Thursday, April 30, 2026

Perfect Storm: St. John’s Biggest Fans Can’t Bet on the School

St. John’s is one of the major storylines of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament, but in the No. 1 sports betting market, the Red Storm are strictly off-limits. The reason dates back years.

Mar 15, 2025; New York, NY, USA; St. John's Red Storm guard RJ Luis Jr. (12) after hitting a three-point basket against the Creighton Bluejays in the second half at Madison Square Garden.
Robert Deutsch-/Imagn Images
Nov 10, 2019; Pittsburgh, PA, USA; ESPN radio sideline reporter Dianna Russini during the NFL game between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Los Angeles Rams at Heinz Field. The Steelers defeated the Rams 17-12. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports
Exclusive

Top Athletic Editor Addresses Russini Saga in All-Hands Meeting

Steven Ginsberg acknowledged the outlet’s communications could have been clearer.
Read Now
April 29, 2026 |

This year’s men’s March Madness is dominated in historic fashion by the SEC, but the story of the tournament in many ways is the resurgence of St. John’s, a long-downtrodden program that has dramatically returned to national prominence under coach Rick Pitino and billionaire booster Mike Repole.

Red Storm fans and backers in the school’s home state of New York, however, cannot bet on (or against) St. John’s in the tournament—a situation stemming from an existing prohibition on any sports betting on in-state colleges.

Sports betting across much of the U.S. continues to surge, and March Madness wagering this year is expected to reach $3.2 billion—a level more than double the $1.39 billion in activity surrounding last month’s Super Bowl LIX, a one-day event compared to the tournament’s nearly three-week run. The March Madness betting activity, however, will need to coexist with rules in 15 states that prohibit, at least to some agree, wagers on in-state colleges. 

A similar situation emerged three years ago, when New Jersey–based Saint Peter’s unexpectedly advanced to the Elite Eight as a No. 15 seed. The in-state prohibitions, however, are now reaching arguably their most dramatic collision with St. John’s beginning March Madness as the No. 2 seed in the West region, the No. 7 favorite to win the national championship, and one of the top candidates to disrupt the SEC dominance. 

The bans are also particularly salient given New York is the No. 1 state in the country for sports betting, while Illinois (No. 2) sent two schools to the tournament, and the fast-rising Virginia market sent three. 

Mar 15, 2025; New York, NY, USA; St. John's Red Storm forward Zuby Ejiofor (24) hoists the championship trophy after defeating the Creighton Bluejays to win the Big East Tournament at Madison Square Garden
Brad Penner/Imagn Images

“We now have something of a patchwork landscape that’s evolved around the country,” James Kilsby, an analyst for Vixio, a betting regulatory provider, tells Front Office Sports. “While the matter is quite settled in some states, we’ve seen changes in some other areas, and some states are now finding greater nuance.”


The roots of the current situation, in many ways, lie in New Jersey and predate the landmark 2018 U.S. Supreme Court decision allowing individual states to set their own rules. 

In 2011—years before the advent of NIL (name, image, and likeness) rights in college sports—New Jersey approved a nonbinding constitutional amendment that would permit sports gambling but prohibit wagers on in-state college sports. The state legislature then codified that into law the following year. Several sports leagues then sued to enjoin the New Jersey law, crucially helping set the stage for the U.S. Supreme Court ruling six years later. 

The New Jersey move had two primary aims: to help create an initial legal framework for sports betting, and also to protect college athletes who state leaders saw as particularly vulnerable to the downsides of the industry and temptations from bad actors. 

There’s plenty of local history on that latter point, as back in 1951, a massive point-shaving scandal involved CCNY and several other area schools. The widespread fallout included numerous arrests and bans from professional play, coach firings, suspensions, or downgrades of athletic programs, and it ultimately threatened the very existence of college basketball. 

Within that protective mindset, though, New Jersey remained keenly interested in legal sports betting, and after the Supreme Court ruling, became a key early state to approve mobile sports betting.

Saint Peter's KC Ndefo (left) and Jaylen Murray leave the court after the Peacocks' 67-64 win against Purdue to advance to the Elite Eight in the NCAA tournament at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, March 25, 2022.

Ncaa Basketball Ncaa Tournament Saint Peter S Vs Purdue In Sweet 16 Saint Peter S At Purdue
William Bretzger/Imagn Images

As 38 states and the District of Columbia now have legal sports betting, many of them used New Jersey’s laws as a template to create their own—particularly in New York, which began mobile sports betting in 2022 after seeing its immediate neighbor initially claim national industry supremacy. 

“New Jersey has definitely been the most influential when it comes to setting the table for regulations in this area,” Kilsby says. “And we’ve seen this strategy around in-state colleges adopted elsewhere where it’s helped ensure a smooth passage of the broader sports betting legislation.”

Major sportsbooks such as FanDuel and DraftKings, for their part, have called betting bans on in-state colleges “artificial barriers,” but generally have not lobbied heavily in this area. Instead, the operators have often preferred to focus their political energies on bigger-picture issues such as opening up entire new states.

There are some notable carveouts now, though, including in Connecticut and Massachusetts, which have similar bans on in-state colleges that are suspended for tournaments such as March Madness.


Several states have since had opportunities to revisit their bans on betting on in-state colleges, and have declined to change their rules. Most notably, voters in New Jersey soundly defeated in 2021 a proposed amendment to the state constitution to allow betting on in-state schools. The measure would have opened up bets for residents on schools such as Rutgers and Seton Hall—and notably would have allowed activity around Saint Peter’s subsequent Cinderella run—but voters rejected the proposal by 14 points.

Meanwhile, state officials and the NCAA are even more wary about the rise of prop bets. These wagers have quickly become a critical part of the overall sports betting market. Even in states where betting on in-state college sports is allowed, though, prop bets are frequently prohibited on in-stage colleges. 

The NCAA, for its part, has been seeking a national-level ban on prop bets for college sports, beginning a full-scale lobbying effort last year to create a unified framework. There is a fair amount of agreement on the issue among state-level regulators, but the issue has not yet received a significant amount of attention at the federal level. Several major states, most notably New York, continue to offer their support in this area. 

“As regulators of the largest sports-betting market in the United States,” wrote New York State Gaming Commission chair Brian O’Dwyer last year in a letter to NCAA president Charlie Baker,

“we continue to believe that the prohibition of college proposition betting on student-athletes is appropriate.”

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Sign up for
The Memo Newsletter

Get the biggest stories and best analysis on the business of sports delivered to your inbox twice every weekday and twice on weekends.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

Apr 6, 2026; Indianapolis, IN, USA; Michigan Wolverines head coach Dusty May celebrates with the trophy after defeating the UConn Huskies in the national championship of the Final Four of the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament at Lucas Oil Stadium.

Dusty May: Another Men’s Championship Will Cost $10M or More

“We anticipate it to be much greater next year,” May told FOS.

Dusty May Says Unsigned Michigan Deal Is Just a ‘Formality’

May told FOS he won’t sign his new contract until July. 

Featured Today

INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA - MARCH 25: Caitlin Clark of the Indiana Fever sits on the baseline and makes photographs during the Indiana Pacers game against the Los Angeles Lakers at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on March 25, 2026 in Indianapolis, Indiana.

Why Athletes Are Moonlighting As Sports Photographers

Athletes are swapping courtside seats for sideline cameras.
Quinnipiac women's varsity rugby
April 21, 2026

The Death of Quinnipiac Women’s Varsity Rugby

The sudden decision at Ilona Maher’s alma mater left players blindsided.
April 17, 2026

The Lawyer Steering the NIL Era

In the new era of college sports, Darren Heitner is everywhere.
blake griffin
April 14, 2026

Inside Blake Griffin’s Rookie Season at Prime Video

The six-time All-Star was initially hesitant to enter the media space.
Kalshi's logo is displayed on a smartphone placed on a reflective surface onto which a betting curve is projected in Creteil, France, on March 9, 2026, during a major scandal and a $54 million lawsuit concerning bets related to recent strikes in Iran. (Photo by Samuel Boivin/NurPhoto)NO USE FRANCE

CFTC: ‘Biggest Issue Is Manipulation’ in Sports Event Contracts

Michael Selig says his agency is in talks with “all the major sports leagues.”
Jul 25, 2025; East Rutherford, NJ, USA; FanDuel Sportsbook at Meadowlands Racing & Entertainment.
April 27, 2026

Warren Buffett Calls Sports Betting a ‘Tax on Stupidity’

The billionaire doesn’t like “things that make a sucker out of people.”
Aug 23, 2025; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; A general view of the MLB logo before the start of a game between the Cincinnati Reds and Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field.
April 28, 2026

Sportradar Refutes Claims It Works With Illegal Betting Companies

The company is an integrity monitor for leagues including the NBA and MLB.
Sponsored

Why Brandon Marshall Bet on Athlete-Owned Media

Brandon Marshall on athlete media, life after football, building I AM ATHLETE.
Michael Selig, U.S. President Trump's nominee to serve as Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) chairman, testifies in a Senate Agriculture Committee hearing on his nomination on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., November 19, 2025.
April 27, 2026

Trump Calls It a ‘Casino.’ CFTC Chief Defends Role As Regulator

“We can’t have them be the Wild West. That’s why we’re taking action.”
The logo of the 2026 NFL Draft is showcased at the big screen inside the theater Wednesday, April 22, 2026 from outside Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh, Pa.
April 23, 2026

NFL Draft Odds Chaos Pits Insiders Against the Market

There’s been plenty of line movement for the No. 2 pick.
An overall look at the newly opened MGM Grand Detroit sports betting & entertainment venue called BetMGM Sports Lounge at its casino in Detroit, Michigan on Wednesday, March 11, 2020.
April 21, 2026

‘Purely Gaming’: Inside the Tribal Fight Against Prediction Markets

A California tribal leader tells FOS “we have the truth on our side.”
April 9, 2026

College Athletes Are Ignoring NCAA Gambling Bans

“We were going to bet regardless,” says one former D-I athlete.