Hard Rock Sportsbook App
The odds at this site are reasonable, with spreads and totals coming in at a standard -110 in most cases. Odds on things like moneylines and futures may fluctuate from other sportsbooks depending on the amount of money on each option that Hard Rock has taken. But the odds here are very competitive.
- Plenty of betting markets, ample live betting
- Website optimized for mobile devices
- Respectable welcome bonus
- Difficult to navigate on desktop devices
- Promotions more casino-focused
The biggest positive to wagering at Hard Rock is the fact that there are so many betting options to choose from. More specifically, there are a ton of live betting choices to be made from high-profile leagues all the way down to lower level leagues in sports like soccer and basketball.
On the flip side, the negatives that stick out at Hard Rock have to do with the user experience for sports bettors. While it is great that the site is streamlined for use on mobile devices, the desktop experience is lacking somewhat by design. And there could be more promotions related to sports betting.
The Hard Rock Sportsbook said that the suspension includes the acceptance of all new bets, new accounts and new deposits, but “all active bets starting before 11 a.m. ET on Dec. 4, 2021 will run and settle based on event outcome per normal.”
Seminole Tribe suspends sports betting app after losing bid for court stay
The Seminole Tribe’s Hard Rock Sportsbook on Saturday announced an immediate suspension of its Florida operation as a result of an appellate court ruling that rejected a request to continue online sports betting as it tries to overturn a lower court decision.
“Due to yesterday’s appellate court decision, the Hard Rock Sportsbook mobile app will temporarily suspend accepting new bets and deposits,’’ the Hard Rock Sportsbook stated on Twitter. “Player information and account funds are safe and secure, and the app will remain online for easy withdrawals via all payment methods.”
Gary Bitner, the tribe’s spokesperson, said in a statement to the Times/Herald on Saturday that “account balances for all current players will be refunded as requested.”
The Hard Rock Sportsbook said that the suspension includes the acceptance of all new bets, new accounts and new deposits, but “all active bets starting before 11 a.m. ET on Dec. 4, 2021 will run and settle based on event outcome per normal.”
Any bets after that time, however, “will be voided and initial bet amounts returned to your app wallet. This includes all future bets.”
“Your funds are safe & secure,’’ the company added. “The app will remain active for easy withdrawals.”
The company added that free bets will not be allowed to be withdrawn, but the Hard Rock Sportsbook “will maintain a lot of free bets in your account, which will be available again if HardRock Sportsbook resumes accepting new bets.”
It may be months, however, before the tribe is allowed to resume its sports book as the legal challenge winds through the court.
Two lawsuits challenging the legality of the compact were brought by West Flagler Associates, the owners of Magic City Casino and Bonita Springs Poker Room, and a group of plaintiffs that includes No Casinos and Miami businessmen Armando Codina and Norman Braman.
After the lawsuits were filed, however, the tribe quietly opened what it called its “early access launch” of its sports book app on Nov. 1 which allowed anyone in Florida over age 21 to place bets and collect online wagers on sporting events via the internet using the Hard Rock Sportsbook app from anywhere in Florida.
On Nov. 22, Judge Dabney L. Friedrich of the U.S. District Court in the District of Columbia invalidated the 30-year, multibillion-dollar gambling agreement with the state, known as a compact, ruling that it violated federal Indian gaming law.
Under the compact, the tribe agreed to pay the state at least $2.5 billion over the first five years in exchange for being granted a monopoly over sports betting in the state and for being allowed to add roulette and craps to its casino operations.
To get around a state law that prohibits expansion of gambling without voter approval unless it is authorized as tribal gaming, the governor and tribe agreed to give the tribe control of online sports betting throughout the state of Florida by having all wagers go through the tribe’s computer servers. But the court said that provision violated federal Indian gaming law.
The Navajo Nation is the largest federally-recognized Native American Nation in the U.S. with an enrolled membership of approximately 401,000 and trust lands totaling 27,000 square miles. Navajo Nation Gaming, as an enterprise of the Navajo Nation, operates five gaming and hospitality facilities across Arizona and New Mexico.
Mobile app offers interactive gaming and sports betting on Navajo Nation
FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — A new app has been launched that will be used for interactive gaming and sports betting on the Navajo Nation.
The Hard Rock Sportsbook mobile app was launched in Arizona through a partnership between Navajo Nation Gaming Enterprise (NNGE) and Hard Rock Digital.
“Mobile sports and event wagering is an important new offering that we’re excited to introduce,” said Brian Parrish, interim chief executive officer for NNGE. “The Hard Rock Sportsbook mobile sports wagering platform and our brick and mortar operations will offer a broad range of wagers, marketing promotions and cross-marketing offers that will be unique to the Navajo and Hard Rock brands.”
The Navajo Nation is the largest federally-recognized Native American Nation in the U.S. with an enrolled membership of approximately 401,000 and trust lands totaling 27,000 square miles. Navajo Nation Gaming, as an enterprise of the Navajo Nation, operates five gaming and hospitality facilities across Arizona and New Mexico.
Hard Rock Digital was launched in 2020 to be the exclusive Hard Rock International and Seminole Gaming vehicle for interactive gaming and sports betting on a global basis.
“We’re thrilled to partner with the NNGE to provide Arizona sports bettors with a fun and engaging gameday experience through the Hard Rock Sportsbook mobile app,” said Marlon Goldstein, executive managing director & CEO for Hard Rock Digital. “The Hard Rock brand is known worldwide for legendary hospitality and entertainment, and we’re excited to deliver those experiences to Arizonans digitally with unrivaled mobile sports betting.”
The Arizona app will launch with Hard Rock Sportsbook’s new best-in-class platform.
Hard Rock Sportsbook also serves fans in New Jersey and Iowa through the Hard Rock Sports & Casino NJ and the Hard Rock Sportsbook Iowa apps, respectively.
More information is available from Hard Rock Sportsbook at HardRockSportsbook.com.
About Navajo Gaming
NNGE is a Navajo Nation wholly-owned business entity created by the Navajo Nation in September 2006 to develop and operate Navajo casinos in accordance with federal and Navajo Nation laws, as well as the negotiated Navajo Nation-applicable state compacts (New Mexico and Arizona).
Employing 1,200 employees, NNGE operates four casinos and a travel plaza in New Mexico and Arizona, opening its first property, the Fire Rock Navajo Casino near Gallup, New Mexico, in November 2008. Within five years, three additional properties were added, as well as a travel plaza – Flowing Water Navajo Casino (October 2010); Northern Edge Navajo Casino (January 2012); Twin Arrows Navajo Casino Resort (May 2013); Navajo Blue Travel Plaza (September 2020).
NNGE is one of many Navajo Nation-owned and operated enterprises that is charged with the mission of creating jobs, increasing revenues and stimulating incremental economic development. For the latest news and information visit Navajo Nation Gaming Enterprise’s website: www.navajogaming.com and Facebook page
About Hard Rock Digital
Hard Rock Digital is the exclusive Hard Rock International and Seminole Gaming vehicle for interactive gaming and sports betting on a global basis. Known the world over for its famous cafes, casinos, hotels, and music memorabilia collection, Hard Rock’s legendary hospitality and entertainment serves as our foundation as we build the future of sports betting and internet gaming. Headquartered in Hollywood, Florida, and with offices in Austin, Texas, Hard Rock Digital is dedicated to creating the best place to play for sports fans and mobile gamers everywhere.
Hard Rock Sportsbook initially launched in just New Jersey and Iowa, but it could be rolled out across the country. There are Hard Rock properties in lots of states, including Florida, so market access is no problem for the brand, and it has a strong team of industry veterans in place to work on the nationwide rollout.
Registering at Hard Rock
It is quick and easy to sign up for a Hard Rock account. Just follow these steps:
- Click the link on this page to visit hardrocksportsbook.com and click “Login / Sign Up” at the top left of the page.
- Click “Sign Up” to bring up the registration form.
- Enter your email address, first name, last name, ZIP code, address, gender, date of birth, mobile number and government issued ID number.
- Click “Submit” to complete the form.
- You will then need to set up login details, verify your account and make the first deposit to claim your Hard Rock Sportsbook bonus.
For example, she wrote, the state could negotiate a new compact with the tribe “that allows online gaming solely on Indian lands.”
Gambling on sports is off the table in Florida, at least for now, after the Seminole Tribe suspended its online sports-betting operations Saturday morning.
The tribe stopped accepting wagers on its Hard Rock SportsBook mobile app after an appeals court on Friday refused to put on hold a judge’s ruling that said a deal giving the tribe control over sports betting throughout the state violates federal law.
The Seminoles “will temporarily suspend operations of its mobile app in Florida” due to Friday’s decision by a divided three-judge panel of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, tribal spokesman Gary Bitner said in an email Saturday.
“Account balances for all current players will be refunded as requested,” Bitner said.
Bettors trying to use the Hard Rock app Saturday morning received a message saying the online sportsbook was discontinued until further notice.
“Although we are temporarily suspending the acceptance of new bets and account deposits, we remain committed to building the best place for sports betting in Florida,” the message said.
The app also said “all active bets for events starting before 11 a.m. ET on Dec. 4 will run and settle based on event outcome per normal.” All bets for events starting after 11 a.m. Saturday “will be voided and initial bet amounts returned to your app wallet,” it said.
“Your funds are safe & secure. The app will remain active for easy withdrawals,” the message said, advising users to check social media for updates.
Sports betting was included in a 30-year deal, known as a compact, signed by Gov. Ron DeSantis and Seminole Tribe of Florida Chairman Marcellus Osceola, Jr. this spring and authorized by the Legislature in a May special session.
The “hub-and-spoke” sports-betting plan in the compact was designed to allow gamblers throughout the state to place bets online, with the bets run through computer servers on tribal property. The compact says bets made anywhere in Florida “using a mobile app or other electronic device, shall be deemed to be exclusively conducted by the tribe.” Under the compact, the tribe pledged to pay at least $2.5 billion over the first five years to the state because of sports betting and other benefits, such as being able to offer craps and roulette at tribal casinos. The Seminoles have paid the state $75 million since October, according to court records.
Owners of Magic City Casino in Miami-Dade County and Bonita Springs Poker Room in Southwest Florida challenged the compact in federal courts in Washington, D.C. and Tallahassee, alleging the sports-betting provision violates federal law and would have a “significant and potentially devastating” impact on their businesses. The Havenick family has owned the pari-mutuels for decades.
U.S. District Judge Dabney Friedrich on Nov. 22 invalidated the compact in the Washington case, finding that U.S. Department of the Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, whose agency oversees tribal gambling, erred when she allowed the compact to go into effect this summer.
Friedrich ruled that the deal violates the federal Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, or IGRA, which creates a framework for gambling activity on tribal lands. The ruling centered on gamblers being able to place wagers throughout the state, rather than strictly on the Seminoles’ property.
“Altogether, over a dozen provisions in IGRA regulate gaming on ‘Indian lands,’ and none regulate gaming in another location,” she wrote. “It is equally clear that the (Interior Department) secretary must reject compacts that violate IGRA’s terms.”
Although the compact deems sports betting to occur at the location of the tribe’s servers, “this court cannot accept that fiction,” Friedrich wrote. The judge also rejected the Seminoles’ requests to intervene in the lawsuit, which was filed against Haaland and the Department of the Interior, and have it dismissed.
The tribe, which until Saturday had continued to allow sports bettors in Florida to place wagers on its mobile app after Friedrich’s ruling, filed an emergency motion last week asking the District of Columbia appellate court to stay Friedrich’s ruling.
But after a flurry of court filings this week, a panel of the court denied the Seminoles’ attempt to put Friedrich’s ruling on hold until their appeal is resolved.
“Appellant has not satisfied the stringent requirements for a stay pending appeal,” the order by Judges Cornelia T.L. Pillard and Justin R. Walker said. The order said Judge Judith W. Rogers would have granted a stay.
The appellate judges did not elaborate on their reasons, as is common in such decisions.
Saturday’s statement on behalf of the Seminoles said the tribe “looks forward to working with the state of Florida and the U.S. Department of the Justice to aggressively defend the validity before the appeals court, which has yet to rule on the merits of the 2021 compact.”
The statement noted that the state, the federal government and the tribe “have all taken the position” that the compact is legal.
U.S. Department of Justice lawyers said in a court document this week the government did not oppose the tribe’s emergency motion for a stay and that it had not decided whether to appeal Friedrich’s ruling.
As the tribe pursues an appeal of Friedrich’s ruling, the pari-mutuel owners are appealing a decision by U.S. District Judge Allen Winsor, who dismissed the Florida-based lawsuit challenging the compact.
Winsor in October said the pari-mutuels did not have legal standing to sue DeSantis and state Department of Business and Professional Regulation Secretary Julie Brown over the gambling agreement. The pari-mutuels last week filed a notice that they were taking the case to the Atlanta-based 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
Friedrich also found that the compact violated a 2018 constitutional amendment that requires statewide voter approval for expansions of gambling, including sports betting.
But the judge noted that her decision “does not foreclose other avenues for authorizing online sports betting in Florida.”
For example, she wrote, the state could negotiate a new compact with the tribe “that allows online gaming solely on Indian lands.”
Friedrich also suggested that Floridians could approve a citizens’ initiative to allow online sports betting, an effort already underway that could get a boost from her ruling.
Sen. Jeff Brandes called for an investigation into the Seminole Tribe and its vendors on Friday after accusations it is trying to strongarm its way to blocking rival constitutional amendments. He issued his call after reports that the Tribe and its allies were paying operatives to bully, intimidate and harass Florida voters in an attempt to stymie ballot initiatives against gaming expansion. POLITICO first reported the “gaming turf war” on Monday.
Seminole Tribe suspends Florida sports betting app
The Seminole Tribe has suspended operations of its new Hard Rock Sportsbook mobile app — Florida’s first legal online sports betting platform.
In a statement released Saturday morning, the Tribe’s spokesperson confirmed the temporary suspension of the gamblinging app, which will no longer any new bets, accounts or deposits from Floridians as a result of an appellate court ruling made Friday.
“As a result of yesterday’s Appeals Court decision denying a temporary stay of the District Court’s decision on the 2021 Compact, Hard Rock Sportsbook will temporarily suspend operations of its mobile app in Florida,” Gary Bitner, spokesperson for the Seminole Tribe, said in a statement. “Account balances for all current players will be refunded as requested.”
On Friday, an appeals court denied the Tribe’s emergency motion for a stay pending appeal in the sports betting case.
That came a week after a federal judge in Washington threw out the entirety of the 2021 Gaming Compact between Florida and the Seminole Tribe, an unexpected move that brought the Tribe’s sportsbook operation to a halt. The compact effectively legalized sports betting in Florida both through casinos and online, run by the Seminole Tribe, and the deal allowed for new casinos to be built.
Bitner added that the Tribe will continue to work to appeal the ruling.
“Despite the decision, the Seminole Tribe looks forward to working with the State of Florida and the U.S. Department of Justice to aggressively defend the validity of the 2021 Compact before the Appeals Court, which has yet to rule on the merits of the 2021 Compact,” Bitner said in a statement. “The Seminole Tribe of Florida, the State of Florida and the United States have all taken the position that the 2021 Compact is legal.”
The Tribe is also facing a lawsuit from Las Vegas Sands, which accuses the Tribe of “tortious interference with business relationships,” including paying off petition gatherers who are part of the casino company’s gaming amendment campaign.
Sen. Jeff Brandes called for an investigation into the Seminole Tribe and its vendors on Friday after accusations it is trying to strongarm its way to blocking rival constitutional amendments. He issued his call after reports that the Tribe and its allies were paying operatives to bully, intimidate and harass Florida voters in an attempt to stymie ballot initiatives against gaming expansion. POLITICO first reported the “gaming turf war” on Monday.
Christina Pushaw, Gov. Ron DeSantis’ spokesperson, said the Governor’s office is “… reviewing the Court’s perplexing ruling, which certainly contains appealable issues. Because neither the Seminole Tribe nor the State of Florida are parties to the case, it is unclear what if any immediate impact the ruling has in Florida. We look forward to working with the Tribe to ensure the future success of the Compact. We are of the position that the Compact is legal, and we are subject to no court order applicable to the state of Florida at this time.”