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The NRL going to Las Vegas is proof gambling steers our sports

Rev Tim Costello, Chief Advocate for the Alliance for Gambling Reform

24 Feb 2025

The NRL will next month be again hosting its opening round in Las Vagas.


And if ARL Commission Chair Peter V'landys's grand plan comes to fruition, President Trump may also be there to make rugby league great again.


The exporting of the opening round to the city that is the symbolic global capital of gambling is simply the natural outcome of a sport that has sold its soul to gambling.


It wouldn't be so bad if that were the end of it.


But the NRL and the AFL, now fully addicted to gambling revenue, are also the prime opponents of critically needed gambling reform in Australia.


Without such reforms, without the restraining of a predatory gambling industry, Australia will remain the biggest per capita losers from gambling in the world.


Our losses amount to a staggering $31 billion a year.


And with the NRL set to expand into Papua New Guinea in the future - underpinned by funding from the Australian taxpayer - the harm gambling causes will also be exported.


The 10 million PNG citizens certainly are passionate about the game, and there could be unifying national benefits for a nation with 17 per cent of all the world's languages.


The diplomatic "coup" which will involve Australia giving $600 million to PNG also includes a clause to encourage PNG to do no future deals with China.


But unmentioned in this rather unusual sports diplomacy - for security guarantees is the $290 million of taxpayers' money going to the NRL.


It is further indication, if any was needed, that V'landys - a fierce critic of gambling reform - has totally captured our Prime Minister.


So captured, that despite Anthony Albanese's promises to respond to the late Peta Murphy's inquiry and recommendation for a total gambling ad ban, he has simply refused to respond.


The Prime Minister has shelved any reform, and Peter V'landys is cheering.


I was in Port Moresby in September speaking with health and welfare professionals.


Though they love their NRL, there was huge trepidation because NRL gambling ads were already doing great damage there, and a local team sponsored by gambling could trigger a massive spike in domestic violence, addiction and greater poverty.


That is the devastating trajectory both at home in Australia and in PNG, unless the Murphy report is implemented, reclaiming the sport from the effective ownership of sports betting companies, and allowing PNG to have a team without gambling on steroids.


We know that here in Australia where there is problem gambling in a family there is three times more likelihood of domestic violence. It is why the PM's Rapid Review Inquiry on Domestic Violence recommended a ban on gambling ads.


We know that gambling on sport has doubled in the last five years here.

We know that 25 per cent of young men gambling on sport now have a problem with gambling.

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