Venture Fund to Work with Sports Gaming Start-ups

The Sports Gaming Investment Fund has formed to work with casino start-up companies. The first of its kind fund plans to discover, finance and help develop gambling industry projects, including guiding the new firms through the regulatory landscape. The rush of sports betting opportunities in the U.S. should bring a wave of opportunities. Managing partners are Chris Grove (l.) of Eilers & Krejcik Gaming and David Sargeant of iGaming Ideas.

Venture Fund to Work with Sports Gaming Start-ups

A new venture fund dedicated to casino industry start-ups is the first of its kind. The Sports Gaming Investment Fund expects to discover, fund, and guide the development of gaming industry projects through the complex landscape of regulated gambling.

Amid the U.S. sports betting market’s fast expansion, a wave of innovative start-ups is emerging with products, services, and solutions designed to tap the estimated $17 billion dollar that legal U.S. sports betting represents.

The management team consists of: Chris Grove, managing partner, partner at Eilers & Krejcik Gaming, where he heads the firm’s sports betting practice; David Sargeant, managing partner, founder and CEO of iGaming Ideas, a leading international incubator for gambling startups, and sports betting consultant to leading operators across the globe; Blaine Graboyes, advisory partner, co-founder and CEO of the video game gambling machine inventor GameCo; and Seth Schorr, advisory partner, chairman of Fifth Street Gaming and co-founder of the streaming media startup Konek TV. SeventySix Capital is also an advisory partner and will assist with deal structure, vetting, and back office.

Investors in SGIF have been attracted by the combination of timing, team, and opportunity.

“My decision to invest in SGIF was driven by my belief in the team’s superior deal flow, their proven ability to evaluate that flow, and the resources they can deploy to support portfolio companies,” investor Jeremy Levine told Yogonet Gaming News. He is the founder of multiple companies, including DRAFT, which was acquired by Paddy Power Betfair in 2017.

“There’s no doubt that the keys to fully unlocking the potential of the U.S. sports betting market are in the hands of startups,” said Grove, a nationally-recognized expert on the legal sportsbook industry. “We’re just now starting to see the ideas that will ultimately define sports betting in the United States.”

The pace of development in the U.S. market only increases the opportunity for startups, said Sargeant, who has evaluated hundreds of early-stage companies during his career. “Large casinos and software providers won’t have the bandwidth or resources to truly innovate. They’re too busy simply getting up and running.”

Said Graboyes, “Gambling is one of the toughest industries for startups from a compliance perspective. Having the right plan as early as possible in the process can easily be the difference between success and failure for a startup targeting the sports betting industry.”

SGIF will add additional value to portfolio companies by helping to ensure optimal product fit and market access. “Startups don’t always appreciate what problems larger gambling companies are actually looking to solve and what opportunities do and don’t resonate with those companies,” said Schorr, who has held management roles at several Las Vegas casinos and currently operates the Downtown Grand in Las Vegas.

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