The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Hard Rock, Bet365 plan sports betting in N.J.

- By Wayne Parry

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. » Hard Rock has signed a deal with a British online gambling company to offer sports betting as soon as the arrangemen­t is approved by New Jersey gambling regulators.

The global hospitalit­y and gambling company owned by Florida’s Seminole Indian tribe has signed a deal with Bet365 to offer sports betting at its new casino on the Atlantic City Boardwalk.

Neither company has announced the deal, but its existence was revealed in correspond­ence from the state Division of Gaming Enforcemen­t.

According to a June 25 letter from division Director David Rebuck, made public on Monday, Hard Rock and Bet365 signed a deal on June 19 to offer sports betting. Rebuck approved only part of the agreement — a section called Article 3 — and has yet to act on the full request.

The division has not yet responded to a request made Monday by The Associated Press to make the document public; it typically gives companies 24 hours to ask that portions of their filings be blacked out before being released. The agency then assesses those requests and releases what it determines can be made public under state law.

Hard Rock and Bet365 did not immediatel­y respond to messages seeking comment Tuesday.

Currently, only three New Jersey entities offer sports betting: The Borgata and Ocean Resort casinos in Atlantic City, and Monmouth Park racetrack in Oceanport, near the Jersey shore.

But that club is about to expand.

On Saturday, the Meadowland­s Racetrack in East Rutherford will bring sports betting practicall­y to the doorstep of New York City; the track islocated about six miles away from the city of Manhattan.

And Hard Rock would be the fifth to offer it, if its request is approved soon.

At the June 28 opening

of its Atlantic City casino, Hard Rock CEO Jim Allen said the company is pursuing sports betting, but had no announceme­nt to make at the time.

The deal with Bet365 had already been signed nine days earlier, although it had yet to be approved by state regulators on the highest levels.

New Jersey won a United States Supreme Court case earlier this year on May 14. The decision ultimately cleared the way for all 50 states to offer legal sports betting if they are to choose to do so.

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