NBA commissioner Adam Silver calls for legal sports betting

  • NBA chief: betting ‘should be brought into the sunlight’
  • Highlights example of interactive British sports betting
NBA commissioner Adam Silver
NBA commissioner Adam Silver, right centre, attends a game between the Oklahoma City Thunder and the Los Angeles Clippers. Photograph: Noel Vasquez/GC Images

The NBA commissioner, Adam Silver, has called on Congress to pass legislation that would let states legalise and regulate sports betting across the US, in an op-ed published by the New York Times on Thursday.

The editorial – written by the man who runs one of the world’s most popular and valuable sports leagues – comes just weeks after a federal judge temporarily blocked a recently signed New Jersey law that would allow wagering on sports events at state-licensed casinos and racetracks.

Silver said there was a widespread desire among sports fans to bet on games, fueling an underground gambling economy that by some estimates draws $400bn in the country annually.

“I believe that sports betting should be brought out of the underground and into the sunlight where it can be appropriately monitored and regulated,” he wrote.

Previous attempts to widen the spread of sports betting have been strongly resisted by US sports bodies, who feared it could lead to cheating and distortion of athletic competition.

“Let me be clear: any new approach must ensure the integrity of the game,” Silver said in his article.

Silver pointed to examples of gambling on sporting events outside the US, highlighting Britain where bets can be placed on smartphones, at stadiums, and through the television, he said.

Though Silver urged that any law should include regulations including age-verification tools, measures to identify and ban people with gambling addictions, among other restrictions.

The NBA and other sports leagues filed a lawsuit against the New Jersey gambling bill days before the hold was announced, arguing that it would cause irreparable harm and violated a federal law that bans sports betting in all but four US states.

“Without a comprehensive federal solution, state measures such as New Jersey’s recent initiative will be both unlawful and bad public policy,” Silver wrote.

New Jersey officials hoped that legalised sports wagering would generate more revenue for Atlantic City’s gambling industry, which has lost customers to a spate of new casinos opening in nearby states.