Showing posts with label sports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sports. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

BigLead Sports Blog Sold to USA Today

BigLead Sports, now a property of USA Today, published the top online sports property rankings per number of unique visitors, for December 2011. Which is nice for BigLead Sports, they rank at number 6, at 19.38 million uniques. Very nice. Separately reported by the Fantasy Sports Trade Association in its most recent newsletter, is that the USA Today/Big Lead transaction was valued at $30 million. That may or not be nice. Probably nice, though, for the shareholders of BigLead, which allow them to exit.

Let's look at the comScore ranking and then discuss the valuation of the BigLead property and why or why not the valuation may be reasonable:

Top 15 Online Sports Sites (December 2011)
Unique Users (USA) (000s)
Source: www.comScore.com

1. Yahoo 53,239
2. ESPN 43,252
3. Fox Sports 37,836
4. NFL 26,286
5. Sports Illustrated 20,132
6. BigLead Sports 19,384
7. CBS Sports 18,097
8. USA Today 15,646
9. NBC Sports 14,891
10. SB Nation 9,694
11. BleacherReport 9,178
12. Sporting News 8,798
13. MLB 7,132
14. Stack Media 5,832
15. JUMPTV 4,197

So, was the $30 million price for BigLead Sports a good one? Let's take a look. This site could be described as a blog and aggregator. It has some unique content, but it also pulls in selected material from other sites, to include other owned "partner" sites. It appears to rely on an advertising model as its primary revenue driver. Given the high number of monthly unique visitors, that isn't such a bad idea.

OK, so is the price fair? The assumed valuation for BigLead is $30,000,000 / 19,384,000 or $1.54 per unique visitor. If that is now the going rate for a sports website, that might put a downward bias on the value of similar properties. If the evaluated property had significant additional revenue streams, typical of pay-to-play fantasy sports websites, then $1.54 per unique visitor would have to be augmented by a more common metric associated with gaming sites, such as annual revenue per user or a multiple of gross gaming revenue. Overall, fairly well done by BigLead Sports as they started a blog in 2006 and just under 6 years later have a $30 million exit.


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Thursday, November 18, 2010

How are the Predictions from WhatIfSports Looking Now?

I wrote a post back in September at the beginning of the NFL season relating the predictions of WhatIfSports with regard to the division winners, wild card teams and Super Bowl participants and winner. Since ten weeks have transpired, let's take a peek at how accurate WhatIfSports' predictions are appearing to be.

They claim that in the AFC the division winners would be the Jets, Ravens, Chargers and Texans, with the wild cards being Tennessee and Indianapolis. The Jets and Ravens seems like decent picks to win their divisions, but the Chargers seem to be behind the 8-ball with regard to winning the AFC West and the Houston Texans are at the bottom of their division. The prediction that New England and Pittsburgh would NOT make the playoffs in the AFC also seems off base as well as their prediction that the top 3 teams in the AFC East - New York, New England and Miami would all finish with 8-8 records. Both New York and New England already have 8 wins.

In the NFC, WhatIfSports predicted that the division winners would be Dallas, Green Bay, San Francisco and New Orleans. Of this set, Dallas is totally out and it looks tough for San Francisco. The other two teams have a good chance but have strong competition in their division races. The wild card picks, Minnesota and Carolina only have 4 wins between both teams - they're not going anywhere.

Overall, the accuracy of WhatIfSports predictions is seriously lame. If they used their typical methodologies that they use for their core business to make these preditions, I think you know all you need to know about these guys. Maybe WhatIfSports needs to be renamed WTF Sports?


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Sunday, September 12, 2010

It's NFL Kickoff Weekend, But Someone Knows the Results Now!

Yes, indeed. Although the Week 1 games are still in progress, WhatIfSports thinks they know who will make the playoffs and even win the Super Bowl. Here's the teams WhatIfSports think will go to the playoffs, win the conference championships and win the Super Bowl:

AFC East - New York Jets
AFC North - Baltimore Ravens
AFC West - San Diego Chargers
AFC South - Houston Texans
Wild Card - Tennessee Titans
Wild Card - Indianapolis Colts

NFC East - Dallas Cowboys
NFC North - Green Bay Packers
NFC West - San Francisco 49ers
NFC South - New Orleans Saints
Wild Card - Minnesota Vikings
Wild Card - Carolina Panthers

AFC Champion - San Diego Chargers
NFC Champion - Green Bay Packers

Super Bowl - Green Bay Packers

They predict the New England Patriots don't even make the playoffs. We'll see. The company is touting its simulation technology, but I'm not convinced that it is that useful. I've done posts in the past which predicted fantasy rankings, based on the premise that stating what happened last year would happen this year. Individual performances may not vary significantly, but teams' performances can vary significantly from year to year. The recent Super Bowl loser slump is a great example.

Do you think WhatIfSports is correct? Do you think the top 3 teams in the AFC East will all finish with 8-8 records? I have doubts as to the usefulness of this approach with regard to team performance.


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Monday, August 16, 2010

Horse Racing Looking to Fantasy Sports?

BloodHorse magazine in their July 24, 2010 issue had an opinion piece titled "Fantasy Sports: An Opportunity - and a Competitor." The article described the size and growth of the fantasy sports market, the typical demographic, a warning about the potential threat and the potential opportunity. I think the author pointing towards fantasy sports isn't that bad, but his findings are off.

The quote from the article takes recent information from the Fantasy Sports Trade Association's research. There are approximately 27 million Americans and approximately 3 million Canadians that play fantasy sports. That's a pretty good size group of people. With regard to the American player, he is male, 37, college-educated, and has a household income of $94,000 - a great demographic that the horse racing industry would love. As is well known by the typical horseplayer demographic, you would think you need an AARP card in order to place a bet.

Here's where the author is off the mark. The author lays out a decent overview of TVG's Fantasy Horseracing product, which allows players to create a league of horses, trainers and jockeys. He thinks that horse racing would be a great fantasy sports vehicle, which would attract fantasy sports players, who may then become horseplayers to some extent. Wrong, wrong, wrong. No chance.

Why? Super simple.

As anyone who knows fantasy sports (i.e. me) can tell you, fantasy enthusiasts are primarily FANS OF THE SPORT. If you are a fantasy baseball player, odds are you are a baseball fan, then you got into fantasy baseball. The same is true for football, basketball, NASCAR, etc., etc. Fantasy sports players play fantasy sports to get more out of the sport they enjoy. Only the most geeky would have statistics be an attractant. For those, baseball is king...and in my opinion cricket probably isn't far behind - but cricket isn't as popular in the US.

What will not happen is horse racing fantasy being a big draw and sucking in new fans like Washington DC sucking in your tax dollars. Nope. Fantasy horse racing players are horse racing fans who got into fantasy horse racing. If you're not into horse racing, you're not going to play fantasy horse racing. This is where the author is way off.

The author is correct that the demographic would be very attractive to horse racing. They are younger, affluent and intelligent - exactly the kind of new handicappers the industry needs. I've got an idea of how you get these folks, but it's not this way. More on that in a future post.


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Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Would This Be an Indicator of the Most Accurate Fantasy Football Prognosticator?

Over the last couple of years, I've done a few posts regarding fantasy football projections, which you can see here. here. here and here. I have a pretty strong bias that fantasy football magazines aren't significantly more accurate than just predicting what happened last year would happen this year (at least for quarterbacks). Do I buy fantasy football magazines? Of course! Hey, it's fantasy football season! Now I do recognize that I am paying for historical information and a nice paper-based reference. I am not paying $7.95 for rare insight. Nowadays you can get pretty good fantasy info for free.

With regard to accuracy, I've been thinking of what indicator could be a good "tell" that the magazine or publisher might have more on the ball than the competition. Yes, being accurate in every player and position is the objective, but if you could choose just one position and if that accuracy was good, could it be an indicator? I've got an idea here that I will share and you can determine if it has any merit.

I'm thinking that the fantasy prognosticator that does the best with regard to projecting kickers is likely to be accurate with the other positions as well. The reason I say this is that the kicker generally participates in every scoring drive, offensive or defensive. Of course, kickers on good offensive teams will likely score more points, but would they score the most kicker points? Maybe not.

For example, if Kicker 1 on a good team and Kicker 2 on a not so good team are playing each other this week. Team 1 beats Team 2 28-16. Kicker 1 scores 4 extra points or 4 points. Kicker 2 gets 3 field goals and 1 extra point or 10 points. See? Kicker 2 generates more fantasy points.

If a prognosticator gets kicker rankings (and maybe even point projections) correct, they are likely to get other position rankings correct. If they can determine that a kicker is going to get a good number of field goal opportunities but not extra points, that will help paint the picture with regard to quarterback, receiver and running back stats for that team as well. Get the kickers right, and the other positions will follow suit.

That's what I am going to look at this year. I am going to do a follow-up post to lay out a few fantasy football magazines and their Top 15 kickers. We'll see how accurate they are.


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Friday, October 30, 2009

Lack of Parity in NFL Increases Sportsbook Risk

The Chicago Sun-Times has a nice article on the lack of parity in this NFL season. The NFL has been touting the "any given Sunday" line for years, stating that any week any team can beat any other team. This year, that tagline has been shown to be completely inaccurate. Do you really think the St. Louis Rams or the Oakland Raiders have a snowball's chance in hell of beating the New England Patriots, Minnesota Vikings, Pittsburgh Steelers or Indianapolis Colts? Nope.

Now TV ratings are not suffering, but there has been some impact with regard to attendance at the home stadiums of the poor teams. The lack of on-site attendance will have a future impact with regard to finances of the poorer teams as although there is sharing of television revenue, the teams use attendance revenue to assist with singing bonuses, etc. So, in this case the rich get richer and the poor get poorer.

Sportsbooks also suffer from lack of parity. That's due to the particulars of spread betting. Bettors put up $110 to win $100. So, for example if the Raiders and Chiefs were playing, with the Chiefs favored by 3 points, if you bet the Chiefs, they would have to beat the Raiders by more than 3 points in order to win the bet. If they won by just 3 points, the bet would be returned and if they won by less than 3 points (or lost the game outright), you would lose.

The sportsbook makes money by taking $110 from bettors on both the Raiders and Chiefs. They take in $220, pay the winner their $110 plus the winnings of $100, and the sportsbook keeps $10, or about a 4.5% profit.

This system works to ensure the sportsbook makes money if you can get equal bets on both sides - in the example equal bets on both the Raiders and Chiefs. Point spreads are set to help ensure this occurs. When the two teams are evenly matched, the spread is low, with the converse when they are unevenly matched. In theory, you can set the spread large enough to attract equal action. In practice, that doesn't always happen.

This is the problem with the current lack of parity in the NFL. If some teams are just horrible, they are just not going to attract betting interest, unless the spreads are set to a dangerous level. Usually, a very high spread may be 13 points. With the current disparity, a game between between a top team and a bottom team might have to have a spread of 20 points or more to attract ANY betting interest on the poor team. So far, favorites are winning and underdogs (particularly of the poorer teams) aren't winning (even against the spread). If all the betting action is on the favorites and the favorites win, there aren't losing bets on the underdogs to finance paying the winners. That means the sportsbook has to pay out of their pocket, which means the sportsbook actually loses money.

Parity in the NFL isn't just good for the fans - it's good for the sportsbooks too.


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Thursday, August 20, 2009

Early 2010 Super Bowl Odds Posted

For those of you looking for pre-season guesses as to who will win Super Bowl XLIV in January 2010, SBR Global Sportsbook has posted early odds. They are:

Arizona 30/1
Atlanta 23/1
Baltimore 23/1
Buffalo 50/1
Carolina 23/1
Chicago 18/1
Cincinnati 63/1
Cleveland 75/1
Dallas 18/1
Denver 63/1
Detroit 150/1
Green Bay 30/1
Houston 40/1
Indianapolis 12/1
Jacksonville 40/1
Kansas City 63/1
Miami 50/1
Minnesota 14/1 (before Brett Favre's addition)
New England 4.5/1
New Orleans 18/1
New York (N) 11/1
New York (A) 40/1
Oakland 80/1
Philadelphia 10/1 (before Michael Vick's addition)
Pittsburgh 8.5/1
San Diego 8.5/1
San Francisco 63/1
Seattle 50/1
St. Louis 100/1
Tampa Bay 41/1
Tennessee 18/1
Washington 40/1

New England, Pittsburgh and San Diego are the early favorites, which make sense since Tom Brady is back for New England, Pittsburgh is the defending champion and LT and Shawne Merriman are back for San Diego. To me, Green Bay at 30/1 and Arizona at 30/1 seem like good bangs for the buck, but the oddsmakers aren't dumb.

The odds on both Minnesota and Philadelphia are likely to drop with the adds of Brett Favre and Michael Vick (aka Ron Mexico), respectively. Given that Detroit didn't win a game last year, I'm not so sure that 150/1 odds are high enough...perhaps 1000/1?


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Saturday, April 11, 2009

Delaware Sports Betting Bill Progressing

The legislation to authorize sports betting in Delaware passed a legislative hurdle this week. The Delaware House Gaming and Parimutuels Committee released the bill from their committee this week. Certain gaming interests, the NCAA, NFL and anti-gambling interests had been against expanding sports gambling, but the State's need for revenue to relieve a projected shortfall outweighed the special interests' lobbying. More detail on the bill can be found in the Forbes.com article.

The bill keeps the number of casinos at three, but increases the tax rate on slot revenue and institutes a $4.5M sports betting license fee, split among the three casinos. I understand the need for revenue, but increases in gaming taxes don't always translate to increased revenue. In addition, it is important that the casinos are able to generate a profit as well. They are the entities that are taking the business risk.

The sports betting license fee is a bit steep. Assuming the win % on sports betting is 5%, the casinos would have to generate $90M in wagers just to cover the license fee. That doesn't take into their costs of betting lines, sports book property, plant and equipment, advertising and labor costs. The sports bets provided had better be attractive in order to generate sufficient wagering interest. If Delaware just sticks to a sports lottery, requiring a parlay of two or more bets, that offering alone may not be sufficient.

Delaware needs to offer the full spectrum of sports wagers, to include the new pari-mutuel fantasy sports wagers. Fantasy sports is big business, and the three Delaware casinos are racetracks as well, very familiar with pari-mutuel wagering. Also, these tracks already have the proper pari-mutuel equipment in place, just requiring minor software modification to allow pari-mutuel fantasy sports wagers. With almost 30M fantasy sports players in the US, there's a large potential market. Since the population base within a 90 minute drive from Delaware is approximately 35M, there may be as many as 3.5M fantasy sports players as an addressable market by Delaware casinos.

With the pari-mutuel concept, the takeout is much higher than that for parlay bets or straight bets. Pari-mutuel takeout percentages are often 18% or higher. Assuming just a 15% takeout,
only $30M in pari-mutuel fantasy sports wagers would be required to generate the $4.5M to cover the annual license fee. Since the significant portion of the pari-mutuel infrastructure is already in place, this concept could be an easy and profitable portion of the overall sports betting offering.

To learn more about pari-mutuel fantasy sports wagering, see the YouGaming.com website.


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Monday, March 23, 2009

New Jersey to Legally Challenge PASPA

In 1992, Congress passed the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act (PASPA). It should have been called the Nevada Legalized Sports Betting and Illegal Sports Betting Monopoly Act. The law grandfathers four states that had some kind of legal sports betting to be able to allow sports betting, but restrict all others from having legalized sports betting. The four grandfathered states are: Nevada, Oregon, Montana and Delaware. Nevada, is by far the state with the largest amount of legal sports betting. Note that illegal sports betting wasn't hampered by this law. All the law did for 46 states was ensure the "Sopranos" didn't have any legitimate competition. How sweet of Congress to take care of the illegal bookies like that!

Congress knew the law was weak and had iffy Constitutional strength. The Department of Justice (DOJ) actually opposed this law on the grounds that it violated states rights. The reference to the DOJ is here. In addition, the DOJ highlighted the issue that the law allowed professional and amateur sports organizations to bring civil injunctions against states. Professor I. Nelson Rose in his article on PASPA mentions that the US Supreme Court has ruled that states can not be sued without their consent. Professor Rose makes the point that if a state can't be sued by an Indian tribe, what real chance would a sports organization like the NCAA have in getting their case allowed?

The law had never been officially challenged - until now. With state governments scrambling for cash, gambling is looking good. As gambling becomes more prevalent, competition for gaming dollars is heating up. Delaware, as mentioned in a previous post, is considering exercising its rights under PASPA and legalizing a sports betting game. This is causing concern among neighboring states which aren't allowed by PASPA to follow suit.

A New Jersey group comprised of gaming and racing interests filed suit challenging the constitutionality of PASPA in US District Court. The link to the Reuters article is here. It likely won't be decided for quite a few months, but the process is started. Will the DOJ fight the suit even though they are on record questioning the law's violation of states' rights?

I think PASPA should be declared unconstitutional and tossed. Then each state can decide if it wants to allow sports betting and get that betting that is currently unregulated going to bookies become above board, regulated and taxed. Everyone wins...except those with losing bets. Even if PASPA was declared invalid, that would not allow interstate sports betting. That would still be in violation of the Wire Act. This would allow intrastate sports betting. So, the betting books and pools would have to be contained fully within the state, similar to how sports betting in Nevada operates now.

If PASPA is declared invalid, it should increase the value of YouGaming's patents. YouGaming could offer very attractive games to these new markets. Fantasy sports is still growing and pari-mutuel wagering offers a higher intrinsic takeout compared to wagering typical of typical sports wagering.


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Monday, March 16, 2009

What's the Best Betting Value in the NCAA Tournament?

So, who will win the 2009 NCAA men's basketball tournament? I haven't a clue, but it will be one of 65 teams. I know, that's a great insight - you can thank me later. Looking at the initial odds posted by the Las Vegas Hilton (referenced in a story in the Las Vegas Sun), there may be some teams that based on the odds relative to their seeding, might be worth a gamble.

I took a look at the odds posted for the various teams and mapped them to their seeding. I averaged out the odds per seed level and looked for teams that the posted odds were significantly above the average. Before I give you the possible values, here's the average odds per seed level:

Seed Avg Odds
  1. 5.75
  2. 14.25
  3. 28.75
  4. 47.5
  5. 71.25
  6. 56.25
  7. 100
  8. 175
  9. 250
  10. 200
  11. 475
  12. 175
  13. 400
  14. 200
  15. 200
  16. 200
You can see that there is a natural trend that the lower the seed, the higher the odds, except for the lowest seeds. The LV Hilton sportsbook has most of the teams with discrete odds, with a field entry for everyone else. The field entry for this tournament consists of all 14-16 seeds, plus Northern Iowa and Akron. I don't think the field entry is a value bet, even though you get a chance on 14 teams.

Notice that the 5, 9 and 11 seeds on average pay more than the next lower seeds. We'll look there and also look at other seed levels to determine if a team or two is being offered at a significant differential to the average odds for the seed level.

If we set a level of differential to identify those teams whose odds are 75% higher than the average odds of their seed level, here's what we get:

4/Xavier - Odds 100:1/Seed Avg Odds 47.5:1
6/Marquette - Odds 100:1/Seed Avg Odds 56.25:1
9/Siena - Odds 500:1/Seed Avg Odds 250:1
11/Utah St - Odds 1,000:1/Seed Avg Odds 475:1
13/Cleveland St - Odds 1,000:1/Seed Avg Odds 400:1

If we lower the value threshold to 40% higher than the average odds of their seed level, these other teams appear:

5/Utah - Odds 100:1/Seed Avg Odds 71.25:1
5/Illinois - Odds 100:1/Seed Avg Odds 71.25:1
8/BYU - Odds 300:1/Seed Avg Odds 175:1
10/Minnesota - Odds 300:1/Seed Avg Odds 200:1
12/W. Kentucky - Odds 300:1/Seed Avg Odds 175:1

This will be interesting to see if any of these make a Cinderella run, or, if the oddsmakers are right, they make an earlier exit than expected.


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Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Fantasy Sports Prognosticators Not So Accurate

The 2008 NFL regular season is now over, which also means that for the most part the fantasy football season is over. In a previous post, I mentioned that it would be nice to have some measure of accuracy of player projections.

Now this is not by any means determinative, but I took a few fantasy football magazines I had for this year, and compared their QB projected rankings to how they actually turned out. The stats were based on total performance (passing and rushing), not just TDs. The league I was in counted passing TDs for 3 pts instead of 6 pts, so QBs that maybe didn't pass as well but got some stats rushing may show up higher in this list than the rankings your league has. The ranking lists of the magazines also were based on a performance model, not just TDs, to keep the comparison consistent.

To be fair to the magazines, since I used as my sample what I had on hand, I omitted the actual names of the magazines and list them as A, B and C. The table below shows the fantasy QB rankings at the end of this year's regular season, along with the projected rankings from the 3 fantasy football magazines. Also, I averaged the ranking error for the 3 magazines under the "Variance" column.

Where the QB was not included (ranked too low) in a particular magazine's rankings, I insert an "N/A" and assume a ranking of 50. Magazine A had a longer list of QB rankings compared to magazines B and C.

Here's the results (table is at the end of the post):

  • Correct within 5 or less spots - 10 (31%)
  • Correct within 10 or less spots - 13 (40%)
  • Incorrect by 11 or more spots - 19 (59%)
  • Average ranking error - 15 spots
What is striking is how inaccurate the various fantasy magazines are with their rankings. It is interesting that these magazines, supposedly independent, are very similar with regard to their rankings. They by and large all predict the same performance. So what is the real difference between these various magazines?

On a whim, I wanted to see if the final QB stats ranking for the 2007 season was used, as is, for the 2008 QB stats ranking, how that would measure. For those QBs that ended up ranking too low for measurement in the final 2008 regular season stats, I assumed a ranking of 65. No changes were made to the 2008 projected rankings based on off-season changes. I took the final 2007 regular season rankings verbatim. In other words, Cleo Lemon was projected 25th, Josh McCown was projected 31st, etc. The results are:

  • Correct within 5 or less spots - 10 (31%)
  • Correct within 10 or less spots - 15 (46%)
  • Incorrect by 11 or more spots - 17 (53%)
  • Average ranking error - 17 spots
Pretty much the same. So, at least compared to the magazines considered, you could have simply taken last year's QB stats rankings as your cheat sheet and likely not done any worse. I didn't do the work, but from a cursory glance, taking the 2007 rankings and simply swapping QBs that took over from the previous year's starter, you likely would have been more accurate than the fantasy football magazines (at least the ones evaluated).

I did not look at the other positions, so it is possible QBs have a greater variation but that would have to be verified and I'll leave that to others to research. As of now, here's some evidence that fantasy football magazine projections (crafted by "experts") are not statistically more accurate than just saying what happened last year would happen this year.






































#QB NameMag AMag BMag CVariance
1Drew Brees5443
2Aaron Rodgers16191916
3Jay Cutler8885
4Philip Rivers18131311
5Kurt Warner37363631
6Peyton Manning2224
7Matt Cassel64N/AN/A48
8Donovan McNabb7662
9Tyler ThigpenN/AN/AN/A41
10David Garrard915153
11Chad Pennington27303018
12Tony Romo4339
13Eli Manning1312121
14Brett FavreN/AN/A4534
15Matt RyanN/A343424
16Jason Campbell1725246
17Kyle Orton31383919
18Joe Flacco33373818
19Ben Roethlisberger67712
20Jake Delhomme2114144
21Matt Schaub1217176
22Jeff Garcia2223231
23Trent Edwards2428284
24Kerry Collins50N/AN/A26
25Shaun Hill38404014
26JaMarcus Russell2622223
27Marc Bulger15111015
28Ryan Fitzpatrick66N/AN/A27
29Gus Frerotte45N/AN/A19
30Seneca Wallace53N/AN/A21
31Derek Anderson11101120
32Dan OrlovskyN/AN/AN/A18



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Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Question: How Do You Spell Failure? Answer: Montana Sports Action

The NFL regular season is over, and so is the first NFL season for Montana Sports Action. The weekly handle is shown in the chart above. It doesn't look very pretty. Problems with this game have been discussed in previous posts. You can read those posts here and here.

For the entire season, Montana Sports Action didn't even generate $100,000 in handle. The estimate, based on prize amounts, is approximately $87,510. If you read the hype regarding the revenue potential of this game, it should have been generating $87 thousand per week in wagers. Not even close. The results are so poor, that it is likely that the total amount held back for horse racing, the lottery and the retailers wasn't even enough to offset the costs of the fantasy sports statistics feed. However the cost of the statistics feed can not be covered by the fees to the retailers, or by the fees given to the Board of Horse Racing, so the network operator (Lottery) has to cover an approximate $20,000 charge with their gross revenue of about $5,250.

There is nothing positive with these results. Even the trend is in the wrong direction. If handle was low, but steadily increasing, you could make the claim that the future looks brighter. Not with Montana Sports Action. The trend is downward, with lower handle as the season progressed.

The total revenue amounts to the various entities after paying prizes are approximately:

Montana Board of Horse Racing (MBOHR) - $14,000
Montana Lottery - $5,250
Retailers - $3,500

Assuming 150 retailers, each one generated on average a whopping $23 in commissions - $1.37 per week.

As stated in a previous post, probably only the statistics supplier made money on this game.

On a related topic discussed in a previous post, if this game is truly a lottery game, and not a pari-mutuel game, as the Lottery seems to be moving their positioning toward, why pay MBOHR any money? If the game is a lottery game, that game would be outside the purview of HB 616; therefore no need to pay MBOHR. Quoting Forrest Gump, "stupid is as stupid does."

Keeping with the topic of stupidity, the Montana Lottery is looking to launch a similar game for the NASCAR racing season. Recent research from the Fantasy Sports Trade Association estimated that there were about 4 times as many fantasy NFL participants as fantasy NASCAR participants. Given the poor results of the NFL game, which by far is the most popular fantasy sport, it is fair to estimate that the NASCAR game will generate about 1/4 the handle. Even Forrest Gump would be scratching his head at that.

Given this assumption, and the assumption that the Montana Lottery or their vendor partner isn't bright enough to make sufficient changes to the core game, a similar handle chart is expected. Some initial interest, realization that the game is poor, and a steady gradual decline in handle. Albert Einstein defined insanity as doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.

There are rumors of legislation that will be proposed in the new year to put an end to this insanity. Let's see if the Montana Legislature has more sense than the Montana Lottery and the Montana Board of Horse Racing. Time will tell.


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Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Delaware Looking To Parlay With Sports Betting

When the Delaware Legislature convenes next month, figuring out something to help their racinos counter increased gambling offerings from Pennsylvania and Maryland will be on their list of "to do" items.

How do you counter gambling? MORE GAMBLING! As Sarah Palin might say, "you didn't see that one coming, you betcha!"

Delaware is one of four states that is grandfathered under the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act to legally offer sports gambling. If bigger states offer more slot machines to keep their gambling citizens within state borders, how does a small state like Delaware compete? Offering something Pennsylvania and Maryland can't is probably a good idea. The Forbes.com link to the Associated Press article has more detail on the subject.

The outgoing governor is against the idea, but who cares? She's leaving so who gives a hoot about what she thinks? The incoming governor is facing a revenue shortfall to the tune of about 500 million dollars, and the increased gaming competition from nearby states isn't going to help. He could opt for the Beatles' "Taxman" approach, but that won't be too popular. But adding more gambling? A win-win! (except for the people that lose money gambling) The choice is, do you let those gamblers lose money in someone else's state, or do you want them to lose money in Delaware? If you're Delaware, that's a no brainer.

If Delaware adds sports gambling products that are popular and profitable, Delaware could totally counter what her neighboring states are doing. To those that are scratching their heads, yes, you can offer a sports betting product that loses money. Check out my recent posts regarding Montana Sports Action.


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Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Montana Sports Action: Pie In The Sky From The Big Sky

Montana Sports Action (MSA), the fantasy sports wagering game instituted by the Montana Lottery, has been in operation for three months. There is enough data to perform some analysis.

MSA allegedly is an attempt to implement a fantasy sports wagering game in accordance with Montana HB 616, which authorized pari-mutuel wagers on fantasy sports. A previous post discussed the potential regulatory issues with MSA.

This new wagering game was predicted to deliver big revenue. During the legislative process in 2007, the Governor's Office of Budget and Program Planning estimated annual wagers of approximately $12 million ($11,985,600 according to the documents). More recently, an article by Online Casino Advisory.com quoted the Montana Lottery Director as expecting "the game to produce between three and five million dollars annually." That may not be the case as published results from the MSA website show.

At the top of the post is a chart showing the amount of wagers per week so far this NFL season for MSA. You are reading it correctly. After 12 weeks, the game that was supposed to generate millions in wagers has barely topped $65 thousand dollars total, with the highest weekly handle a paltry $6,800. You would think that the Montana Lottery and its vendor could figure out how to make a popular GAMBLING game. Obviously not. Don't think that new sports like NASCAR and golf will help these folks either. Fantasy football is the largest of the fantasy sports by a good margin. These other sports are very likely to make LESS than this. Montana Sports Action needs to be renamed More Suckers Anyone.

So, how is this "plethora" of cash broken out? By law, any game that is operated under the authority of HB 616 needs the following revenue split:
  • 74% - Winning Bettors
  • 16% - Montana Board of Horse Racing
  • 6% - Network Operator (Montana Lottery)
  • 4% - Retail Outlets
So, after 12 weeks, $48,753 has gone to the winning bettors, $10,541 to the Montana Board of Horse Racing, $3,953 to the Montana Lottery and $2,635 to the retail outlets. Who is making money? Let's start with the retailers and work our way up.

There are about 150 of the retailers, who had to pay $75 for a license fee to offer Montana Sports Action. In return, they get 4% of the fantasy sports wagers as a commission. To break even on that investment, the retailers will need to sell $1,875 worth of fantasy sports wagers. Assuming each of the retailers sold an equal amount (unlikely), after 2/3 of the NFL season, each one on average has sold only $440. Remember, fantasy football is the most popular of the fantasy sports. Other sports should generate far LESS revenue.

It gets better (if you have a warped sense of humor). Assuming that the betting terminal consumes 150 watts of power, is on for 12 hours a day, and electricity costs 10 cents per kilowatt hour, the terminal will cost the retailer $5.40 per month in electricity. The average retailer earns a whopping $5.84 in MSA commissions. So, each retailer earns enough to cover the electricity costs plus turn a monthly profit of 44 cents. Wow. But remember, that is only if the retailer is performing at the retailer average. Those that are underperforming likely aren't generating enough in MSA betting to even cover the cost of electricity for the betting terminal.

Retailers? NOT making money on Montana Sports Action.

The Montana Lottery is acting as the network operator for the game. So far, they have pulled in just under $4,000 in MSA revenue. To put on the game, they need marketing labor to push the terminals on the retailers, put up the website, etc. But, let's assume all that costs zero. They still need a statistics feed to run the game. Based on the typical rates for these kind of statistics feeds for fantasy sports games, a ballpark assumption is that the cost for fantasy stats for the NFL season would be around $20,000.

Montana Lottery? NOT making money on Montana Sports Action.
Stats Supplier? MAKING money on Montana Sports Action.

The Montana Board of Horse Racing was hoping for this big revenue to keep the horse racing industry alive in the state. To date, they've pulled in approximately $11,250 in retailer license fees and $10,500 in MSA wager revenue, totaling $21,750. Unless jockey insurance drops dramatically and horsemen like race purses around $100, I don't think they are going to get the money they need.

Montana Board of Horse Racing? NOT making money on Montana Sports Action.

So, of all the entities involved in a GAMBLING game, only the stats supplier seems to have a valid profit on Montana Sports Action.

But what if the Montana Lottery's motivation was not really to push the fantasy sports game but really to push lottery ticket sales? We'll examine that possibility in an upcoming post.


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Saturday, November 8, 2008

Montana Lottery Fantasy Sports Betting In Trouble?

In 2007, the State of Montana passed House Bill 616 (HB 616) which authorized pari-mutuel wagering on fantasy sports. On August 31, 2008, the Montana Lottery began operating a fantasy sports wagering game (Montana Sports Action) under an inter-agency agreeement with the Montana Board of Horse Racing. If you're thinking that it is a little strange that a lottery would be running a pari-mutuel game for an agency well entwined with pari-mutuel wagering, you're not alone.

On September 12th, the Economic Affairs Interim Committee of the Montana Legislature discussed the implementation of HB 616. As a result of that discussion, they requested a formal audit of the Board of Horse Racing. The key excerpt from that request is below:

The Economic Affairs Interim Committee respectfully requests an audit of the Board of Horseracing and its implementation in 2008 of statutes related to fantasy sports gambling in Title 23, chapter 4. Specifically, the Committee is concerned that the approach taken by the Board of Horseracing in its rules and the use of an intra-agency agreement with the Montana Lottery Commission may run counter to the intent of House Bill 616, which authorized fantasy sports gambling in Montana to be conducted by a “pari-mutuel facility licensed by the Board of Horseracing.”

There has been some back and forth between the Lottery and the Legislature on this, with the request for an audit being the latest salvo. This is interesting enough but the game, Montana Sports Action, isn't generating the level of wagering as was predicted during the deliberation of HB 616. In addition, there is the underlying issue of whether the Montana Lottery has the statutory authority to offer this kind of game at all.

Montana Code 23-7-102 states:

Purpose

  • (1) The purpose of this chapter is to allow lottery games in which the player purchases from the state, through the administrators of the state lottery, a chance to win a prize. This chapter does not allow and may not be construed to allow any game in which a player competes against or plays with any other person, including a person employed by an establishment in which a lottery game may be played.
  • (2) The administration and construction of this chapter must comply with Article III, section 9, of the Montana constitution, which mandates that all forms of gambling are prohibited unless authorized by acts of the legislature or by the people through initiative or referendum. Therefore, this chapter must be strictly construed to allow only those games that are within the scope of this section and within the definition of "lottery game".
  • (3) The state lottery may not: (a) operate a slot machine or carry on any form of gambling prohibited by the laws of this state; or (b) carry on any form of gambling permitted by the laws of this state but which is not a lottery game within the scope of this section and within the definition of "lottery game".

Montana Code 23-7-103 (4)(a) states:

  • A "Lottery game" means any procedure, including any online or other procedure using a machine or electronic device, by which one or more prizes are distributed among persons who have paid for a chance to win a prize and includes but is not limited to weekly (or other, longer time period) winner games, instant winner games, daily numbers games, and sports pool games.

The key here is the meaning of chance. Generally, chance is viewed with regard to lottery and other numbers games in the spirit of pure chance, randomness and equal probability, such as the odds of a coin flip, roll of a die or lottery numbers. In a game conducive to pari-mutuel wagering, although each contestant in the field has a non-zero probability of prevailing, it cannot be said that each contestant has an equal chance of prevailing.

This difference is important and tends to question the ability of a fantasy sports game to be viewed as a lottery game, where the wagering public has the ability to place bets on players with unequal chances of winning. For example, it is not realistic to assert that a quarterback that is on injured reserve or on a bye week would have an equal chance of having the best statistics for the week compared with quarterbacks taking the field. The case of chance would be stronger if the only option of betting was a random "quick pick," where the wagering system randomly selected the wager.

According to 23-7-102 (2), the chapter must be strictly construed to allow only those games that are within the scope of this section and within the definition of "lottery game".

Assuming the meaning of chance is what likely was intended when the Montana Lottery was authorized in 1985 (pure chance), if the Montana Lottery is claiming that Montana Sports Action is a pari-mutuel game, how does that align with the statutory restriction of the Montana Lottery to only offer certain games of chance (pure chance)? As any horse handicapper can tell you, horse racing (pari-mutuel wagering in the USA) isn't a game of pure chance.

Neither is fantasy sports.

When the Lottery came to the Board of Horse Racing in May 2008 and offered to implement a pari-mutuel fantasy sports wagering game, you would think they had to be aware of the restrictions they were under with regard to games eligible to be offered?

Montana Code Section 23-4-301 8(a) states that it is unlawful to conduct pool selling or bookmaking or to wager on a fantasy sports league other than by the parimutuel system and by being physically present at the licensed parimutuel facility.

By observing the evolution of the documents from the Montana Lottery regarding this game, the phrase "pari-mutuel" is dropping out of sight. The June 2008 Montana Sports Action "How To Play" document had 3 mentions of the term "pari-mutuel." The July 2008 Montana Sports Action "How To Play" document had no mentions of the term. Also, an August Wall Street Journal article reporting on Montana Sports Action referred to the game as a "fantasy football lottery game." That article was also mentioned in the same terminology on the Montana Sports Action website.

If the Montana Lottery is claiming that Montana Sports Action is a lottery game, how does that align with the prohibition of 23-4-301 8(a)? Why the change? Hard to say with certainty. Could it have something to do with the Legislature questioning the authority of the Lottery to operate a pari-mutuel fantasy sports wagering game?

It seems that the Montana Lottery might be blowing hot and cold on the same set of facts. That may work temporarily, or with audiences with short memories, but possibly not with audiences that are focused on the issue and have a strong bias toward proper implementation of statutes, like the Legislature.

What if the audit finds that the Montana Lottery is not allowed by statute to offer fantasy sports wagering? Would that mean that any fantasy sports wagers made with the Montana Lottery were illegal and void, and that all wagers need to be refunded? Not sure how any finding of this kind, if ever pursued, would turn out, but it would indeed be interesting to watch.

In a future post, we'll examine the financial performance of the game compared to estimates and attempt to determine who (if anyone) is making money with Montana Sports Action.


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Saturday, October 25, 2008

Gambling Analyst Crunches Numbers To Cast Doubt On NBA Donaghy Claims

On October 2nd, NBA Commissioner David Stern had a press conference to discuss the Pedowitz Report, which supports the assertion from the NBA that referee Tim Donaghy was the only referee gambling on games, he did not affect the outcome of games and he acted alone.

Well, affecting the outcome of games, Mr. Stern was likely referring only to the official scoreboard outcome, not the gambling outcome. If a referee doesn't do anything that has one team win that shouldn't (e.g. the "Tuck Rule" NFL playoff game), but does do things that impact the point spread result, I suppose you could claim that the referee didn't affect the outcome as the actual winner of the game didn't change. Gamblers, however, may not see things the same way.

RJ Bell of pregame.com did some analysis and found out some very interesting information. Here's a quote from his post:

"The first 15 games of the 2006-07 refereed by Tim Donaghy that had big enough betting to move the point spread by at least 1.5 points were UNDEFEATED against Las Vegas - meaning that the big-money gamblers won 15 of 15 times on his games. The odds of that happening randomly are 32,768 to 1."

For those not mathematically inclined, how did Mr. Bell come up with those odds? In spread betting, the theory is that the spread will be such that equal betting will occur on both teams. If that occurs, the assumption is that each team would have a 50% chance of prevailing, even if in real life one team may be much better than the other. The point spread tends to provide a positive handicap to the perceived weaker team. So, if each team has a 50% chance, then it is similar to a coin flip.

What are the odds of heads coming up on a single coin flip? 50% or 1/2. How about heads coming up on three straight coin flips? The probability is P = 1/2 * 1/2 * 1/2 or 1/8 or 1 out of 8. Another way to say this is that the odds of three straight heads is 8 to 1.

What Mr. Bell discovered is that for those 15 games refereed by Tim Donaghy that had such heavy betting on one of the teams, such that the spread actually had to be shifted by at least 1.5 points, the big-money gamblers were on the right side of the wager every single time. Think of it as you knowing heads will come up 15 straight times. What are the odds of that? P = 1/2 to the 15th power or 1/32,768. The odds of this are 32,768 to 1. The NBA Commissioner states that referees didn't impact the outcomes of games. That is not the same thing as not having an impact of any kind.

Tim Donaghy also made calls to another referee in this time period. RJ Bell looked into that and found 10 games refereed by that person had heavy betting on one of the teams such that the spread had to be shifted by at least 2 points. The big-money gamblers were on the right side of those wagers every time. The odds of that happening were P = 1/2 to the 10th power, or 1,024 to 1.

You really think that these gambling outcomes were random? What are the odds that 15 games by one referee went one way and 10 games by another referee went one way (in favor of the heavy betting action)? P = 1/32,768 * 1/1,024 or 33,554,432 to 1. What actually happened only had a 1 in 33 MILLION chance of happening randomly. Hmmm...you know what I think? I don't think this was random chance. Do you?


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Saturday, April 26, 2008

The Horse Racetrack Industry Analyzed Using Porter's Five Forces Model


Introduction

Professor Michael Porter of Harvard first postulated the Five Forces Model to help explain the influences that shape industry competitiveness. The diagram above depicts the forces and their source. The entities that can impact an industry participant are:

Suppliers
Buyers
New Entrants
Substitutes
Competitors

Others analyzing the Porter model identify that entities such as complementers and governments are missing. In this exercise, complementers will be discussed along with suppliers. Governments, particularly in any wagering business, need to be considered.

We’ll study the US horse racing industry viewed from the perspective of race track operators (tracks). Each entity will be examined to determine the extent of the entity’s leverage upon on the tracks. The objective of the analysis will be to assist the tracks in positioning. The concept of positioning is the key point of Porter.

Suppliers and Complementers

Suppliers provide the inputs which the firm uses to create its product or service. In horse racing the key input is, of course, horses, provided by breeders (horsemen). The majority of horses used in US horse racing are Thoroughbreds and Standardbreds. Other horses used include Quarter Horses, Arabians and Palominos.

The power of horsemen is lessened to the extent that:

§ horses of sufficient quality are plentiful;
§ tracks can offer wagering on the races of other tracks; and,
§ tracks have additional revenue streams, such as slot machines.

The power of horsemen is increased to the extent that:

§ horsemen exercise their right under law (Interstate Horseracing Act of 1978) to restrict the ability of tracks to offer wagering of races across state lines;
§ tracks providing economically viable purses are plentiful and accessible; and,
§ horsemen have the ability to forwardly integrate into the track business.

Typical complementers to the tracks are the off-track betting (OTB) establishments, Advance Deposit Wagering (ADW) providers and race information services such as Equibase. With regard to OTBs and ADWs, these entities can also be viewed as competitors, particularly if they cannibalize patrons that would ordinarily travel to the track to wager.

Buyers (Customers)

Buyers are the wagering customers of horse racing. Horse racing enthusiasts attempt to analyze various factors in an attempt to predict the winning horses. Handicapping allows skilled players the ability to increase their chances of selecting the winning horse. Unlike other gambling activities like lotteries, slot machines and craps, there is an element of skill in predicting the outcome of a horse race. That cerebral activity is an attractant and a detractor from horse race wagering, depending upon the customer preference.

The power of buyers is increased to the extent that:

§ buyers are large or few in number or purchase (wager) in large quantities;
§ buyers wagers are a significant portion of the tracks selling revenue; and,
§ tracks provide a standardized offering such that buyers can find alternative tracks and switch at low or no cost.

Pari-mutuel wagers, either on- or off-track, are the key driver of track revenue. No wagers, no need for tracks or horses. Some tracks have incorporated slot machines and have become racinos, but the horse race wagering remains the lifeblood of the industry.

The amendment in 2000 of the Interstate Horse Racing Act of 1978 permitted betting on horse racing over the internet. This spawned the emergence of ADWs. ADWs generally offer wagering on many racetracks, both in the US and internationally, allowing buyers the choice of alternative tracks at zero cost of switching.

New Entrants

If an industry is lucrative and the entry barriers are low new entrants may enter, increasing the level of competition. For this industry, new entrants can include other tracks, off-track betting (OTB) facilities and ADWs.

Substantial barriers to entry exist with regard to creating a new track. There are significant capital outlays as well as various governmental land use and gaming regulatory permissions required. Depending on the jurisdiction, referendums may be required as well.

Tracks have the following revenue streams common among them: on-track wagering, off-track simulcast wagering on other tracks’ racing, parking, admission and concessions. For those with approvals, slot and table casino game revenues are also available.

Tracks have several revenue streams and high barriers to entry. They seem to be in a good position, but it is an illusion. Of the common revenue streams, the pari-mutuel wagering is the item of interest. Any new entrant only needs to craft a solution to capture pari-mutuel wagering. The large capital outlay to build a track is not necessary to capture pari-mutuel wagers.

Substitutes

Substitutes are products and services that are similar in customer benefit, but are not just the same product provided by a competitor. Substitution can become more prevalent as:

§ buyers find available alternatives;
§ legal and regulatory barriers are removed;
§ technological change reduces the benefit of the product or service; and,
§ buyers’ behavior changes.

Substitute products to horse race gambling are other gambling products such as lotteries and casinos, both physical and online. Since horse race handicapping applies a certain level of knowledge and skill, online sports betting may be considered a substitute. With the takeout or “vigorish” on sports wagers generally less than that for horse racing, sports betting may be an attractive alternative.

There are US statutes that severely restrict the offering of sports wagering by firms in the US. However, several offshore firms continue to offer sports wagering to US customers, regardless of US law. Online gambling may become more prevalent if US law is liberalized, increasing any substitution effects.

Competitors (Rivalry among Tracks)

Rivalry among tracks tends to be regulated by state racing agencies. These agencies divide the available racing days among the various tracks in the state. In many cases, tracks do not have a close physical competitor offering races at the same time. Or, if they do, it may be a “fair circuit” track that generally offers lower quality horses, of hopefully lower wagering interest.

Tracks in general offer the same basic product, horse race wagering and OTB horse race wagering, with the exception of those tracks that are allowed to offer casino games, such as slot machines. With respect to rivalry for off-track handle, tracks with history of high purses tend to attract better quality horses, which tend to stimulate more wagering interest. However, there also is a correlation between the number of horses in a race and the wagering interest on that race. With field sizes of less than 8 horses, the wagering handle tends to drop off quickly.

There is an aspect of indirect rivalry, which is more lack of coordination rather than rivalry. In the US, tracks do not coordinate their race start times such that bettors can have the opportunity to bet on all races. Many races in the US may run within a minute or two of each other, not giving bettors a chance to cash winning wagers on a race on Track A and then betting on the upcoming race on Track B, for example. In other countries, such as Australia, tracks coordinate their start times to maximize the availability of races for betters to reinvest their winnings, maximizing overall wagering handle.

Who Has Power in the Value Chain

Buyers

Buyers have great power. With the advent of ADWs, buyers have a wide selection of racing, both domestic and international, with no switching costs. In addition, buyers can gamble on state lotteries and patronize land-based casinos in many states. Buyers can also use the internet and patronize dozens of online gambling websites that cater to US customers.

Unlike the old days, horse racing isn’t the only game in town when it comes to legalized wagering. Other forms of US gambling have increased in sales, where horse wagering handle is flattening. Although not true in all cases, on-track wagering handle is stagnant to declining. If inflation is taken into account, overall wagering handle growth looks even worse.

Horsemen

Horsemen currently have moderate power, but potentially have great power. Horsemen provide the core input. They also have statutory power to allow various interstate outlets access to track signals and pari-mutuel pools.

Until recently, horsemen have not been aggressive in utilizing this power, but that is changing. They may run the risk of becoming too aggressive if their demands for a greater portion of the horse wagering takeout extend to areas such as track parking, concessions and slot machine revenue. Horsemen also have the ability to move the highest quality horses between tracks to enhance and/or detract various tracks’ race offerings or boycott tracks with substandard purses, amenities, etc.

Horsemen have the potential to forwardly integrate into ownership and operation of race tracks and ADWs. As the manufacturer of the core input, horsemen have the potential to construct a completely vertically integrated offering – horses, venues and wagering outlets. The only barrier to this vertical integration is governmental regulation and antitrust restrictions.

Tracks

Depending upon jurisdiction, amount of nearby tracks and served population area, tracks have low to moderate power. Tracks provide the venues that horses need to race. Tracks and horsemen provide the key inputs to the industry.

Tracks have the ability to limit the access to other outlets to wager on its races. Generally, that isn’t done as off-track wagering is much greater than on-track wagering. Tracks do have the ability to forwardly integrate into the ADW space, which has occurred with Magna Entertainment and Churchill Downs. Tracks theoretically can backwardly integrate into the horse breeding space as well, but complete integration will not be able to compensate for a track located in a market that has a small population, nearby competition and onerous government regulation.

New Entrant OTBs and ADWs

OTBs and ADWs should have minimal power. The current structure of the industry allows OTBs and ADWs to enjoy more power than they may deserve as they are in reality nothing more than a retail channel. OTBs and ADWs have no role in the actual manufacture of the racing product.

ADWs are just websites that tie to the various track pari-mutuel pools. They do need to be approved in the various jurisdictions which they desire to offer wagering services and they do need to pay simulcating and other fees to tracks. Offshore ADWs may or may not be licensed to operate in the US, but may do so anyway. In addition, offshore ADWs are more likely to offer rebates to large-volume wagerers. An ADW is more expensive to develop than a typical website, in the hundreds of thousands of dollars versus hundreds of millions for a racetrack.

ADWs can offer convenient wagering from a customer’s home or office, allowing the customer to avoid having to travel to a track or OTB facility. If the ADW is an off-shore entity, they may offer rebates to large-volume customers. ADWs are new entrants that are a threat to tracks’ on-premises business. It is likely that they do not have as high a margin as tracks, but their overhead is significantly lower, which may make them potentially more profitable.

OTBs are location-based, so they are only as powerful as their overall attractiveness. If an OTB is just a place to wager on horses, it is less attractive than an OTB located at an Indian casino, or Las Vegas casino race and sports book.

References

Mishra, Sam. (2006), Michael Porter’s Five Forces, Retrieved April 26, 2008, from:
http://www.franteractive.com/.

Porter, Michael. (2008, January), The Five Competitive Forces That Shape Strategy, Harvard Business Review, Retrieved April 26, 2008, from: http://harvardbusinessonline.hbsp.harvard.edu/hbsp/hbr/articles/article.jsp?value=BR0801&ml_subscriber=true&ml_action=get-article&ml_issueid=BR0801&articleID=R0801E&pageNumber=1

Silbiger, Steven. (1993), The Ten Day MBA, William Morrow, New York, 319-323.

Tiffany, Paul. (2006, March), Corporate and Product Strategy, Product Management Program 2006, UC Berkeley Center for Executive Development.

Wikipedia.org. (2008, April), Horse racing, Retrieved April 25, 2008, from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horse_racing.

Wikipedia.org. (2008, April), Online gambling, Retrieved April 25, 2008, from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Online%20gambling.

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Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Nevada Sportsbooks LOST Money on the Super Bowl

Traditional bookmaking can earn a profit - if you can have equal money wagered on both sides of the game. For Super Bowl XLII, unfortunately more money was wagered on the Giants - and the Giants won. This outcome cost Nevada sportsbooks $2.6 million. Since $92.1 million was wagered on the Super Bowl, Nevada sportsbooks had looked to profit by approximately $4 million. The actual result was an almost $7 million swing in the wrong direction. The debacle is described in detail by the Las Vegas Sun .

What should happen is that once the sportsbook sets a line, if too many wagers occur on one side, the line is adjusted to incent increased action on the other side, to balance the money on each. That didn't happen to a sufficient degree. The main culprit wasn't the spread, however, but the money line. A particular sportsbook had the money line: Giants +320, New England -440. This means that you could bet $100 on the Giants to win $320 or bet $440 to win $100 on the Patriots. The books should have adjusted the odds downward on the Giants and upward on the Patriots to incent proportionally more wagers for the Patriots.

There is some general correlation between point spreads and the money line, which I won't get into here. It appears though that the money line on the Patriots was attractive compared to the point spread, but even that attractiveness to experienced bettors couldn't overcome the large casual betting interest in the Giants.

The need to balance the books is a problem with this type of wagering. The book needs to be maintained in balance and done so on a fairly continuous basis to ensure the house earns a profit. That isn't the problem with a pari-mutuel wagering method. With pari-mutuel, the house takes its profit off the top and distributes the remainder of the wagers to the winners.

For example in a pari-mutuel wagering scenario, if early wagering on the Giants was 2.5 times the amount wagered on the Patriots, the odds on the Giants would have dropped to 1:1 and the odds on the Patriots would have risen to 5:2, given a 15% takeout for the sportsbook. When bettors saw this, more wagers would have been placed on the Patriots. If this occurred to the point where the money ultimately wagered on the Giants was equal to the amount wagered on the Patriots, the final odds for each would have settled at 8:5. What is better about this method is that the house has no need to balance the book because the bettors themselves set the odds and the house earns its takeout regardless of the outcome. If $18 million had been wagered this way at a 15% takeout, Nevada sportsbooks would have earned $2.6 million.

Pari-mutuel wagering, due to the larger takeout, may not be as attractive to experienced bettors, but with sporting events with large casual interest, such as the Super Bowl, a wagering method that generates a good margin with lower risk has potential value.

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Saturday, February 16, 2008

Degree of Fantasy Game Differentiation Diminishing

The fantasy game model is a game construct where contestants select individuals, sport teams, etc., to form a virtual "team," which is then tracked for certain performance characteristics or news items, which then get converted to a point system for scoring purposes. The contestants attempt to craft a team that can generate the highest score, for either bragging rights or prizes. The fantasy model, typically applied to sports like football and baseball, is expanding to other areas such as politics, soap operas and movies, in addition to expanding to other sports such as fishing. Although this expansion captures more participants, the games themselves operate similarly to traditional fantasy sport contests.

Traditional fantasy games differentiate across these dimensions:
  • Stakes/Prizes (free to hundreds of thousands of dollars)
  • Player selection (draft, salary cap, auction)
  • Scoring methodology (statistics and weightings)
  • Competition method (head-to-head, rotisserie, playoff)
  • Timeframe (daily, monthly, season, post-season)

What passes now as new and innovative is usually no more than just a minor variant on one of the above dimensions. This is borne out by new research from the Fantasy Sports Trade Association, http://www.fsta.org/, that states that the number of fantasy sport consumers have only increased 7% from 2003-2007. This statistic is more weighted toward the pay-to-play fantasy consumer and is underweighting the free-play fantasy consumer, which is the majority of fantasy players. However, the fantasy consumers that play free games generally are less lucrative to the fantasy operator than those that pay entry fees.

For fantasy operators, particularly new entrants, that want to compete effectively in a relatively crowded and undifferentiated marketplace, game innovation that provides a sustainable competitve advantage is required. Even if the new entrant developed an innovative game concept that proved popular, competitors could easily copy the concept and bring it to market.

Yahoo, ESPN and CBS are the largest fantasy football sites, according to research from the Fantasy Sports Association, http://www.fantasysportsassociation.com/. Fantasy football, by a large margin, is the most popular of the fantasy sports. Each of these competitors has unique users/visitors in the 1.5M to 4.5M range. It would be very difficult for a new entrant, even if the first mover with a differentiated game, to prevail against larger competitors that decided to implement that game if there were no real barrier to entry.



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