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NCAA (Not Caring About Anyone)

NCAA to Allow Sports Betting Data Deals for Schools, Conferences

The NCAA is further loosening its long-held opposition to sports betting, paving the way for individual schools and conferences to sign lucrative deals with data companies that sell that information on to sportsbooks.

The Division I Interpretations Committee met Wednesday to discuss the topic, and determined that an individual, school or conference can provide stats to sports wagering companies if that information is also available to the general public, according to an NCAA spokesperson. Membership was informed of the ruling Thursday afternoon.

The decision will likely open the door for conferences large and small ( and maybe individual schools themselves) to capitalize directly on the rush of money being spent by betting operators and data middlemen as more states legalize gambling on pro and college games.

The move comes amid major changes inside college sports and its main governing body. As new NIL rights, anti-trust lawsuits and conference realignment take center stage, the NCAA is increasingly ceding more rule-making and enforcement obligations to individual divisions or conferences. The upheaval claimed a high-profile job this week, as NCAA president Mark Emmert agreed to leave his role in the middle of his contract, giving the association a chance to assess its future under new leadership.

The NCAA’s memo is a response to a formal rules interpretation request filed earlier this year by the Mid-American Conference, which was looking for clarity about the organization’s sports betting restrictions. More specifically, the conference asked about Section 10.3 of the NCAA’s Division I manual, which states that athletes, university staffers and conference employees cannot “provide information” to anyone associated with sports wagering. That sentence could be interpreted as forbidding conferences from signing pricey data distribution deals.

Those deals have become one of the prominent ways that pro leagues like the NBA and NFL are profiting off the booming U.S. sports betting industry, and the MAC took a major steps toward replicating them last month, when it inked a wide-ranging deal with Genius Sports. That partnership doesn’t allow Genius to sell data to sportsbooks right now, according to someone familiar with the status, but that could change now that the NCAA has provided more clarity.

It’s unclear what Genius agreed to pay the MAC, but it will pale in comparison to what the biggest college conferences, like the Big Ten and SEC, could make from similar deals. Their football and basketball games are often more popular (and attract more bettors) than established U.S. pro leagues. Bidding that led to the NHL’s recent deal with Sportradar, for example, eclipsed $250 million, and the league’s eventual deal included the right to purchase about around $90 million worth of equity.

This is just the latest area where the Indianapolis-based governing body appears to be loosening its grip on how college sports is governed and policed. In January the NCAA approved a new slimmed-down constitution that will cede more control to individual divisions, and likely to individual conferences themselves. That came as the NCAA faces public, legal and legislative challenges to its long-held version of amateurism.

For decades the NCAA and the major U.S. leagues fought the push for more legal sports betting in America, citing fears over the integrity of their games. The seminal case on the issue, Murphy v. NCAA, eventually landed at the Supreme Court, and in May 2018 the court struck down the federal ban on sports betting.

Entire article: https://sports.yahoo.com/ncaa-allow-sports-betting-data-193130883.html
 
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Targeting is saving the game!


“I realize this might not be the most popular position to take, and I’m trying not to be overdramatic, but the targeting rule is saving our game,” said Steve Shaw, college football’s national coordinator of officials. “It is truly changing player behavior.”
 
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You literally can't make this shit up. NOW they care about integrity.

NCAA Concerned About College Football Prediction Markets
The NCAA said Thursday that it was "deeply concerned" about the lack of guardrails for the online prediction markets that are challenging betting industry norms after financial company Robinhood began allowing trades on college football.

Robinhood announced Tuesday that it was launching markets on the outcomes of professional and college football games this season. The company said in a release that it will allow customers to trade on the outcomes of every NFL game and every college game involving schools from the Power 4 conferences and independents. A market on the winner of Saturday's Iowa State-Kansas State game was open for trading Thursday night. Robinhood also offered a market on the Heisman Trophy winner.


Robinhood's move is in partnership with the financial exchange Kalshi, which earlier in the week began offering trading on college football point spreads and over/under totals on its own site. Prediction markets have emerged over the past year and are competing with traditional sportsbooks such as DraftKings and FanDuel in the evolving U.S. betting market.

Robinhood and Kalshi say they fall under the jurisdiction of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, a federal agency, and not state gambling regulators, which oversee the sportsbooks.

The NCAA believes companies offering markets on college athletics outside of state regulatory bodies "pose a threat to competition integrity and student-athlete safety," according to a statement by Tim Buckley, a senior vice president for the NCAA.

"We will continue to analyze developments of this market and work with industry leaders to help ensure guardrails and regulations to protect NCAA competition, student-athletes, coaches and officials," Buckley said.

Robinhood vice president JB Mackenzie told ESPN that the company believes the federal regulations they operate under provide the necessary guardrails.

"Federal regulations provide important customer protections and market integrity safeguards, and we do not believe that these event contracts threaten competition integrity or student-athlete safety," he said.

The rise of prediction markets, with their nationwide access, has prompted DraftKings and FanDuel, the two leading sportsbook companies, to position themselves to enter the sector. FanDuel announced this week that it was partnering with CME Group, a derivatives marketplace, to "develop new fully funded, event-based contracts with defined risk."

Robinhood filed a suit this week against gambling regulators in New Jersey and Nevada to prevent the states from taking action to block their sports markets. Kalshi is also in the middle of legal battles with state regulators in multiple states. For now, the companies continue to offer event contracts on sports outcomes as football season kicks off.
 
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