MLB Players’ Association Concerned League Too Cozy with Sports Betting
Posted on: July 21, 2022, 11:03h.
Last updated on: July 21, 2022, 12:51h.
The Major League Baseball Players’ Association believes MLB might be getting too close with the legal sports betting industry.
Tony Clark has served the MLB Players’ Association as its executive director since late 2013. Clark has steered the players’ interests through several critical developments. The latest came in March when the union initiated a strike that lasted 99 days until a new collective bargaining agreement was struck.
This week at the MLB All-Star Game in Los Angeles at Dodger Stadium, Clark expressed concerns regarding the league’s ongoing enthusiasm for legal sports betting across the country. Asked whether he is getting concerned that MLB might be overly embracing the expanded gambling sector, Clark didn’t hold back.
Getting [concerned]? No. Is? Yeah. Has been? Sure,” Clark answered during a press conference with the Baseball Writers’ Association of America.
“We’re entering a very delicate, and dare I say, dangerous world here. We hope that it is truly beneficial for our game moving forward and that everyone who is involved benefits from it in one fashion or another. But when you have players suggest that no sooner was PASPA (The Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act of 1992) repealed, that they started to have book houses following them on social media, that gets you a little twitchy pretty quick,” Clark added.
PASPA limited single-game sports betting everywhere other than Nevada. The federal law ran from its passage in 1992 until its May 2018 repeal by the US Supreme Court.
Incessant Agreements
MLB, along with the NFL, NBA, NHL, and NCAA, had for many years opposed efforts to legalize sports betting outside Nevada. The leagues and collegiate sports bodies argued that widespread legal sports gambling would jeopardize the integrity of their games, as players, coaches, and other insiders could become vulnerable to outside influences.
Proponents of repealing PASPA and giving states the right to decide their own laws on sports betting countered by saying that sports betting has been going on for as long as the games have been played, albeit through unregulated — and therefore technically illegal — channels, such as underground bookies and offshore websites.
But after the Supreme Court struck out PASPA, more than 30 states have since passed laws authorizing legal sports gambling. The MLB, as well as the other organizations, have sought to partner with the sportsbook interests and gaming industry. Data shows that legal sports betting increases fan engagement, leading to better in-person stadium attendance, higher television ratings, and, subsequently, more overall revenue for the league and its franchisees.
Player, Family Protections
Clark wants to ensure that the league’s financial windfall from sports betting doesn’t threaten players or their families.
We’ll continue to pound the pavement in each of the state legislatures that are continuing to push, that have language in place, and those that don’t yet that are potentially coming online to ensure that as much as anything, our players are protected, and their families by extension, are protected as a result of the language that’s on the books despite the fact that this train has left the station,” Clark said.
However, Clark’s MLB Players’ Association has also boarded the sports betting train. Earlier this month, the association’s business arm — MLB Players, Inc. — struck a deal with MGM Resorts. The pact allows MGM’s sports betting unit — BetMGM — to use MLB Players branding in its marketing materials.
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