MGM Springfield Submits Sports Betting Application Late
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Posted on: November 30, 2022, 11:26h.
Last updated on: November 30, 2022, 11:26h.
MGM Springfield has been afforded a rare pardon for committing a regulatory infraction with the Massachusetts Gaming Commission (MGC).
The MGC concluded its first open bidding round for the state’s forthcoming sports betting industry earlier this month. The state gaming regulator said last week that it received 15 applications for all classes of its sports betting licensing categories.
But it was later revealed that MGM Springfield, one of the state’s two resort-casino properties, Encore Boston Harbor being the other, failed to properly submit its Category 1 sportsbook facility application for retail betting privileges. MGC staff said the casino did properly submit its Category 3 online sports betting license for its digital unit BetMGM ahead of the commission’s Nov. 22 bidding window closing.
State Provides Forgiveness
Augustine Kim, vice president and legal counsel for MGM Resorts International, appeared before the MGC during the commission’s meeting yesterday to ask for forgiveness for the Category 1 filing error.
There was a miscommunication. It was completely my fault,” Kim told the commissioners. “I apologize. I am so sorry.”
“But as soon as we realized there was an issue, we corrected the problem. All of the paperwork is in, so we ask that the commissioners approve the processing of our application,” Kim pleaded.
MGC Executive Director Karen Wells said the issue required a vote from the commissioners. But Wells also said the commissioners shouldn’t be overly worried about voting in favor of allowing MGM Springfield’s licensing application to be processed because the three casinos are not actually bidding competitively for sports betting privileges.
Wells explained that the state’s sports betting law provides three Category 1 sports betting licenses that are only available for MGM Springfield, Encore Boston Harbor, and Plainridge Park. As a result, MGM Springfield isn’t directly competing against other bidding entities that properly submitted their applications.
“The delay of a couple of days does not impact any other party and no other party would be aggrieved,” Wells clarified.
Following Wells’ input, the five MGC commissioners voted unanimously in favor of allowing MGM Springfield’s late Category 1 submission to be grouped into the state’s initial bunch of fielded sports betting applications.
January Launch
If the MGC had not agreed to include MGM Springfield’s Category 1 sports betting application in the state’s first batch of bids, the casino would not be allowed to commence retail sports betting operations in early January when the first legal bets in the commonwealth are expected to begin.
The MGC has set a January 2023 goal of having in-person sports betting operational at the three casinos. Online operations are expected in March.
Along with the three casinos, Massachusetts’ sports gambling law allows for in-person sports betting at the state’s two horse racetracks. But Suffolk Downs and Raynham Park did not submit sports betting applications before the Nov. 22 closing of the MGC’s first bidding window. However, both tracks say they are readying future bids.
Along with the casino applicants and their mobile partners — Encore Boston Harbor and WynnBet, MGM Springfield and BetMGM, and Plainridge and Barstool — nine firms are seeking fully online sports betting privileges. Those applying entities are Caesars Sportsbook, Fanatics, Bally Bet, bet365, Betr, Betway, DraftKings, FanDuel, and PointsBet.
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