Major Setback For Oklahoma Sports Betting Hopes As Senate Rejects Revived Bill
State’s tribes and NBA’s Thunder came together in support of legislation, but Senate not on board
InGame Despite industry optimism coming into the day, the Oklahoma Senate on Wednesday voted against the latest effort to legalize online and retail sports betting in the state. The vote shook out 27-21 against state Sen. Bill Coleman’s amended version of HB 1047 .
In May 2025, a pair of bills to legalize sports wagering died in the Senate , but hopes began to stir anew last fall when a proposal favored by the state’s one major professional sports team, the NBA’s Oklahoma City Thunder, materialized. On Tuesday, Coleman and Rep. Ken Luttrell announced they were ready to proceed with a new version of the bill that was supported by the Thunder and a supermajority of the tribes that are members of the Oklahoma Indian Gaming Association.
Just one day later, Coleman had the chance to present the bill on the Senate floor, but he did not get the outcome he was seeking. The proposal would have allowed tribes to offer retail sports betting while also permitting mobile betting under a framework in which digital operators, such as FanDuel and DraftKings, could partner with tribes. There was also special language requiring revenue derived from NBA and WNBA bets to be allocated to a program called the Strong Readers Fund, while revenue generated from other wagers would benefit, among other recipients, a Thunder-backed tourism fund.
“This is a big day for Oklahoma,” Coleman said Tuesday in optimistically presenting the new bill. “We’re closer than we’ve ever been to legalizing sports betting. ” They weren’t as close as he thought, however, and barring a re-vote with a different outcome, Coleman’s proposed Nov.