Has wagering on golf taken off in the four years since a Supreme Court decision helped bring about legalized sports betting in many U.S. states? You bet your Nassau it has.
The amount of money wagered with PGA Tour official betting operators â aka âthe handleâ â rose almost 50 percent from 2020 to â21, and total bets increased almost 40 percent. Further growth is pretty much a given; among the more interesting questions is what kind of golf betting the future might bring, and what role it will play in the Tourâs business more generally. To find out, we spoke to Scott Warfield, the Tourâs vice president of gaming.
GOLF: The PGA Tour is bullish on in-play betting â wagers made during an event, not before. Why?
Scott Warfield: Whoâs going to shoot the lowest round? This player versus that player. You get your bet in Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday; you come back on Sunday to see if you won. Itâs very stale, very stagnant.
Where weâre moving is focusing more on the live. Thereâs three holes left, and a threesome is coming through. Whoâs going to have the low score on this hole? Jon Rahm has 250 yards to the pin from the fairway on a par-5. Here are the odds he can get it inside 20 feet, 10 feet, five feet.
In more mature markets, like Europe, where theyâve had legalized sports betting for decades instead of years, in-play betting represents somewhere in the 70-80 percent range of all bets. Theyâre less likely to bet on things like over-under, or a money line, or a spread. They bet more on the next tennis point, or whoâs going to have the next foul or score the next basketball point. Itâs much more microtransactions.
In the U.S., that in-play number is about 30 percent â growing, but significantly smaller. Itâs been an illegal territory, and the easiest thing to bet on with a friend or a bookie or whatnot is that money line or spread or whoâs going to win the game. Over the next three, five, seven years, we see that in-game number continuing to increase to 50, 60, 70 percent. If the American bettor follows that trajectory, itâs my belief there are two sports that stand the best chance to capitalize â baseball and golf.
GOLF: Why those two?
SW: Because of the amount of content and the pace of play, which is leisurely enough to work perfectly with in-play betting. With IMG Arena, our exclusive data provider in the space, weâre able to offer different opportunities around every hole, every player, every shot. Because of our investment in ShotLink data and, again, the pace of play, it sets itself up great for the growth of in-play betting here in the States.
GOLF: Explain the role of IMG Arena in in-play betting.
SW: You really canât do in-play betting in golf without the official league data. And if you want that data, i.e. ShotLink, thatâs where the IMG Arenaâs Golf Event Centre product comes in. Consider âsquattersâ â people who come in and can watch an event and basically price and model different bet types without official league data. Itâs nearly impossible in golf, right? To know whether the shot is at 12â9″, or is that 9â11â? Unless you have the Golf Event Centre.
GOLF: The Tour has five official betting operators. Whatâs their role, beyond just taking bets?
SW: FanDuel, DraftKings, BetMGM, PointsBet, Parx â those operators are the mouthpiece to sports fans, to sports bettors. Having partnerships with these market leaders helps because since theyâre in business with us, theyâre helping promote our events.
On days when thereâs an NFL game on, youâre still getting promotion of PGA Tour events. Or in the spring when the Tour is up against NBA playoff games, theyâre still promoting the Tour and talking about it.
Weâre trying almost to create a market. Traditionally, this has just been âtry and predict the outright winner of a golf tournament.â We want to get to a place where itâs much more in-play and live and microtransactions. Part of that evolution is educating sports fans â that if you didnât bet on the outright winner by Thursday morning, itâs OK. That market remains open, and it moves throughout the event as players bogey or par or birdie. Itâs education and entertainment â and thatâs where the operators play a disproportionately important role for us, because theyâre doing a lot of that work.
GOLF: Whatâs the story with the upcoming sports book project at TPC Scottsdale?
SW: DraftKings is operating in the state of Arizona as our designee, and theyâre building a retail sportsbook at TPC Scottsdale that will be one of the best sportsbooks in the world, a global destination for golf fans. Iâve shown it to a few of my golf buddies. Kiawah, Pinehurst and Bandon Dunes will still be in the rotation for our annual golf trips â but now youâll have a chance to go to TPC Scottsdale, play 36 holes of golf, sit in a world-class DraftKings sportsbook and watch your favorite events. Itâll be a big one for us in the fall of â23.
GOLF: Beyond the financial considerations, why is it so important?
SW: The WM Phoenix Open is our largest crowd, and itâs a very young crowd. The scene is a scene. Given the brand of that event, having a sportsbook there just adds to the allure of one of the yearâs most popular tournaments.
On top of that, the other 51 weeks a year have us really excited. Again, youâre going to be able to play a couple world-class courses â and drive your cart over in between those two courses to an open-air sportsbook with fire pits. Itâs going to be a unique thing.
We get asked a lot if this is something weâll see a lot of, and the answerâs no. It has to be the right course, the right tournament, and the right brand fit. This checked all those boxes for us. I wonât say there wonât be another one, but this will be unique. I think for DraftKings it will be almost a West Coast headquarters. Thatâs how theyâre thinking about the uniqueness of this facility.
GOLF: How would you sum up the PGA Tourâs relationship with sports betting â where it is, where itâs heading?
SW: For us, this whole space for us is about engagement. The Supreme Court made a decision in 2018 that allowed the states to regulate sports betting, if they so choose. Weâve been trying to operate within that framework, continue to maintain and ensure absolute integrity with our product, and leverage the opportunity to engage the core fans and grow our audience.
Yes, there will be commercial benefit to all the stakeholders in all the sports. But first and foremost, we look at it as a way in this fragmented media landscape to get a fan to watch an extra three holes each weekend or attend two more events every year, to get a 25-year-old whoâs never thought about PGA Tour golf and viewing it or attending it as something they should consider.
Thereâs not a lot of new ways into sports fandom. Social media, e-sports, sports betting, the metaverse. Those are all areas where we can engage that key 21- to 35-year-old fanbase and do it responsibly and appropriately. For us, itâs continuing to find those partners who do it the right way, and creatively â and look at what this might look like 7-10 years from now, not necessarily what it looks like today.
