GAMBLING COMMISSION ADVISES ON UK FOOTBALL
SPONSORSHIPS
2 October 2009
Tips for 'foreign' gambling operators
The spate of football sponsorship deals between online
gambling firms and UK football teams appears to have
prompted the UK Gambling Commission to issue an advisory
note this week.
The advisory informs that sports
sponsorship falls within the definition of advertising
in Section 327(2)(a) of the Gambling Act 2005, and that
such deals raise two principle issues:
a) Whether
foreign gambling providers may advertise within Great
Britain and;
b) The need to comply with the
gambling industry code for socially responsible
advertising.
Under section 331 of the Act, it is
an offence to advertise foreign gambling. Any gambling
operator who wishes to advertise within Great Britain
must be licensed and regulated in either an EEA state
(for the purposes of the Act, Gibraltar is considered an
EEA state), or one of the states that have been approved
by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) on
the UK government’s white list (currently Antigua &
Barbuda, Alderney, the Isle of Man and Tasmania).
If a gambling sponsor does not meet one of these
licensing criteria they are not permitted to advertise
in Great Britain and clubs may not carry their branding.
This should also be borne in mind when hosting
international competitions. Care should be exercised to
ensure that visiting teams’ sponsors are permitted to
advertise within Great Britain, because the advertising
of a gambling sponsor on a visiting club’s branded
shirts will constitute an offence under section 331 if
that sponsor does not meet the licensing criteria.
The second issue is with the branding of children’s
replica kits. The gambling industry code for socially
responsible advertising covers this issue and states at
paragraph 33 that:
"The advertising of adult-only
gambling products or product suppliers should never be
targeted at children. This applies equally to
sponsorship and this code requires that gambling
operators will not allow their logos or other
promotional material to appear on any commercial
merchandising which is designed for use by children.
"A clear example of this would be the use of logos
on children’s sports shirts which in future would not be
permitted under the terms of this code. "Children’s
shirts and other merchandise will be defined as those
that do not attract VAT.
Two recent cases
reported by InfoPowa illustrate the general advertising
principles involved:
Swiss authorities recently
prevented Real Madrid FC from displaying the Bwin logo
in a UEFA away match in Switzerland. A statement on the
football club's website advised:
"The Swiss
authorities only allow gambling to be advertised when
they are state-owned companies.
And in the UK,
the Gambling Commission directed that Cardiff FC could
not display new sponsor 777ball's branding until the
Asian facing sportsbook had obtained a licence
enabling them to advertise their services within the
European Economic Area.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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