Delaware sports betting to coincide with start of NFL season

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Ready, set, hike - and bet.
The National Football League season kicks off Sept. 10. For casino gamblers in Delaware, sports betting may begin on the same day.
Delaware gaming officials said Wednesday they plan to have sports betting ready in time for the NFL season. However, they face possible legal challenges from sports leagues, including the NFL itself.
NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy declined to say whether the league will file a lawsuit, but made it clear that professional football is adamantly opposed to sports betting in Delaware.
"We don't believe that promoting additional betting on professional or college sports is healthy for the game. It threatens the integrity of the game," McCarthy said.
Ed Sutor, president and chief executive officer of Dover Downs Hotel & Casino, asserted that any legal action to stop sports betting would fail. He noted that the NFL lost a federal court fight in the 1970s, when Delaware briefly experimented with a sports lottery then.
"We fully expect the NFL to challenge us," Sutor said. "They challenged us before and lost, so there's not a lot of concern this time around."
Delaware is preparing to introduce sports betting on professional and college games at its three racetrack casinos - Dover Downs, Delaware Park and Harrington Raceway. Betting, however, would not be allowed on Delaware's college teams or the Wilmington Blue Rocks minor league baseball team.
"We will have the full array of sports betting that they have out in Las Vegas, including major league football, baseball and basketball and the college games," Sutor said.
Delaware is just one of four states, along with Nevada, Montana and Oregon, that were grandfathered under a 1992 federal law that bans sports betting. Those states had some form of sports betting laws at the time or before the federal law was introduced. Delaware was exempted because of its sports lottery in the 1970s.
New Jersey is belatedly trying to win court approval for sports betting in a federal suit that challenges the ban.
"Certainly, it will give Delaware an amenity that no other casinos have east of the Mississippi," said Wayne Lemons, the state's lottery director.
Delaware Gov. Jack Markell signed legislation in May legalizing sports betting and casino table games at the racetrack slot parlors. Delaware's lottery commission soon will approve the hiring of a private contractor to oversee the sports betting system for the state, including the setting of odds.
Lemons has indicated Delaware plans to allow bettors to wager on the outcome of a single game or a parlay of several games. Sutor said the NFL likely would object to single-game wagering, but probably would accept parlay betting because it is considered more of a "game of chance."
Whatever form of sports wagering is ultimately decided, Delaware will certainly have an advantage over the Atlantic City casinos in that type of gambling. Delaware also has approved adding Atlantic City-style table games for its casinos, although they aren't expected to be ready until some time next year.
"Now they have a choice of betting on the slots and horseracing. But by next April, we think they'll be able to bet on the table games," Sutor said of Delaware gamblers.
Analysts believe sports betting and table games will allow Delaware to siphon customers away from the Atlantic City casinos. Sutor, a former Atlantic City gaming executive, said the main benefit for Delaware will be to draw more gamblers from its primary feeder markets in Maryland, Washington, D.C., and Virginia.
"We don't get a lot of business now from Atlantic City," he said. "However, I think sports betting will attract some new people. It's a new product, and I think people in Philadelphia and perhaps as far away as New York will come down to Delaware to try it."
 

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So they WILL have baseball playoffs and World series!
But will miss the Va. Tech-Alabama college football game on Sept 5th.

Starting the 10th!@):) Full sports wagering.@):)
 

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How does opening up a sportsbook in Delaware threaten the integrity of the game? Cant these guys see the bigger picture, if more people bet, more people will watch the "whole" game which means better ratings for the NFL.
 

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How does opening up a sportsbook in Delaware threaten the integrity of the game? Cant these guys see the bigger picture, if more people bet, more people will watch the "whole" game which means better ratings for the NFL.


Here's "their" thinking. NFL owners are not poor folks. Would imagine billionaires or at the least multimillionaires. This group of people (wealthy) are overwhealmingly Republicans. They figure if you bet on games, that is money lost that could have been given or spent with other big business that they "own". Don't fool yourself--they never get enough money!
 

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I think you're living in the past thinking the "rich" are Republicans.

And if they were worried about money being spent on places other than "their" businesses, they'd open the sportsbooks themselves and rake in the big bucks directly (rather than taking some puny cut of the (otherwise) gambling losses going to businesses hither and yon). You know how those "greedy" Republicans think.
 

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Most NFL owners and brass are afraid of anything disturbing the status quo, as they've practically had a license to print money for many years. I'm sure one of the reasons they fear an expansion of legal sports betting is a fear of losing a stranglehold on their own cash cow of fantasy football.

Funny thing is, expansion of sports betting would probably cause a boom of interest in the game. A legal sportsbook on the corner isn't going to bring in organized crime, as those guys already bet their big money on the games, but it would bring in the working guy who wants to bet $50 on his favorite team.

The various soccer leagues in England don't seem to worry much about "the integrity of the game," and it's almost as easy to find a sportsbook in London as it is to find a Tube station.
 

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I think you're living in the past thinking the "rich" are Republicans.

And if they were worried about money being spent on places other than "their" businesses, they'd open the sportsbooks themselves and rake in the big bucks directly (rather than taking some puny cut of the (otherwise) gambling losses going to businesses hither and yon). You know how those "greedy" Republicans think.


Why don't you gather information on how the NFL owners voted? My guess 4 to 1 Republican. (You pick the years since 2000)
 

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Why don't you gather information on how the NFL owners voted? My guess 4 to 1 Republican. (You pick the years since 2000)

Jeez, talk about an admission of "I don't know what the f*** I'm talking about". Go get it yourself -- I assumed you already did since you made the claim.
 

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Jeez, talk about an admission of "I don't know what the f*** I'm talking about". Go get it yourself -- I assumed you already did since you made the claim.

Your avitar speaks volumes. Giving the finger from a Dick Cheney...Go fly a jet or buy another Blackwater. You are a Republican---voting against gambling and for doctors--and big business! Could never have guess you're a republican...Go pray with Pat Robertson. If you think NFL owners aren't billionaires and Republicans---pass me that pipe!
 

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Alot of the NFL Owners are Jewish and vote Democrat. Not sure where you get your information from.. possibly the Twilight Zone.

This isn't about that though. Why do you think they feel it will effect fantasy football? I personally dont understand that?
 

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Why do you think they feel it will effect fantasy football? I personally dont understand that?

I don't think it WILL affect fantasy football, I think they're worried that it will. NFL brass are very afraid of making anything available for free or through channels they don't control. For example, try finding an XML feed for NFL stats. It's almost impossible. Major League Baseball, on the other hand, makes an incredible amount of stuff available.

So if the NFL is afraid to make something as basic as that available, they're definitely going to worry the ability to make a real bet is going to draw some people away from what some may see as the next best thing, which is the official NFL.com fantasy football.
 

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Your avitar speaks volumes. Giving the finger from a Dick Cheney...Go fly a jet or buy another Blackwater. You are a Republican---voting against gambling and for doctors--and big business! Could never have guess you're a republican...Go pray with Pat Robertson. If you think NFL owners aren't billionaires and Republicans---pass me that pipe!

My, my, quite the intemperate response.

It's spelled "avatar"

It's the finger from Dick Cheney, not a Dick Cheney. Unless there are copies floating around I don't know about.

I'm not a pilot, I can't fly a jet.

Again, as far as I know there's only one Blackwater, and it's not for sale.

Yes, I am a Republican. I was starting to worry you wouldn't get anything right here.

I did I vote for or against big business? It seemed to be just thrown in there.

Pat's busy this week.

No, most NFL owner's are not billionaires.

I don't know if they're Republicans, that's you're assertion. I think you assume they are because you don't like owners.
 

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My, my, quite the intemperate response.

It's spelled "avatar"

It's the finger from Dick Cheney, not a Dick Cheney. Unless there are copies floating around I don't know about.

I'm not a pilot, I can't fly a jet.

Again, as far as I know there's only one Blackwater, and it's not for sale.

Yes, I am a Republican. I was starting to worry you wouldn't get anything right here.

I did I vote for or against big business? It seemed to be just thrown in there.

Pat's busy this week.

No, most NFL owner's are not billionaires.

I don't know if they're Republicans, that's you're assertion. I think you assume they are because you don't like owners.


Since you appear to be concerned with spelling and grammatical errors, I think it is relevant to point out that you were unable to use the correct form of "your." That is all.
 

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Since you appear to be concerned with spelling and grammatical errors, I think it is relevant to point out that you were unable to use the correct form of "your." That is all.

Damn, that's what happens when your in a hurry!

(BTW - you missed owner's vs owners. If you're going to take it on yourself to be my proofreader at least do a complete job).
 

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I think you're living in the past thinking the "rich" are Republicans.

And if they were worried about money being spent on places other than "their" businesses, they'd open the sportsbooks themselves and rake in the big bucks directly (rather than taking some puny cut of the (otherwise) gambling losses going to businesses hither and yon). You know how those "greedy" Republicans think.

You fool. An NFL owner is contractually not permitted to own a sports betting establishment. You had better jump off this thread before you put your foot in your mouth again.:laugh:
 

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You fool. An NFL owner is contractually not permitted to own a sports betting establishment. You had better jump off this thread before you put your foot in your mouth again.:laugh:

Another idiot on the "rich Republican" bandwagon. Yes, they have a "policy" about owning casinos, particularly those that have sportsbooks. It might be contractual, I don't know, but like all things these sort of taboos pass with time. After all, it's what this thread is about. You have to get with the times, pal. The NBA certainly has no restriction on such things.
 

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The NFL (and the republican party...LOL) are way to paranoid.

I went to Candlestick Park with 60 thousand other folks for the better part of 20 years and in our section I think I was the only one cringing to the out of town score board.

What I am saying is in the big picture a very small percentage of their audience is betting on their games.

I am sure the NHL wishes more would bet on their sport!
 

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Man can't wait I live 10 min from either track dover or harrington the countdown has started. Some of the places have been getting their betting rooms ready I hear they will be very nice
 

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