• /
  • Responsible Gambling
This site contains commercial content
  • US Sports Betting
    • Arizona Sports Betting
    • Colorado Sports Betting
    • Florida Sports Betting
    • Illinois Sports Betting
    • Indiana Sports Betting
    • Kentucky Sports Betting
    • Louisiana Sports Betting
    • Maryland Sports Betting
    • Massachusetts Sports Betting
    • Michigan Sports Betting
    • Missouri Sports Betting
    • New Jersey Sports Betting
    • New York Sports Betting
    • North Carolina Sports Betting
    • Ohio Sports Betting
    • Pennsylvania Sports Betting
    • Tennessee Sports Betting
    • Vermont Sports Betting
    • Virginia Sports Betting
  • Betting Apps
    • Best Sports Betting Sites
    • bet365 Bonus Code
    • Caesars Promo Code
    • BetMGM Bonus Code
    • Fanatics Sportsbook Promo Code
    • Borgata Promo Code
    • BetRivers Promo Code
    • ESPN BET Promo Code
    • DraftKings Bonus Code
    • Fliff Promo Code
    • Rebet Bonus Code
    • TwinSpires Offer Code
    • FanDuel Sportsbook Promo Code
  • DFS Sites
    • PrizePicks Referral Code
    • Betr Promo Code
    • Boom Fantasy Promo Code
    • Dabble Fantasy Promo Code
    • OwnersBox Referral Code
    • Sleeper Promo Code
    • SuperDraft Promo Code
    • Underdog Fantasy Promo Code
    • Thrillzz Sportsbook Promo Code
  • Tools
    • Sportsbook Bonuses Explained
    • What Is a Teaser Bet?
    • What Is a Parlay Bet?
    • What is a Same Game Parlay?
    • What Is a Moneyline Bet?
    • What is Expected Value?
    • Win/Loss Statement
    • Sports Betting Revenue Tracker
    • Sports Betting Podcasts
    • Partnership Tracker
    • Sports Scores And Odds Apps
    • Sports Betting Twitter
  • News
No Result
View All Result
  • US Sports Betting
    • Arizona Sports Betting
    • Colorado Sports Betting
    • Florida Sports Betting
    • Illinois Sports Betting
    • Indiana Sports Betting
    • Kentucky Sports Betting
    • Louisiana Sports Betting
    • Maryland Sports Betting
    • Massachusetts Sports Betting
    • Michigan Sports Betting
    • Missouri Sports Betting
    • New Jersey Sports Betting
    • New York Sports Betting
    • North Carolina Sports Betting
    • Ohio Sports Betting
    • Pennsylvania Sports Betting
    • Tennessee Sports Betting
    • Vermont Sports Betting
    • Virginia Sports Betting
  • Betting Apps
    • Best Sports Betting Sites
    • bet365 Bonus Code
    • Caesars Promo Code
    • BetMGM Bonus Code
    • Fanatics Sportsbook Promo Code
    • Borgata Promo Code
    • BetRivers Promo Code
    • ESPN BET Promo Code
    • DraftKings Bonus Code
    • Fliff Promo Code
    • Rebet Bonus Code
    • TwinSpires Offer Code
    • FanDuel Sportsbook Promo Code
  • DFS Sites
    • PrizePicks Referral Code
    • Betr Promo Code
    • Boom Fantasy Promo Code
    • Dabble Fantasy Promo Code
    • OwnersBox Referral Code
    • Sleeper Promo Code
    • SuperDraft Promo Code
    • Underdog Fantasy Promo Code
    • Thrillzz Sportsbook Promo Code
  • Tools
    • Sportsbook Bonuses Explained
    • What Is a Teaser Bet?
    • What Is a Parlay Bet?
    • What is a Same Game Parlay?
    • What Is a Moneyline Bet?
    • What is Expected Value?
    • Win/Loss Statement
    • Sports Betting Revenue Tracker
    • Sports Betting Podcasts
    • Partnership Tracker
    • Sports Scores And Odds Apps
    • Sports Betting Twitter
  • News
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result

The Leagues Vs. Delaware on Sports Betting: Goodwill, Goodell And The NFL’s Fury 611d6l

Ryan RodenbergRyan Rodenberg
March 28, 2018
in Regulation
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Editor’s Note: first installment probed the 1976 federal case initiated by the NFL.  This second part of the series unpacks the 2009 lawsuit against Delaware Governor Jack Markell started by the same five sports leagues who would later forces to sue New Jersey. 2v712z


Roger Goodell’s letter to Delaware Governor Jack Markell was clear.

The opening paragraph of Goodell’s March 17, 2009 letter to Gov. Markell even included underlining for emphasis:

Four months later, the NFL—along with the NBA, NHL, NCAA, and Major League Baseball—collectively sued Gov. Markell and other state officials alleging that Delaware’s move to expand its sports lottery violated the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act (PASPA).

Court documents from the case obtained by SportsHandle shed light on the leagues’ evolving sports wagering policy stances and help explain why the yet-to-be-resolved PASPA case involving New Jersey has proven so thorny.

‘Bait’ for Sports Gambling 2p372p

The NFL, NBA, NHL, and Major League Baseball—but not the NCAA—provided Delaware a preview of litigation to come in a t statement seven years before filing suit.

“The four professional sports leagues oppose state-sponsored sports gambling in Delaware or any other state,” wrote the four leagues on December 18, 2002.  “Simply put, we do not want our games used as bait to sell gambling.

“We do not want our athletes used as roulette chips.”

At the time, Delaware was tinkering with the idea of re-instituting—and possibly expanding—the sports lottery offered in the 1970’s.  The four sports leagues moved to re-assert their united stance in opposition of state-sponsored sports gambling.  The leagues’ position in their 2002 statement to Delaware mirrored that articulated to Congress ten years earlier when PASPA was enacted.

The quartet of leagues explained why states should stay away from authorizing sports betting:

 

The leagues’ also flagged sports gambling vis-à-vis young people.

“Our players cannot be expected to serve as healthy role models for youth if they are made to function as participants in gambling enterprises,” wrote the four leagues.  “And legalized sports gambling sends a regrettable message to our young people that ‘anything goes’ when it comes to raising revenues or protecting local interests, and that we might as well legalize, sponsor, and promote any activity so that the state can get its ‘cut.’”

Five Leagues File Lawsuit 5v3g3i

The NBA, NCAA, NFL, NHL, and Major League Baseball filed a 19-page complaint against Gov. Markell on July 24, 2009.  The leagues focused on alleged violations of PASPA and the Delaware Constitution stemming from the state’s move to expand its sports betting options beyond the pro football parlays offered in the 1970’s.

The five sports governing bodies flagged single-game betting specifically:

On the issue of damages, the leagues explained that the resulting harm “cannot even begin to be measured, let alone compensated by money damages.”

The league quintet also had a take on the role of skill in single-game sports betting:

In of the lawsuit, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell filed an eight-page declaration.

“State-sponsorship of sports gambling threatens to confuse fans into believing that the NFL s sports gambling, thereby allowing casino operators and other sports-betting operations to trade unfairly on the NFL’s goodwill and image of fairness,” wrote Goodell on July 29, 2009.  “Because of the threat that sports gambling poses to the goodwill and integrity of NFL [f]ootball, and to the fundamental bond of loyalty and devotion between fans and teams that the league seeks to maintain, the NFL has repeatedly and consistently been a leading opponent of legalized sports gambling.”

732t51

Federal Judges Weigh In 44631g

Judge Gregory M. Sleet of the United States District Court for the District of Delaware got the first crack at evaluating the case.

“[T]he court is not certain that the plaintiffs have demonstrated irreparable harm,” wrote Judge Sleet on August 10, 2009.

After describing the earlier 1977 case involving Delaware as “noteworthy,” Judge Sleet ultimately denied the five leagues’ motion for a preliminary injunction to stop the lottery.

The NBA, NCAA, NFL, NHL, and Major League Baseball filed a notice of appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit three days before Judge Sleet issued his ruling.

And on August 13, the Third Circuit granted the leagues’ motion to expedite the case.

Things moved fast after that.

Oral arguments were held on August 24.  Judge Thomas Hardiman wrote the unanimous decision for the three-judge week later.

“[A]ny effort by Delaware to allow wagering on athletic contests involving sports beyond the NFL would violate PASPA,” wrote Judge Hardiman on August 31, 2009.

To do so would “engender the very ills that PASPA sought to combat,” he explained.

The Third Circuit also made an observation that could be the topic of a future Congressional hearing about sports betting.

“Congress was concerned that state-sponsored gambling carried with it a label of legitimacy that would make the activity appealing,” wrote Judge Hardiman about PASPA’s impetus.

In an interesting side note, included on the three-judge in the Markell case was Judge Julio M. Fuentes, who would later write the 2-1 majority decision in the Third Circuit’s 2013 Christie I decision and then dissent in the Third Circuit’s 2015 Christie II ruling.  Judge Fuentes would also write one of the two dissents in the Third Circuit 2016 en banc decision in Christie II.

[Also see: Delaware Hungry to Lead The Way On Expanded Sports Betting, Believes It Can]

Knocking on SCOTUS’s Door 3i2e16

Delaware turned to Virginia A. Seitz—the author of the 2011 Department of Justice memo regarding the scope of the Wire Act—to handle the state’s appeal of the Third Circuit decision to the U.S. Supreme Court.  The five sports leagues hired Paul Clement to file a brief opposing Delaware’s petition to the Supreme Court.  Clement would later be retained as the leagues’ counsel of record in the New Jersey sports betting case.

[Also see: The Wire Act of 1961: That Time RFK Sent JFK a Letter About Sports Betting]

At the Supreme Court level, Delaware’s lawyers argued that a 1991 SCOTUS case—Gregory v. Ashcroft—required “Congress to make ‘unmistakably clear’ its intent to constrain the States’ ‘substantial sovereign powers.’”

Delaware claimed PASPA fell short under the so-called “plain-statement rule.”

The five sports leagues disagreed.

“[T]he application of the plain-statement rule would not change the outcome because [PASPA’s statutory text] is unambiguous,” wrote Clement.  In contrast, he described the legislative history tethered to PASPA’s exemptions as “undeniably muddled” and “internally inconsistent.”

The Supreme Court denied Delaware’s application for review in 2010, ending the case.

A Muted Impact 1i2j2m

delaware sports betting
Jack Markell

With the New Jersey sports betting case reaching the Supreme Court, the 2009 Markell case will likely be relegated to footnote status in the coming years.  While the New Jersey litigation and the Markell dispute both pertained to PASPA and involved the same five sports league plaintiffs, the cases varied in two important ways.

First, the Third Circuit’s decision in Markell was not based on the Tenth Amendment or any other portion of the Constitution like the New Jersey case.  Rulings on constitutional grounds—as opposed to cases involving statutory interpretation—usually have more of a legacy.

Second, Delaware merely wanted to expand its sports betting options under PASPA’s grandfather clause that was already known to at least partially insulate the state.  That differed markedly from New Jersey, who was on the outside looking in and has argued for over five years that PASPA should be wiped away entirely as unconstitutional.

Moving forward, if the Markell case is to be looked to as precedent, it would likely stand for the proposition that certain states are frozen in time under PASPA, unable to tweak the permissible scope of the type of sports betting authorized by the state.

Earlier this week, ESPN reported that Nevada regulators granted licensed sportsbooks permission to offer “expanded options” based on the NFL Draft.

Share2TweetShare
Ryan Rodenberg

Ryan Rodenberg 3k486z

Ryan Rodenberg works as a professor, researcher, and writer.

This site contains commercial content. We may be compensated for the links provided on this page. The content on this page is for informational purposes only.

Related Posts 3c253c

Promotions

Where Can I Bet On The 2025 NFL Draft? How to Bet, Draft Betting Rules by State 5y1my

April 24, 2025
Industry

Delaware’s Gaming Handle Breaks Six-Year Record for Two Consecutive Months h3j3o

December 30, 2024
Load More

SportsHandle 11z4m

  • Analysis
  • Casino
  • Features
  • Horse Racing
  • Industry
  • Legal
  • Legislation
  • Lottery
  • Opinion
  • Podcasts
  • Poker
  • Politics
  • Promotions
  • Regulation
  • Sports
  • Uncategorized

Better Collective 5q5o70

This website is owned and operated by Better Collective USA. Trademarks and copyrights referenced on this website are and shall remain the exclusive property of their respective owners and/or licensors. Please be sure to visit the operator’s website(s) to review their & conditions. We advise you to read these carefully as they contain important information. Copyright © 2025 | Better Collective USA
21 Play Responsibly
National Council on Problem Gambling
Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-Gambler.

Search Sports Handle n6a5h

No Result
View All Result

Legal 5h1l1k

  • Cookie Policy
  • /
  • Responsible Gambling

No Result
View All Result
  • US Sports Betting
    • Arizona Sports Betting
    • Colorado Sports Betting
    • Florida Sports Betting
    • Illinois Sports Betting
    • Indiana Sports Betting
    • Kentucky Sports Betting
    • Louisiana Sports Betting
    • Maryland Sports Betting
    • Massachusetts Sports Betting
    • Michigan Sports Betting
    • Missouri Sports Betting
    • New Jersey Sports Betting
    • New York Sports Betting
    • North Carolina Sports Betting
    • Ohio Sports Betting
    • Pennsylvania Sports Betting
    • Tennessee Sports Betting
    • Vermont Sports Betting
    • Virginia Sports Betting
  • Betting Apps
    • Best Sports Betting Sites
    • bet365 Bonus Code
    • Caesars Promo Code
    • BetMGM Bonus Code
    • Fanatics Sportsbook Promo Code
    • Borgata Promo Code
    • BetRivers Promo Code
    • ESPN BET Promo Code
    • DraftKings Bonus Code
    • Fliff Promo Code
    • Rebet Bonus Code
    • TwinSpires Offer Code
    • FanDuel Sportsbook Promo Code
  • DFS Sites
    • PrizePicks Referral Code
    • Betr Promo Code
    • Boom Fantasy Promo Code
    • Dabble Fantasy Promo Code
    • OwnersBox Referral Code
    • Sleeper Promo Code
    • SuperDraft Promo Code
    • Underdog Fantasy Promo Code
    • Thrillzz Sportsbook Promo Code
  • Tools
    • Sportsbook Bonuses Explained
    • What Is a Teaser Bet?
    • What Is a Parlay Bet?
    • What is a Same Game Parlay?
    • What Is a Moneyline Bet?
    • What is Expected Value?
    • Win/Loss Statement
    • Sports Betting Revenue Tracker
    • Sports Betting Podcasts
    • Partnership Tracker
    • Sports Scores And Odds Apps
    • Sports Betting Twitter
  • News

loading

Please wait while you are redirected to the right page...

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.Read more