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March Madness Betting Boom Sparks Regulatory Crackdown Across US States
Published 4 weeks ago
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In the past 48 hours, the sports betting industry faces intensifying regulatory scrutiny amid booming activity from March Madness, with New York reporting 554.7 million dollars in wagers for the week ending March 22, the tournaments first weekend.[5] Governors and lawmakers are pushing safeguards, as New York Governor Kathy Hochul announced plans Monday to block underage gamblers, limit AI-driven bonuses, and flag at-risk bettors depositing over 10,000 dollars in 24 hours, prompting public comments from the State Gaming Commission.[5] Massachusetts proposed rule changes on sports betting Monday, signaling broader state-level tightening.[9]
Prediction markets emerged as a flashpoint, with the NFL warning operators like Kalshi and Polymarket Sunday to halt manipulable trades on game props, citing integrity risks amid nearly 40 states in litigation and pending CFTC rules.[3][6][12] A bipartisan Senate bill introduced last week by Senators Schiff and Curtis aims to ban sports-related prediction contracts, despite MLB's recent multi-year deal with Polymarket as its exclusive partner, complete with CFTC info-sharing to police wagers.[4] The NFL holds firm, demanding clearer regulations before partnerships, unlike MLB, NHL, MLS, and UFC.[3][6]
Leaders like FanDuel and DraftKings ramped up DC lobbying Monday, contributing millions to PACs amid federal pushes.[7][10] New apps vie for share, with theScore Bet, rebranded from ESPN BET by PENN Entertainment, live since December 1, 2025, touting a Bet Reset up to 1,000 dollars promo as the freshest US entrant.[1]
BetMGM and Fanatics target casual fans via influencer campaigns with Livvy Dunne and others, leveraging brackets to hook new users into long-term play.[8] Compared to prior weeks, activity spiked with tournament fever, but regulatory heat eclipses last months relative calm, as operators balance growth against federal and state clamps. No major market disruptions or supply chain issues noted, though consumer shifts favor mobile promos amid cautionary rules.(348 words)
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Prediction markets emerged as a flashpoint, with the NFL warning operators like Kalshi and Polymarket Sunday to halt manipulable trades on game props, citing integrity risks amid nearly 40 states in litigation and pending CFTC rules.[3][6][12] A bipartisan Senate bill introduced last week by Senators Schiff and Curtis aims to ban sports-related prediction contracts, despite MLB's recent multi-year deal with Polymarket as its exclusive partner, complete with CFTC info-sharing to police wagers.[4] The NFL holds firm, demanding clearer regulations before partnerships, unlike MLB, NHL, MLS, and UFC.[3][6]
Leaders like FanDuel and DraftKings ramped up DC lobbying Monday, contributing millions to PACs amid federal pushes.[7][10] New apps vie for share, with theScore Bet, rebranded from ESPN BET by PENN Entertainment, live since December 1, 2025, touting a Bet Reset up to 1,000 dollars promo as the freshest US entrant.[1]
BetMGM and Fanatics target casual fans via influencer campaigns with Livvy Dunne and others, leveraging brackets to hook new users into long-term play.[8] Compared to prior weeks, activity spiked with tournament fever, but regulatory heat eclipses last months relative calm, as operators balance growth against federal and state clamps. No major market disruptions or supply chain issues noted, though consumer shifts favor mobile promos amid cautionary rules.(348 words)
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI