As the calendar turns from June to July, and as America largely turns the page on a pandemic that temporarily shut down sports and closed casinos — to say nothing of its more devastating impacts — Sports Handle celebrates six months of a gradual return to normalcy with some mid-year awards for the sports gambling world.
This is a look back at the best, the worst, and the weirdest of what has thus far been a record-smashing sports betting year.
But those records won’t last long, so let’s skip right past Ricky Gervais’ roast of the celebrities in attendance and get straight to the awards …
Biggest State Legislative News of the Half Year f3d4u
There’s no suspense as we open our first envelope. New York state legalizing mobile sports betting, with expectations that the first bets on phones and computers will be taken by the 2022 Super Bowl, is certain to recalibrate the regulated betting world. The Empire State is the first of the “Big Four” (California, Texas, and Florida being the other three) to legalize mobile betting, and with its population in excess of 20 million people, it will surely New Jersey quickly to become America’s top sports betting state, at least in of betting handle. (And it will directly siphon major betting dollars away from the Jerz when New Yorkers no longer have to bridge or tunnel their way across state lines to get a bet down.)
Optimism is online betting at the end of 2020 — seemingly on a hamster wheel to nowhere — Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s about-face ushered in the biggest U.S. sports betting news cycle of the year so far.
Silver medal: Arizona suddenly legalizes sports betting and DFS.
Bronze medal: Connecticut and its tribes reach a deal for mobile gambling.
Biggest Tease of Potentially Huge State Legislative News l374l
New York wasn’t the only “Big Four” state advancing sports betting legislation in the first half of the year. push for a ballot measure for a more competitive mobile market.
Sports betting is coming to Florida, but how and when are questions that were by no means resolved during the first half of 2021.
Biggest Legislative News Just Outside the U.S. 15qd
While the Canadiens sit on the precipice of a possible Stanley Cup title, the alternate-spelling Canada had its version of PASPA-overturned moment in June, when the ban on single-game sports betting was lifted, giving provinces the option to regulate the activity, perhaps launching as early as this fall.
Out With a Whimper Award 1c6370
This is only tangentially a sports betting issue — it’s more of an all-around online gambling concern — but the threat posed by changing interpretations of the Wire Act of 1961 has been erased, at least for now.
Widely believed to be at the behest of casino mogul and Republican mega-donor Sheldon Adelson, the Trump Department of Justice tried in 2018 to reverse the Obama-era opinion that opened the door for regulated online poker and casino games. But the New Hampshire Lottery fought back in 2019 and won, and two major January events — a change of presidential power and the death of Adelson — signaled the end of the fight. The Biden DOJ let the NH Lottery ruling go quietly, without a challenge, and like that, the Wire Act issue was kaput.
Runner-up: The 2½-year legal battle between New Jersey horsemen and the major sports leagues over $150 million theoretical sports betting dollars owed was suddenly “amicably resolved.” Really? Just like that? This was like if Reservoir Dogs ended with no guns drawn and everyone shaking hands and going their separate ways.
Least Exclusive Partnership Award 292x3n
This honor goes to the Caesars, DraftKings, and FanDuel as official partners of the league. This served as an exclamation point to the NFL’s full-throated reversal of its longstanding position that gambling was a scourge that would destroy the sport. It also served to introduce the word “tri-exclusive” into the vernacular — only to be immediately scrubbed from our collective vocabulary because it is very much not a word.
Sportsbook Controversy of the Half Year 2v6h37
A regulated environment means that there are rules, and there are consequences if those rules are breached. It took until March of 2021, but for the first time in the post-PASPA era, a sportsbook had its license suspended — albeit temporarily — when local TN Action 24/7 got shut down for alleged financial crimes on the platform.
such as “credit card fraud” and “money laundering” were bandied about, although the suspension lasted only about a week — ironically, one “24/7” period. The online sportsbook was ultimately deemed by the Tennessee Education Lottery to be in “good standing.” However, a possible federal investigation looms concerning the underlying, potentially criminal activity occurring on the platform.
Biggest Sports Betting Month of the Half Year (and of all-time) 2m4d62
March 2021 goes into the history books as generating more handle than any other month ever, a record that should last … until the next football season begins.
Still, with Virginia launched mobile sports betting in late January, opening up subsequent months to a larger bucket of potential sports gamblers than ever before, and the peak came in the month famous for hosting the NCAA men’s basketball tournament.
Dumbest Sports Betting Rule of the Half Year (and of all-time) 3z6a57
You want to bet on Illinois-based college teams while in the state of newly proposed law, that option is coming. But only at retail sportsbooks, not online. And only on Tuesdays, when the temperature is below 72 degrees, and it’s a crescent moon.
OK, those last few stipulations aren’t real. But being prohibited from betting on certain college games online and forced to drive to a brick-and-mortar sportsbook to make those wagers? That is a real idea that someone had, and it appears it will be implemented.
Sports Betting Media Deal of the Half Year, Controversial Division 5k1j5q
The Associated Press — yes, the venerable, respected, 175-year-old Associated Press — has found itself a sportsbook partner. In a deal announced in May, the AP welcomed FanDuel Sportsbook as its official odds provider. Which means whenever betting lines appear in an AP story, they will come from one sportsbook, even if the consensus line happens to be something different. It’s great exposure for FanDuel. It’s a little bit icky for a purportedly unbiased news outlet.
Runner-up: DraftKings bought VSiN in March, which our own Jeff Edelstein referred to as “a ‘wolf investing in hen houses’ type of move.”
Sports Betting Media Deal of the Half Year, Non-Controversial Division 731v6f
This one goes to Sports Handle’s parent company, Denmark-based Better Collective, acquiring The Action Network on May 3 for 240 million U.S. dollars. Unlike with the FD-AP partnership or the DK-VSiN deal, there’s no potential conflict of interest here. (Except when we hand out mid-year awards celebrating the deal, of course.)
Shortest Lived Partnership of the Half Year 3b453g
The suits running the Vegas Golden Knights didn’t think this one through, apparently. On a Wednesday in February, the NHL team ended the agreement.
This one didn’t even last a single Scaramucci.
Simultaneously Most Surprising and Least Surprising Partnership 2y2c1x
UPickTrade bags a second award! In April, the Guadalajara, Mexico-based tout service announced that it was ing forces with Pete Rose, who would share his daily sports picks with subscribers. Once a cornerstone of “The Big Red Machine,” now Pete is part of the The Big Green Machine that accompanies the post-PASPA sports betting industry. This news was alarming to some … but also pretty much inevitable.
Whoopsie-Daisy of the Half Year p20x
At least five online sportsbooks experienced outages either prior to the kickoff of the Super Bowl or during the game. One of them, DraftKings, paid good money to during the big game (an industry first). This was inopportune timing, to say the least. The biggest sports betting day of the year produces volume that will test your technology — and in several cases this year, that technology, and the regulated U.S. sports gambling industry, failed.