Orlando Sentinel

A sure thing? Don’t bet on it

Mobile sports betting money tempting but no lock to solve some states’ budget crunches

- By Wayne Parry

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — States around the country are realizing what gamblers figured out long ago: The future of sports betting — and tax money to be made from it — is online.

But they’re also realizing that extra tax money isn’t nearly enough to turn seas of red ink into black. That was the case even before the coronaviru­s pandemic blew huge holes in state budgets.

Currently, 15 states plus Washington, D.C., offer mobile sports betting, and several others are considerin­g adopting it. New York is poised to become one of the largest markets in the U.S., passing a budget last week that includes mobile sports wagering after years of opposition by Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who is expected to sign it.

Chris Krafcik, managing director of Eilers & Krejcik Gaming, which tracks gambling legislatio­n, said as many as seven additional states could legalize mobile sports betting this year: Arizona, Connecticu­t, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, Maine and Ohio. By year’s end, 20 to 23 states could offer it, he said.

In 2019, a panel of experts predicted that 90% of sports betting in the United States will be done over mobile phones or the internet in the next five to 10 years.

But two years later, we’re almost there already: Nationwide, 81% of sports bets are made online, according to the American Gaming Associatio­n. For the first two months of 2021, that figure rose to 85%.

Mattias Stetz, the chief operating officer of Rush Street Interactiv­e, which operates BetRivers.com and PlaySugarH­ouse.com in Pennsylvan­ia, said 87% of his company’s sports betting is done via mobile devices in markets where both online and in-person are available.

“It is clear from the numbers that mobile and online sports betting is very important to the overall sports betting industry,” he said. “Sports fans are enjoying the option of betting from the comfort of their homes.”

It’s also long been clear that tax money from sports betting, while a welcome addition under the “something is better than nothing” doctrine, is not a panacea for cashstrapp­ed states.

Michigan launched online sports betting in late January and handled nearly $302 million in wagers in February, the quickest that any state had reached that level of betting action.

But the sportsbook­s kept just $9.5 million of that and paid $142,240 in taxes on it. Sports betting in Michigan is taxed at 8.4%, lower than in numerous other states, at least two of which keep 50% or more of total sports betting revenue.

The National Conference of State Legislatur­es, in a report last month, acknowledg­ed the gap between the seemingly vast amount of money being wagered and the much smaller amount of it flowing to states as tax revenue. The average sportsbook keeps about 7.2% of the bets it handles; taxes are assessed on that amount, not on the much larger total amount of money wagered.

“Still, the potential revenue has been a big selling point for legalizing sports betting in many states,” the report noted.

But, it added, “States looking to close budget gaps with sports betting revenue may be disappoint­ed, especially as more and more states legalize and take their slice of the market.”

 ?? WAYNE PARRY/AP ?? A man last month at a New Jersey casino. In 2019, experts said 90% of U.S. sports betting will be done over mobile phones or the internet in five to 10 years. It’s taken two years to come close to that figure, according to the American Gaming Associatio­n.
WAYNE PARRY/AP A man last month at a New Jersey casino. In 2019, experts said 90% of U.S. sports betting will be done over mobile phones or the internet in five to 10 years. It’s taken two years to come close to that figure, according to the American Gaming Associatio­n.

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