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No Integrity Fee, But…

The NFL has long been opposed to legal, regulated sports betting but unlike the and MLB, which accepted the inevitable last year and began lobbying for their own interests the league has remained relatively silent on the issue.

But the NFL has not had its head in the sand all this time, according to Goodell, who said the organization had spent considerable time preparing for the advent of legal US sports betting.

NFL Supports ‘Common Sense’ Sports Betting Laws, Sets Out ‘Four Core Principles’ of Regulation

We have … prepared to address these changes in a thoughtful and comprehensive way, including substantial education and compliance trainings for our clubs, players, employees and partners, he wrote. These efforts include supporting commonsense legislation that protects our players, coaches and fans and maintains public confidence in our games.”

Unlike the NBA, MLB, and more recently the PGA, the NFL is not demanding a so-called “integrity fee” a percentage cut of all bets on its games but its emphasis on the protection of its content and intellectual property suggests that it may be planning to monetize its data and stats by forcing sports books to pay for them.

Federal Sports Betting Bill Proposed

Many state lawmakers have rejected the integrity fee proposed by the NBA et al, seeing it as little more than a cash grab that will hamper the new sports books and take money away from individual states. The NFL clearly feels that asking for federal approval of its “core principals” may be a more effective way to get what it wants than via state-by-state lobbying.

(R-Utah), one of the original authors of PASPA, is known to have had talks with the NFL and is planning to introduce federal sports betting legislation designed to “help protect honesty and principle in the athletic arena.

But the Supreme Court repealed PASPA because it was deemed by the justices to be a violation of states’ Tenth Amendment rights, which outlines that some states cannot be held to federal laws that other states do not have to comply with. In addition, Congress has to date not shown interest as a body in federal gaming legislation, and it s unlikely that position will change when it comes to legal sports betting.

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