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Sports betting companies battle for customers as NFL season kicks off

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NFL season kicks off this weekend amid what's expected to be another record year for online sports gambling. While bettors debate which team will win the Super Bowl this year, the companies providing the markets for most of those wagers are duking it out for customers.

DraftKings (DKNG) and FanDuel had more than 75% of the market through the end of the first quarter of this year, per analysis from Macquarie research. But two of sports business's premier brands, ESPN and Fanatics, are entering the gambling world, setting the stage for a fall that could once again be defined by heavy promotions.

DraftKings, for its part, says it isn't worried about the competition.

"We've seen this in pretty much every digital product in existence, the best product wins," DraftKings co-founder and CEO Jason Robins told Yahoo Finance. "On the internet, it's easy to compare. People talk and they see. I think that we really invested there, and I think at this point in time we're the best product in the market and it's only going to get better."

Destabilizing the landscape

On Aug. 8, Penn Entertainment ditched Barstool Sports and signed a $2 billion deal with ESPN, the self-proclaimed worldwide leader in sports. Penn is aiming to launch ESPN Bet in November and hopes the new brand can earn it double-digit market share, up from its current low-single-digit share.

Penn CEO Jay Snowden said at an industry conference this week that Penn is now operating its own tech stack and believes the company has "great product," which could be a meaningful development with primetime ESPN exposure expected to draw more eyes to the app.

Meanwhile, Fanatics has a massive database of sports fans and their favorite teams from years of order placements. The company sends targeted emails to sell merchandise around team events. It could leverage a similar strategy with online gambling and promote bets to customers based on their favorite teams.

"I think there's a real opportunity to do some things differently in the category, some things that look a lot more like a consumer technology company and a lot less like a sportsbook," Matt King, CEO of Fanatics Betting & Gaming, told Yahoo Finance.

King spent nearly six years at FanDuel, including almost four as CEO, before leaving in the fall of 2021. He likens the new approach he's taking with Fanatics to American Express, where customers pay year after year to be a part of the reoccurring rewards program. The e-commerce giant is currently offering a free jersey to any Massachusetts user that bets $50 or more on the platform. It also plans to integrate its collectibles business and build out fan experiences where bettors can interact with players.