Washington Spirit CEO Calls for Open Sports Betting Market in D.C.

Head of National Women's Soccer League team supports push for more sportsbook operators in the District.

Ziv Chen - News Editor at Covers.com
Ziv Chen • News Editor
Jun 12, 2024 • 10:54 ET • 4 min read
Washington Spirit
Photo By - USA TODAY Sports

Kim Stone, CEO of the Washington Spirit team that competes in the National Women’s Soccer League, has voiced her support for an open sports betting market in the capital.  

In a statement on the team’s website, Stone highlights the potential revenue-generating opportunities an open betting market will bring to women and minority-owned businesses in the District. Her announcement comes amidst discussions the D.C. City Council is currently holding to consider legislation that will allow more sportsbooks to operate in the city.   

“Currently, the District only allows a single sports betting platform to operate, creating a monopoly that stifles competition and leaves out local businesses, sports teams, and media partners,” said Stone. “When only one sportsbook controls the market, there is less incentive to create lucrative marketing deals and partnerships. These partnerships could be worth tens of millions of dollars, especially for local businesses more likely to be women, minority, and Black-owned in D.C.” 

After being announced in March 2024, FanDuel replaced GambetDC to become the District’s only betting platform available throughout the city. GambetDC was operated by the DC Lottery.

Commercial sportsbook apps BetMGM and Caesars are currently available in Washington, D.C., but only within a two-block radius of the brands’ retail betting facilities, located in Nationals Park and Capital One Arena, respectively.  

The Sports Wagering Amendment Act of 2024 (B25-0753), introduced by councilmember Kenyan McDuffie in March, would allow players to access sportsbooks from anywhere in Washington D.C. while three online skins would be available through Class A mobile licenses for operators that partner with local sports stadiums. The proposal also includes Class C licenses, which allow D.C. sports betting operators to partner with sports teams that play at least 90% of their home games in the District.  

“Under the current system, minority-owned businesses must compete for a limited budget from a single sportsbook. In a competitive market, multiple sportsbooks would vie for the chance to partner with organizations like ours, expanding the opportunities for everyone involved,” Stone added.

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Ziv Chen
News Editor

Ziv has been deep in the iGaming trenches for over 20 years, long before most people could spell "geolocation compliance." With a background in marketing and business development at some of the biggest names in gambling tech, Ziv knows the industry from the inside out. Since joining Covers, he's turned his sharp eye (and sharper keyboard) toward everything happening in the fast-moving world of online gambling. Whether it's new state launches, the latest twists in regulation, or what the big operators and game providers are cooking up next, Ziv breaks it all down with clarity, context, and just the right amount of snark. He covers the business side of betting, from affiliate trends and revenue reports to the tech powering your favorite slots. His motto in writing is “let’s make it make sense without putting you to sleep.”

When he’s not tracking gambling legislation or looking for the next breaking story, Ziv is living and dying with every pitch and play from his beloved Pittsburgh Steelers, Pirates, and Penguins. As a Pitt graduate, it’s a city loyalty forged in heartbreak, but one he wouldn’t trade for anything, except maybe a few more playoff wins.

When away from the keyboard, Ziv loves to hit the road and soak up the energy of casinos. Whether strolling the neon jungle called the Vegas Strip, or wandering into a smoky riverboat casino in the Midwest, Ziv’s in his element. He’s the guy chatting with players, blackjack dealers, and asking pit bosses way too many questions, all in the name of “research,” of course. The casino floor isn’t just his workplace, it’s a weird and wonderful ecosystem of flashing lights, wild characters, and pure sensory overload, and he wouldn’t have it any other way.

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