Maryland's
Neighbors
Push for
Sports
Betting, But
Slots
Unlikely to
be Hurt
By DYLAN
WAUGH
Capital News
Service
ANNAPOLIS
(March
23,2009) -
As
distracted
office
workers and
college
basketball
fans gambled
millions on
the opening
weekend of
March
Madness, two
of
Maryland's
neighboring
states are
looking to
legalize
sports
betting as a
way to raise
revenue.
Delaware
Gov. Jack
Markell
views sports
betting as a
partial
solution to
his state's
$750 million
budget
shortfall.
And New
Jersey State
Sen. Raymond
Lesniak next
week intends
to challenge
a federal
ban on
sports
gambling.
The moves
come as
Maryland
struggles to
implement
its slots
plan, which
was intended
to raise
money for
education
and save the
state's
horse racing
industry.
But even
though
Delaware
might have
sports
betting in
place in
time for
this fall's
football
season,
experts
don't see
the move
cutting into
the slots
revenue
projected to
start
flowing into
Maryland in
a few years.
"I don't
think there
is really
much risk of
Delaware
stealing
customers
from
Maryland,"
said Bill
Eadington,
director of
the
Institute
for the
Study of
Gambling and
Commercial
Gaming at
the
University
of Nevada,
Reno.
Eadington
described
sharp
differences
between the
types of
gamblers,
calling
slots fans
"pure chance
players,"
and sports
bettors
"much more
cerebral."
"There's not
a lot of
spillover,"
Eadington
said,
referencing
Nevada
gambling
data.
"That's
pretty clear
from a lot
of
evidence."
Bethesda-based
gambling
analyst
Jeffrey
Hooke
agreed,
noting
distinctions
between
slots
gamblers and
sports
bettors as
well as the
distance
Maryland
residents
would have
to travel in
order to bet
on sports in
Delaware.
"I don't
think it's
going to
have any
effect,"
Hooke
said."Maryland
slots is
basically
catering to
the
convenience
bettor."
Beyond
catering to
different
types of
gamblers,
Eadington
doesn't
think sports
betting in
Delaware
would create
a big enough
market to
infringe on
Maryland's
slots
without
including
provisions
for online
gambling or
out-of-state
wagering.
Senate
President
Thomas V.
Mike Miller
Jr.,
D-Calvert,
said he is
"not at all"
worried by
the prospect
of legalized
sports
betting just
east of
Maryland,
citing the
"two totally
different
crowds"
attracted by
slots and
sports
gambling.
Other
Maryland
lawmakers
were
hesitant to
predict how
nearby
sports
betting
could affect
the state's
projected
slots
revenue,
instead
taking the
opportunity
to criticize
the state
slots law
and the
slots
implementation
process.
"It's too
hard to tell
right now,"
said Senate
Minority
Leader Allan
Kittleman,
R-Carroll.
"I don't
know how it
will affect
the slots in
the sense
that I don't
know slots
is going to
be
successful
anyway."
House
Minority
Whip
Christopher
Shank,
R-Washington,
said he
didn't see a
connection
between
sports
betting and
Maryland's
slots. He,
too,
criticized
the slots
process in
his
response.
"The entire
process has
been rife
(with)
political
errors and
omissions
and it
doesn't
surprise me
now that
you'll see
this
interstate
political
tit-for-tat,"
Shank said.
Maryland
voters
approved
slots in a
referendum
last year
but the
state
received
only four
qualified
bids for a
total of
fewer than
half of the
15,000
terminals
allowed. The
tepid
response
means the
state will
likely
struggle to
deliver the
$660 million
for public
schools it
hoped slots
would
generate by
the 2013
fiscal year,
regardless
of possible
sports
betting in
Delaware.
Sports
betting in
Delaware
might be
limited to
parlay bets,
which are
combinations
of at least
two
individual
outcomes --
for example
betting on a
basketball
team winning
and a
certain
player
scoring more
than 15
points.
Sports
betting is
prohibited
by federal
law but
Delaware is
one of four
states
exempt from
the
restriction,
having been
grandfathered
in for
experimenting
with a
sports
lottery
before the
1992 federal
ban.
Legislation
could be
introduced
in Delaware
as soon as
next week.
A 1999
National
Gambling
Impact Study
Commission
report
estimated
$80
billion-$380
billion is
illegally
wagered on
sports each
year
nationally.
In 2008,
more than
$2.5 billion
was legally
wagered on
sports in
Nevada,
according to
The American
Gaming
Association.
College
basketball's
annual March
Madness
tournament
and the
Super Bowl
are widely
considered
among the
most popular
gambling
events.
Gamblers
place
$80-$90
million in
legal bets
in Nevada on
the NCAA
tournament
each year,
according to
American
Gaming
Association
statistics.
But with
approximately
half of the
country
participating
in some sort
of bracket
pool, the
amount of
money
wagered on
the
tournament
illegally is
likely much
higher.
Eadington
estimated
$600 million
was lost in
illegal
basketball
gambling
last March
based on
projections
from legal
Nevada
betting
data, but
cautioned
the figure
includes
wagers on
NBA games as
well.
The NCAA and
professional
sports
leagues have
widely
opposed
sports
gambling.
Delaware
does not
have a major
league
baseball,
basketball,
football or
hockey team.
Although
Maryland is
currently
forbidden
from
entertaining
sports
betting
legislation,
the state
may not be
immune from
the sports
gambling
movement
forever.
New Jersey
State Sen.
Raymond
Lesniak,
D-Union,
said he
plans Monday
to file a
legal
challenge to
the 1992
federal law
banning
sports
betting,
potentially
legalizing
sports
gambling
nationwide.
Lesniak
argued that
New Jersey
residents
already
"profusely"
gamble on
sports and
legalizing
the activity
would allow
the state to
generate
revenue
currently
captured by
offshore
gambling
entities and
organized
crime.
He estimated
New Jersey
could bring
in $100
million
annually
from a
probable 8
percent tax
on sports
gambling.
New Jersey
sports
betting
would likely
occur in
Atlantic
City's
casinos,
racetracks
and on the
Internet, he
said.
But Lesniak
said New
Jersey
wouldn't be
the only
state to
benefit if
he is
successful.
"Other
states would
be able to
raise
billions of
dollars,"
Lesniak
said.
Hooke said
many other
states would
likely take
advantage of
legalized
sports
betting, but
"it's hard
to say"
whether
Maryland
would do so,
noting the
strong
presence of
anti-gambling
interests in
the state.
"I could see
Maryland
taking a
look at the
thing
eventually,"
Hooke said.
State
leaders said
it's too
early to
determine
Maryland's
possible
interest in
pursuing
sports
gambling.
A spokesman
for Gov.
Martin
O'Malley
said he is
more focused
on the
state's
current
fiscal woes
than
addressing
the
possibility
of sports
betting in
Maryland.
O'Malley and
lawmakers
are expected
to make more
than $500
million in
cuts to next
year's
budget.
Alexandra
Hughes, a
spokeswoman
for House
Speaker
Michael
Busch,
D-Anne
Arundel,
also said
the issue is
not a high
priority
right now.
"At this
point, the
state is
pretty
universally
focused on
implementing
... a slots
program,"
Hughes said.
"We'll wait
and see."
Capital News
Service
Staff Writer
Michael
Frost
contributed
to this
report. |