Yahoo (NASDAQ: YHOO) Rolls Out New Fantasy-Sports Feature: Daily, Weekly Contests - Bloomberg’s Emily Chang reports on the number of fantasy-sports players across the U.S. and Canada in “BWest Byte” on “Bloomberg West,” July 9th. (Source: Bloomberg)
Money quote: "Betting on sports is illegal outside of Las Vegas but Fantasy Sports 'get a pass' because Pro Leagues consider it a 'game of skill'"--Emily Chang, Bloomberg
Daily and weekly contests comprise the fastest growing area of Fantasy Sports. "Links between daily fantasy sports and more traditional forms of wagering are strong. Many members of FanDuel’s executive team used to work in online gambling. (Eccles worked for the UK’s Betfair.) DraftKings is one of the main sponsors of the World Series of Poker, the planet’s largest land-based poker tournament." (source: Quartz, infra)
Fan Duel, Draft Kings, and now Yahoo! According to the Fantasy Sports Trade Association, more than 30 million Americans participate in fantasy football leagues, and spent an estimated $11 billion on the activity last year.
Domain names of companies referenced:
Yahoo: yahoo.com and Yahoo Fantasy Sports: sports.yahoo.com/fantasy/
Draft Kings: draftkings.com
Fan Duel: fanduel.com
ESPN: espn.com and games.espn.go.com/frontpage/
CBS Sports: cbssports.com and cbssports.com/fantasy
NFL: nfl.com and fantasy.nfl.com
Fantasy Sports Trade Association: fsta.org
Why Fantasy Sports is NOT Gambling - Fantasy Sports Trade Association: "... The Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 included "carve out" language that clarified the legality of fantasy sports. It was passed by Congress and signed into law on October 13, 2006 by President George W. Bush. The act makes transactions from banks or similar institutions to online gambling sites illegal, with the notable exceptions of fantasy sports, online lotteries and horse/harness racing. The bill specifically exempts fantasy sports games, educational games or any online contest that "has an outcome that reflects the relative knowledge of the participants, or their skill at physical reaction or physical manipulation (but not chance), and, in the case of a fantasy or simulation sports game, has an outcome that is determined predominantly by accumulated statistical results of sporting events, including any non-participant's individual performances in such sporting events..."
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