PointsBet Cleared For Indiana Mobile Sports Betting, Soft Launch Expected Thursday

PointsBet Cleared For Indiana Mobile Sports Betting, Soft Launch Expected Thursday.

Costfoto / NurPhoto / Getty Images

Key Takeaways

PointsBet will launch in its third state on Thursday, when the Australian-based sportsbook goes live with its mobile betting application in Indiana.

The first exit on Interstate 65 in Indiana is a popular destination for Kentuckians wanting to place online wagers. Starting Thursday, bettors in the Hoosier State will get another sports betting option, as PointsBet is expected to launch operations. (Image: Formulanone/Flickriver)

The Indiana Gaming Commission on Wednesday announced that it gave PointsBet clearance to start taking bets as soon as Thursday. The company told Casino.org it plans to treat the first few days of operations as a soft-launch period. A larger grand opening, so to speak, will likely come next week.

The PointsBet team is excited to enter Indiana, our third state of operation, where we look forward to providing the sports-loving community in the Hoosier State with the premium sports betting product they deserve, PointsBet CEO Johnny Aitken said in a statement to Casino.org.

enters Indiana through an agreement the company reached with Penn National Gaming, which operates the Hollywood Casino and Hotel in Lawrenceburg. The IGC allows each licensee to operate three sports betting skins.

is an open registration state. That means anyone who is interested in wagering with PointsBet only needs to download the application to their phone and register online from anywhere in the Hoosier State. No in-person registration is necessary.

Indiana is the first state to go live in that agreement, which also gives PointsBet access to West Virginia, Louisiana, Missouri, and Ohio. Of those states, only West Virginia currently allows sports betting.

Launch in Time for March Madness

PointsBet’s launch in Indiana coincides with the start of March Madness, the nickname given to college basketball’s postseason. Some conferences have already started their tournaments this week, and the major conferences will follow suit next week.

The winners of those tournaments will earn spots in the NCAA Tournament, which starts March 17.

Just how big is basketball in Indiana? In January, the state’s sportsbooks took in $59.8 million in bets on hoops games and futures, according to IGC data. By comparison, bettors wagered $36.7 million for football, even though January included the college football championship and NFL playoff games.

Those figures combine both college and pro sports, and the IGC accounts for parlays separately. The state s sportsbooks handled another $40.6 million in parlays across all sports in January.

Basketball betting in Indiana has likely been helped by the fact that Michigan and Kentucky, two border states that currently do not allow sports betting, have large college basketball fan bases for their states’ teams. Michigan, however, has legalized sports betting and retail sportsbooks may open there later this month.

College basketball is very big in Indiana, thanks to schools like Purdue, which made the Elite Eight last season, and Butler, which PointsBet lists at +4500 to win the NCAA title this season. And then there’s Indiana, the state’s flagship school, which might find its way back into the NCAA Tournament this year for the first time since 2016.

About PointsBet

While PointsBet offers traditional fixed-odds wagering, it also offers a product called PointsBetting. That allows customers to win – or lose – exponentially on their wager.

For example, if you bet $10 on a nine-point favorite, you’ll win $10 if they win by 10. If they win by 19, you win $100. If your team wins by only a point, you’d lose $80.

The company also has made headlines for its , which has offered refunds on bad beats and games that have had controversial plays or endings.

The company currently operates in Iowa and New Jersey. Agreements are in place to operate in Colorado, Illinois, and Michigan.

Article Sources
Las Vegas Raiders Inaugural Season To Be Without Fans, Further Bad News for Casinos editorial policy.
  1. Texas Legislature To Once Again Consider Bills To Clarify Eight-Liner Rules

Compare Accounts
×
Las Vegas Drai’s Nightclub Shooter Benjamin Frazier Sentenced for Row Over $30 Club Entry That Left One Man Dead, Two Injured
Provider
Name
Description
CES Las Vegas 2022 Pressing On Despite Major Tech Exhibitors Pulling Out  MGM Resorts Announces 254 Managerial Layoffs Days After Being Named to ‘Best Large Employer’ List  Indiana Legislature Passes Biggest and Most Controversial Gambling Expansion Package in Decades  Bags Stuffed with Cash at BC Casinos was Asian ‘Cultural’ Quirk, Claimed Regulator  Wynn Resorts CEO Matt Maddox Sells Some Stock Ahead of Departure  Las Vegas Gaming Revenue Down 3.25 Percent in First Quarter, Sportsbooks Set Handle Record in March  Boyd Gaming Posts Record 2017 Revenues But Shares Plunge on Q4 Profits  Novomatic Sells Stake in Casinos Austria Amid Corruption Scandal  Ohio State vs. Penn State White Out Highlights Busy College Football Week 5  Venetian Sphere to Make Las Vegas an Edgier, Governor Sandoval Gets Ball Rolling