Could legal sports betting be a boost for the media business? If a new partnership between Major League Baseball and MGM Reports is any indication, league officials and gaming executives
certainly think so.
At a press conference at MLB’s headquarters in New York City Tuesday afternoon, MLB commissioner Rob Manfred and MGM CEO Jim Murren announced a multiyear
deal that will see the gaming and entertainment giant become the official gaming partner of the league.
The deal includes data, with MLB providing MGM with its official statistics
feed on a non-exclusive basis, and with select data from its “Statcast” data package on an exclusive basis.
It includes media, with MGM committing to promote its brand and
gaming options on MLB’s digital and TV platforms, like MLB At Bat app, and MLB Network. It will also include sponsorships and activations at a local level, and internationally in Japan.
Both Manfred and Murren were most optimistic about the interactive nature of sports wagering.
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“Baseball is perfectly suited for this,” Murren
told reporters at the presser. “It will increase social networks, people will be talking about the next pitch, the next out, the next inning. It will extend the viewership of games through
multiple innings, even regardless of the outcome or the score.”
“I think it is an areas where the natural pace of our game—which we actually like on the
whole—is an advantage in terms of in-play betting,” Manfred said. “It allows for an opportunity to be creative with the types of wagers.”
The companies provided
no more details of how that interactive in-game wagering could play out. After all, for now sports betting is only legal in a handful of states, although that number is likely to increase in the
coming months and years, now that the Supreme Court effectively paved the way
with a ruling earlier this year.
That ruling also opened the door to leagues making official deals with gaming companies, something that would have been unthinkable just a few years
earlier.
Manfred said that league research suggested that the change in legal framework, as well as in public opinion, “presented an opportunity.” He added,
“We operate in a really competitive environment, and we have to take advantage of every [chance] to drive engagement by our fans.”