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Entrepreneur Develops Stock Market-Style Sports Betting

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  • Entrepreneur Develops Stock Market-Style Sports Betting

    Hoop Dreams
    by Galen Moore Mar 22 2010

    A first-time entrepreneur says he has found a way to offer legal online sports bets by framing the games in terms of the stock market.


    Jeremy Levine has crafted his betting system to model the stock market.

    First-time entrepreneur Jeremy Levine thinks he’s found a loophole that allows online betting on sporting events, and he’s using March Madness to roll the dice and see if his hunch pans out.

    The Cambridge, Massachusetts, native’s startup, StarStreet Inc., is treating pro sports like a stock market. Gamers place bets with real cash by buying shares in a team or an individual player. If the team or player does well, those share prices may go up, and the gamer wins.

    Levine swears it’s legal. He has the online game in a private beta test at StarStreetSports.com with about 150 users betting cash on teams in this year’s NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament. He hopes to have the site ready for public unveiling in time for the 2010 professional football season.

    “The real simple reason it’s legal is because it’s a game of skill, not chance, that doesn’t depend on the outcome of any single event,” he said.

    StarStreet has its own legal advisers, Levine said, but Franklin "Biff" Levy, a former Las Vegas corporate counsel who recently became a partner in the Boston office of Duane Morris LLP, expressed a little skepticism about the company’s founding logic.

    “I can’t imagine this could be legal,” said Levy, who has no affiliation with Levine or StarStreet. “How is this more skill-based than (Texas) Hold ’em?”

    Legal skeptics aside, Levine won’t be the first to try making sports into an online stock market. At least three Web startups have tried—and failed. The first to attempt it was E-Global Sports Network Inc., operators of Oneseason.com. Founded in 2007, the San Francisco startup took $3.5 million from investors including Charles River Ventures, a Boston venture capital firm, before it folded last December. Founder Michael Sroka couldn’t be reached, and Charles River partner George Zachary declined to comment.

    Another San Francisco startup, ProTrade Sports Inc., had venture capitalists betting far more heavily—taking in at least $12 million before it abandoned the sports stock market model in 2008, and rebranded itself. Now known as Citizen Sports Network, the company develops applications for fantasy sports leagues on Facebook.com and Apple Inc.’s iPhone. On March 17, Citizen Sports was acquired by Yahoo Inc. for undisclosed terms.

    ProTrade co-founder Jeff Ma said the idea of a sports stock market was compelling, but difficult to execute. “It’s just too difficult a concept to make understandable,” Ma said. “I know that sounds weird because everyone says, ‘Sports stock market, yeah, sure, I get it,’ but somehow that doesn’t translate well into a lot of users.”

    Levine thinks he can do better—by making StarStreet’s sports stock trading system a zero-sum market, where each entity trading on the market is worth no more or less than the number of shares, times the trading share price. If it works, StarStreet will take a cut of the sell side of every trade.

    At least a handful of tech luminaries think Levine’s idea may work. Palle Pedersen and Doug Levin, directors at Black Duck Software Inc., are advisers, and StarStreet was accepted into the Techstars Boston incubator program, which invests small seed rounds and provides mentors for early-stage startups.

    Now 23 years old, Levine said he’d been nursing the idea since he was a kid collecting baseball cards. “Rather than the gimmicky cards with the jerseys, I always wanted the rookie cards,” he said. “I was always playing with my friends, trading cards, trying to get the next big thing.”

    His eyes set on entrepreneurship as early as high school, Levine never thought his best idea, letting online players invest in players like rookie-card buyers, could be legal—until Oneseason launched. He worked with his high-school math teacher, Rob MacDonald, to come up with a spreadsheet pricing model that formed the basis of StarStreetSports.com.

    http://www.portfolio.com/companies-e...e-Large-BJ.jpg

  • #2
    reminds me of the now defunct PROTRADE. went belly up once they started involving actual money in their system, as i imagine, some genius found a way to corrupt the balance of stock
    Anything else you noticed.....

    Comment


    • #3
      Any opinions on this? or the future of sports betting in general?

      Imo, live/interactive/in-play betting is the future. It's far more exciting than dead betting, and, if you can read games, easier to win at.

      What we need is legalization. Reentry of low-price options (Pinnacle). More shops letting user SELL (not just buy) points. And great expansion of live betting after the wsex model in particular.

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by tball View Post
        reminds me of the now defunct PROTRADE. went belly up once they started involving actual money in their system, as i imagine, some genius found a way to corrupt the balance of stock
        Don't remember that. I find it irritating that, in this country, your first question always has to be whether you CAN do something. There's always some pig, some lawyer, some whiner ready to crusade against anything new and interesting.

        Would any of you have interest in the type of thing Levine is developing?

        Comment


        • #5
          Good Luck with that,

          This is Amerika, the InJustice Department will squash him
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          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by illuminati View Post
            Good Luck with that,

            This is Amerika, the InJustice Department will squash him
            Certainly possible.

            Comment


            • #7
              the problem (to me) that seemed to be the issue with protrade's setup was the actual stock system he had setup, that not all user -even myself at first- had in understanding.

              they would have futures set for each player and or team... like the base price for say Chris Johnson as a rookie was maybe 800 yds rushing and 500 yds receiving, and if you knew he'd do better than that, you;d buy up as much as you could there -so on and so forth with all the players you could afford in portfolio... then once he either out performed, or under performed the PT expecttaion his price would either go up or down, depending, though-- you only got the pay increses at the close of they as they had no ongoing barometer to base against except final numbers. thne once season was over--you'd hafta cash out your guys as "session" closed and newer stock goals would be released for the guyt in the upcoming year....

              it centered almost exclusively around hyped basketball players... as their stats were much more deceivingly apparent. a glue guy, like say birdman for nuggets, while getting alotta love would be a losing stock versus a turnover machine that put up enough points to gain value in performance. in that sense it was like a fantasy makeup, yet didnt translate as fluently as wouldve liked in kowing where value--as... you could've say--jumped all over ray rice coiming outta college and found a gem etc etc
              Anything else you noticed.....

              Comment


              • #8
                it was

                RIDICULOUSY ADDICTING, once you got in it---so heads up....

                mind you, most of you guys already in a real stock market so already have that pull.
                Anything else you noticed.....

                Comment


                • #9
                  [QUOTEWould any of you have interest in the type of thing Levine is developing?[/QUOTE]

                  NO

                  Look at the stock market and see the corruption there. When it comes to my $$ I want it on a game that is live not some ticker that is ran by a computer. Don't see how this will draw interest from real gamblers. Seems way to risky to me. What do I knwo though.
                  Do you know why Bo Schembechler eats his soup on a plate? Because if it was in a bowl he would lose it.


                  “We know that God has a plan for us and we will be fine” Jim Tressel's closing statement in his resignation letter.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by illuminati View Post
                    Good Luck with that,

                    This is Amerika, the InJustice Department will squash him
                    he'll be moving to Costa Rica or Antigua and running from the feds...soon..

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by GoldenTaint View Post
                      Don't remember that. I find it irritating that, in this country, your first question always has to be whether you CAN do something. There's always some pig, some lawyer, some whiner ready to crusade against anything new and interesting.

                      Would any of you have interest in the type of thing Levine is developing?

                      what part dont you remember? PROTRADE?, or my idea of why they didnt work?

                      again, its more a speculation on my end than anything, as their site seemed to close around the time they were pushing funding actual accounts, as opposed to earning points that would translate into cash way down the line.
                      Anything else you noticed.....

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by illuminati View Post
                        This is Amerika, the InJustice Department will squash him

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by tball View Post
                          what part dont you remember? PROTRADE?, or my idea of why they didnt work?
                          I wasn't responding to you, just hit enter about the same time.

                          I never used or knew about PROTRADE, so no opinion there.

                          again, its more a speculation on my end than anything, as their site seemed to close around the time they were pushing funding actual accounts, as opposed to earning points that would translate into cash way down the line.
                          Yeah to me that sounds more like fantasy stuff, which is to me completely uninteresting. Should be able to trade freely, cash out or hold as long as you want - like live betting. I have been surprised, after discovering live betting, that no one here ever talks about it when it is roughly 100x more exciting than regular betting and EASIER TO BEAT if you're actually trying to make money rather than doing betting as a hobby.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Look at the stock market and see the corruption there. When it comes to my $$ I want it on a game that is live not some ticker that is ran by a computer. Don't see how this will draw interest from real gamblers. Seems way to risky to me. What do I knwo though.
                            I don't understand the system without doing it, but my impression is it is more objective than stock values. Could be wrong. I do agree that stocks are inherently more manipulable than sports. Sports there are biases, but many of them are predictable, and they're less outright fixes than tweaks to make an outcome a little likelier.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              I don't get the appeal of fantasy at all. It's like you get a free job as an unpaid research assistant or secretary. There are prizes, but they aren't much, and they take too long to win.

                              Comment

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