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SPORTS BETTING

US – Michigan shatters revenue records in November joining $500m club

By - 16 December 2021

Michigan became the fifth state to generate more than $500m in combined retail and online sports bets over a single month as sportsbooks smashed the state revenue record in what was an impressive November. And as winter weather begins to set in, Michigan’s sportsbooks and online casinos should continue to hover at or near record levels.

“Michigan football’s run, including the intense interest in its showdown with Ohio State, certainly helped buoy sportsbooks,” said Matt Schoch, lead analyst for PlayMichigan.com. “The rising tide of the past three months, though, is more than one game and one sport. Sportsbooks continue to reach more and more Michiganders, and bettors are becoming increasingly comfortable with more diverse forms of betting. Sportsbooks are looking at a bright future, even after football season.”

Online sportsbooks in Michigan drew a record $473.8m in November, breaking the record of $463.6m set in October by 2.3 per cent, according to official data released Thursday. Add $26.7m in retail wagering at Detroit-area casinos announced earlier this week, and Michigan’s online and retail sportsbooks hit $500.5m in wagering for the month.

Michigan joined New Jersey, Nevada, Illinois and Pennsylvania as the only states to generated $500m in wagers in one month.

Online sportsbooks won a whopping $54.1m in gross revenue in November, up 122.7 per cent from $24.3m in October. Combined with $4.6m in retail revenue, sportsbooks won a total of $58.8m for the month, up 118.1% from $26.9m in October and topping the previous high of $35.2m in March. After promotional credits, taxable revenue for both online and retail wagering hit $38.8m, another state high, which yielded a record $2.9m in state taxes.

The onslaught of records came despite fewer weekends of football than in October, which had five full weekends. Bettors found plenty to wager on, though, with a full month of NBA basketball, the opening of college basketball, and the season-ending Ohio State-Michigan showdown that drew immense local interest.

“The NFL deservedly gets a lot of attention for the betting interest it creates, but NBA betting is a difference-maker, too,” said Eric Ramsey, an analyst for the PlayUSA.com Network, which includes PlayMichigan.com. “The increase in NBA inventory in November, combined with the start of college basketball, was more than enough to make up for one fewer weekend of football games.”

DraftKings retook the online market lead with $126.3m in wagers, up from $120.4m in October. Those bets yielded $13.1m in gross gaming revenue. FanDuel was second with $115.2m in bets in November, down from $124m in October. November’s wagering produced a market-topping $18.3m in gross sports betting revenue.

“Nowhere is the competition between DraftKings and FanDuel more closely fought than in Michigan,” Schoch said. “Nearly one year into online sports betting, the two rivals continue to trade the top spot. The biggest difference is that FanDuel has wrung more revenue from the wagering it has taken in, even as DraftKings has expanded its market share.”

Michigan’s online casinos and poker rooms generated $107.6m in gross gaming revenue, falling just short of October’s record of $109.7m by 1.9 per cent. But revenue actually grew to $3.59m per day over the 30 days of November, from $3.54m per day during the 31 days of October.

Michigan’s online casinos and poker rooms have now generated $992.2m in gross gaming revenue, putting the state at the doorstep of $1bn for the year. Only New Jersey and Pennsylvania have reached such rarefied air over the course of a calendar year.

“No other first-year online gaming market has come close to Michigan’s success,” Ramsey said. “Michigan was always a market with enormous potential, but rivaling the results of New Jersey and Pennsylvania so soon has been impressive.”

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