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Daily
Fantasy Sports Bill Introduced in Ohio - 13th December
2016



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Ohio
State Senators Dave Burke and Cliff Hite introduced
a bill last week that would authorize the Ohio Casino
Control Commission to regulate daily fantasy sports
(DFS), making the games explicitly legal in the state.
DFS operators such as DraftKings and FanDuel are currently
active the state and happily accept Ohio customers,
but legal gray areas are never fun and only serve
to keep the possibility of legal troubles open. SB
375 would solve that, removing any sort of question
about the legality of fantasy sports in Ohio.
The
bill defines a fantasy contest as follows:
(1)
The value of all prizes and awards offered to winning
fantasy contest players is established and made known
to the players in advance of the contest.
(2) All winning outcomes reflect the relative knowledge
and skill of the fantasy contest players and are determined
predominantly by accumulated statistical results of
the performance of managing rosters of athletes whose
performance directly corresponds with the actual performance
of athletes in professional sports competitions.
(3) Winning outcomes are not based on randomized or
historical events, or on the score, point spread,
or any performance of any single actual team or combination
of teams or solely on any single performance of an
individual athlete or player in any single actual
event.
For
those who have kept up on fantasy sports legal news
over the years, this will look very familiar. It is
for all intents and purposes the portion of the UIGEA
that carved out a spot for fantasy sports, essentially
creating the daily fantasy industry. Many states have
used this definition in their own legislation.
SB
375 also prohibits the usual types of people from
playing: those under the age of 18, DFS employees
or family members (from playing on their own site),
those who self-restricted, people from states where
fantasy sports are explicitly illegal, and athletes
and referees from the real-life games that are tracked
by the fantasy contests.
The
initial licensing application fee would be $30,000
with a $30,000 renewal fee every three years. Legislation
in some other states made such fees so high that all
but the largest sites (read: DraftKings, FanDuel,
maybe Yahoo!) would be unable to afford it, but at
first glance, $30,000 seems doable for most operators.
Recently,
daily fantasy operators made moves to try to make
their gaming environments more friendly to new and
casual players. One thing they did was identify highly
experienced players in the contest lobby so
that lesser-skilled players could have the opportunity
to stay away from games with them when possible. Beginner
contests were also added. In the Ohio legislation,
the Commission would actually be able to define what
constitutes a highly experienced and beginning player;
one would assume that the operators would then have
to mold their offerings around that. The Commission,
however, would not be permitted to establish the basic
rules of contests, such as how the scoring systems
work.
(Poker
News Daily)
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