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FanDuel adds fantasy golf as it prepares to merge with DraftKings

You could say that after nearly 18 straight months in the news cycle, it’s been all quiet on the daily fantasy sports front since November, when the two leading companies in the fast-growing space, FanDuel and DraftKings, announced their intention to merge by the end of 2017. Now the companies are beginning to make some changes as they prepare to combine.

First up: FanDuel will add golf to the list of sports it offers, Yahoo Finance has learned.

This comes two months after FanDuel added English Premier League (EPL) soccer to its sports lineup. That was the first new sport it had added to its product in three years.

Taken together, EPL soccer and pro golf suggest that FanDuel is making itself look more like DraftKings in anticipation of the time when the companies will slim to one platform. (The companies have not been specific about their product plans, but once they combine, it’s highly unlikely they will keep operating two separately branded apps.)

DraftKings has long offered more sports than FanDuel: both have NFL, NBA, MLB, and NHL, but DraftKings also offers golf, mixed martial arts, Nascar, and soccer (for English Premier League, Champions League, and MLS).

In the past, FanDuel’s answer for that gap was about focusing on the sports that bring the most revenue. “When we looked at our data, we said, you know what, 80% of our revenue comes from NBA and football; it’s more important that we go deep there,” CEO Nigel Eccles said in 2015. “If [DraftKings] have 100% market share of a sport that only has 1% of the total market, hey, okay. I’d rather have 80% market share of 80% of the market.”

Jordan Spieth at the Sony Open in January 2017. (AP)
Jordan Spieth at the Sony Open in January 2017. (AP)

Adding DFS golf, despite legal questions

Eccles’ answer today for the “why now” of adding golf is about timing and caution. “The smaller sports… always kind of slipped to the bottom of the pile,” he tells Yahoo Finance. “We had been looking at golf for over a year. We were mindful of the regulatory environment, but now we have states passing laws and really setting the boundaries of what we can and can’t do. We think there’s a golf product we can do that would be compliant with that and be an awesome experience. We took our time on it.”

Golf Channel, owned by NBCUniversal, recently released numbers suggesting that 2016 was a banner year for the network, especially with digital streaming, and especially among millennial viewers. DFS insiders like to theorize that if golf ratings are on the rise, it’s thanks to DFS golf. So far, there has been nothing to prove that, but Eccles buys it: “I could see it driving golf,” he says. “Because now I have a reason to watch all day, because I’ve picked my team.” When DraftKings added golf back in 2015, DraftKings CEO Jason Robins told Golf Digest, “The setup is perfect for what we do. There are these four mega events every year. Everybody stops what they’re doing to pay attention to the Masters and the U.S. Open.”