Results in New Jersey and elsewhere indicate that mobile sports betting rakes in far more money than retail operations, thanks to the convenience factor. Indeed, the percentage of mobile revenue accounts for 85 percent to 90 percent of the total in many cases.
That situation is not happening in Washington, based on August results. Bettors in the District of Columbia have two options. Place wagers online via GambetDC or trek over to Capital One Arena. Patrons prefer Cap One’s sportsbook, operated by William Hill U.S.
William Hill took $9.1 million in bets, the first full month of operations. Revenue amounts to $1.4 million, which means a high 15.6 percent hold rate, according Legal Sports Report.
In August, GambetDC attracted a handle of $2.1 million with revenue of $278,141. Results should have exceeded a typical August, when the NBA and NHL seasons were not playing. GambetDC, operated by Intralot, brought in $3.1 million in bets since the platform launched May 28. Blame poorly priced lines for the less than stellar results. Those odds produced a 14.7 percent hold since launch with $457,166 in revenue.
There were 66,831 bets placed in August on the GambetDC platform, or $31.90 per wager, compared to 69,085 bets for William Hill, which comes to $132.16 a bet.