British sports lawyer on DraftKings, FanDuel: 'It looks like betting'

Next year may bring major changes in American gambling law, thanks to Christie et al vs NCAA et al, a long-lingering case that the U.S. Supreme Court will hear on Dec. 4.

And “daily” fantasy sports (DFS) companies DraftKings and FanDuel have played a role in the momentum, whether they publicly acknowledge it or not.

At issue in the Dec. 4 case is whether the state of New Jersey can legalize sports betting in its state, despite PASPA (Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act), the 1992 federal law that banned sports betting everywhere in America but Nevada. On the other side are the NCAA, NBA, NFL, MLB, and NHL, which oppose New Jersey’s case even though most of them have expressed support for legalized sports betting. They would rather see PASPA repealed at the federal level than have gambling become a state-by-state issue.

Either way, regardless of whether New Jersey wins its case, the gaming industry is optimistic that change is coming imminently to America’s stringent gambling laws. That’s thanks to a wide range of factors, including the fact that President Donald Trump is a former casino owner.

Another big factor is DFS, which experts say has contributed to the momentum toward legalized betting.

DFS “has been the most significant thing” in the effort toward legalizing sports betting

DFS “was a great opportunity,” American Gaming Association president Geoff Freeman told Yahoo Finance earlier this year. “Frankly, I think that has been the most significant thing when it comes to raising attention to the demand consumers have to no longer be passive, but to be engaged in these games one way or another.”

Yet the companies themselves have insisted, since their inception, that their games are not a form of sports betting.

They have made this argument by relying on a carveout in a different federal law, the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 (UIGEA) that prohibited gambling online and essentially killed online poker. UIGEA had a specific carveout for fantasy sports as “games of skill” rather than chance.

“It looks like betting”

To gaming industry observers outside the U.S., where sports betting is perfectly legal, the distinction is nonexistent.

“It’s always very interesting from British eyes to look at the daily fantasy arguments that were going on about whether it was or wasn’t betting,” says Tom Russell, general counsel of Genius Sports, a London-based firm that provides betting data and analytics to legal sportsbooks and sports leagues.

“I mean, we have fantasy sports in the UK as well, and it’s widely recognized that they are betting. And to British eyes, it looks like betting,” Russell says. “I don’t want to wade into that argument, particularly as a non-American, but I think we view that as probably betting.”