According to the American Gaming Association and other sources, 60 million adults placed bets on Super Bowl LX. More than $1.7 billion was through legal sportsbooks.
A launch pad for explosive growth
The concept of betting isnât new, but the landscape has shifted â defined by accessibility and hyper-specific wagers.
The growth of legalized markets has been a major catalyst behind the accessibility of todayâs sports betting, said Mike Fry, PhD, professor of Operations, Business Analytics and Information Systems at the University of Cincinnatiâs Lindner College of Business.
In May of 2018, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned a federal ban stopping states from legalizing sports wagering. The decision gave states the green light to create their own gambling markets within their borders.
âItâs growing so fast â weâre still in a very reactive mode,â said Fry. âItâs difficult because each state is making their own rules.â
Legalization didnât just expand access â it reshaped the product itself. Once sports betting went mainstream, sportsbooks needed new ways to keep fans engaged, opening the floodgates to prop bets.
The proliferation of the prop bet
Thanks to apps such as DraftKings, Fan Duel and emerging prediction markets such as Polymarket, wagering became fast, frictionless and hyper-specific â turning every play into a high-stakes moment.
At the heart of this shift is the explosion of proposition bets, or prop bets. Unlike traditional wagers that focus on the final outcome, prop bets zoom in on micro-moments, plays and players â each one bettable.
Credit: AP
Credit: AP
This granular approach broadened the audience, turning rare fans into regular fans by offering them infinite reasons to tune in â from whoâs going to score a touchdown to when theyâre going to score a touchdown to how many times theyâre going to score a touchdown. Yardage, points, passes â itâs all on the table.
âIt totally changed how fans follow games,â said Fry. âIt drove interest from watching âyour teamâ to watching dozens of players from dozens of games. You can really make any game interesting â itâs very much about the individual.â
But that individuality comes with new risks.
âAs prop bets become more and more specific, itâs easier for people even peripherally involved in the game to influence the outcome of these bets,â Fry said. âAnd itâs becoming a bigger and bigger problem.â
Credit: NYT
Credit: NYT
The greedy side of game influence
Fryâs research focuses on sports analytics, and he brings a unique perspective to the conversation â one informed not just by academia, but by experience. He previously owned an analytics company focused on fantasy sports applications, providing valuable insight into the dynamics between incentives and behavior.
âNow with these prop bets, itâs become much easier for people and players to manipulate without affecting the outcome of the game,â he said.
And itâs moved beyond the professional level into college sports â where susceptibility may be more of a concern. College athletes, often younger and under intense pressure, may prove to be more vulnerable to outside influence â particularly when individual actions can swing the bet.
âIn most cases, college athletes are paid a lot less,â Fry said. âSo there may be more of an incentive to influence a prop bet.â
The ability to influence outcomes can also affect the legitimacy of the game, said Fry, as very legitimate actions are being questioned.
âItâs making it harder to separate good game management from a prop bet.â
An example of this: HITC.com reports an NFL fan used Super Bowl rehearsals to make winning prop bets on performance timings. He showed his plan in TikTok videos and talked about recording the national anthem rehearsal at 1 minute and 44 seconds.
A betting formula with bad behavior
For many fans, watching the game is no longer enough. They want action â and stakes â on every drive.
With increasing accessibility comes increased concerns over addictive tendencies.
âTodayâs sports betting reduces friction and makes gambling easier than ever,â Fry said. âThe addictive nature of it has the potential to really do some harm.â
The Harvard Gazette cites a recent study in JAMA Internal Medicine finding that internet searches for help with gambling addictions have risen 23 percent from the 2018 court ruling through June 2024, suggesting that modern sports betting lends itself to addictive behavior.
âHaving it on your phone with push notifications and constant advertisements is able to kind of hijack your brain in a really fascinating way,â student fellow Spencer Andrews told the Harvard Gazette. Andrews is the author of a two-part series for the âBill of Health Blogâ on the dangers of sports gambling. Online: Marching Toward Gambling Madness
A permanent shift in fandom
Thereâs no going back to a pre-app era of sports viewing. Betting platforms have fundamentally altered how fans engage with the game, turning passive spectators into active participants with money on the line.
âItâs changed what it means to be a fan,â said Fry.
For some, it heightens excitement and deepens engagement. For others, it raises ethical and cultural questions about what sports are becoming.
As the Super Bowl and other marquee moments continue to blend athletic performance with entertainment and wagering, experts like Fry are watching closely, asking not just how the game is changing, but what those changes mean for fans, athletes and the future of sports itself.
Content Creator Brooke Bunch may be reached at brooke_bunch@yahoo.com.
GAMBLING ADDICTION SUPPORT
The Ohio Problem Gambling Helpline:
- Call: 1-800-589-9966
- Text: 4hope to 741741
- Chat online at gamblinghelpohio.org
The National Problem Gambling Helpline:
- Call: 1-800-MY-RESET
- Text: 800GAM
- Chat online at ncpgambling.org/chat
Locate problem gambling services in your area at gamblinghelpohio.org.
Gam-Anon is a peer support group for those who are or have been affected by someone elseâs gambling. To learn more about Gam-Anon visit gam-anon.org.
Gamblers may take this confidential self-assessment quiz to help them understand if they may have a problem: pausebeforeyouplay.org/play-responsibly/rate-your-risk
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