States report heavy betting on this year's Super Bowl
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) — Legal betting on this year's Super Bowl was heavy in the four states that had reported results as of Tuesday.
Nevada saw nearly $180 million in bets, New Jersey saw nearly $144 million, Mississippi saw nearly $6.4 million and Montana saw nearly $700,000.
With more states approving legal sports betting, this year's Super Bowl was sure to break records;
“It’s pointing to a very positive picture," said David Forman, senior director of research at the gaming association. “Nevada was up over 30% from last year, New Jersey was up over 20%, which is particularly impressive given that New York is now online.”
in the nation in terms of the amount bet on sports, taking in nearly $2 billion worth of bets in its first month. It will report the amount of Super Bowl bets its sportsbooks took on the Super Bowl on Friday.
The Rams beat the Bengals 23-20 but did not cover the 4.5-point spread, meaning that those who backed the underdog Bengals and took the points were winners.
Nevada's total smashed its own record by more than $21 million. Its sportsbooks kept $15.4 million of that total as revenue, an increase of 22.6% over last year.
New Jersey's sportsbooks kept $7.8 million after winning bets and other expenses were paid out, down from the $11.3 million they kept from last year's Super Bowl.
Montana's total amount bet was up 41% over last year's total; it kept $267,971 as revenue.
Mississippi has taken sports bets since 2018, but only at in-person sites; it does not offer mobile betting, which accounts for over 80% of the U.S. sports betting market.
GeoComply Solutions, whose location technology is used by virtually the entire legal sports betting industry in America to verify that customers are where they say they are before making a bet, reported processing more than 80 million geolocation transactions this past weekend, more than twice the amount recorded for the 2021 Super Bowl.
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Follow Wayne Parry on Twitter at @WayneParryAC