What Does The NCAA Do If New Jersey Wins Its Sports Betting Case?

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hacheman@therx.com
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What Does The NCAA Do If New Jersey Wins Its Sports Betting Case?
Dustin Gouker
7/26/17

If New Jersey wins its US Supreme Court case to allow legal sports betting, the major US professional sports leagues may not love the outcome, but they’re all likely prepared for that future.
It’s far less clear what the NCAA — one of the plaintiffs in the NJ sports betting case — might do.

The NCAA: Between a rock and a hard place on sports betting

Here’s what we know about the NCAA’s stance on gambling: It doesn’t like it. That goes doubly so for sports betting, which it views as a direct threat to the integrity of its games.

The NCAA uses federal law — the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act — to keep sports betting from expanding outside of Nevada. But if New Jersey beats the NCAA in court in striking down PASPA as unconstitutional, then the NCAA is in a stickier position. (PASPA gives the NCAA and the pro leagues the power to attempt to stop sports betting schemes via the courts. Without PASPA, that power would be gone.)

The pro sports leagues have at least been softening their stance on sports betting, with the NBA even advocating for a federal framework to regulate it in the US. The NCAA, though, doesn’t have an obvious exit strategy if New Jersey wins and other states start to legalize sports gambling.

The NCAA needs to get ready for that world, as SI’s Andy Staples already pondered. But they have options, some more tenable than others.

Option 1: Lobby against sports betting

New Jersey, if it wins, would likely allow wagering on college sports. It’s not clear what other states would do if they try to legalize sports wagering, but it’s fair to assume a lot of them will try to do the same.
The NCAA could just try to oppose the legalization and regulation of sports betting in any state where it comes up. It might be going it alone, on that front, at least when it comes to other pro sports leagues, who may not have enough will or desire to stop state-by-state regulation.

The states also aren’t likely to dismiss sports betting entirely just because the NCAA doesn’t like it. That leads us to another possible scenario…

Option 2: Fight for a carveout

The more likely scenario is for the NCAA to advocate if a state wants to regulate wagering, it should exclude college sports from the wagers that operators can take.

The NCAA successfully stopped daily fantasy sports based on college contests in an agreement with DraftKings and FanDuel. The two DFS sites now advocate for laws that prohibit contests based on any NCAA event (as well as any amateur event).
Still, the effort to stop betting on college sports would be a legitimate state-by-state battle, and not one the NCAA could simply nip in the bud like it did with DFS. The stakeholders are far more varied.
Betting on college sports is also big business. Billions of dollars are bet annually on college football and basketball on unregulated offshore sportsbooks. No one is likely to just give up on college sports betting without a fight.

Option 3: Be a part of the solution in creating a regulated environment

This one seems unlikely, but the NCAA could change its tune on sports betting. Instead of actively fighting it, it could try to put in place workable regulation that would help protect game integrity.

Wagering on college sports takes place in Nevada with little concern for fixing of games because of limits on bets for less high-profile matchups. The aforementioned Staples piece gets into that.
The NCAA has shown little willingness to be active on this front, however. But if it’s faced with the reality that sports betting is moving forward without its say-so, the NCAA might see this as the best option.

Option 4: Do nothing

The NCAA sitting idly by if and when sports betting starts to proliferate seems highly unlikely.
For now, the NCAA is a plaintiff in the NJ case and is hoping it wins in court. That would allow it, and the other sports leagues, to kick the can down the road on sports betting. If the NCAA loses, we’ll quickly find out how it will react.
 

The Miracle Worker
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Here in Oregon we had a state lottery sponsored NBA and NFL
parlay game. The Blazers helped talk them out of the NBA part
of it after the first two years. Then we had just the NFL for like 15
years ( give or take a year ) after that....UNTIL...the cry babies at the
NCAA stepped in and lobbyed against it. The told Portland that we
would never get to host any rounds of March Madness unless we got
rid of the sportsbetting in our state. So we had a few jerk offs cave in
almost a decade ago and we lost our parlay game. And we have only
hosted an opening round of march madness maybe a couple of times
in that time period.

F*CK The NCAA hate that piece of shit organization.
 

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If NCAA was smart they'd get on board in other States like they do here. Nevada sports books have uncovered more schemes in the NCAA than the FBI and all law other law enforcements put together. When something is going down, Nevada knows about it pretty quick.
 

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if it was not for gambling on these teams the ratings for ncaa, nfl, nba would drop like a brick
 

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I DO Not understand the integery of the game theory ;

We Currently have legal sports betting in the USA !!!!! Las Vegas ?
does that impact the games ,,no......

I have always believed and still maintain that Las Vegas and its internal lobbist are keeping sports betting from expanding.............this will not change easily
 

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Perception of the integrity is what they're afraid of. Just look at how many bettors here that that bet illegally and think the games are all fixed; there are quite a few. I imagine if it were legal, that number dramatically goes up. It's not that the integrity of the game will be compromised, it's that it will be questioned by all the casual fans that start betting when they lose their bets that they thought were for sure easy winners. That's what the leagues are afraid of, and they're right. People believe just about any conspiracy now, no matter how incredulous it is.
 

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When it passes there might not be NCAA at first... down the road everything will be on the board.

states get $ from booze, lottery, cigs, gas, tolls , etc ..etc ....next sports , just look at history....we are living in a casino.
 

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