Caesars and RSI among 18 operators in final Arizona licensee list

In total, 10 tribal gaming licences were handed out to operators including the Hualapai Tribe powered by Golden Nugget, the Tonto Apache Tribe in association with Churchill Downs Incorporated, and the San Carlos Apache Tribe in tandem with WynnBet.

Eight sports teams or venues were also allocated licences. Among those were MLB side the Arizona Diamondbacks, which partnered with Caesars/William Hill, and the Arena Football League’s Arizona Rattlers in tandem with Rush Street Interactive (RSI). The WNBA’s Phoenix Mercury are working with Bally’s Corporation, and Phoenix Speedway has partnered with Penn National Gaming.

They join BetMGM, DraftKings and FanDuel which all announced their entrance into the Arizona Market last week.

Fantasy sports betting is already live in Arizona, and licenced operators include DraftKings, FanDuel, FFPC, Yahoo, Fantasy Sports Shark and Underdog Sports.

Read the full story on iGB North America.

Malta regulator cancels Evobet’s licence

Evobet held a B2C gaming services licence in Malta and operated bet11.com, m.bet11.com and sports.bet11.com.

However, the licence was cancelled after the MGA said Evobet breached regulation 10 of the Gaming Compliance and Enforcement Regulations.

The ruling related to regulation 9 (1), which refers to an operator failing to comply with one or more applicable obligations, whereby Evobet did not pay certain regulatory fees to the MGA. 

As such, Evobet’s licence was cancelled, effective from 16 July, with the operator no longer able to carry out any gaming operations, register new players or accept new customer deposits.

However, Evobet will be required to retain and provide all registered players with access to their accounts, as well as refund all monies standing to players in and to settle outstanding fees due to the MGA.

TopSport fined $60,000 in New South Wales over illegal gambling adverts

An investigation by Liquor & Gaming NSW found TopSport had breached section 33H (1) of the state’s Betting and Racing Act 1998, which makes it illegal to publish an advert that offers any inducement to take part, or participate frequently, in any gambling activity.

Such an offence carries a maximum penalty of $100,000.

TopSport pleaded guilty to three illegal gambling advertising offences in Downing Centre Local Court, two of which related to adverts on TopSport’s website promoting its ‘Top Up’ enhanced odds feature.

The third breach was in relation to the promotion of a weekly tipping competition on the Sporting Base website, offering TopSport bonus bets as a prize for the top tipsters.

TopSport was fined $20,000 per breach, which took place in August and September, and was also ordered to pay Liquor & Gaming NSW’s legal costs.

“The laws are there for a reason; enhanced odds and tipping competitions linked to betting accounts have the ability to induce people to open a betting account when they otherwise may be refraining from gambling, and they may encourage people to gamble more frequently,” Liquor & Gaming NSW compliance director Marcel Savary said.

“During sentencing the Magistrate noted TopSport didn’t have previous convictions for this type of offence however there was a need for specific and general deterrence.”

DraftKings to replace Scoreboard as Oregon Lottery sportsbook brand

This will see the offering operate under the DraftKings brand in the state going forward, though a timescale for this change has not yet been announced. 

In a Commission meeting held yesterday (August 26) Oregon Lottery executive director Barry Pack explained that it had discussed a potential transition from the SBTech platform that has powered Scoreboard since 2019, to the updated DraftKings solution. 

“There are a number of business benefits in terms of simplifying some of the structure and there are player benefits as the experience will be improved on the new platform,” Pack explained.

DraftKings is in the process of migrating from its previous sportsbook solution, provided by Kambi, to an updated version of the SBTech platform, following its acquisition of the supplier in December 2019. That migration is expected to be completed in the third quarter of 2021.

In response to a question from Commissioner Julie Wilcox about the potential disruption and loss of revenue from the migration, Pack said the lottery would “try and make [the process] as seamless as possible”. 

However, he added, customers would have to re-register for a DraftKings account following the change. This, he said, could see some players opt out of moving, but that the loss of those individuals’ spend would be more than offset by an improved customer experience and increased wagering options. 

Read the full story on iGB North America.

Caesars ups ownership of Horseshoe Baltimore to 76%

This means Caesars’ stake in the property has been increased to 76%, and as a result its financial performance will be included in the operator’s financial statements. 

It has not yet been revealed which joint venture partner has sold its stake. When Horseshoe Baltimore opened in 2014, it was developed with Rock Gaming – now Jack Entertainment – as the main partner.

That business and Caesars established a consortium also featuring real estate developer CVPR Gaming Holdings; STRON-MD and PRT TWO for the property, which is located near Baltimore’s M&T Bank Stadium and Oriole Park sports arenas. 

Caesars’ decision to consolidate Horseshoe Baltimore into its financial reporting comes as Maryland prepares to launch legal sports betting. 

After a statewide referendum saw voters back legal betting, HB 940 was passed by the Maryland legislature, then signed into law by Governor Larry Hogan, in May this year. 

It will allow mobile betting, as well as betting at stadiums, casinos, racetracks and smaller gaming venues, with a maximum of 60 licences to be issued. All betting will be subject to a 15% gross revenue tax. 

Bragg commences trading on Nasdaq

Shares are now trading under the ticker symbol ‘BRAG’ after Bragg earlier this week secured approval to launch on Nasdaq.

The provider filed an application to list its common shares on Nasdaq in March of this year and shortly after won the backing of shareholders for the listing.

Bragg will also continue to trade its shares on the Toronto Stock Exchange in Canada under the same ticker symbol.

“At Bragg we are successfully executing on our initiatives to grow our business and market share in the large global igaming market that is increasingly of interest to US and Canadian investors,” Bragg’s chief executive Richard Carter said.

Read the full story on iGB North America.

Esports Entertainment Group links up with NFL’s Colts

Under the multi-year agreement, Esports Entertainment will serve as the official esports tournament platform provider of the Colts.

Esports Entertainment will operate co-branded esports tournaments annually for the Colts, utilizing its Esports Gaming League platform.

In addition, Esports Entertainment will leverage player imagery within the team’s local market, as well as work with the Colts to promote the tournaments via digital marketing across social media, email, mobile, and online.

Read the full story on iGB North America.

BoyleSports scores extended deal with Wolves

The deal will run throughout the 2021-22 season and see BoyleSports remain as the club’s official betting partner at its Molineux home stadium.

BoyleSports will benefit from brand promotion across digital marketing on the club’s social channels, on LED screens inside Molineux during games and also in the official matchday programme.

In addition, BoyleSports will work with Wolves on a range of supporter-focused activations, competitions, experiences and special offers.

The bookmaker held a similar role in the 2020-21 season, but much of the campaign saw the club forced to play games behind closed doors due to the novel coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic.

However, the relaxation of Covid-19 restrictions means fans can this year once again attend matches.

“We look forward to continuing our flourishing partnership as supporters return to Molineux for what we expect to be another exciting Premier League campaign,” Wolves’ partnerships sales manager Kieron Ansell said.

“As official partner, BoyleSports will have a great presence inside the stadium on matchday while we cannot wait for our fans to interact with the range of special offers and competitions BoyleSports are launching this season.”

BoyleSports chief executive Mark Kemp added: “As an official partner, we look forward to BoyleSports betting being available on our app, online and at Molineux for the new season.

“We both have great ambitions this season, and we wish Wolves and their fans all the best of luck for a successful campaign.”

Earlier this month, BoyleSports also agreed a new two-year partnership with Premier League club Newcastle United.

Wakayama and Clairvest sign IR agreement

The agreement – which follows the Clairvest consortium’s selection as the priority holder for an IR licence – is the first such contract to be signed by a Japanese prefecture.

The agreement includes “matters concerning the cost burden” for the consortium, as well as details about the establishment of an IR company and integrity matters.

Now that the agreement has been signed, the prefecture and the consortium will jointly work on an area development plan, explaining how the IR will contribute to development and tourism in Wakayama. This plan will be submitted to the Japanese central government by the 28 April, 2022 deadline.

Local businesses are encouraged to work with the prefecture government to strengthen the bid.

If the site, which will be located in the city’s Wakanoura Bay, be selected to host one of Japan’s three integrated resorts, Clairvest will construct a 569,000 square metre facility, of which 38,000 square metres will be a gaming floor. 

The property will also include a large conference hall, taking up approximately 45,000 square metres, as well as a number of facilities such as a Japanese heritage museum, restaurants, an esports facility and an urban sports park. It will also be able to host 2,700 guests. 

Last week, a number of anonymous documents emerged in Japan, arguing that William Weidner – president of Gaming Asset Management, which is advising Clairvest – is unsuitable to be involved with the bid due to conduct during his time as president of Las Vegas Sands.

The documents were addressed to Japan Casino Regulatory Commission, Wakayama Prefecture Government, Clairvest and its Wakayama arm Clairvest Neem Ventures. However, ICE365 has confirmed that three addressees did not receive them and did not get a response from JCRC.

Weidner terms the documents “sophisticated but unsubstantiated name calling” containing nothing “that would constitute criminal activity.”

DoubleDown Interactive aims to raise $126.3m as US IPO launches

The business offered 5,263,000 in American depositary shares (ADSS) – each made up of 20 common shares – as part of the IPO, while an unnamed selling shareholder also offered 1,053,000 ADSs.

The estimated price range per ADS is $18 to $20, meaning if DoubleDown was able to sell all the ADSs as planned, it could raise as much as $126.3m.

Riley Securities acted as the sole bookrunner for the proposed offering, while CBRE and Northland Capital Markets served as co-managers.

DoubleDown had been planning for the IPO for some time, last month revealing that it had filed for the IPO on the Nasdaq exchange.

Read the full story on iGB North America.