NBA & Frank Pallone Come To Fantasy Sports/DFS & Sports Betting's Defense Against The NYtimes' Absurd, Uneducated Opinion Of The Two

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hacheman@therx.com
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Here is the piece from NYTimes with the response further below in Post #2....





Rein In Online Fantasy Sports Gambling

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD<time class="dateline" datetime="2015-10-05" style="font-size: 0.6875rem; line-height: 0.75rem; font-family: nyt-cheltenham-sh, georgia, 'times new roman', times, serif; color: rgb(0, 0, 0); margin-left: 12px;">OCT. 5, 2015


Anybody who has watched a football game on television recently has seenads for fantasy sports websites that promise multimillion-dollar contests, cash prizes and testimonials from people who claim to have won tens of thousands of dollars. The companies behind these commercials say that their games are harmless and perfectly legal. But it is hard to believe that this is what Congress had in mind when it exempted fantasy sports from a law that effectively outlawed Internet gambling in 2006.

Fantasy sports have been around for years. For most of their existence, groups of friends played against each other over the course of several months. In fantasy sports, each player assembles a hypothetical team of athletes. Points are calculated based on how those athletes do in actual games. Now companies like FanDuel and DraftKings are encouraging people to play daily and weekly fantasy games in which they compete against dozens or hundreds of strangers on the Internet.

Players pay entry fees ranging from 25 cents to several thousand dollars to win awards that go from a few dollars to more than $1 million. The most a player can lose is the entry fee; the player whose athletes collect the most points, based on the athletes’ performance, wins the top prize. There are also lesser payoffs.


These companies have grown rapidly with the help of aggressive advertising. Last year 41 million Americans and Canadians played fantasy sports, up from 27 million in 2009, according to the Fantasy Sports Trade Association. Professional leagues like the National Basketball Association and Major League Baseball have invested in fantasy sports companies, as have businesses like Comcast, Fox and Google. Football teams like the New England Patriots and the Jacksonville Jaguars have set up cocktail lounges in their stadiums where fans can play fantasy sports.

This boom has grown because the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006, which prevented payment processors from working with gambling websites, included an exemption for fantasy sports. At the time, however, most fantasy sports were the season-long, low-stakes games friends played with each other, not the daily and weekly games that companies are marketing now.

The companies argue that their games are legal under the laws of most states because they are games of skill, not chance, and they say they don’t allow people to play in the few states where the games are illegal.

Because daily and weekly fantasy games are so new, there are very few studies on whether they are addictive and result in the social problems typically associated with gambling. One study published last year in the journal Addictive Behaviors found that college students who played fantasy sports were more likely to have gambling-related problems than other students.

What is worrisome is that some lawmakers, like Representative Frank Pallone Jr., Democrat of New Jersey, are using the growth of fantasy sports to push Congress to let states legalize conventional gambling in sports. Late last year, the commissioner of the N.B.A., Adam Silver, called for legalizing sports betting.

The allure of profits from gambling clouds otherwise rational minds. Giving people more ways to bet on the outcomes of sports is sure to threaten the integrity of sports and create more gambling addicts, especially among young people who are already more likely to engage in risky behaviors.

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hacheman@therx.com
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Here is the response from NBA & Frank Pallone.....





Legalizing Betting on Pro and Fantasy Sports

OCT. 11, 2015


To the Editor:
Re “Rein In Online Fantasy Sports Gambling” (editorial, Oct. 5):

Fantasy leagues are widely legal in the United States and have been a popular form of entertainment for decades, offering fans an exciting way to engage with their favorite sports. There is no evidence that the growth in fantasy’s popularity, or the evolution of its format to include daily and weekly games, has threatened the integrity of sports or led to other social ills.

As for the separate issue of sports betting, Americans already are betting on sports in record numbers. Hundreds of billions of dollars are wagered illegally each year with bookies and offshore gambling websites. This activity is unmonitored and unregulated.
Bringing sports betting into the mainstream would not undermine the integrity of sports. To the contrary, legalization would bring new tools and resources to monitor unusual betting activity and promote responsible gambling.

MICHAEL BASS
Executive Vice President
National Basketball Association
New York






To the Editor:
In response to my call for a congressional hearing to examine the relationship between professional and daily fantasy sports and shine light on professional sports leagues’ hypocrisy in opposing sports betting, your editorial referred to my efforts as “worrisome.” What seems to have been missed is that a federal prohibition on sports betting has forced the industry into the black market.

Opponents of sports betting make remarkably similar arguments to those made by alcohol prohibitionists of the 1920s, claiming, as The Times put it, that legalization will “create” more addicts. The reality is, regardless of its legality, sports betting is and always will be available. It currently functions almost exclusively in the shadows, through organized crime. An estimated $400 billion is spent annually in the United States, and 99 percent of it is illegal.

The major barrier to legalized sports betting is opposition from most professional sports leagues. In my home state, New Jersey, for example, sports leagues sued to stop a voter-approved implementation plan for legalized sports betting, choking off the revenue this multibillion-dollar industry would bring to the state. At the same time, because they are directly invested, the leagues duplicitously support daily fantasy sports betting.

The legal ambiguity, lack of oversight and systematic hypocrisy make this issue ripe for congressional review.

FRANK PALLONE Jr.
Washington
The writer, a Democratic member of Congress, is the ranking member of the Energy and Commerce Committee, which has jurisdiction over professional sports and gambling.






http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/12/opinion/legalizing-betting-on-pro-and-fantasy-sports.html
 

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