambling, compared to $273.7 million in 2019.

Still, casino executives say those numbers are skewed by sports betting and internet money, much of which the casinos don’t get to keep after partners and expenses are paid.

They say a more telling comparison is in-person gambling revenue won from gamblers inside casinos. And in that comparison, seven of the nine casinos are lagging behind their pre-pandemic levels.

The nine casinos collective­ly won $216.6 million from in-person gamblers in March of this year compared to $223.1 million in March 2019.

Only two casinos – Hard Rock and Ocean – are winning more now on their premises than they did before the pandemic. Hard Rock won $39.3 million from in-person gamblers in March, up nearly 60% from 2019, and Ocean won $25.4 million, up 67% over that period.

The Borgata had more than $106 million in total gambling revenue in March, more than twice its nearest competitor, Hard Rock, which had nearly $46 million.

But in terms of in-person gambling revenue, the gap is much narrower, with Borgata winning nearly $55 million compared to $39.3 million for Hard Rock.

Jane Bokunewicz, director of the Lloyd Levenson Institute at Stockton University, which studies the Atlantic City gambling market, took note of the dichotomy between total gambling revenue, which is increasing with the help of internet and sports betting, and inperson casino winnings, which by and large is not.

 ?? WAYNE PARRY/AP ?? Figures released by New Jersey gambling regulators Monday show seven of Atlantic City’s nine casinos continue to win less than they did from in-person gamblers before the coronaviru­s pandemic took hold.
WAYNE PARRY/AP Figures released by New Jersey gambling regulators Monday show seven of Atlantic City’s nine casinos continue to win less than they did from in-person gamblers before the coronaviru­s pandemic took hold.

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