N.B.A. Commissioner Adam Silver: Allow Gambling on Pro Games

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[h=2]Legalize and Regulate Sports Betting[/h] [h=1]N.B.A. Commissioner Adam Silver: Allow Gambling on Pro Games[/h] By ADAM SILVER<time class="dateline" datetime="2014-11-13">NOV. 13, 2014</time>


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<figcaption class="caption" itemprop="caption description"> Credit Matt Dorfman </figcaption> </figure>



BETTING on professional sports is currently illegal in most of the United States outside of Nevada. I believe we need a different approach.
For more than two decades, the National Basketball Association has opposed the expansion of legal sports betting, as have the other major professional sports leagues in the United States. In 1992, the leagues supported the passage by Congress of the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act, or Paspa, which generally prohibits states from authorizing sports betting.
But despite legal restrictions, sports betting is widespread. It is a thriving underground business that operates free from regulation or oversight. Because there are few legal options available, those who wish to bet resort to illicit bookmaking operations and shady offshore websites. There is no solid data on the volume of illegal sports betting activity in the United States, but some estimate that nearly $400 billion is illegally wagered on sports each year.
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</aside> Times have changed since Paspa was enacted. Gambling has increasingly become a popular and accepted form of entertainment in the United States. Most states offer lotteries. Over half of them have legal casinos. Three have approved some form of Internet gambling, with others poised to follow.
There is an obvious appetite among sports fans for a safe and legal way to wager on professional sporting events. Mainstream media outlets regularly publish sports betting lines and point spreads. Voters in New Jersey overwhelmingly voiced their support for legal sports betting in a 2011 referendum. Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey recently signed a bill authorizing sports betting at local casinos and horse racetracks, a law the N.B.A. and other leagues have opposed — and a federal court has blocked — because it violates Paspa.
Outside of the United States, sports betting and other forms of gambling are popular, widely legal and subject to regulation. In England, for example, a sports bet can be placed on a smartphone, at a stadium kiosk or even using a television remote control.
In light of these domestic and global trends, the laws on sports betting should be changed. Congress should adopt a federal framework that allows states to authorize betting on professional sports, subject to strict regulatory requirements and technological safeguards.
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</aside>These requirements would include: mandatory monitoring and reporting of unusual betting-line movements; a licensing protocol to ensure betting operators are legitimate; minimum-age verification measures; geo-blocking technology to ensure betting is available only where it is legal; mechanisms to identify and exclude people with gambling problems; and education about responsible gaming.
Without a comprehensive federal solution, state measures such as New Jersey’s recent initiative will be both unlawful and bad public policy.
Let me be clear: Any new approach must ensure the integrity of the game. One of my most important responsibilities as commissioner of the N.B.A. is to protect the integrity of professional basketball and preserve public confidence in the league and our sport. I oppose any course of action that would compromise these objectives.
But I believe that sports betting should be brought out of the underground and into the sunlight where it can be appropriately monitored and regulated.
Adam Silver is the commissioner of the National Basketball Association.
 

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"But I believe that sports betting should be brought out of the underground and into the sunlight where it can be appropriately monitored and regulated."
 
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Hello Roger, Hello Congress - are you listening? At least one commissioner appears to have a clue.
 

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Its like pulling teeth with these clowns......Silver stood front & center & says let's do this, hopefully these other leagues follow they yellow brick road.....
 

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NBA signed a 4yr deal to let FanDuel be the official daily fantasy sports provider of the NBA.

Embracing whatever betting they can, nice to see the leagues know where the bread is buttered
 

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he sees the NBA for what it is pathetic and knows the only way to make money in the future is advertising from books
 

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NBA signed a 4yr deal to let FanDuel be the official daily fantasy sports provider of the NBA.

Embracing whatever betting they can, nice to see the leagues know where the bread is buttered

Yea and Draft Kings logos are popping up on the boards at many NHL rinks on the TV viewable side. Hockey Central, the Canadian talk show now on the NHL Network is primarily sponsored by Draft Kings.

It's inevitable boys. It's blowing in the wind, but the wind is -120. So in many ways tis an ill wind that blows.

Remember in USA the only legally sanctioned gambling is next to impossible to beat. Vegas will remain the only viable option.
 

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How about OTB didn't it go bankrupt! When municipalities get there sloppy hands on these things they never work out.
 

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So one of the big sports finally has a good commish for the first time since paul tagliabue
 
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Always shocks me how technically gambling is illegal yet I could go buy 10,000 powerball tickets today. I could know nothing and have a 50/50 chance at a bet, I could spend 10K on lottery tickets with an astronomical chance yet the govt needs to protect me from myself while I smoke my weed in Denver that is legal. Geeze.
 

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when the leagues get their piece, like with fan duel, suddenly the objections will evaporate. Silver's comments are getting widespread coverage, dan patrick, mike and mike, and cowherd all led with it.
 

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Major League Baseball declines comment regarding Adam Silver's call for sports betting legalization.
 

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So one of the big sports finally has a good commish for the first time since paul tagliabue

Silver took points with Sixers Friday after they lose by 53 points Thursday with a little on Money Line......
 

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Silver is the most enlightened Sports Commish in the US since Pete Rozelle. He gets it. His handling of Sterling was decisive and perfect. He excised the cancer swiftly and painlessly, when so many thought thought it would be a long, drawn out situation. He's not a hypocritical ostrich about Sports Betting.
images
 

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It's inevitable boys. It's blowing in the wind, but the wind is -120. So in many ways tis an ill wind that blows.

Remember in USA the only legally sanctioned gambling is next to impossible to beat. Vegas will remain the only viable option.

Agree 100%. Be careful what you wish for because I am not buying what Silver is selling.

Not approving NJ legislation because he wants a "comprehensive federal solution". In other words, he wants a fed bill where his lobbyists will influence Congress and future sports gambling legislation will be dictated by the leagues, not what the betting public wants. Does anybody here think Congress can pass a legit, comprehensive sports gambling bill? I am sure they will get to it between health care, Ebola, ISIS and immigration.

The only thing worse than placing a ban on sports gambling in every state but Nevada is a federal bill legalizing everywhere but under strict, federal guidelines. It should be up to each state to decide. And I agree with you Mr. Jones, I see -120 in the future. -10 to the house, -5 to the leagues and -5 to the Governments. All mandated by Congress. And the only people betting that way will be the hardcore degenerates who are the same ones who you see standing in front of 7-11 with about 20 scratchers in their hands.
 

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On Friday, the other leagues stood firm in their defense of Paspa. Brian McCarthy, a spokesman for the N.F.L., said Silver’s view “doesn’t change our stance that has been articulated for decades: no gambling on N.F.L. games.”
Bill Daly, the deputy commissioner of the N.H.L., was more nuanced. “That was Adam’s opinion, and certainly one he and the N.B.A. are entitled to,” Daly wrote in an email. “That does not mean we share it. I think there are several assertions he relies on that we might question, or certainly would want to test further, and there are other considerations not mentioned that we think are relevant. It is a complex issue and, at least from our perspective, one that does not lend itself easily to a simple ‘agree’ or ‘disagree.’ ”
 

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David Payne Purdum ‏<small class="time"></small> Mark Cuban on Silver: "There were a bunch of owners that have been tired of the hypocrisy for yrs. Proud that Adam took the initiative."
 

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