• /
  • Responsible Gambling
This site contains commercial content
  • US Sports Betting
    • Arizona Sports Betting
    • Colorado Sports Betting
    • Florida Sports Betting
    • Illinois Sports Betting
    • Indiana Sports Betting
    • Kentucky Sports Betting
    • Louisiana Sports Betting
    • Maryland Sports Betting
    • Massachusetts Sports Betting
    • Michigan Sports Betting
    • Missouri Sports Betting
    • New Jersey Sports Betting
    • New York Sports Betting
    • North Carolina Sports Betting
    • Ohio Sports Betting
    • Pennsylvania Sports Betting
    • Tennessee Sports Betting
    • Vermont Sports Betting
    • Virginia Sports Betting
  • Betting Apps
    • Best Sports Betting Sites
    • bet365 Bonus Code
    • Caesars Promo Code
    • BetMGM Bonus Code
    • Fanatics Sportsbook Promo Code
    • Borgata Promo Code
    • BetRivers Promo Code
    • ESPN BET Promo Code
    • DraftKings Bonus Code
    • Fliff Promo Code
    • Rebet Bonus Code
    • TwinSpires Offer Code
    • FanDuel Sportsbook Promo Code
  • DFS Sites
    • PrizePicks Referral Code
    • Betr Promo Code
    • Boom Fantasy Promo Code
    • Dabble Fantasy Promo Code
    • OwnersBox Referral Code
    • Sleeper Promo Code
    • SuperDraft Promo Code
    • Underdog Fantasy Promo Code
    • Thrillzz Sportsbook Promo Code
  • Tools
    • Sportsbook Bonuses Explained
    • What Is a Teaser Bet?
    • What Is a Parlay Bet?
    • What is a Same Game Parlay?
    • What Is a Moneyline Bet?
    • What is Expected Value?
    • Win/Loss Statement
    • Sports Betting Revenue Tracker
    • Sports Betting Podcasts
    • Partnership Tracker
    • Sports Scores And Odds Apps
    • Sports Betting Twitter
  • News
No Result
View All Result
  • US Sports Betting
    • Arizona Sports Betting
    • Colorado Sports Betting
    • Florida Sports Betting
    • Illinois Sports Betting
    • Indiana Sports Betting
    • Kentucky Sports Betting
    • Louisiana Sports Betting
    • Maryland Sports Betting
    • Massachusetts Sports Betting
    • Michigan Sports Betting
    • Missouri Sports Betting
    • New Jersey Sports Betting
    • New York Sports Betting
    • North Carolina Sports Betting
    • Ohio Sports Betting
    • Pennsylvania Sports Betting
    • Tennessee Sports Betting
    • Vermont Sports Betting
    • Virginia Sports Betting
  • Betting Apps
    • Best Sports Betting Sites
    • bet365 Bonus Code
    • Caesars Promo Code
    • BetMGM Bonus Code
    • Fanatics Sportsbook Promo Code
    • Borgata Promo Code
    • BetRivers Promo Code
    • ESPN BET Promo Code
    • DraftKings Bonus Code
    • Fliff Promo Code
    • Rebet Bonus Code
    • TwinSpires Offer Code
    • FanDuel Sportsbook Promo Code
  • DFS Sites
    • PrizePicks Referral Code
    • Betr Promo Code
    • Boom Fantasy Promo Code
    • Dabble Fantasy Promo Code
    • OwnersBox Referral Code
    • Sleeper Promo Code
    • SuperDraft Promo Code
    • Underdog Fantasy Promo Code
    • Thrillzz Sportsbook Promo Code
  • Tools
    • Sportsbook Bonuses Explained
    • What Is a Teaser Bet?
    • What Is a Parlay Bet?
    • What is a Same Game Parlay?
    • What Is a Moneyline Bet?
    • What is Expected Value?
    • Win/Loss Statement
    • Sports Betting Revenue Tracker
    • Sports Betting Podcasts
    • Partnership Tracker
    • Sports Scores And Odds Apps
    • Sports Betting Twitter
  • News
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result

Tennessee Sports Betting Rules Debate Persists As Comments Surface k6dc

A full review of the comments submitted to regulators 3e1n1o

Brett SmileyBrett Smiley
February 20, 2020
in Regulation

Neon signs at night along Broadway Street in Nashville, TN (Shutterstock) 3n2d5b

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The final form of the more light shed after a pair of meetings on Tuesday and Wednesday.

One of the most offensive proposed rules — based on the volume and nature of the responses to it — was a clause that would have required licensed operators to keep a minimum of 85% of all wagers placed, more akin to a fixed matrix lottery product or parimutuel takeout. That runs counter to sports betting, which is a more variable and lower margin venture but can reach some pretty incredible volumes as far as total dollars wagered, as evidenced by recent records in New Jersey and Nevada.

It appears, however, that regulators at the Tennessee Education Lottery Corporation (TELC) are listening to stakeholders and the nine-member appointed Tennessee Sports Wagering Council. From the Wednesday meeting of the Board of Directors:

NEW: At the Tennessee Lottery Board of Directors Meeting today, the Lottery said it will go with 92% for a fixed payout cap on sports wagering. The cap will be reflected in the next version of the regulations.

Previous cap proposal was 85%.

Regs expected to be done in ~2 months

— Brian Pempus (@brianpempus) February 19, 2020

There is not yet a required minimum hold requirement for sports betting, at any number, in any legal U.S. jurisdiction. TELC Chief Rebecca Hargrove has pointed to such rules in , Greece and Switzerland to demonstrate their existence in Europe.

Some operators may suck it up and manufacture a way to meet the requirement, to the probable detriment of Joe Sports Bettor, while others may shy away from the Tennessee market (where a license costs $750,000 annually), seeing the move from 85% to 92% going from an “untenable” position to a “less untenable” position.

Said veteran Las Vegas oddsmaker Robert Walker, Director of Sportsbook Operations for US Bookmaking.

“Any cap or in this case mandatory hold puts a brake on competition.  A straight bet with a 20 cent line (-110 on both sides) is a 4.5% theoretical hold.  In reality we hold much lower than that due to line movement.  Let’s say 3% for arguments sake and our return to players is 97%.

Historically books in Nevada hold much less than 8%. Any type cap like this will eliminate large straight bets as well, forcing those players offshore. We don’t quite understand the repercussions of not holding 8%, however, so there may be some room to maneuver.

At the end of the day handle and hold percentage mean very little. Revenue is all that matters. Any cap negatively impacts our ability to seek optimal revenue.

Public comments, path ahead 716h4c

The council and board meetings indicate a fluid situation, and certainly questions and concerns remain. The TELC in January released an abbreviated, summary version of the comments it received on the draft rules, and at that time there were 37 comments on the proposed “capped payout” and 60 on a proposal that would grade a tie in a parlay as a loss. There were myriad other comments or suggestions about the 20% tax rate, licensing and application processes, and how deposits and withdrawals will work.

Since then, Sports Handle has obtained a complete copy of the comments, which are 271 pages, as compared to the 18 summary pages provided by the TELC in January. Like the overview, commenters are not identified, as they were clearly whited out by hand on each comment.

In some states, when the comments are released, the names of the commenters are made public. Potential operators DraftKings, Caesars, and William Hill as well as industry groups  iDEA Growth and the American Gaming Association are among those who identified themselves in their comments, as the companies used their names in text that was not redacted.

Major League Baseball, the NBA and PGA Tour are also identified. They wrote in to reiterate their of several league-friendly rules, including the mandated use of “official league data” and the opportunity to prohibit certain wagers.

A second draft of proposed regulations is coming, according to chairperson Susan Lanigan. The TELC and its advisory council is expected to meet again in March, at which time the rules may be closer to adoption.

TN proposed regs frustrating to stakeholders 4f4520

Those commenting were required to use an online form set up by the TELC, which stakeholders complained about as cumbersome during the process. The form only allowed commenters to discuss one topic at a time, and from the looks of the complete document of public comments, they often needed multiple forms to complete a single thought.

The complete comments paint a picture of frustration from stakeholders. Industry group iDEA wrote that the proposed regulations would “hamper” growth of the industry, called one rule “underdeveloped,” and said another would “undermine the effectiveness of regulators.”

One stakeholder referred to the “capped payout,” described in the proposed rules as putting an 85% cap on the payout of winnings, as “crippling,” while another called it a way to “limit market growth and legal operators’ ability to to give customers a compelling reason to move from the illegal market.”  Yet another called the push-loss idea “anti-consumer.” The cap is not part of the law ed by Tennessee’s legislature and was added in the regulatory process.

Among the full comments, there were multiple ones about the requirement of placing 20% of a single day’s adjusted gross revenue into an escrow . Comments suggest that this is an unreasonable requirement. One wrote, “this process does not contemplate the possibility that adjusted gross income on certain days could be negative.”

Marketing approval period must be shortened 6h39t

Another issue that cropped up repeatedly is the 30-day approval period the TECL proposes for approving marketing campaigns. The time frame, according to multiple stakeholders, is unreasonable, as sports betting opportunities are based on real-time events that are ever evolving. As an example, if during March Madness a team gets hot from the three-point line, an operator may want to add in a unique three-point bet going forward. The 30-day approval period would not allow for this kind of flexibility.

The 30-day window is “entirely unworkable,” wrote a commenter. “Current advertising and marketing moves at a much quicker pace that is not conducive to pre-approval of any type. Online advertising and marketing must be nimble and capable of reacting to current events.”

Besides the comments from stakeholders, some comments were from potential bettors — and they drive home the point that bettors are seeking a fair and trustworthy market in which to place bets. Some examples:

  • “You all are trying to make this a fixed thing like the lottery. You try to run sports gambling like the lottery and make it more beneficial to the house. Everyone will continue to do illegal betting or travel to neighboring states. I can be in Kentucky in 45 minutes. Once they approve sports betting, I’d have no problem driving to the border multiple times a week.”
  • “Cancelling a parlay if 1 of the legs tied is absolutely crazy … Don’t be greedy. You’ll get your money.”
  • “A push in a parlay makes the parlay a loss, which isn’t industry standard — why and thought this was a good idea( sic)?”
  • “Calling a tie a loss is a disservice to bettors & TN would lose customers. (personally, I’d just continue to go to Tunica to prevent a ‘loss’ when a bet is merely a push.)
  • “Grading a pushed parlay as a loss is an absolutely idiotic move.”
  • “Don’t make ties lose a standard. It’s noncompetitive, looks silly, and the consumer in TN deserves better.”

"We were just flat out wrong," Hargrove on the proposed reg that stated a push in a parlay leg would result in the entire parlay being deemed a loss.

TELC just voted unanimously to remove that very bad rule for consumers.

cc @dan_back

— Brian Pempus (@brianpempus) February 18, 2020

At least that one rule will be gone from the next draft. The status of cap on payout — viewed as a more grave threat — is still up in the air.

On balance, potential stakeholders identified plenty of problems, best summed up in this comment: “this draft regulation is antithetical to sports betting’s core identity.”

To be continued.

ShareTweetShare
Brett Smiley

Brett Smiley 4r6q36

Brett Smiley was a co-founder of Sports Handle, which ed forces with Better Collective in November 2018.

This site contains commercial content. We may be compensated for the links provided on this page. The content on this page is for informational purposes only.

Related Posts 4a5r72

Promotions

Best Tennessee Sportsbook Promos: Secure More than $3K in Offers for March Madness Wofford vs. Tennessee, Any Game 2b376y

March 20, 2025
Promotions

bet365 Tennessee Bonus Code SHNEWS: Snag New $150 Bonus to Use on Any Game Today 5f3i33

March 17, 2025
Load More

SportsHandle 5w3960

  • Analysis
  • Casino
  • Features
  • Horse Racing
  • Industry
  • Legal
  • Legislation
  • Lottery
  • Opinion
  • Podcasts
  • Poker
  • Politics
  • Promotions
  • Regulation
  • Sports
  • Uncategorized

Better Collective 58t4o

This website is owned and operated by Better Collective USA. Trademarks and copyrights referenced on this website are and shall remain the exclusive property of their respective owners and/or licensors. Please be sure to visit the operator’s website(s) to review their & conditions. We advise you to read these carefully as they contain important information. Copyright © 2025 | Better Collective USA
21 Play Responsibly
National Council on Problem Gambling
Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-Gambler.

Search Sports Handle 4g1872

No Result
View All Result

Legal 31o1q

  • Cookie Policy
  • /
  • Responsible Gambling

No Result
View All Result
  • US Sports Betting
    • Arizona Sports Betting
    • Colorado Sports Betting
    • Florida Sports Betting
    • Illinois Sports Betting
    • Indiana Sports Betting
    • Kentucky Sports Betting
    • Louisiana Sports Betting
    • Maryland Sports Betting
    • Massachusetts Sports Betting
    • Michigan Sports Betting
    • Missouri Sports Betting
    • New Jersey Sports Betting
    • New York Sports Betting
    • North Carolina Sports Betting
    • Ohio Sports Betting
    • Pennsylvania Sports Betting
    • Tennessee Sports Betting
    • Vermont Sports Betting
    • Virginia Sports Betting
  • Betting Apps
    • Best Sports Betting Sites
    • bet365 Bonus Code
    • Caesars Promo Code
    • BetMGM Bonus Code
    • Fanatics Sportsbook Promo Code
    • Borgata Promo Code
    • BetRivers Promo Code
    • ESPN BET Promo Code
    • DraftKings Bonus Code
    • Fliff Promo Code
    • Rebet Bonus Code
    • TwinSpires Offer Code
    • FanDuel Sportsbook Promo Code
  • DFS Sites
    • PrizePicks Referral Code
    • Betr Promo Code
    • Boom Fantasy Promo Code
    • Dabble Fantasy Promo Code
    • OwnersBox Referral Code
    • Sleeper Promo Code
    • SuperDraft Promo Code
    • Underdog Fantasy Promo Code
    • Thrillzz Sportsbook Promo Code
  • Tools
    • Sportsbook Bonuses Explained
    • What Is a Teaser Bet?
    • What Is a Parlay Bet?
    • What is a Same Game Parlay?
    • What Is a Moneyline Bet?
    • What is Expected Value?
    • Win/Loss Statement
    • Sports Betting Revenue Tracker
    • Sports Betting Podcasts
    • Partnership Tracker
    • Sports Scores And Odds Apps
    • Sports Betting Twitter
  • News

loading

Please wait while you are redirected to the right page...

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.Read more