Beyond that, the Ohio Lottery will make sports-gaming kiosks available in about 2,500 bars and restaurants statewide, likely including dozens within a 40-minute drive of the Hollywood Casino. So are the Cincinnati Reds and FC Cincinnati. That’ll bring up to five retail locations to Hamilton County and up to 25 statewide license holders who can offer mobile apps for betting.ĭowntown’s Hard Rock Casino and Belterra Park are expected to seek licenses. Into this mix now comes Ohio, which is developing rules to launch several new sports-betting options by January 1, 2023. Indiana’s total handle, or how much gamblers bet, was $3 billion, with 86% of that money going to online sports books. DraftKings and FanDuel own two thirds of the online market in the Hoosier state, with a combined $137 million in gross receipts, which is the money gaming operators keep after all bets are paid.
Of course, its gains are a drop in the bucket compared to the sports betting apps that dominate the industry.