Why sportsbooks are refunding bettors who lose

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hacheman@therx.com
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Why sportsbooks are refunding bettors who lose

Kendall Baker
4/7/19


Some New Jersey sportsbooks have begun issuing refunds (in the form of a credit) to losing bettors following bad beats in high-profile games.

Driving the news: When Zion Williamson's shoe exploded against UNC in February, PointsBet, an Australian-based operator with a mobile app in New Jersey, issued $100,000 in refunds to those who bet on losing Duke.

DraftKings refunded spread and money line bets (up to $50) to those who bet on Purdue over the weekend after Virginia hit a buzzer-beater to send the game to overtime and then covered the 4.5-point spread.

What's happening: These give backs are, at their core, a marketing ploy designed to generate publicity. Pick a high-profile game, announce the refund and sit back while The Action Network's Darren Rovell and others report on it.

In other words, sportsbooks are taking a short-term loss in hopes that news of them doing so generates a long-term gain.

Also, the refunds come in the form of credits, not actual cash. So they're giving money back but that money must be used to place a future bet.

The other side: Not all bettors like this idea. After all, how do you decide when money does and doesn't get returned? What's the precedent? Any sportsbook that engages in this too frequently risks looking like they're not legit.

Plus, while it may be good business now, that might not be the case in the future. "When sportsbooks are doing this 100 times a year, I'm going to stop tweeting about it, as will others, and there will be diminishing returns," Rovell tells me.

The big picture: "The New Jersey sports betting market is becoming increasingly competitive, and it's a proving ground for anyone who wants to contest the broader U.S. online sports betting market," Chris Grove, managing director of Sports and Emerging Verticals at Eilers & Krejcik Gaming, tells me.

"All of that adds up to an environment where we're going to see aggressive marketing tactics, including some that wander into negative ROI territory or ruffle the feathers of some sports betting 'purists.'"

Be smart: To paint this as nothing more than a marketing tactic designed to bring in new customers would be a mistake, as give backs are also designed to keep existing bettors around. Customer loyalty, if you will.

"A lot of people are betting for the first time and it's with us. We don't want one of those bets to punch them in the nose and for them not to come back," says Jamie Shea, head of digital sportsbook operations for DraftKings.

And by the way... "Vegas did the exact same thing," says Shea. "But instead of giving back money on bets, they kept customers loyal by offering comp rooms or meals or loyalty points. We can't give free rooms."
 

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Because "Rebates" are taxable revenue. Refunds are not. The rebate issue raged on for years in many forms here in Vegas.
 

Rx God
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Because "Rebates" are taxable revenue. Refunds are not. The rebate issue raged on for years in many forms here in Vegas.

Well nobody actually pays taxes on some monies they might win from some sports book in Costa Rica or wherever, it's not like hitting a big trifecta on Jai alai , horse racing or something similar to that were you have to do it to get paid and the Infernal Revenue " Service" is notified.
 

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Free advertising/publicity. The money that they refund is fraction of what they would have to spend if they wanted to get the same publicity via all the media outlets. Lots of sheeps in social media and lots of sheep journalists these days that care about headline/click bait than good investigative story. Something like refunding a bet will go viral amount the sheeps and its free press.
 

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99steak, has it right.it is just such good public relations to once in a while pay both sides of a bet when the result of the game is just wrong most often due to errors made by the referee/ umpire , or whatever official is present depending on what sport it is. Even a not quite A book, but still decent place sometimes pays both sides of a prop because they wrote it so poorly that it is disputable. I believe Vegas books are very rigid as a rule and won't bend a bit. Many offshores will pay a future early when it has already won like some NFL team over 8 wind and they're sitting at 9-4. Go ahead and pay it then, customer will be happy with the unexpected money you provide them and now an opportunity to blow this money you'd have to pay a month later anyway. This is likely to be what it takes to get the punter to choose your book when he re-ups. It's just good business.

Good business men are creative. A local discount furniture dealer offers deals like buy in April now and if the Red Sox pitch a no hitter in July or August , your purchase will be refunded and you get your furniture FREE ! I have no doubts about this being honored. The company could insure it with a specialty insurer like Lloyd's of London if they don't to take on the possible hit on their own.

You're average casual Sawx fan Schmuck looking for a new sofa could easily go for this kind of offer and maybe he buy
a lot more. I'm not saying people in Boston are idiots ( well perhaps (BTJ), in fact the opposite, the stupidest people in the nation live in LA


S
 

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