Los Angeles Times

NBA rolls dice with MGM deal

In a ‘partnershi­p of trust,’ Silver tries to stay ahead of the curve in preparing for legal gambling.

- By Kevin Armstrong

NEW YORK — Morning broke Wednesday with bargains to be had at the NBA Store on Fifth Avenue. A sign in the window advertised an “END OF SEASON SALE,” and a life-size bobblehead of LeBron James — still in Cleveland Cavaliers wardrobe — was marked down from $22,000 to $13,200. His new Lakers jersey was priced at $110, but his July signing for $153 million now ranks as a past transactio­n in NBA financial annals.

There is no offseason in the hunt for revenue and deals continue to be struck with NBA commission­er Adam Silver reaching an agreement to partner with MGM Resorts, the world’s largest casino operator.

Silver has long been ahead of the curve when it comes to preparing for the legalizati­on of profession­al sports gambling, and now the NBA is the first league in the U.S. to make a sportsbook operator an official partner.

Sitting alongside MGM Resorts Chief Executive Jim Murren in a second-floor conference room at the St.

Regis Hotel, Silver announced Tuesday afternoon that his league completed an agreement that locks up MGM as the exclusive official gambling partner of the NBA and WNBA.

Already partners for the annual NBA Summer League in Las Vegas, Silver noted that he seized upon his time out west in recent weeks to formalize a path forward with Murren, who owns the WNBA’s Aces, the first profession­al basketball team in Las Vegas. The Aces play home games at MGM Resorts’ Mandalay Bay Events Center.

“We said, ‘Let’s take advantage of this opportunit­y to do something historic,’ ” Silver said. “To us, there was no better partner out there in the gaming business.”

Silver added that it was a “leap of faith on both sides” and that the deal was moderate in length.

It comes in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision in May to strike down a federal law that effectivel­y banned sports wagering in most states, but Silver had already been taking the long view of the landscape. The commission­er advocated for the legalizati­on and regulation of sports gambling as early as 2014.

MGM’s casinos, as part of the agreement, will have access to official NBA data. MGM will also work with the NBA regarding integrity provisions, namely the detection and prevention of fraud and game-fixing. In addition, MGM will have the right to use NBA and WNBA intellectu­al property, including team logos.

“This is a partnershi­p of trust,” Murren said. “It has been based on an understand­ing that this is a new frontier. We have to figure this out together. We have to understand that there are many questions left unanswered, but it has been my commitment at MGM to try and answer those questions.”

Silver cited the breadth of MGM’s holdings and its regulatory experience in the state of Nevada as benefits for the NBA. MGM Resorts will be promoted across the NBA’s digital assets including NBA TV, nba.com, the NBA App and social-media platforms. In turn, the NBA will be promoted across MGM Resorts’ sports betting platforms.

Neither side revealed the value of the partnershi­p.

Silver also pointed out that the two sides did not “over-negotiate” the deal. Both the league and its partner recognized that there will be more informatio­n to glean as bets are made.

“We all realized that there were certain areas where we just didn’t have enough informatio­n, frankly, to keep negotiatin­g to the nth degree,” Silver said. “We were better off saying, in terms of reasonable­ness and good faith, ‘Let’s see how this business begins to unfold.’ ”

sports@latimes.com Kevin Armstrong is a freelance journalist based in New York.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States