UConn Out Front in Pushing for its Share of Gambling Revenue | The Boneyard

UConn Out Front in Pushing for its Share of Gambling Revenue

whaler11

Head Happy Hour Coach
Joined
Aug 27, 2011
Messages
44,374
Reaction Score
68,261
Anyone who gives these leagues or schools a penny is a complete moron.

Anyone who believes the schools needs to waste even more money on useless administrators over the change shouldn’t have oxygen wasted on them.
 
Joined
Aug 29, 2016
Messages
4,074
Reaction Score
7,917
They are talking about minuscule percentages, just enough to cover what they figure will be the added costs of compliance. Like 0.5 to 1.0% of handle. They wouldn't be paid for content.
 

Exit 4

This space for rent
Joined
Feb 3, 2012
Messages
10,427
Reaction Score
38,312
It’s early yet for me on the subject, but my initial thought is that sports/schools that manage to get a piece of the gambling pie will be subject to the extra burden of being regulated per se and therefore much more exposed to gambling-integrity lawsuits. Maybe that exposure is overstate or can be largely insulated by state law....but maybe not. On the other hand, I don’t see how any school has integrity exposure if they don’t participate in the gambling vig.
 

HuskyV

Connecticut UConn Husky
Joined
Aug 26, 2011
Messages
525
Reaction Score
1,064
All sports see an increase in interest. Which will lead to higher TV ratings. Which will lead to higher prices for content providers/leagues.

There is no need to cut them in on the revenue. They can invest their own money or create a bet direct option and compete for the business.

But they might as well ask. Cities will give them multi-million dollar stadiums. They will now convince the legislators to create a tax to pay them for existing.
 

whaler11

Head Happy Hour Coach
Joined
Aug 27, 2011
Messages
44,374
Reaction Score
68,261
They are talking about minuscule percentages, just enough to cover what they figure will be the added costs of compliance. Like 0.5 to 1.0% of handle. They wouldn't be paid for content.

That’s a huge percentage. The margins in this business are thin.

In a record year the hold percentage in Vegas was 5.1%.

There are no added costs of compliance, that’s bs posturing by administrators who waste taxpayer money.
 

whaler11

Head Happy Hour Coach
Joined
Aug 27, 2011
Messages
44,374
Reaction Score
68,261
All sports see an increase in interest. Which will lead to higher TV ratings. Which will lead to higher prices for content providers/leagues.
.

Complete fallacy.

1. The incremental ratings increase is going to be tiny.

2. Television contracts are priced based on who is competing for the rights and what they are willing to pay not what the revenues are.

3. The main way networks generate revenue anyway is through cable subs - is this going to stop cord-cutting?

They might get a cut because politicians are easily purchased, but there is no legitimate argument to give them a dime.
 
Joined
Aug 29, 2016
Messages
4,074
Reaction Score
7,917
Doubt it will increase the betting demand. It'll just be done legally or more legally.
 
C

Chief00

Mohegan will have sports betting a few weeks before the NFL season starts or in about 2.5 months.
 
Joined
Aug 26, 2011
Messages
8,160
Reaction Score
21,326
That’s a huge percentage. The margins in this business are thin.

In a record year the hold percentage in Vegas was 5.1%.

There are no added costs of compliance, that’s bs posturing by administrators who waste taxpayer money.

Was the 5.1% just the sports book or all casino operations?
 

whaler11

Head Happy Hour Coach
Joined
Aug 27, 2011
Messages
44,374
Reaction Score
68,261
Was the 5.1% just the sports book or all casino operations?

That’s the sports book hold across Nevada.

It’s why many casinos took out their sportsbooks and stuck in more slots.

Most of those that didn’t brought in Cantor or William Hill to run them.

Cantor and WH have to aggressively screw the customers to get to that 5.1% hold.
 

CL82

NCAA Men’s Basketball National Champions - Again!
Joined
Aug 24, 2011
Messages
56,958
Reaction Score
208,743
It’s early yet for me on the subject, but my initial thought is that sports/schools that manage to get a piece of the gambling pie will be subject to the extra burden of being regulated per se and therefore much more exposed to gambling-integrity lawsuits. Maybe that exposure is overstate or can be largely insulated by state law....but maybe not. On the other hand, I don’t see how any school has integrity exposure if they don’t participate in the gambling vig.
Interesting take.
 

Online statistics

Members online
435
Guests online
4,498
Total visitors
4,933

Forum statistics

Threads
156,994
Messages
4,075,991
Members
9,965
Latest member
deltaop99


Top Bottom