PlaySugarHouse, Penn National Approved for PA Online Gaming

The post PlaySugarHouse, Penn National Approved for PA Online Gaming appeared first on SportsHandle.

The Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board approved two more online gaming licenses at its regularly scheduled meeting on Wednesday. PlaySugarHouse and Penn National Gaming gained approval, bringing the number of qualified entities to have purchased some sort of iGaming license to 11. The only two Pennsylvania casinos that have not purchased iGaming licenses are The Meadows and Lady Luck Nemacolin.

PlaySugarHouse, owned by Rush Street Gaming, launched an online sports betting app in New Jersey last month, and Penn National, according to PennBets.com, revealed Wednesday that is will use IGT rather than SG Digital to run its online casino in the state. Penn National partners with SG Digital in New Jersey.

Pennsylvania made sports betting legal nearly a year ago and rolled out regulations over the summer. No casinos have been approved for sports betting licenses in the state, but both Penn National and Greenwood Gaming and Entertainment have applied. It’s likely their applications will be on the gaming control board’s agenda for one of the two October meetings (Oct. 3 or Oct. 31). Those licenses come with a $10 million application fee due within 60 days of approval.

 

Read more PlaySugarHouse, Penn National Approved for PA Online Gaming on SportsHandle.

New Jersey Gets Seventh Mobile Betting Option With 888sport’s Launch

The post New Jersey Gets Seventh Mobile Betting Option With 888sport’s Launch appeared first on SportsHandle.

Add the European-based 888 brand to the red hot sports and online gambling market in New Jersey in a move further integrating sports betting with online casino gaming.

888 Holdings is based in Gibraltar and listed on the London Stock Exchange. The company announced today (Monday) that it has set up its first 888 sport brand in the New Jersey, clearing the way for growth in other U.S. markets as they become legal.

Continue reading New Jersey Gets Seventh Mobile Betting Option With 888sport’s Launch on SportsHandle.

Greenwood Gaming Second to Apply for PA Sports Betting License

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Greenwood Gaming and Entertainment, Inc. is planning to get the most bang for its 10 million bucks.
 
The gaming operator on Friday became the second to apply for a sports betting license in Pennsylvania, where the licensing application is $10 million. The Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board made the application public on Monday.
 
 
Greenwood applied for the application for use at the Parx Casino in Bensalem, as well as the Philadelphia Turf Club, as an auxiliary location. Greenwood’s application follows the Aug. 17 application submitted by Penn National for the Hollywood Casino at Penn National Race Course.
 

Greenwood Gaming Plans to Offer Land-Based, Mobile and Interactive Sports Betting in Pennsylvania, if Its Application Is Approved.

Pennsylvania has the highest licensing fee in the nation, along with a 36 percent tax rate (34 percent state, 2 percent local) for sports betting. The state legalized sports betting in the fall of 2017 and it took nearly 10 months for the first operator to apply for a license. Pennsylvania has 13 sports betting licenses available, one each for every commercial casino currently operating in the state.
 
parx casinos pa sports betting online betting partnership
 
In its petition, Greenwood states that it already pays the state $250 million in taxes annually from other gaming ventures and that it intends to offer land-based, mobile and interactive sports betting. The company also states that is will offer any and all sports betting allowed by the state. Who will provide integrity and risk management for Greenwood Entertainment is redacted from the public version of the application.
 
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Greenwood Gaming Second to Apply for PA Sports Betting License

Get a Grip: The Week in Sports Betting

The post Get a Grip: The Week in Sports Betting appeared first on SportsHandle.

It’s information overload everywhere, and there’s not time enough to sleep and eat and stay fully apprised of what’s happening on this crazy blue dot of ours (two out of three ain’t bad).

Here’s the weekend Sports Handle item, “Get a Grip,” rounding up top stories in sports betting and gaming, and the world of sports at large. You may have missed them, and they are worth reading. This is meant to be brief, so that’s it.

MGM, PlaySugarHouse.com Debut Mobile App, Online Platform

It’s been a busy week in the virtual world of sports betting, as MGM finally dropped its mobile app in New Jersey. The company soft-launched the app for Android users on Wednesday with the intention of making it more widely available in the coming weeks. The playMGM NJ Sports app was released through the MGM-owned Borgata in Atlantic City will give company to the DraftKings Sportsbook, which had fully launched on Aug. 6 and remained the only online sports betting app available in New Jersey. The current version of the app offers tons of betting opportunities, including straight bets, futures, props, and parlays available. The professional (NFL) and college football menus are queued up with a wide variety of different player and team props, futures and totals. The only thing that appears to be missing the chance for in-play wagering.

MGM Mobile Sportsbook In New Jersey With Borgata’s PlayMGM App

PlaySugarHouse.com, owned by Rush Street Gaming, followed a day later when it launched an online betting platform, also for New Jersey users. What’s special about this one is that it integrates the new sports wagering opportunity for state residents with its already operating online casino. Rush Street’s platform is the third to be introduced in the Garden State this summer, with plenty more sure to come.

ICMY SportsHandle Edition

Illinois Holds First Gaming Hearing: Lawmakers are starting to lay the groundwork for sports betting in Illinois and on Wednesday, heard from gaming stakeholders ahead of an October meeting that will feature sports betting as one of the key topics.

Is the Time Right?: According to a study presented to Kentucky’s working group on sports betting, despite struggles in the past, now may well be the time to legalize sports betting.

Bookies in the Legalized Sports Betting Market: Sports betting and other forms of illegal gambling used to take up lots of space in the justice system, but according to former Brooklyn and Bronx Criminal Courts judge John Wilson, not so much anymore.

PlaySugarHouse.com Launches N.J. Online Sports Betting Platform

The post PlaySugarHouse.com Launches N.J. Online Sports Betting Platform appeared first on SportsHandle.

PlaySugarHouse.com has now launched an online sports betting platform for New Jersey sports bettors  significant in that it integrates the new sports wagering opportunity for state residents with its already operating online casino. This also makes the mobile/online sports betting platform the third available in New Jersey, on the heels of MGM’s Wednesday release of the Android version of its playMGM NJ Sports app through the MGM-owned Borgata in Atlantic City.

New Jersey gambling regulators had approved the site to go live Thursday morning and the company said it was taking sports wagers as of 6 a.m. 

The SugarHouse Online Sportsbook & Casino is the first online sports betting site operated under the aegis of the Golden Nugget Atlantic City, which has an online and fully licensed affiliation with Philadelphia’s SugarHouse Casino. The site is operated by Rush Street Interactive (RSI), the SugarHouse parent company.  RSI is also partnered with the Malta-headquartered sports betting supplier Kambi, which previously helped launch the DraftKings Sportsbook, which on Aug. 6 was the first online sportsbook to go live in New Jersey.

To read the rest of this story visit SportsHandle using the link below.

MGM Drops Mobile Sportsbook In New Jersey With Borgata’s PlayMGM App

On Wednesday after two-plus weeks of waiting, the MGM-owned Borgata’s playMGM app will give company to the DraftKings Sportsbook, which had fully launched on August 6 and remained the only online sports betting app available in New Jersey.

But wait no more: the playMGM app is available now to New Jersey-based Android users. “The playMGM NJ Sports app is being initially soft-launched on the Android platform, with an iOS version due to launch imminently,” said MGM Resorts International in a statement coinciding with the app’s release. “Through our partnership with GVC Holdings, our mobile betting operations in New Jersey will be delivered on a best-in-class mobile platform that positions us as a leader in technology, accessibility and sports betting expertise” added Scott Butera, MGM Resorts International President of Interactive Gaming.

After zipping around the platform a bit from here in New Jersey, what follows is some initial impressions, notes on what you can bet and some odds and ends.

MGM’s New Jersey Online Sportsbook Available Through Borgata’s and playMGM App Ahead of Football Season

mgm online betting app nj legal sportsbooks


So what can patrons wager on? A lot.

There’s straight bets, futures, props, and parlays all available. The professional (NFL) and college football menus are queued up with a wide variety of different player and team props, futures and totals, such as:

  • Most regular season losses by any NFL team: o/u 13 (-110)
  • Deshaun Watson regular season touchdown passes o/u 26.5 (-110)
  • Kareem Hunt regular season rushing yards o/u 1099.5 (-110)
  • Regular season points by Philadelphia Eagles o/u 404.5 (-110)
  • Will the Texans make the playoffs?  Yes -130, No +110
  • Which two teams will make the Super Bowl? For example, Steelers/Saints is 50-1
  • Will Grier (West Virginia) regular season passing touchdowns: o/u 35.5 (-110)
  • Regular season wins by Nebraska 6.5 (o/EV, u -120)

What can’t folks wager on for now?  So far I did not find live or in-play wagering options on playMGM. It’s possible I’m missing them or they simply may not have been introduced yet. 

To read the rest of this article please visit SportsHandle using the link below:

DraftKings Sportsbook’s Juicy Mobile App Launch In New Jersey

The post What’s Up With DraftKings Sportsbook’s Very Juicy Mobile App Launch In New Jersey? appeared first on SportsHandle.

The DraftKings Sportsbook debuted on Wednesday, making the daily fantasy sports-turned-sportsbook operator’s mobile sports betting app the first to hit the market in New Jersey — and further, the first legal betting app available anywhere outside Nevada. On the surface, pretty exciting!

Some recreational folks may be celebrating, but public reception has been lukewarm elsewhere and in some corners downright caustic because, like the FanDuel Sportsbook launch (in retail at the Meadowlands Racetrack) in mid-July, the baseball lines offered are just dismal compared to industry standards (more on this later).

The DK sportsbook right now is in a soft-launch phase with up to 50,000 people in New Jersey supposedly eligible to download, deposit and wager. No doubt DraftKings carefully observed the rollout of the FanDuel Sportsbook and  saw some backlash against their lines. As a result, it seems more likely to me that this pricing is not incompetence or disrespect for its customers … and from a business perspective may actually make sense. (Or shouldn’t be surprising.)

DraftKings Sportsbook Lines on Mobile App Are Way Out of Whack Upon New Jersey Soft Launch: Is This Clueless or Well-Calculated?

OK, so, these lines are rough, as Robert Dellafave to NJ Online Gambling explores and others have noted, when compared with the typical 10-cent baseball money lines (for example, -155 for Team A and +145 for Team B) or 15- or 20-cent lines in some cases you can see below from Las Vegas and offshore books. A look at the pricing from ESPN’s David Purdum:

 

 

So what’s the idea? Right now DraftKings is remaining in a soft launch indefinitely. This is a launch with its self-selected early adopter cohort that will give the company valuable feedback. We really have no clue if the app is available to 50,000 people or 500. I can tell you that I live in New Jersey, have played a decent amount of DFS during NFL season, and have not (yet) been invited to download.

It’s baseball season and they’ve got a one month to ramp up before football season — the Official King of U.S. Sports Betting — to figure things out technologically and also, well, test and evaluate this initial cohort.

First, just how many of its users don’t know that these prices are bad? Second, DK can see how many users bet the lines and cross-reference against their DFS histories. How many and what percentage of its users “invited” (likely MLB DFS players) will download the app are going to bet? They can then project how much of its database may download and play during football season, perhaps on -115 spread bet? The DraftKings run line pricing is more in line with industry norms. As evidenced by the dumbed-down terminology “Who Will Win?” instead of saying “money line” — they’re appealing to the recreational sports bettor. It’s possible the spread bets for football meet -110 norms and the money lines are elevated as here with baseball.

Maybe also DK can see how many of the users know the lines aren’t good and simply don’t care. In a way, playing in GPP DFS contests is akin to setting money on fire. DK may have even obtained (purchased) e-mails from offshore sportsbooks to see which of its users have deposited offshore and will bet through DraftKings against certain lines. 

Point is, there’s a one-month window here during the dog days of summer/baseball when DraftKings can glean a whole lot of information in a contained environment before it really matters: that is, football season, when the MGM/Borgata app and the Caesars app and others are up and running on mobile as well.

In other words, they’re testing the upper limit. They can always come back down from these prices and probably few people will remember if they even knew in the first place. Most people not vacationing right now probably aren’t betting on the Giants-Diamondbacks.

Further, these lines aren’t being covered by the mainstream media. The major publishers will dive bomb when there’s a major event in the sports betting world, or perhaps just to offer a misinformed think piece about how legal sports betting will render collegiate sports extinct … but they’re just not getting into pricing issues.

Another number of note? Despite the FanDuel Sportsbook stumble out of the gate, it still did $3.5M handle in just nine days. During baseball season with a sprinkle of World Cup. We’ll know in a of couple weeks how they performed with handle/old over the month (in retail form only).

Sports betting inherently has an upper limit problem with revenue. DraftKings will mop up on parlays and teasers like every shop, but they’re looking to get more out of money line wagering here and in the future, evidently.

For most the folks reading here who will run away from this pricing and never come back, they probably expected you’d react that way. Best advice for everyone else, whether you’re shopping for a toaster, a car or a money line: shop around. 

The post What’s Up With DraftKings Sportsbook’s Very Juicy Mobile App Launch In New Jersey? appeared first on SportsHandle.

MGM, GVC Joint Venture in Sports Betting, Online Gaming Will Create ‘A Beast’

The post MGM, GVC Joint Venture in Sports Betting, Online Gaming Will Create ‘A Beast’ appeared first on SportsHandle.

The “British Invasion” in the emerging enterprise of legal sports betting in the U.S. is continuing with the official announcement today (Monday) that British betting group GVC Holdings Plc, owner of the Coral, Ladbrokes and Sportingbet brands, will form a sports betting and online gaming joint venture with MGM Resorts International.

GVC would join other British controlled betting companies such as William Hill, Paddy Power Betfair, bet365 and others that have or are about to assume a major role in the U.S. as a risk manager and/or sports wagering software provider to U.S. gambling companies that have opened or expect to soon open sportsbooks at their U.S. operations.

Jim Murren, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of MGM Resorts, said in a company media release, “We are proud to join forces with GVC, the largest and most dynamic global online betting operator, with existing reputable and trusted operations in the U.S.” Murren added, “With MGM Resorts’ expertise and leading position in key markets across the U.S., this historic partnership will be positioned to become the instant leader in technology, market access, sports relationships and brands.”

MGM and British Betting Group GVC Teaming Up In Sports Betting and Online Gaming Venture, As More Legal Sports Betting States Open Up Big Opportunity in U.S.

Initial media reports indicate GVC and MGM will contribute $100 million apiece as part of a 50:50 venture that would encompass a 25-year commitment, with an option for either company to buy the other out after 10 years.

GVC already operates MGM’s online casino initiative in New Jersey. Murren’s mention of “sports relationships and brands” is in apparent reference the company’s title sponsorship of the NBA Summer League and its ownership of the WNBA’s Las Vegas Aces franchise.

As earlier reported by Sports Handle, MGM is expected to be one of the U.S. market’s largest sportsbook operators as various states legalize sports betting as a result of the U.S. Supreme Court May ruling that said the law limiting single-game betting to Nevada was unconstitutional. MGM has already begun taking sports bets at The Borgata in Atlantic City and will open at two casino/resorts along Mississippi’s Gulf Coast as soon as state regulators finish due diligence in that state, possibly as early as Wednesday.

MGM now operates National Harbor, a major casino/resort near Washington. D.C., will open MGM Springfield in Massachusetts in late August, and is completing its acquisition of Empire City Casino and Yonkers Raceway, a racino bordering New York City.

One industry insider told Sports Handle, “It is a beast of a deal if it comes to fruition.” 

mgm gvc sports betting online betting venture new jersey

Although MGM is a major Nevada sports betting operator with casinos and sportsbooks all along the Las Vegas Strip, the emerging multi-billion dollar sports betting business along the East Coast alone and the risk involved, may be the motivation behind the proposed GVC/MGM joint venture, industry observers say. They indicate these East Coast sportsbooks alone could potentially take in many millions of dollars in wagers each day.

Such high volume betting action would subject the bet takers to major liability. Forming a new company would spread the risk and make the emerging business more palatable to Wall Street and investors, Sport Handle was told.

Additionally, if MGM were to operate sportsbooks through a different company, with their smaller margins and greater financial exposure, its core casino/resort business would be insulated from potential losses.

MGM recently converted to an IGT betting platform at its numerous Nevada properties on the Las Vegas Strip and is using it at its newly opened sport betting operation at The Borgata in Atlantic City. It’s unclear if the joint venture would use a GVC betting platform rather than IGT’s.  

And More News Today.

MGM and Boyd Gaming announced a new partnership on Monday that will expand MGM’s portfolio into states likely to offer sports betting and/or online gaming in the coming months or years. The partnership has an eye toward jurisdictions where either Boyd Gaming or MGM Resorts operate physical casino resorts and should be able to obtain licenses to operate online.

Boyd will eventually bring to the table eight states where MGM does not operate – Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Missouri.

This is the second partnership between MGM and Boyd. The companies were 50-50 partners in Atlantic City’s Borgata Resort, but MGM bought out Boyd’s stake two years ago.

“We are excited to team yet again with Boyd Gaming on this unprecedented partnership,” Murren said. “We look forward to expanding our entertainment options for guests beyond their visits to our land-based resorts.”

CDC Gaming Reports contributed to this story.

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