A Senate committee has rejected a bill that would allow Virginia residents to bet on the state’s college sports teams. Some worry that college athletes would be put under pressure to accept bribes or throw the outcome of games.
On Tuesday, the Senate Finance and Appropriations Committee voted 14-0 to continue the bill to next year, meaning the measure is done for this year.
Lawmakers legalized most sports gambling in Virginia in 2020. The one group of teams left out were college teams here, such as Virginia Tech football or University of Virginia basketball. They were left out so they would not be pressured to take bribes.
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“That’s really the question,” said Sen. Ryan McDougle, R-Hanover.
The bill’s sponsor, Sen. Schuyler VanValkenburg, D-Henrico, countered that college athletes are already under such pressure, because people already wager on their games.
“Virginia folks are already gambling on sports,” VanValkenburg said. “They’re doing it illegally. They’re doing it through friends in other states. They’re going to other states themselves.”
It would be safer to legalize gambling and monitor it, he added. Plus the state would make money off the tax revenue.
Sen. Creigh Deeds, D-Charlottesville, said the transfer portal and the decision to let players profit off their name, image and likeness, or NIL, has ruined college sports. He shared McDougle’s concern.
VanValkenburg pointed out that some college athletes are making big money through endorsements and other advertisements. Armando Bacot, a University of North Carolina basketball player from Richmond, told Sports Illustrated he expected to earn hundreds of thousands of dollars in endorsements. Allowing gambling would not add pressure to these athletes, VanValkenburg said.
“I agree. I think college sports are in a bad place,” he added. “I actually think this helps us in that way.”
Virginia residents wagered $633 million on sports in the month of December, according to the Virginia Lottery, generating $8 million in tax revenue.
Today in history: Feb. 7
1948: Omar Bradley
1962: John F. Kennedy
1964: The Beatles
1984: Spacewalk
1985: Enrique “Kiki” Camarena
1991: Jean-Bertrand Aristide
2009: Lake Erie
2014: Sochi Olympics
2018: Los Angeles Times sale
2020: Donald Trump
2021: Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Eric Kolenich (804) 649-6109