What to Watch For in the NBA After the Break

Joe Duffy (www.OffshoreInsiders.com)

As you enjoy the All-Star break, the sideshows and the
manlove debates, we want to share with you our crib sheet for the NBA second
half. These are proactive trends we look
to happen, rather than react when it’s too late:

Atlanta Hawks pick up the pace: The Hawks have
played their best basketball in up tempo games. When we saw Coach Mike Woodson
bring attention to this, we researched using the most important numbers.

They are an uncanny 7-2 SU when the total is 200 or
higher. In slower paced games (199.5 or less) they are 14-29, so that stat is
big. The fact they enter the break going over 8-4 represents an effort by the
Hawks to pick up the pace. We look for Atlanta
to run more up tempo, making the over an edge to keep an eye on.

Lamar Odom and
Lakers benefit from the rest:
The Lakers do not have a lot of talent beyond
Kobe Bryant, who has had to be a one-man show too often this year. Lamar Odom
finally looked like the player many expected the first 21 games of the
year. He then went down with a knee
injury. Since his return, his numbers are off: down 2.9 points from his
pre-injury and he’s shooting a horrid 39.7 percent. According to Coach Phil Jackson, Odom is
around 80 to 85 percent of his full strength.

No player will benefit from the break more than he. This is both mentally and physically. Because
he is so valuable to the depth challenged Lakers, his return to 100 percent
will be consequential and should sneak under the oddsmaker’s radar. We expect
some extra value for the Lake Show
after the break.

Mavericks will be a
value to go against:
Not exactly an exclusive story—the Mavericks are
playing out of the collective skull. However, the oddsmakers noticed. Betting
on Dallas right now is like purchasing the trendiest completely sold out video
game a week before Christmas—no matter how hard you shop you will have to pay
way over market value.

As we so often state, sharp players find line value in
teams that often win without covering or lose while staying within the number. Assistant
coach Del Harris expressed merely winning the division is not the Mavs
priority. “We’re shooting for the big flag”. Look for Dallas
to pace themselves as winning games handily will carry a low priority.

They can win games effortlessly and still fail in the
wallet. God help the books if they go in a slump. Look for the Mavericks to miss the covering
the number by a small margin very often from now until the regular season
ends.

All-Star break a
Bulls market:
The Bulls staggered into the break. But they also finished out with a seven game
road trip, followed by a close home loss, and then they flew through a blizzard
before fading late to Charlotte.

They are a better team than that. Few teams need the break more than they do. We
look for them to come out of the homestretch gate quickly.

Joe Duffy plays are on GodsTips.com.
He is former General Manager of the Freescoreboard scorephone network and CEO
of OffshoreInsiders.com, the
premier hub of world-class handicappers.


America’s Gambling Mecca Gambling on Team

Nobody does a party like this gambling town, a big reason why the NBA picked it for an All-Star celebration that threatens to add a new definition to the word excess. There are so many A-list happenings on the glittering Las Vegas Strip that Sunday’s game seems almost an afterthought.
It’s the first time the NBA has held the annual exhibition in a city that doesn’t have a team. Already there’s talk about a return All-Star appearance in a few years.
What Las Vegas really wants, though, is something more permanent _ a team of its own. So far, the glitzy city has struck out trying to land one from the four major sports.
Las Vegas may have the biggest hotels in the world, including a $7 billion resort complex under construction that other cities could never match. But it still looks with envy at more sedate places like Indianapolis that have teams _ and titles.
“I think Las Vegas is the next great world city, and a component part of that has to be a major league team, be it NBA, NHL, baseball or football,” said Mayor Oscar Goodman. “That’s what makes great American cities.”
A big part of the problem for Las Vegas is that other American cities weren’t built on gambling. Other American cities don’t have neighborhood casinos that make it as easy to bet on a game as it is to go to the supermarket for a gallon of milk.
Leagues already wary of betting scandals are even more wary of committing a team to play in a place where betting is not only tolerated, but encouraged.
“It’s not about a moral crusade about gambling,” NBA commissioner David Stern said when announcing the All-Star game would be in Las Vegas. “It’s just about betting on basketball games.”
To land the All-Star game, casino sports books agreed not to accept bets on it, a concession easily made since it’s an exhibition that hardly anyone bets on anyway. The casinos, though, made it clear they won’t do the same for an entire season.
Goodman has made it his mission in recent years to lure some sort of team to town, even going so far as to show up at baseball’s winter meetings a few years ago with two showgirls and an Elvis impersonator in tow.
He’s been rebuffed for both moral and financial reasons, but the fast-growing city now has a relatively affluent population of 2 million and might eventually prove so attractive that it can’t be ignored.
Stern hasn’t budged from his insistence that there be no betting on the NBA as a condition for any team to locate in Las Vegas. But he had no problem bringing the All-Star game to town and seems to have softened his stance recently by saying it would be a decision made by the owners.
Stern met with Goodman on Wednesday and signaled he may be ready to move further, asking the mayor to come up with a proposal to deal with the betting issue. Stern said he hoped to have the proposal in hand when the NBA’s Board of Governors meets in April.
At least one of those owners believes the NBA will be in Las Vegas in a few years.
“I think within five years,” said Gavin Maloof, whose family owns both the Sacramento Kings and the Palms hotel-casino in Las Vegas. “Certainly within the decade, absolutely. The city has too much going for it. It’s very large, there’s a lot of money here, there’s a huge local population, and they love basketball.”
The NBA isn’t the only league hesitant to commit. Baseball flirted with moving the Montreal Expos to the city, but the betting issue and a better offer prompted the league to choose Washington, D.C., instead.
The NFL, meanwhile, is so unfriendly to the city that it won’t even allow Las Vegas to be mentioned during the Super Bowl telecast, much less advertise on it. That policy apparently won’t change under new commissioner Roger Goodell.
“I think it’s a real issue,” Goodell said earlier this month at the Super Bowl. “I have my personal views about gambling, and I don’t think it’s in the best interests of the NFL to have any association with sports betting.”
The city’s best hope for the immediate future might be the NHL, which is struggling with both attendance and television ratings and doesn’t appear nearly as dogmatic about betting.
“Certainly there has been interest expressed since the lockout ended by people wanting to own a franchise in Las Vegas,” deputy commissioner Bill Daly said. “At the appropriate time I think we have to look at that interest.”
Daly said he believes an accommodation could be made on the betting issue. More important, he said, would be the willingness to build a new arena since the 19,000-seat UNLV campus arena where the NBA All-Star game will be played wouldn’t satisfy a basketball or hockey team.
“It’s an intriguing market for a host of reasons. The demographics are strong, there’s wealth in the market and interest in the market,” Daly said. “But it’s essential there be a state-of-the-art arena before we have a franchise there.”
That could be more difficult than getting casinos to stop taking sports bets. Local leaders formed a committee to study building a new arena, but there is little appetite for tax money to pay for one.
Casinos, for the most part, see a team as competition for the entertainment dollar, not a lure for tourists.
“There isn’t a movie company in Los Angeles that would expect the government to pay another movie company to come to town. And we shouldn’t be doing that for a sports team,” said Alan Feldman, vice president of public affairs for the powerful MGM Mirage casino operator. “In this state and community we pay for everything. We get no breaks.”
Pro teams and big-time athletes are no strangers to Las Vegas. The U.S. Olympic team made up of NBA stars trains in the city and will host an Olympic qualifier this summer, while Michael Jordan, Charles Barkley and Tiger Woods are regulars in the casinos.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar broke Wilt Chamberlain’s career scoring record in the city in 1984, when the Utah Jazz played 11 games at the UNLV arena, and the Oakland A’s played their first six home games of the 1996 regular season in Las Vegas.
Maloof said he isn’t planning to move his family’s team to Las Vegas, despite arena problems in Sacramento.
Still, he said, he believes the city needs a team to be complete.
“There needs to be one of the four major sports,” Maloof said. “All I can say is that Vegas has everything, yet it has nothing when it doesn’t have sports. There really is a need for it.”
Source: Times and Democrat

Gambling Connections Could Hinder Braves Deal

Liberty Media’s deal to acquire Major League Baseball’s Atlanta Braves could hit a hitch because the Douglas County-based company owns one of the Internet’s premier sports-betting information website.
Liberty’s ownership of DonBest .com – which provides gamblers with betting lines, “expert” picks and other information to help them win money on sporting events – presents a conflict of interest, said sports-business expert Dave Smrek. Only one or two of the experts rise to the level of OffshoreInsiders.com stable of handicappers.
“I think Major League Baseball would have to take a long, hard look at it,” said Smrek, principal of Denver-based Adrenalin, a sports-consulting firm. “In one way or another, it needs to be addressed.”
Liberty’s agreement to acquire the Braves from Time Warner as part of an asset swap requires approval from 75 percent of major-league team owners.
Major League Baseball has long abhorred its teams’ having ties with gambling operations. MLB spokesman Rich ard Levin said Wednesday he couldn’t comment about what impact Liberty’s interest in DonBest might have on the approval process.
In response to an e-mail questioning DonBest’s operations and its potential impact on the Braves deal, Liberty spokesman John Orr wrote, “We have no comment.” DonBest is operated by Toronto-based Fun Technologies. Liberty paid $195 million last year for a 51 percent stake in Fun.
Described in a 2003 New York Times article as the “Bloomberg of sports betting,” DonBest charges users $600 a month for up-to-the- minute betting odds on games in every major sport, including baseball.
“It’s definitely the No. 1 sports-betting-line service online,” said gambling expert Ken Weitzner, president of EyeOnGambling.com. “There’s not even a close second; it’s that popular.”
Betting on major sports such as baseball in the United States is legal only at casino sports books in Las Vegas.
DonBest features betting lines from offshore sports books such as TheGreek.com and Sportsbook.com. The U.S. Department of Justice last year launched a major crackdown on online gambling, arresting executives of sites such as Bet OnSports.com while they traveled in the U.S.
It’s unclear whether DonBest, which hasn’t been targeted by the U.S. government, receives revenue from illegal sports-betting websites.
“Obviously, any direct ties with illegal gambling presents a problem for baseball,” said Levin, the MLB spokesman.
DonBest also offers picks from its sports experts that are guaranteed to make money for users or they don’t have to pay the fees, which range from $25 to $40 per package of daily picks.
Liberty shouldn’t have a problem divesting DonBest if it is asked to do so to get the Braves deal approved, Smrek said. “For them, this is a pretty small play,” he said.
Source: Denver Post

Wait For Neteller Funds Extended

The waiting game for thousands of U.S. patrons with money tied up in an online payment service under federal investigation just got longer.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York late Wednesday said it extended the deadline until March 16 to decide whether to indict the co-founders of Neteller, an Internet money-transfer service popular among gamblers. Stephen Lawrence and John Lefebvre were arrested in January on a charge of conspiracy to transfer funds with the intent to promote illegal gambling
For U.S. customers of the site, it was another delay in their efforts to recoup their money, which remains in Neteller accounts until the legal matter is resolved.
Neteller says U.S. authorities have frozen access to about $55 million in U.S.-based accounts.
“As a result of the restrictions placed by third parties, court-ordered seizures and related legal concerns, (Neteller) is unable to make payments to U.S. customers,” says a posting on the company’s website.
FBI agent Neil Donovan has said funds are being held in court as potential evidence. He did not provide a timetable on when customers may get their money back.
Though money-transfer companies such as Neteller do business with financial institutions and merchants, many also allow gambling companies to transfer money collected from U.S. gamblers to bank accounts outside the USA. Neteller last month closed its U.S. Internet gambling services, erasing about two-thirds of its business.
A law signed by President Bush in October bans the use of credit cards, checks and electronic fund transfers for Internet gaming. U.S. residents place more than half of all bets to major offshore casinos in an estimated $10.6 billion industry. However, most online gaming sites are based offshore, outside the reach of American law enforcement.
With Neteller’s financial future teetering in the balance, consumers might choose less reliable money-transfer services instead, says Ken Dreifach, an Internet attorney.
Source: USA Today

Will US Join Market of Mobile Gamblers?

lacing bets and buying lottery tickets via a mobile phone is projected to grow into a $16.6 billion industry by 2011. Europe and Asia currently lead the way, but American carriers and lawmakers have been reluctant to climb on board. Could careful regulation and better age verification approaches give the U.S. a toehold on the market?
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Handheld computers have simplified many activities. Individuals can surf the Web, text message their friends, buy a new pair of pants, and, increasingly, try to hit the jackpot in the lottery.
Market research firm Juniper Research expects the worldwide mobile gambling market to grow from US$1.35 billion in 2006 to $16.6 billion by 2011 — and the increase is coming outside of the U.S., which currently prohibits the activity.
“The mobile channel will push gambling services out to a broader, lower stake market than existing channels, offering significant opportunities for market growth,” Bruce Gibson, research director at Juniper, told TechNewsWorld.
Convenient Casinos
Mobile gambling is rising because of the ubiquity of handheld devices as well as the convenience these devices offer. In 2006, the number of handheld devices sold worldwide passed the 1 billion mark, indicating a gigantic pool of potential users.
Mobile gambling functions rely largely on text messaging, which has become simple to use and quite popular. These features gel with the impulsive nature of playing games of chance and allow gamblers to go online and wager when they are sitting in a restaurant, waiting for a bus or even working at their desks.
These gamblers find a growing number of gambling outlets. Sports betting is currently the largest sector in mobile gambling, and fans now wager on a variety of professional leagues, with soccer being the most popular. Lotteries are the second most popular segment, but Juniper Research forecasts it will take the top spot by 2010 as related games, such as bingo, become more widely available. Casinos offer virtual games like poker, blackjack, roulette and craps, and they have also achieved wide popularity.
Europe, Asia Lead the Way
Gambling services attract a variety of customers, according to Gibson. “The typical mobile gambler will be [a] young, upwardly mobile professional with disposable income,” he said. While most gambling has been male oriented, the availability of games like bingo and skill games will attract more women and make it popular to both genders.
Mobile gambling enterprises started to evolve at the turn of the millennium and have become well established in certain areas. Europe has been a hotbed for mobile gambling, with Juniper Research estimating that users placed $665 million in bets there in 2006.
In the Netherlands, Sweden, Germany, Britain and Austria, mobile phones are regularly used to buy lottery tickets, bet on sporting events or enter sweepstakes for prizes. These services are also rapidly gaining ground in Asia. In fact, Juniper Research expects Asia to become the market’s largest segment, accounting for $6.7 billion by 2011.
Vendors have had to address various technical issues in order to spur market acceptance. Security is at the top of the list. After people dial in and enter their wagers, wireless e-mails are sent back asking them to confirm all the details.
Typically, winnings or losses are logged into an account the bettor has set up, and more authentication is required in order to make changes to the account. Content monitoring and filtering technologies enable cellular operators to monitor gambling traffic as it passes over their networks, and additional checks are in place in case of suspicious activity, such as unusually high numbers of bets.
Age Verification
Sequestering these services has been another concern. “Regulators want to make sure that young children do not take part in these services and then become gambling addicts,” Neil Strother, an industry analyst with market research firm The NPD Group, told TechNewsWorld.
Technological advances and new processes have been put in place to address this issue. Around the world, mobile network operators have imposed age verification procedures to ensure that users are old enough.
“Sometimes age verification is implemented by operators as part of a voluntary code of practice covering mobile content, such as in the UK,” Juniper’s Gibson noted. Many operators issue users PIN numbers to access special accounts, which are based on credit cards.
Because it is electronic and instantaneous, mobile gambling presents new logistical challenges, such as making sure that odds are fair. Betting equipment now includes software that determines dynamic odds, or odds that change as the betting process progresses.
Illegal Since 1934
Currently, the biggest inhibitor in the mobile gambling market has been a reluctance to offer these services in the U.S. In the summer of 2006, federal legislators put in place restrictions to keep mobile gambling illegal. U.S. regulators have been disinclined to embrace online gambling and are now thwarting mobile gambling as well.
The main problem is how the wagers are made — a 1934 law makes betting over a phone line illegal, and that law has halted gambling expansion in the online world.
This restriction has also made it more difficult for gambling companies to get paid. As part of its purchase of online bill payment service, for example, PayPal discontinued its online gaming business due to the uncertain legal status around online gaming. Financial service companies such as Citibank followed suit and no longer processes credit card payments from offshore gambling operations. Gibson sees this as a short-term rather than long-term problem and projects that North America will account for 6 percent of the mobile gambling market in 2011.
As the mobile gambling market takes shape, the question arises — how will it impact the current state of gambling?
“Initially, mobile gambling will be an additional channel for existing gamblers,” concluded Gibson. “In the longer term, the market will attract a significant number of new users as the inherent advantages of the mobile channel become apparent and as mobile gambling develops into a mass-market application.”
Source: E Commerce News

Tuesday Computer Trends

Tuesday, February 13,
2007

 

Congrats to everyone who swept with GodsTips.com Game of the Year, 1-31 NBA
Toronto more than doubling the spread to Washington
and yesterday Texas -7 winning by
29 for the CBB version. The top cappers at OffshoreInsiders.com

CBB

·       
Butler
is 8-1 the last nine

·       
Old Dominion-Hofstra
series under 6-of-7

·       
Kentucky
is 10-2 on the road

·       
Penn 7-2 to Princeton

·       
Canisius is 1-6 at home

·       
Missouri
State
is 8-1 versus Southern
Illinois

·       
TCU is 1-8 their last
nine

·       
Oklahoma
0-10 road opponent called for 17 or fewer fouls per game

 

NBA

·       
Toronto
under 11-1 after 3 straight spread
wins

·       
Houston
is 22-42 at home

·       
New Jersey
is 17-5 overall

·       
San Antonio
9-1 to New Jersey

·       
Chicago
14-1 to Toronto

 

 


Sports Gambling Watch List, 2-12-07

Joe Duffy (www.OffshoreInsiders.com)

Sharp players examine our daily news and notes on OffshoreInsiders.com. Among the other crib sheets we
compile in-house are our pro-active sports gambling “Watch Lists”. These are
nuggets to look for based on drastic changes and recent trends by specific
teams. Most importantly, we analyze how the teams and oddsmakers will adapt
accordingly.

Update: Gonzaga
6-foot-11 forward Josh Heytvelt has been suspended following an arrest. One of
the leading candidates for West Coast Conference player of the year, Heytvelt
is averaging 15.5 points per game and 7.7 rebounds.

Insight: Initially Gonzaga will be a go-against
especially after the short-term rally-around-adversity reaches the point of
diminishing return. The Zags will be a bubble-team (meaning more pressure)
without their key cog. This is a classic
go-against proposition in particular when the Bulldogs play against teams in
pure spoiler roles. Interpretation: underdogs looking for a defining win in an
“everything to gain, nothing to lose” contest.

However, we look for the suspension to be short-lived as
Heytvelt is too important. Teams with dominant big men do the best in
conference play and the Big Dance (Florida
last year, North Carolina and Illinois
two years ago headline many examples). They again will be a dark horse if he
returns and the Zags make the NCAA.

Update: Pacers
continue to play up or down to the competition. Through Sunday Feb. 11 action,
they are just 14-13 SU to teams with a .500 or worse record, seven of the
losses at home. They are getting key swingman Marquis Daniels back.

Insight: This
is what we preach: the best “splits” are from teams that are not affected by
home court advantage, plus the Pacers are like we so often say “predictably
unpredictable”. Pending other factors, we look to lean going with them against
quality teams on the highway. Daniels is a guy, whose contribution will sneak
under the radar, meaning often just inside the number.

Prior to his injury, he played his best basketball,
averaging 13.2 points in 27 minutes in the five games before missing action.

Update: The
UCLA real-time injury report is crucial for all sports bettors. They face a key
road trip to Arizona and Arizona
State
and may be without starting
center Lorenzo Mata and point guard Darren Collison.

Insight: The
Bruins will be very vulnerable if they are with devoid of either starter.
Freshman Russell Westbrook played miserably filling in for Collison, while Ryan
Wright and Alfred Aboya proved to be a huge drop-off from Mata. The depth-challenged
Bruins will likely lose both road games, yes even against Arizona
State
, if both of their starters
are absent.

Update: Detroit
is 10-2 SU with Chris Webber in the line-up. He has three double-doubles.

Insight: Ride Detroit
against quality teams, especially on the road.
Webber is playing in a honeymoon period that will likely last through
the playoffs. Rejuvenated underachievers are a component we’ve exploited over
the years. Also in the “90 percent of the game is half-mental” aspect, Detroit
has convinced themselves lightning has struck twice. Detroit
got Rasheed Wallace midseason 2004 en route to a
championship and there are a lot of parallels to the current situation.

Joe Duffy is Senior Handicapper at GodsTips.com. His 18-hour days during the
college postseason and the dividends it’s paid for clients have earned him the
monikers of “Mr. March” and “the Lord of the Dance”. Get his free gambling news
and notes at OffshoreInsiders.com


This Prohibition Here to Stay

American Gaming Association President Frank Fahrenkopf told me last week that if online poker players are confident they can persuade Congress to pass a law that would define poker as a game of skill, they’re sadly mistaken.
The poker players, online poker rooms and poker publishers hope that the recent changes in congressional leadership will prompt legislators to reverse the impact of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006, which caused the leading online poker room to stop taking action from Americans and made funding and withdrawing money from online poker accounts more cumbersome.
A law that defined poker as a game of skill would exempt online poker from the UIGEA.
The climate on Capitol Hill is not favorable for any pro-Internet gambling legislation, he said.
“They don’t have a chance in hell,” Fahrenkopf said.
The AGA supports a congressionally mandated study of online gambling to see whether technology exists to make sure customers are playing from jurisdictions that allow betting, keep underage bettors from wagering and limit problem gambling. If the study determines that the technology exists to provide those safeguards, then a law could be passed allowing individual states to decide whether to offer online gambling.
Fahrenkopf acknowledged that even if those two hurdles are cleared, it is unlikely that states would set tax rates low enough to compete with the barely regulated and taxed casino and poker sites that now proliferate.
• • •
Before he left for Macau last week, I spoke to Steve Wynn by phone as he took a break from skiing in Sun Valley, Idaho.
Wynn said he’s had a couple of feelers from companies that would like to combine operations with Wynn Resorts to compete more effectively with the industry’s biggest operators, but he told them he’s not interested in diluting the strength of the Wynn brand.
“I won’t say never, but it would have to be an incredible deal,” Wynn said.
Wynn said he expects gaming regulators in Nevada and New Jersey to OK competitor MGM Mirage’s Macau casino partnership with Pansy Ho, daughter of controversial casino owner Stanley Ho.
“I expect MGM to open the MGM Grand in Macau,” Wynn said. “There will be some finger-pointing and finger-wagging here, but MGM’s partnership with Pansy will be allowed.”
Wynn said he was returning to Las Vegas from Macau before the Chinese New Year because he wants to attend a Friday event being held in conjunction with the NBA All-Star Game, the Touching a Life Gala, which is run by a group of NBA wives.
His wife, Elaine Wynn; Magic Johnson’s wife, Cookie Johnson; and NBA player Dikembe Mutombo are being honored at the event for their community-service efforts, with proceeds to benefit the Greater Las Vegas After-School All-Stars and Communities in Schools of Southern Nevada.
Elaine Wynn told me the NBA All-Star Game and its associated events are signals to the rest of the world that Las Vegas has arrived.
“I think we’ve earned the credibility before this, but fabulous events like this allow people to come and sample the menu of diverse attractions in Las Vegas,” she said.
Source: Las Vegas Sun

Vegas Still Unlikely to Get Pro Sports Team Thanks to Gambling

The NBA’s elite descend on Las Vegas next weekend, forced to squeeze in an All-Star Game and skills events between all the frolicking and cavorting around town.
The question is whether this will be a one-shot deal for Sin City, or the harbinger of something bigger.
Despite luring All-Star weekend, Las Vegas faces considerable odds to secure a major professional team of its own. The obstacle, naturally, is the issue that has fueled the city’s popularity: gambling.
Las Vegas mayor Oscar Goodman said Friday he doesn’t consider next weekend’s festivities an audition and remains ”very optimistic” about landing a team in the future, more likely an NHL or NBA team.
But in comments to reporters last year, NBA commissioner David Stern made one thing very clear about the possibility of placing a team in Las Vegas: “We’re not going to go there while they have betting on NBA basketball games.”
In fact, in order to get the All-Star Game, Goodman and the Las Vegas sports books had to agree not to allow wagers on next Sunday’s game. But Goodman said he would not consider eliminating betting on NBA games in order to secure a team.
”I will not budge on our position,” he said. “David Stern is a great guy. We’ll sit and discuss it.”
All of this leads to a larger issue: If the NBA isn’t ready to put a team in Las Vegas, why is it placing its marquee midseason event there?
”We’re going to Las Vegas because we think it’s a great destination city,” Stern, who was unavailable for an interview last week, said in a news conference last fall. “They have removed the All-Star events from the betting line and . . . we have no problem with people who want to go there and gamble.
“It’s state-sanctioned, state-sponsored, state-regulated. They have great hotels, great shows, great restaurants, great family events. It’s a great entertainment place. We don’t think it’s a stigmatized city in our view.”
Las Vegas has its share of pro sports — minor-league baseball, Arena Football, marquee boxing and tennis events — but Goodman wants something bigger, something sexier. He believes it’s warranted for a city that draws 37.4 million visitors annually and has seen its population triple, to 1.8 million, in the past 20 years.
Goodman at one point said he expects a team from one of the four major leagues to relocate by 2010. He didn’t offer a new timetable in a phone interview Friday, but said he hopes to have serious conversations with one of the leagues “before spring.”
Goodman said he has spoken with several NBA teams, but declined to name them. He reportedly inquired about the New Orleans Hornets when they shifted games to Oklahoma City after Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
MARLINS BLOCKED
Two Marlins officials met with Goodman in December 2004, but Major League Baseball would not permit the Marlins to have more serious conversations because of the gambling issue, The Miami Herald reported last year.
‘I’ve been told by [commissioner] Bud Selig to stay out of the Marlins’ business,” Goodman said Friday. ”He indicated [last year] he prefers I don’t speak with them and that the team stays in South Florida.” He said he did not push the issue because he wants to preserve a good relationship with MLB.
Last week, MLB president Robert DuPuy voiced concerns about any team relocating to Las Vegas.
‘We had very productive discussions with Las Vegas about a baseball team in that city during the Expos’ relocation process,” DuPuy said in an e-mail. “And the mayor and local leaders were very enthusiastic and committed. As a rapidly expanding city, Las Vegas offers interesting professional sports opportunities. The television market there is quite small, but the growth is intriguing.
“However, the gaming remains an issue, particularly the fact that baseball is on board with the other sports. While gambling has become more pervasive in other forms in many states, the difference in Nevada is the sports betting. Given the history of the Office of the Commissioner and the sensitivity to the issue of gambling, this would be a significant obstacle.”
Because of that, Hall of Famer Reggie Jackson hasn’t made progress in his efforts to bring a team to Las Vegas, though he reportedly pieced together a deep-pocketed investment group.
Meanwhile, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell expressed serious concerns when asked at a Super Bowl news conference how he would react if an owner approached him and said he wanted to move to Las Vegas.
”I feel strongly about keeping a very strong line between the NFL and sports gambling,” he said. “I think it’s a real issue. I have my personal views about gambling, and I don’t think it’s in the best interests of the NFL to have any association with sports betting.”
Goodell said he has not had any dialogue about moving a team to Las Vegas. Twice in the past nine months, Goodman has made inquiries to the San Diego Chargers, who want a new stadium. But the Chargers have said they will concentrate their efforts on San Diego. Goodman also once offered to build a stadium to play host to all Monday Night Football games, but the NFL declined.
”I don’t have the best relationship with the NFL,” said Goodman, who was unhappy when the league rejected some of the city’s broadcast advertisements in the past.
The NHL won’t rule out Las Vegas, but said changes would need to be made regarding sports gambling issues.
”Las Vegas we’ve had talks with — it’s a great sports town and certainly could be considered,” NHL spokeswoman Bernadette Mansur said. ”There would have to be restrictions with gambling. But it’s all speculation. We are not considering any expansion or relocation of clubs.” Mansur reiterated the NHL hopes the Penguins — whose future is in question — will remain in Pittsburgh.
To Goodman, the reluctance to bring a team to Las Vegas is mystifying. He consistently has called gambling concerns a “red herring.”
”Tonight, [the Heat] is playing in Cleveland,” Goodman said Friday. “There will be more bets taken in Cleveland for that game than in all the sports books in Las Vegas. . . . Sports betting is good. We’re the only state that regulates it.”
This won’t be the NBA’s first foray into Las Vegas. During the 1983-84 season, former Utah Jazz owner Sam Battistone scheduled 11 games at Thomas & Mack Center, which will play host to next weekend’s festivities. In one of those games, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar surpassed Wilt Chamberlain and became the NBA’s all-time leading scorer. The U.S. national team held training camp in Las Vegas last summer, and the league holds summer league competition in the city each July.
Stern suggested last year that if NBA games weren’t wagered on, he would have no qualms about placing a team in Las Vegas.
`WHAT AMERICA DOES’
”Forty states have lotteries,” he said. “Those that don’t have lotteries, there’s Indian reservations that have gambling establishments or video poker or all their eating establishments. So everybody gambles now. Whether that’s right or wrong, that’s state government policy that’s been left to the states. And that’s what America does.”
Even beyond gambling, another drawback is the lack of a state-of-the-art baseball/football stadium or an arena to replace Thomas & Mack, which doesn’t have enough revenue-producing luxury suites to support an NBA team.
Goodman has said he is proceeding with plans to build a $404 million arena, potentially without using public money, but hasn’t offered details.
”No one is going to privately build a stadium unless a team is there,” Goodman said in a November news conference in comments published by The Las Vegas Review-Journal in November. “But if the NBA is going to come here, I have ways I believe it could be built without taxpayer dollars.”
Goodman isn’t alone.
Gavin Maloof, whose family owns the Sacramento Kings and the Palms Hotel, told The Associated Press he expects an NBA team in Las Vegas within the next five years, despite Stern’s position.
”Every owner that I’ve spoken to loves Vegas,” said Maloof, who helped facilitate the All-Star Game going to Nevada.
Marc Ganis, president of Chicago-based Sportscorp — a sports business consultancy firm that works on franchise relocations — said he expects a pro team in Las Vegas ”well within the decade, perhaps within three or four years.” He said he easily could see an NBA team move to Las Vegas if Stern ever changed his mind on the issue.
”Hockey needs Vegas the most,” Ganis said. “If there was not the sports gambling element, it is the most viable market in the country that is available.”
For now, though, a weekend of NBA All-Stars will have to suffice.
Source: Miami Herald